Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Disable private memory pools. Make viewer large address aware on windows.
Reviewed by Kelly
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memory corruption in the case that the new memory size requested is smaller than the old memory size. Also, adding check to ensure that the aligned malloc returns a non-null value before memcopying.
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actually been to ll_aligned_free_16().
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memory allocations and frees in the LLPrivateMemoryPool with aligned memory allocations and frees.
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out-of-order deletion of LLTextureFetch on shutdown
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ssh://hg@bitbucket.org/stinson_linden/viewer-beta-drtvwr-179.
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tested
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repository.
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Two fairly simple conflicts: dead stats sending code in the
texture fetch code (new llcorehttp library) and the cleanup
code in llappviewer was moved around in 3.4.x.
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This was yet another refresh from v-d because of significant changes
to lltexturefetch that would not have been resolvable by casual
application of any merge tool. There are still a few questions
outstanding but this is the initial, optimistic merge.
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The LLURI::buildHTTP() overloads that take an LLSD 'path' accept 'undefined',
LLSD::String and (LLSD::Array of LLSD::String). A sequence of path components
passed in an Array is constructed into a slash-separated path. There are unit
tests in lluri_test.cpp to exercise that case.
To my amazement, there were NO unit tests covering the case of an LLSD::String
path. The code for that case escaped and appended the entire passed string.
While that might be fine for a 'path' consisting of a single undecorated path
component, the available documentation does not forbid one from passing a path
containing slashes as well. But this had the dubious effect of replacing every
slash with %2F.
In particular, decomposing a URL string with one LLURI instance and
constructing another like it using LLURI::buildHTTP() was not symmetrical.
Having consulted with Richard, I made the string-path logic a bit more nuanced:
- The passed path string is split on slashes. Every path component is
individually escaped, then recombined with slashes into the final path.
- Duplicate slashes are eliminated.
- The presence or absence of a trailing slash in the original path string is
carefully respected.
Now that we've nailed down how it ought to behave -- added unit tests to
ensure that it DOES behave that way!!
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I recently tried to wade through llhandle.h and got somewhat perplexed. Armed
with an explanation from Richard, I've added notes to the file to try to make
it a bit less mysterious.
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Leaving llhandle.h in llui restricts the set of viewer project directories
which could potentially use it, and there's nothing whatsoever UI-specific
about it.
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rather than fixing them; changing llcommon to be statically linked avoids the symbol issues with llcommon.dll
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We now specialize std::less<const std::type_info*> to use
std::type_info::before(), and on Windows and Mac that Just Works. It even
works on Linux when using gcc 4.4+: more recent implementations of gcc's
std::type_info::before() apparently do name()-string comparisons internally.
It doesn't work so well on Linux with gcc 4.1, though, and that's the compiler
we still use on our Linux build-farm machines. But rather than give up,
perform explicit name()-string comparison in that case.
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Instead of forbidding std::map<const std::type_info*, ...> outright (which
includes LLRegistry<const std::type_info*, ...> and LLRegistrySingleton<const
std::type_info*, ...>), try to make it work by specializing std::less<const
std::type_info*> to use std::type_info::before().
Make LLRegistryDefaultComparator<T> use std::less<T> so it can capitalize on
that specialization.
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The changeset above touched every consumer of the two LLRegistrySingletons
originally defined with std::type_info* as keys. Those two
LLRegistrySingletons were changed to use const char* as keys, then all
consumers were changed to pass std::type_info::name() instead of the plain
std::type_info* pointer -- to deal with the observed fact that on Linux, a
given type might produce different std::type_info* pointers in different load
modules. Since then, Richard turned up the fascinating fact that at least some
implementations of gcc's std::type_info::before() method already accommodate
this peculiarity. It seems worth backing out the (dismayingly pervasive)
change to see if properly using std::type_info::before() as the map comparator
will work just as well, with conceptually simpler source code.
This backout is transitional: we don't expect things to build/run properly
until we've cherry-picked certain other pertinent changes.
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boost::unordered_map<const char*, ...> does NOT, by default, "do the right
thing." Give it hash and equality functors that do.
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