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2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: LLChannelManager depends on LLUI. Tell LLSingleton.Nat Goodspeed
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476, SL-12197: Don't throw Stopping from main coroutine.Nat Goodspeed
The new LLCoros::Stop exception is intended to terminate long-lived coroutines -- not interrupt mainstream shutdown processing. Only throw it on an explicitly-launched coroutine. Make LLCoros::getName() (used by the above test) static. As with other LLCoros methods, it might be called after the LLCoros LLSingleton instance has been deleted. Requiring the caller to call instance() implies a possible need to also call wasDeleted(). Encapsulate that nuance into a static method instead.
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Have to package libhunspell dylib now, not .a lib.Nat Goodspeed
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Remove diagnostics around 'SetFile -a V' commands.Nat Goodspeed
Earlier versions of macOS manifested frustrating problems in finishing the built package. Those build steps seem to have been behaving better for a few years now. Eliminate (what we fervently hope has become) a bit of ancient cruft.
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Make viewer_manifest.py report its own command line.Nat Goodspeed
That way, if there's a problem, a developer can rerun the same command.
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Annotate Mani's plea from 2009 with a suggested solution.Nat Goodspeed
However, this is not the right moment to perform that refactoring.
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476, SL-12205: Update to glod built with VS 2017 runtime libs.Nat Goodspeed
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Throw some more Microsoft runtime DLLs at the viewer.Nat Goodspeed
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Correct runtime DLL names for VS 2017.Nat Goodspeed
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Update to VS 2017 versions of runtime DLLs.Nat Goodspeed
Also forget obsolete references to VS 2010 runtime DLLs.
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Update llviewerjoystick.cpp for updated libndofdev API.Nat Goodspeed
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Defend against late ~LLWatchdogTimeout() calls.Nat Goodspeed
LLAppViewer's heap LLWatchdogTimeout might be destroyed very late -- as late as in LLAppViewer's destructor. By that time, LLAppViewer::cleanup() has already called LLSingletonBase::deleteAll(), destroying the LLWatchdog LLSingleton instance. But LLWatchdogTimeout isa LLWatchdogEntry, and ~LLWatchdogEntry() calls stop(), and stop() tries to remove that instance from LLWatchdog, thus inadvertently resurrecting the deleted LLWatchdog. Which is pointless because the resurrected LLWatchdog has never heard of the LLWatchdogTimeout instance trying to remove itself. Defend LLWatchdogEntry::stop() against the case in which LLWatchdog has already been deleted.
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Add diagnostic output to llviewerjoystick.cpp.Nat Goodspeed
Add ndof_dump_list() call, to enumerate available devices, when ndof_init_first() returns failure. Add "joystick" tags to existing LL_INFOS() (etc.) calls in llviewerjoystick.cpp to make it easier to enable and disable such log messages. Add a specialized operator<<() function to log the contents of an NDOF_Device struct. Add a couple LL_DEBUGS() calls for more visibility into library operations.
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Keep coroutine-local data on toplevel()'s stack frame.Nat Goodspeed
Instead of heap-allocating a CoroData instance per coroutine, storing the pointer in a ptr_map and deleting it from the ptr_map once the fiber_specific_ptr for that coroutine is cleaned up -- just declare a stack instance on the top-level stack frame, the simplest C++ lifespan management. Derive CoroData from LLInstanceTracker to detect potential name collisions and to enumerate instances. Continue registering each coroutine's CoroData instance in our fiber_specific_ptr, but use a no-op deleter function. Make ~LLCoros() directly pump the fiber scheduler a few times, instead of having a special "LLApp" listener.
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Mention LLApp::stepFrame() in LLAppViewer::idle()Nat Goodspeed
which performs "by hand" the same sequence of calls found in stepFrame(). Why not simply call stepFrame()? Hysterical reasons?
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Introduce LLEventMailDrop::discard() (instead of flush()).Nat Goodspeed
Overriding virtual LLEventPump::flush() for the semantic of discarding LLEventMailDrop's queued events turns out not to be such a great idea, because LLEventPumps::flush(), which calls every registered LLEventPump's flush() method, is called every mainloop tick. The first time we hit a use case in which we expected LLEventMailDrop to hold queued events across a mainloop tick, we were baffled that they were never delivered. Moving that logic to a separate method specific to LLEventMailDrop resolves that problem. Naming it discard() clarifies its intended functionality.
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Directly reference LLVivoxVoiceClient::mVivoxPump.Nat Goodspeed
The LLEventMailDrop used to communicate with the Vivox coroutine is a member of LLVivoxVoiceClient. We don't need to keep looking it up by its string name in LLEventPumps.
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Fix Windows line endingsNat Goodspeed
2020-03-25[DRTVWR-476] - fix compiler errors 32 bit windows buildAnchor
2020-03-25[DRTVWR-476] - fix compiler errorAnchor
2020-03-25Fix stall during login by yielding when needed from the LLXXMLRPCListener's ↵Brad Kittenbrink
Poller.
2020-03-25[DRTVWR-476] - disable dbghelp.h warningsAnchor
2020-03-25[DRTVWR-476] - fix linkingAnchor
2020-03-25[DRTVWR-476] - test adding at beginiing of listAnchor
2020-03-25[DRTVWR-476] - legacy_stdio_definitions shld be the last library linkedAnchor
2020-03-25SL-793: Use Boost.Fiber instead of the "dcoroutine" library.Nat Goodspeed
Longtime fans will remember that the "dcoroutine" library is a Google Summer of Code project by Giovanni P. Deretta. He originally called it "Boost.Coroutine," and we originally added it to our 3p-boost autobuild package as such. But when the official Boost.Coroutine library came along (with a very different API), and we still needed the API of the GSoC project, we renamed the unofficial one "dcoroutine" to allow coexistence. The "dcoroutine" library had an internal low-level API more or less analogous to Boost.Context. We later introduced an implementation of that internal API based on Boost.Context, a step towards eliminating the GSoC code in favor of official, supported Boost code. However, recent versions of Boost.Context no longer support the API on which we built the shim for "dcoroutine." We started down the path of reimplementing that shim using the current Boost.Context API -- then realized that it's time to bite the bullet and replace the "dcoroutine" API with the Boost.Fiber API, which we've been itching to do for literally years now. Naturally, most of the heavy lifting is in llcoros.{h,cpp} and lleventcoro.{h,cpp} -- which is good: the LLCoros layer abstracts away most of the differences between "dcoroutine" and Boost.Fiber. The one feature Boost.Fiber does not provide is the ability to forcibly terminate some other fiber. Accordingly, disable LLCoros::kill() and LLCoprocedureManager::shutdown(). The only known shutdown() call was in LLCoprocedurePool's destructor. We also took the opportunity to remove postAndSuspend2() and its associated machinery: FutureListener2, LLErrorEvent, errorException(), errorLog(), LLCoroEventPumps. All that dual-LLEventPump stuff was introduced at a time when the Responder pattern was king, and we assumed we'd want to listen on one LLEventPump with the success handler and on another with the error handler. We have never actually used that in practice. Remove associated tests, of course. There is one other semantic difference that necessitates patching a number of tests: with "dcoroutine," fulfilling a future IMMEDIATELY resumes the waiting coroutine. With Boost.Fiber, fulfilling a future merely marks the fiber as ready to resume next time the scheduler gets around to it. To observe the test side effects, we've inserted a number of llcoro::suspend() calls -- also in the main loop. For a long time we retained a single unit test exercising the raw "dcoroutine" API. Remove that. Eliminate llcoro_get_id.{h,cpp}, which provided llcoro::get_id(), which was a hack to emulate fiber-local variables. Since Boost.Fiber has an actual API for that, remove the hack. In fact, use (new alias) LLCoros::local_ptr for LLSingleton's dependency tracking in place of llcoro::get_id(). In CMake land, replace BOOST_COROUTINE_LIBRARY with BOOST_FIBER_LIBRARY. We don't actually use the Boost.Coroutine for anything (though there exist plausible use cases).
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Eliminate std::mem_fun1() special case for Windows.Nat Goodspeed
We used to have to use #if LL_WINDOWS logic to pass std::mem_fun1() to llbind2nd() instead of std::mem_fun() elsewhere. VS 2017 no longer supports std::mem_fun1(), which means we can eliminate the special case for Windows.
2020-03-25DRTVWR-476: Fix _open_osfhandle() param from long to intptr_t.Nat Goodspeed
The Microsoft _open_osfhandle() opens a HANDLE to produce a C-style int file descriptor suitable for passing to _fdopen(). We used to cast the HANDLEs returned by GetStdHandle() to long to pass to _open_osfhandle(). Since HANDLE is an alias for a pointer, this no longer works. Fortunately _open_osfhandle() now accepts intptr_t, so we can change the relevant GetStdHandle() calls. (But why not simply accept HANDLE in the first place?)
2020-03-25SL-11215: Add release notes URLs to update-related notifications.Nat Goodspeed
Add code to login-fail handler to provide release notes URL from SLVersionChecker handshake event.
2020-03-25SL-11216: Try to pacify VS 2013.Nat Goodspeed
2020-03-25SL-11216: To display release notes, listen on "relnotes" LLEventPump.Nat Goodspeed
Now, when the viewer decides it's appropriate to display release notes on the login screen, wait for SLVersionChecker to post the release-notes URL before opening the web floater.
2020-03-25SL-11216: getViewerInfo() calls LLVersionInfo::getReleaseNotes().Nat Goodspeed
Make LLAppViewer retrieve release notes from LLVersionInfo, rather than synthesizing the release-notes URL itself based on the viewer version string.
2020-03-25SL-11216: Add a "getStateTable" op to "LLStartUp" listener.Nat Goodspeed
getStateTable returns a list of the EStartupState symbolic names, implicitly mapping each to its index (its enum numeric value).
2020-03-25SL-11216: Introduce LLVersionInfo::getReleaseNotes() method.Nat Goodspeed
The default string returned by getReleaseNotes() is empty. It must be set by posting the relevant release-notes URL string to a new LLEventMailDrop instance named "relnotes". Add unique_ptr<LLEventMailDrop> and unique_ptr<LLStoreListener<std::string>> to LLVersionInfo -- using unique_ptr to leave those classes opaque to header-file consumers. Introduce an out-of-line destructor to handle the unique_ptr<opaque> idiom. Initialize the LLEventMailDrop with the desired name; initialize the LLStoreListener with that LLEventMailDrop and the data member returned by getReleaseNotes().
2020-03-25SL-11216: Convert LLVersionInfo to an LLSingleton.Nat Goodspeed
This changeset is meant to exemplify how to convert a "namespace" class whose methods are static -- and whose data are module-static -- to an LLSingleton. LLVersionInfo has no initClass() or cleanupClass() methods, but the general idea is the same. * Derive the class from LLSingleton<T>: class LLSomeSingleton: public LLSingleton<LLSomeSingleton> { ... }; * Add LLSINGLETON(LLSomeSingleton); in the private section of the class. This usage implies a separate LLSomeSingleton::LLSomeSingleton() definition, as described in indra/llcommon/llsingleton.h. * Move module-scope data in the .cpp file to non-static class members. Change any sVariableName to mVariableName to avoid being outright misleading. * Make static class methods non-static. Remove '//static' comments from method definitions as needed. * For LLVersionInfo specifically, the 'const std::string&' return type was replaced with 'std::string'. Returning a reference to a static or a member, const or otherwise, is an anti-pattern: the interface constrains the implementation, prohibiting possibly later returning a temporary (an expression). * For LLVersionInfo specifically, 'const S32' return type was replaced with simple 'S32'. 'const' is just noise in that usage. * Simple member initialization (e.g. the original initializer expressions for static variables) can be done with member{ value } initializers (no examples here though). * Delete initClass() method. * LLSingleton's forté is of course lazy initialization. It might work to simply delete any calls to initClass(). But if there are side effects that must happen at that moment, replace LLSomeSingleton::initClass() with (void)LLSomeSingleton::instance(); * Most initClass() initialization can be done in the constructor, as would normally be the case. * Initialization that might cause a circular LLSingleton reference should be moved to initSingleton(). Override 'void initSingleton();' should be private. * For LLVersionInfo specifically, certain initialization that used to be lazily performed was made unconditional, due to its low cost. * For LLVersionInfo specifically, certain initialization involved calling methods that have become non-static. This was moved to initSingleton() because, in a constructor body, 'this' does not yet point to the enclosing class. * Delete cleanupClass() method. * There is already a generic LLSingletonBase::deleteAll() call in LLAppViewer::cleanup(). It might work to let this new LLSingleton be cleaned up with all the rest. But if there are side effects that must happen at that moment, replace LLSomeSingleton::cleanupClass() with LLSomeSingleton::deleteSingleton(). That said, much of the benefit of converting to LLSingleton is deleteAll()'s guarantee that cross-LLSingleton dependencies will be properly honored: we're trying to migrate the code base away from the present fragile manual cleanup sequence. * Most cleanupClass() cleanup can be done in the destructor, as would normally be the case. * Cleanup that might throw an exception should be moved to cleanupSingleton(). Override 'void cleanupSingleton();' should be private. * Within LLSomeSingleton methods, remove any existing LLSomeSingleton::methodName() qualification: simple methodName() is better. * In the rest of the code base, convert most LLSomeSingleton::methodName() references to LLSomeSingleton::instance().methodName(). (Prefer instance() to getInstance() because a reference does not admit the possibility of NULL.) * Of course, LLSomeSingleton::ENUM_VALUE can remain unchanged. In general, for many successive references to an LLSingleton instance, it can be useful to capture the instance() as in: auto& versionInfo{LLVersionInfo::instance()}; // ... versionInfo.getVersion() ... We did not do that here only to simplify the code review. The STRINGIZE(expression) macro encapsulates: std::ostringstream out; out << expression; return out.str(); We used that in a couple places. For LLVersionInfo specifically, lllogininstance_test.cpp used to dummy out a couple specific static methods. It's harder to dummy out LLSingleton::instance() references, so we add the real class to that test.
2020-03-25SL-11216: Remove LLSingletonBase::cleanupAll().Nat Goodspeed
Remove call from LLAppViewer::cleanup(). Instead, make each LLSingleton<T>::deleteSingleton() call cleanupSingleton() just before destroying the instance. Since deleteSingleton() is not a destructor, it's fine to call cleanupSingleton() from there; and since deleteAll() calls deleteSingleton() on every remaining instance, the former cleanupAll() functionality has been subsumed into deleteAll(). Since cleanupSingleton() is now called at exactly one point in the instance's lifetime, we no longer need a bool indicating whether it has been called. The previous protocol of calling cleanupAll() before deleteAll() implemented a two-phase cleanup strategy for the application. That is no longer needed. Moreover, the cleanupAll() / deleteAll() sequence created a time window during which individual LLSingleton<T> instances weren't usable (to the extent that their cleanupSingleton() methods released essential resources) but still existed -- so a getInstance() call would return the crippled instance rather than recreating it. Remove cleanupAll() calls from tests; adjust to new order of expected side effects: instead of A::cleanupSingleton(), B::cleanupSingleton(), ~A(), ~B(), now we get A::cleanupSingleton(), ~A(), B::cleanupSingleton(), ~B().
2020-03-25DRTVWR-494: Defend LLInstanceTracker against multi-thread usage.Nat Goodspeed
The previous implementation went to some effort to crash if anyone attempted to create or destroy an LLInstanceTracker subclass instance during traversal. That restriction is manageable within a single thread, but becomes unworkable if it's possible that a given subclass might be used on more than one thread. Remove LLInstanceTracker::instance_iter, beginInstances(), endInstances(), also key_iter, beginKeys() and endKeys(). Instead, introduce key_snapshot() and instance_snapshot(), the only means of iterating over LLInstanceTracker instances. (These are intended to resemble functions, but in fact the current implementation simply presents the classes.) Iterating over a captured snapshot defends against container modifications during traversal. The term 'snapshot' reminds the coder that a new instance created during traversal will not be considered. To defend against instance deletion during traversal, a snapshot stores std::weak_ptrs which it lazily dereferences, skipping on the fly any that have expired. Dereferencing instance_snapshot::iterator gets you a reference rather than a pointer. Because some use cases want to delete all existing instances, add an instance_snapshot::deleteAll() method that extracts the pointer. Those cases used to require explicitly copying instance pointers into a separate container; instance_snapshot() now takes care of that. It remains the caller's responsibility to ensure that all instances of that LLInstanceTracker subclass were allocated on the heap. Replace unkeyed static LLInstanceTracker::getInstance(T*) -- which returned nullptr if that instance had been destroyed -- with new getWeak() method returning std::weak_ptr<T>. Caller must detect expiration of that weak_ptr. Adjust tests accordingly. Use of std::weak_ptr to detect expired instances requires engaging std::shared_ptr in the constructor. We now store shared_ptrs in the static containers (std::map for keyed, std::set for unkeyed). Make LLInstanceTrackerBase a template parameterized on the type of the static data it manages. For that reason, hoist static data class declarations out of the class definitions to an LLInstanceTrackerStuff namespace. Remove the static atomic sIterationNestDepth and its methods incrementDepth(), decrementDepth() and getDepth(), since they were used only to forbid creation and destruction during traversal. Add a std::mutex to static data. Introduce an internal LockStatic class that locks the mutex while providing a pointer to static data, making that the only way to access the static data. The LLINSTANCETRACKER_DTOR_NOEXCEPT macro goes away because we no longer expect ~LLInstanceTracker() to throw an exception in test programs. That affects LLTrace::StatBase as well as LLInstanceTracker itself. Adapt consumers to the new LLInstanceTracker API.
2020-03-18Increment viewer version to 6.3.9Nat Goodspeed
following promotion of DRTVWR-481
2020-03-10SL-12817 New text for snapshot uploadAndrey Kleshchev
2020-02-25SL-12757 - typo in menu_viewer.xmlBrad Payne (Vir Linden)
2020-02-21SL-10498 - made benefits debug output a bit less verboseBrad Payne (Vir Linden)
2020-02-21mergeBrad Payne (Vir Linden)
2020-02-20Increment viewer version to 6.3.8Nat Goodspeed
following promotion of DRTVWR-499
2020-02-05Revert SL-4354Andrey Kleshchev
2020-02-04SL-4354 Used wrong conditionAndrey Kleshchev
2020-01-30SL-4354 Mesh avatars look broken while loading.andreykproductengine
2020-01-29SL-12587 - debug logging option to see list of requested capsBrad Payne (Vir Linden)
2020-01-29SL-4354 Mesh avatars look broken while loading.andreykproductengine
2020-01-29potential crashfixandreykproductengine
2020-01-29SL-12590 SL-12608 Fixed wrong statesandreykproductengine