Also run it across the whole tree to get everything using the One True Style.
We don't yet run this in an automated fashion as it's a little slow, but
there is a snippet to do so in makeall.sh.
This is in preparation for eventually using it in userspace.
LinearAddress.h has not been moved for the time being (as it seems to be
only used by a very small part of the code).
The scheduler expects m_select_timeout to act as a deadline. That is, it
should contain the time that a task should wake at -- but we were
directly copying the time from userspace, which meant that it always
returned virtually immediately.
At the same time, fix CEventLoop to not rely on the broken select behavior
by subtracting the current time from the time of the nearest timer.
This makes out-of-tree linking possible. And at the same time, add a
CMakeToolchain.txt file that can be used to build arbitrary cmake-using
applications on Serenity by pointing to the CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE when
running cmake:
-DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=~/code/serenity/Toolchain/CMakeToolchain.txt
It makes sense to keep this consistent between applications, and the
purpose of the string is not immediately obvious from an API perspective.
If we need to make it configurable later, that can come from a setter.
* Added killall command
* Fixed feedbacks of awesomekling
* Implemented pidof program and helper to parse arguments called ArgsParser.
* Fixed feedbacks in pidof implem.
Fixes#26
This way you can spam small write()s on a file without the kernel writing
to disk every single time. Flushes are included in the FS::sync() operation
and will get triggered regularly by syncd. :^)
I just discovered the hard way that clobbering FPU/MMX/SSE registers in the
kernel makes things very confusing for userspace (and other kernel threads.)
Let's banish all of those things from the kernel to keep things simple.
It's now possible to edit widget properties inline in the properties window.
We're currently relying on the basic GVariant conversion functions to do
all the "parsing" but that's not gonna be good enough.
You open the configuration for an app like so:
auto config = CConfigFile::get_for_app("MyApp");
This will then open ~/MyApp.ini and parse it for you.
Immediately start using it in Minesweeper to load the field size and mine
count from a config file.