Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This is just a config file with the default options that PixelPaint
recognizes and reads so far. Adding this in since the options are
not really documented anywhere so at least the user can now know what
options are available.
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These interfaces are broken for about 9 months, maybe longer than that.
At this point, this is just a dead code nobody tests or tries to use, so
let's remove it instead of keeping a stale code just for the sake of
keeping it and hoping someone will fix it.
To better justify this, I read that OpenBSD removed loadable kernel
modules in 5.7 release (2014), mainly for the same reason we do -
nobody used it so they had no good reason to maintain it.
Still, OpenBSD had LKMs being effectively working, which is not the
current state in our project for a long time.
An arguably better approach to minimize the Kernel image size is to
allow dropping drivers and features while compiling a new image.
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A quick grep revealed these stats (counting only the first occurrence
per line):
`thing`(1): 154
`thing(1)`: 9
thing(1): 4
This commit converts all occurrences to the `thing`(1) format.
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For now, just hardcode the mounting in SystemServer code.
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There are a few places in the system where this could be useful,
such as PixelPaint and the MandelBrot demo. It seems general enough
that it is probably useful to have it as a system-wide cursor rather
than loading it manually each time.
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This can be used immediately in PixelPaint (separate commit), but
I am adding this as a system-wide cursor since it may also be useful
for other applications that want to use it.
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Super+Wheeling window opacity was removed in 370d374.
Guilty only of being ahead of its time.
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The top arrow wasn't as sharp as the bottom arrow. Move the top arrow
down to make space for some sharpness. :^)
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TestCommonmark runs the CommonMark test suite
(https://spec.commonmark.org/0.30/spec.json) against LibMarkdown.
Currently 44/652 tests pass.
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The outline was already black in general, besides one dark blue pixel
on the right side of the picture.
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Some pixels weren't fully transparent in the top-right corner, which
was pretty visible on file selection in File Manager on default theme.
The files has been also compressed using the Zopfli algorithm, since
they would have been rewritten here anyway.
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This time with a consistent light source (top left) and a color scheme
closer to the SerenityOS default colors. :^)
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Make the bottom left corner of this icon rounded, to match all the other
directory icons in the system.
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I think this *should* be working as-is, but there's probably something
wrong with the this value of native functions. Either way, not relying
on the implicit this value will allow us to use strict mode here
eventually.
Fixes #9240.
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The new asctl (audio server control) utility expands on avol with a
completely new command line interface (documented in the man page) that
supports retrieving and setting all exposed audio server settings, like
volume and sample rate. This is currently the only user-facing way of
changing the sample rate.
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ConfigServer is an IPC service that provides access to application
configuration and settings. The idea is to replace all uses of
Core::ConfigFile with IPC requests to ConfigServer.
This first cut of the API is pretty similar to Core::ConfigFile.
The old:
auto config = Core::ConfigFile::open_for_app("App");
auto value = config->read_entry("Group", "Key");
The new:
auto value = Config::read_string("App", "Group", "Key");
ConfigServer uses the ~/.config directory as its backing store
and all the files remain human-editable. :^)
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These are:
- `initial`
- `inherit`
- `unset`
Cascade4 and 5 also define `revert` and `revert-layer`, but let's not
get ahead of ourselves. :^)
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The IRC Client application made some sense while our main communication
hub was an IRC channel. Now that we've moved on, IRC is just a random
protocol with no particular relevance to this project.
This also has the benefit of removing one major client of the single-
process Web::InProcessWebView class.
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This is an application analogous to WidgetGallery, in that it tests
various capabilities of LibGUI models. Right now it is pretty bare, but
as more work towards LibGUI models is done regarding persistent model
indices, more demos will be added.
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Now you can specify a CursorTheme key in /etc/WindowServer.ini. The
cursors are loaded from /res/cursor-themes/<name> directory. This
directory contains a Config.ini file with format similar to previous
Cursor section, except it uses relative paths.
This commit adds also Default theme, which uses cursors being
previously in /res/cursors.
The WidgetGallery is updated to match the new cursor path format.
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System Monitor can already be accessed quickly by clicking one of the
resource graph applets in the task bar, so this icon was redundant.
Assistant can be opened with the Super+Space hotkey, so we don't need a
dedicated icon for it.
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"SerenityOS @ GitHub" was a pointlessly long name for this.
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- More combinations of values
- Testing a font (Liberation Serif) which has multiple faces
- Add calc() tests for font-size and weight
- Check fallback when a font isn't available
While I was at it, reorganized the file so the CSS is inline - this
keeps it close to the relevant test case.
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This allows for typing [8] instead of [8, 8, 8, 8] to specify the same
margin on all edges, for example. The constructors follow CSS' style of
specifying margins. The added constructors are:
- Margins(int all): Sets the same margin on all edges.
- Margins(int vertical, int horizontal): Sets the first argument to top
and bottom margins, and the second argument to left and right margins.
- Margins(int top, int vertical, int bottom): Sets the first argument to
the top margin, the second argument to the left and right margins,
and the third argument to the bottom margin.
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[skip ci]
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With this change, a user can open .obj files from FileManager.
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We are not using this for anything and it's just been sitting there
gathering dust for well over a year, so let's stop carrying all this
complexity around for no good reason.
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This is a template which instantiates into what you'd write to start out
a basic Serenity GUI application. It contains a CMakeLists.txt file
which describes what each declaration does, a simple GUI application
which uses layouts, widgets and callbacks, and comes with a minimal set
of pledges which the user can add to as necessary.
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Also added a test page for the `overflow` properties. They apparently
don't work, but at least they do parse.
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Box 9 and Box 10 were in the wrong order somehow, so now they are not.
:^)
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This is not just moving the code from StyleResolver to Parser. The logic
has changed to allow for the `flex-basis` to come before or after the
`flex-grow/shrink` values, as well as handle the special one-value
cases.
Also added test cases to flex.html to check the parsing. It does parse
correctly, but elements with `flex-basis: auto` do not calculate their
width correctly.
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Modified text-decoration.html to better test that the values can be in
any order, and that it adopts the color from the `color` property if no
decoration color is specified. Right now, it always does because we do
not support a different decoration color. Later, we need to support the
`currentcolor` special CSS value for this purpose.
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Yes, the name is silly, but it's a StyleValue for list-style, so...
yeah. :^)
Since `list-style-type` and `list-style-image` can both have `none` as a
value, and can appear in any order, we have to handle it separately, and
then assign either or both of those to `none` depending on how many
`none`s there are, and whether those sub-properties already have values.
Added some extra test cases to lists.html to cover list-style-image and
list-style-position parts of the list-style shorthand, and the `none`
values.
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This one represents one secton of a `background` property, since it can
have multiple background values separated by commas. Eventually, we will
represent that as a List of BackgroundStyleValues.
Also modified some background-foo properties in StyleResolver so that
the is_background_x() functions could be removed.
I realized that our handling of var() in shorthand properties is wrong,
so have been removing the is_builtin_or_dynamic() calls from the parsing
code for shorthands. This broke our var() test page, so I have replaced
the use of 'background' with 'background-color' there.
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After working with the code for a while, it makes more sense to put all
the parsing in Parser, instead of some of it living in StyleResolver.
That means our current ValueListStyleValue needs to be replaced with
specific StyleValue types for the properties that are shorthands or
otherwise combine several values together.
Here we implement FontStyleProperty, which represents a `font` CSS
property.
Also adjusted the fonts.html test page so that font-weights are featured
in test cases without things we do not yet support.
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