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Previously, this was disabled because GCC flagged seemingly correct and
well-defined code. This was however not the case because GCC implicitly
marked some pointers non-null, even if we wanted to handle them
ourselves, and deleted null checks on them. By re-introducing this
warning, we will know if the compiler tries to discard our code again.
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This is enabled by default for GCC (>=C++14) but apparently not for
Clang, which has been causing CLion to get confused about kernel code.
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The host's version of c++filt might not work on some operating systems,
e.g. macOS.
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This is primarily to allow using LibUnicode within LibJS and its REPL.
Note: this seems to be the first time that a Lagom dependency requires
generated source files. For this to work, some of Lagom's CMakeLists.txt
commands needed to be re-organized to include the CMake files that fetch
and parse UnicodeData.txt. The paths required to invoke the generator
also differ depending on what is currently building (SerenityOS vs.
Lagom as part of the Serenity build vs. a standalone Lagom build).
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The Unicode standard publishes the Unicode Character Database (UCD) with
information about every code point, such as each code point's upper case
mapping. LibUnicode exists to download and parse UCD files at build time
and to provide accessors to that data.
As a start, LibUnicode includes upper- and lower-case code point
converters.
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GCC and Clang allow us to inject a call to a function named
__sanitizer_cov_trace_pc on every edge. This function has to be defined
by us. By noting down the caller in that function we can trace the code
we have encountered during execution. Such information is used by
coverage guided fuzzers like AFL and LibFuzzer to determine if a new
input resulted in a new code path. This makes fuzzing much more
effective.
Additionally this adds a basic KCOV implementation. KCOV is an API that
allows user space to request the kernel to start collecting coverage
information for a given user space thread. Furthermore KCOV then exposes
the collected program counters to user space via a BlockDevice which can
be mmaped from user space.
This work is required to add effective support for fuzzing SerenityOS to
the Syzkaller syscall fuzzer. :^) :^)
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Use objcopy from the toolchain so that the changes introduced in
7236584 will succeed on macOS.
Fixes #8768.
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The GCC documentation says that since it's officially a part of C++20,
this flag does nothing. Clang, however, does complain that it does not
recognize it, so it's better to just remove it.
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This adds a utility program which is essentially a command generator for
CMake. It reads the 'components.ini' file generated by CMake in the
build directory, prompts the user to select a build type and optionally
customize it, generates and runs a CMake command as well as 'ninja
clean' and 'rm -rf Root', which are needed to properly remove system
components.
The program uses whiptail(1) for user interaction.
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This is not technically a toolchain change, but it does require
rebuilding the toolchain for x86_64 (and just that).
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They're not yet properly supported.
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Neither the kernel nor LibELF support loading libraries with larger
PT_LOAD alignment. The default on x86 is 4096 while it's 2MiB on x86_64.
This changes the alignment to 4096 on all platforms.
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Simple clone of LibPCIDB to support USB IDs instead of PCI
ones. The format is basically identical, besides a few changes
of the double tab fields.
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Components are a group of build targets that can be built and installed
separately. Whether a component should be built can be configured with
CMake arguments: -DBUILD_<NAME>=ON|OFF, where <NAME> is the name of the
component (in all caps).
Components can be marked as REQUIRED if they're necessary for a
minimally functional base system or they can be marked as RECOMMENDED
if they're not strictly necessary but are useful for most users.
A component can have an optional description which isn't used by the
build system but may be useful for a configuration UI.
Components specify the TARGETS which should be built when the component
is enabled. They can also specify other components which they depend on
(with DEPENDS).
This also adds the BUILD_EVERYTHING CMake variable which lets the user
build all optional components. For now this defaults to ON to make the
transition to the components-based build system easier.
The list of components is exported as an INI file in the build directory
(e.g. Build/i686/components.ini).
Fixes #8048.
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It's prone to finding "technically uninitialized but can never happen"
cases, particularly in Optional<T> and Variant<Ts...>.
The general case seems to be that it cannot infer the dependency
between Variant's index (or Optional's boolean state) and a particular
alternative (or Optional's buffer) being untouched.
So it can flag cases like this:
```c++
if (index == StaticIndexForF)
new (new_buffer) F(move(*bit_cast<F*>(old_buffer)));
```
The code in that branch can _technically_ make a partially initialized
`F`, but that path can never be taken since the buffer holding an
object of type `F` and the condition being true are correlated, and so
will never be taken _unless_ the buffer holds an object of type `F`.
This commit also removed the various 'diagnostic ignored' pragmas used
to work around this warning, as they no longer do anything.
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Since I introduced this functionality there has been a steady stream of
people building with `ALL_THE_DEBUG_MACROS` and trying to boot the
system, and immediately hitting this assert. I have no idea why people
try to build with all the debugging enabled, but I'm tired of seeing the
bug reports about asserts we know are going to happen at this point.
So I'm hiding this value under the new ENABLE_ALL_DEBUG_FACILITIES flag
instead. This is only set by CI, and hopefully no-one will try to build
with this thing (It's documented as not recommended).
Fixes: #7527
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There are lots of people who have issues building serenity because
they don't read the build directions closely enough and have an
unsupported GCC version as their host compiler. Instead of repeatedly
having to answer these kinds of questions, lets just error out upfront.
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Take Kernel/UBSanitizer.cpp and make a copy in LibSanitizer.
We can use LibSanitizer to hold other sanitizers as people implement
them :^).
To enable UBSAN for LibC, DynamicLoader, and other low level system
libraries, LibUBSanitizer is built as a serenity_libc, and has a static
version for LibCStatic to use. The approach is the same as that taken in
Note that this means now UBSAN is enabled for code generators, Lagom,
Kernel, and Userspace with -DENABLE_UNDEFINED_SANTIZER=ON. In userspace
however, UBSAN is not deadly (yet).
Co-authored-by: ForLoveOfCats <ForLoveOfCats@vivaldi.net>
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Since LibWasm is still not capable of passing all of the spec tests,
ignore failing tests, only fail the build if some segfault/abort/etc
occurs.
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This option replaces the use of ENABLE_ALL_THE_DEBUG_MACROS in CI runs,
and enables all debug options that might be broken by developers
unintentionally that are only used in specific debugging situations.
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When debugging kernel code, it's necessary to set extra flags. Normal
advice is to set -ggdb3. Sometimes that still doesn't provide enough
debugging information for complex functions that still get optimized.
Compiling with -Og gives the best optimizations for debugging, but can
sometimes be broken by changes that are innocuous when the compiler gets
more of a chance to look at them. The new CMake option enables both
compile options for kernel code.
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This also optionally generates a test suite from the WebAssembly
testsuite, which can be enabled via passing `INCLUDE_WASM_SPEC_TESTS`
to cmake, which will generate test-wasm-compatible tests and the
required fixtures.
The generated directories are excluded from git since there's no point
in committing them.
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This only tests "can it be parsed", but the goal of this commit is to
provide a test framework that can be built upon :)
The conformance tests are downloaded, compiled* and installed only if
the INCLUDE_WASM_SPEC_TESTS cmake option is enabled.
(*) Since we do not yet have a wast parser, the compilation is delegated
to an external tool from binaryen, `wasm-as`, which is required for the
test suite download/install to succeed.
This *does* run the tests in CI, but it currently does not include the
spec conformance tests.
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This had very bad interactions with ccache, often leading to rebuilds
with 100% cache misses, etc. Ali says it wasn't that big of a speedup
in the end anyway, so let's not bother with it.
We can always bring it back in the future if it seems like a good idea.
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This program turns a description of a state machine that takes its input
byte-by-byte into C++ code. The state machine is described in a custom
format as specified below:
```
// Comments are started by two slashes, and cause the rest of the line
// to be ignored
@name ExampleStateMachine // sets the name of the generated class
@namespace Test // sets the namespace (optional)
@begin Begin // sets the state the parser will start in
// The rest of the file contains one or more states and an optional
// @anywhere directive. Each of these is a curly bracket delimited set
// of state transitions. State transitions contain a selector, the
// literal "=>" and a (new_state, action) tuple. Examples:
// 0x0a => (Begin, PrintLine)
// [0x00..0x1f] => (_, Warn) // '_' means no change
// [0x41..0x5a] => (BeginWord, _) // '_' means no action
// Rules common to all states. These take precedence over rules in the
// specific states.
@anywhere {
0x0a => (Begin, PrintLine)
[0x00..0x1f] => (_, Warn)
}
Begin {
[0x41..0x5a] => (Word, _)
[0x61..0x7a] => (Word, _)
// For missing values, the transition (_, _) is implied
}
Word {
// The entry action is run when we transition to this state from a
// *different* state. @anywhere can't have this
@entry IncreaseWordCount
0x09 => (Begin, _)
0x20 => (Begin, _)
// The exit action is run before we transition to any *other* state
// from here. @anywhere can't have this
@exit EndOfWord
}
```
The generated code consists of a single class which takes a
`Function<Action, u8>` as a parameter in its constructor. This gets
called whenever an action is to be done. This is because some input
might not produce an action, but others might produce up to 3 (exit,
state transition, entry). The actions allow us to build a more
advanced parser over the simple state machine.
The sole public method, `void advance(u8)`, handles the input
byte-by-byte, managing the state changes and requesting the appropriate
Action from the handler.
Internally, the state transitions are resolved via a lookup table. This
is a bit wasteful for more complex state machines, therefore the
generator is designed to be easily extendable with a switch-based
resolver; only the private `lookup_state_transition` method needs to be
re-implemented.
My goal for this tool is to use it for implementing a standard-compliant
ANSI escape sequence parser for LibVT, as described on
<https://vt100.net/emu/dec_ansi_parser>
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Make messages which should be fatal, actually fail the build.
- FATAL is not a valid mode keyword. The full list is available in the
docs: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/v3.19/command/message.html
- SEND_ERROR doesn't immediately stop processing, FATAL_ERROR does.
We should immediately stop if the Toolchain is not present.
- The app icon size validation was just a WARNING that is easy to
overlook. We should promote it to a FATAL_ERROR so that people will
not overlook the issue when adding a new application. We can only make
the small icon message FATAL_ERROR, as there is currently one
violation of the medium app icon validation.
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With the goal of centralizing all tests in the system, this is a
first step to establish a Tests sub-tree. It will contain all of
the unit tests and test harnesses for the various components in the
system.
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According to POSIX.1 these should be in <crypt.h>.
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When building libraries on macOS they'd be missing the SONAME
attribute which causes the linker to embed relative paths into
other libraries and executables:
Dynamic section at offset 0x52794 contains 28 entries:
Type Name/Value
(NEEDED) Shared library: [libgcc_s.so]
(NEEDED) Shared library: [Userland/Libraries/LibCrypt/libcrypt.so]
(NEEDED) Shared library: [Userland/Libraries/LibCrypto/libcrypto.so]
(NEEDED) Shared library: [Userland/Libraries/LibC/libc.so]
(NEEDED) Shared library: [libsystem.so]
(NEEDED) Shared library: [libm.so]
(NEEDED) Shared library: [libc.so]
The dynamic linker then fails to load those libraries which makes
the system unbootable.
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Make this stuff a bit easier to maintain by using the
root level variables to build up the Toolchain paths.
Also leave a note for future editors of BuildIt.sh to
give them warning about the other changes they'll need
to make.
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While this has a rather significant impact for me, it appears to have
very minimal build time improvements (or in some cases, regressions).
Also appears to cause some issues when building on macOS.
So disable it by default, but leave the option so people that get
something out of it (seems to mostly be a case of "is reading the
headers fast enough") can turn it on for their builds.
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Until we get the goodness that C++ modules are supposed to be, let's try
to shave off some parse time using precompiled headers.
This commit only adds some very common AK headers, only to binaries,
libraries and the kernel (tests are not covered due to incompatibility
with AK/TestSuite.h).
This option is on by default, but can be disabled by passing
`-DPRECOMPILE_COMMON_HEADERS=OFF` to cmake, which will disable all
header precompilations.
This makes the build about 30 seconds faster on my machine (about 7%).
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Problem:
- Newer versions of clang (ToT) have a similar `-Wliteral-suffix`
warning as GCC. A previous commit enabled it for all compilers. This
needs to be silenced for the entire build, but it currently only is
silenced for some directories.
Solution:
- Move the `-Wno-literal-suffix` option up in the CMakeLists.txt so
that it gets applied everywhere.
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Problem:
- There are redundant options being set for some directories.
- Clang ToT fails to compile the project.
Solution:
- Remove redundancies.
- Fix clang error list.
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This warning informs of float-to-double conversions. The best solution
seems to be to do math *either* in 32-bit *or* in 64-bit, and only to
cross over when absolutely necessary.
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This flag warns on classes which have `virtual` functions but do not
have a `virtual` destructor.
This patch adds both the flag and missing destructors. The access level
of the destructors was determined by a two rules of thumb:
1. A destructor should have a similar or lower access level to that of a
constructor.
2. Having a `private` destructor implicitly deletes the default
constructor, which is probably undesirable for "interface" types
(classes with only virtual functions and no data).
In short, most of the added destructors are `protected`, unless the
compiler complained about access.
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The following warnings do not occur anywhere in the codebase and so
enabling them is effectivly free:
* `-Wcast-align`
* `-Wduplicated-cond`
* `-Wformat=2`
* `-Wlogical-op`
* `-Wmisleading-indentation`
* `-Wunused`
These are taken as a strict subset of the list in #5487.
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install-ports copys the necessary files from Ports/ to /usr/Ports. Also
refactor the compiler and destiation variables from .port_include.sh
into .hosted_defs.sh. .hosted_defs.sh does not exists when ports are
built in serenity
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This regressed in #6000 and started complaining about bad literal
suffixes, so here's a quick and dirty partial revert to make things
build again.
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Prior to this patch there was some long line of unreadable compiler
options. Now the long lines are deduplicated and there is only one
option per line to ease reading/maintenance.
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