Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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Ostensibly there is also a new way to enable VAAPI, need to look into that.
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EvalState::allocBindings had little to do with Bindings, other than
returning them, and didn't belong in that class.
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This function does nothing anymore since the attributes are always
in-order.
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The new attribute set API uses the iterators of the btree_map
directly. This requires changes in various files because the internals
of libexpr are very entangled.
This code runs and compiles, but there is a bug causing empty
attribute sets to be assigned incorrectly.
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Instead of using a custom Args* iterator, use the one belonging to the
map type directly.
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Instead of doing some sort of inline merge-sort of the two attribute
sets, use the attribute sets merge function.
This commit alone does not build and is not supposed to.
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This is the first step towards replacing the implementation of
attribute sets with an absl::btree_map.
Currently many access are done using array offsets and pointer
arithmetic, so this change is currently causing Nix to fail in various
ways.
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Replaces most uses of `string` with `std::string`.
This came up because I removed the "types.hh" import from
"symbol-table.hh", which percolated through a bunch of files where
`string` was suddenly no longer defined ... *sigh*
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The functions in SymbolTable have been renamed to match the Google
Style guide, and some debug-only functions have been removed.
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This replaces the previous use of std::unordered_set with
absl::node_hash_set.
This type was chosen because the current implementation requires
pointer stability.
This does not yet touch the 'Attr' struct.
As a bonus, the implementation of the SymbolTable struct is now
consolidated into a single header/implementation file pair.
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Meson is unable to use CMake in Nix to determine the internal
structure of the Abseil libraries.
This commit adds an explicit list of most of the Abseil targets that
are relevant (so far) and bundles them into a list that is linked
together.
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cmake automatically runs a configure hook which breaks the build,
since this isn't actually a cmake project. This hook is now disabled.
Additionally Abseil's sources are linked to an absolute derivation
path when the build launches, as opposed to the relative path used for
development builds.
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This applies the performance fixes listed here:
https://clang.llvm.org/extra/clang-tidy/checks/list.html
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This applies the readability fixes listed here:
https://clang.llvm.org/extra/clang-tidy/checks/list.html
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This applies the modernization fixes listed here:
https://clang.llvm.org/extra/clang-tidy/checks/list.html
The 'modernize-use-trailing-return-type' fix was excluded due to my
personal preference (more specifically, I think the 'auto' keyword is
misleading in that position).
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These make it possible to link to Abseil strings.
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This makes it possible to link Abseil into shared libraries, e.g. the
various Nix libraries.
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Yep.
This is accomplished by symlinking the sources into the location
expected by Meson for subprojects.
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'768eb2ca2857342673fcd462792ce04b8bac3fa3'
git-subtree-dir: third_party/abseil_cpp
git-subtree-mainline: ffb2ae54beb5796cd408fbe15d2d2da09ff37adf
git-subtree-split: 768eb2ca2857342673fcd462792ce04b8bac3fa3
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None of these are worthy of a specific commit, or even have a real
reason behind them, but I didn't want to lose them.
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Implicit constructors can be confusing, especially in a codebase that
is already as unintentionally obfuscated as this one.
https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Explicit_Constructors
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This last change set was generated by a full clang-tidy run (including
compilation):
clang-tidy -p ~/projects/nix-build/ \
-checks=-*,readability-braces-around-statements -fix src/*/*.cc
Actually running clang-tidy requires some massaging to make it play
nice with Nix + meson, I'll be adding a wrapper or something for that soon.
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This statement got included in a loop when it shouldn't have been. At
least it led to some funny derivation files!
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These were not caught by the previous clang-tidy invocation, but were
instead sorted out using amber[0] as such:
ambr --regex 'for (\(.+\))\s([a-z].*;)' 'for $1 { $2 }'
[0]: https://github.com/dalance/amber
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These were not caught by the previous clang-tidy invocation, but were
instead sorted out using amber[0] as such:
ambr --regex 'if (\(.+\))\s([a-z].*;)' 'if $1 { $2 }'
[0]: https://github.com/dalance/amber
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Previously these structs were declared anonymously inside of the -
anonymous - union. This is not actually supported by the C++ standard,
but is merely a compiler-specific extension.
Unfortunately untangling this required a forward-declaration of the
Value type.
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Fixes mistakes introduced by clang-tidy in the previous commit.
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This change was generated with:
fd -e cc -e hh | xargs -I{} clang-tidy {} -p ~/projects/nix-build/ \
--checks='-*,readability-braces-around-statements' --fix \
-fix-errors
Some manual fixes were applied because some convoluted unbraced
statements couldn't be untangled by clang-tidy.
This commit still includes invalid files, but I decided to clean them
up in a subsequent commit so that it becomes more obvious where
clang-tidy failed. Maybe this will allow for a bug-report to
clang-tidy.
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Changes the configuration to regroup all includes. The include groups
will be (in this order):
1. (in .cc): Include of the corresponding header
2. Includes of C++ standard library headers
3. Includes of other external headers
4. Includes of local headers
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Removes the activity transfer that was previously nulled out from the
daemon protocol completely.
This might actually break Nix completely, I haven't tried yet, but
that's fine because this will be replaced with gRPC.
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The progress bar has lots of complexity for little benefit. The
previous activity tracking stuff has been deleted as part of the
logging refactoring and I am not going to implement support for this
again for now.
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