This patch improves the robustness of menu_view when encounting missing
textures, which can happen during development when using styled buttons
and frames. With the patch, menu_view outputs diagnostic messages,
pinpointing the problem.
The patch also updates the texture handling to use the 'File_content'
utility and the VFS for obtaining PNG images.
Issue #3629
This patch allows for the customization of the text color and alpha
value of the label widget by the means of a style-definition file.
The mechanism is exemplified with the new "invisible" label style
that sets the alpha value to zero.
Issue #3629
This commit adds dynamic switching in between different defined
screens via keyboard shortcuts, or by editing the rules file.
In the window_layouter package it defines per default ten screens,
reachable by pressing the screen key along with numbers 0-9.
Fix#3646
This new attribute can be used to enforce a minimum width in the unit of
the size of the character 'x'. Furthermore, the patch sets the minimum
height of a label to 0 if no 'text' attribute is present. By combining
both features, the label becomes usable as a horizontal spacer.
Issue #3629
This patch refines the hover handling such that a float widget never
responds to hovering unless a child is hovered. This way, it becomes
possible to stack multiple float widgets within one frame and still
reach all child widgets.
Issue #3629
Similarly to the way of how a <cursor> can be defined for a <label>
widget, a selection can be expressed as follows:
<label ...>
<selection at="2" length="12"/>
</label>
Issue #3607
Issue #3629
When setting the <dialog> attribute 'hover_details' to "yes", the hover
report features the character position of a hovered label.
Issue #3607
Issue #3629
This patch equips the label widget with the ability to display a text
cursor, as illustrated by the following example:
<label text="...">
<cursor at="10"/>
</label>
Issue #3607
Issue #3629
The value range supported by the 'Animated_rect' utility is constrained
to 2^11 by the used 32-bit integer type. The interpolation is performed
on fixpoint numbers with a fractional precision of 10 bits. The
non-linear interpolation as performed by the 'Lazy_value' utility
involves squaring the values. Hence, the interpolated integral values
must not exceed 2^11 (2*11 bits for the square plus 10 bit for the
fractional part require 32 bits). This range is too small for
high-resolution displays. Hence this patch replaces the 32-bit integer
type by a 64-bit integer type.
Fixes#3627
The wm used to remember the last pointer position when observing a leave
event. With such a stale pointer position, the wm would eventually
wrongly create an artifical motion event when a supposedly hovered
window changes its position (during an animated move). This can lead to
the propagation of the stale pointer position to the wm client, which,
in turn, may interpret the outdated position (e.g., the menu view would
report a wrong hover state).
This patch removes the stale state by resetting the '_pointer_pos' when
observing a leave event.
Fixes#3632
Instead of listening for new TCP/IP connections only,
the TCP terminal connects to a server when an IP address is
configured in the policy for a terminal client.
Fix#3619
Replace return values with appropiate bool and document two-staged
publickey authentication. This fixes a bug where wrong authentication
attempts are not properly denied.
Issue #3590.
server.h:51:12: warning: ‘int write_avail_cb(socket_t, int, void*)’
declared ‘static’ but never defined [-Wunused-function]
This patch fixes the warning by moving the user of 'write_avail_cb' to
the compliation unit that defines it.
From the man page of expect:
> Both expect and interact will detect when the current process exits
> and implicitly do a close. But if you kill the process by, say, "exec
> kill $pid", you will need to explicitly call close.
Fixes#3569
This patch is a follow-up fix for "ttf_font: prevent out-of-bounds
access", which produced sporadic single-pixel artifacts with large font
sizes, e.g., with the monospaced font set to 24px in Sculpt.
The artifacts occurred only for some horizontal sub-pixel positions, in
combination with the font cache, and after the rendering of '>'
characters. They were ultimately caused by the missed clearning of the
first pixel of a glyph where x0 is 1 (e.g., the character 'd'). In this
case, a pixel from the previously evicted cache entry (the '>') shined
through. The patch fixes the problem by clearing the glyph starting from
the first, not the x0's, pixel.
Fixes#3567
This test covers the situation where depot_query evaluates depot content
that is incompletely extracted. In particular, if the 'archives' file
already exists but has a size of zero, depot_query would produce a
page fault. This situation can be manually provoked by deliberately
creating a zero-sized archives file for any otherwise correct pkg.
This patch also fixes the success indicator of the test. It wrongly
matched an early line of the log output.
Issue #3557
* The log history of a test is stored as a whole for the lifetime of the test.
* Matching of the log history against log patterns is done correctly now
(previously, a pattern like "AAB" on an input like "AAAB" wouldn't have
triggered).
* Use memcmp, memcpy, memmove instead of the former character-wise operations.
* Sanitizing of log input and log patterns now works more generic through the
new Filter class for all replacements/removals.
* Sanitizing is done as soon as a string is available and remains for the
lifetime of the test.
* Sanitizing doesn't interfer with the matching algorithm.
* Decomposing into small clearly named functions.
Ref #3555
When copying config/managed/deploy to config/deploy, the latter may
temporarily result in an empty configuration. Such an intermediate
state should be ignored to keep the currently running scenario in tact
instead of restarting it.
Add a new plugin for creating pipes between pairs of VFS handles. It is
intended to replace the libc_pipe plugin, one of the last remaining libc
plugins.
In contrast to the libc_pipe plugin, this plugin defers cross-handle
notification until I/O signal handling rather than block and unblock
readers using a semaphore. This is a performance regression in the case
of multiple threads blocking on a pipe, but shall be an intermediate
mechanism pending renovations within the libc VFS and threading layers.
As a side effect, threads blocked on a pipe might not be resumed until
the main thread suspends and dispatches I/O signals.
The "test-libc_pipe" test has been adjusted to use the VFS pipe plugin
and tests both local pipes and pipes hosted remotely in the VFS server.
Merge adaptations (such as EOF handling, adjustment to VFS/libc
interface changes) by Norman Feske.
Fix#2303
Nowadays, we use standard command-line tools like vim to edit init
configurations dynamically, which alleviates the need for a custom CLI.
The CLI-monitor component was too limited for use cases like Sculpt
anyway.
The patch also removes the ancient (and untested for long time)
terminal_mux.run script, which used to be the only remaining user of the
CLI monitor.
Issue #3512
This patch extends the 'File_system::Status',
'File_system::Directory_entry', and the related 'Vfs' types with
the following additional information:
- Distinction between continuous and transactional files (Node_type)
(issue #3507)
- Readable, writeable, and executable attributes (Node_rwx),
replacing the former 'mode' bits
(issue #3030)
The types 'Node_rwx', 'Node_type' are defined twice,
once for the VFS (vfs/types.h) and once for the 'File_system'
session (file_system_session/file_system_session.h).
Similarly, there is a direct correspondance between
'Vfs::Directory_service::Dirent' and 'File_system::Directory_entry'.
This duplication of types follows the existing pattern of keeping the
VFS and file-system session independent from each other.
Moving the handling into the input-session clients enables more
sophisticated implementations (like Qt5) to apply key-symbol based
handling of those modifiers like correct CTRL-A with QWERTY and AZERTY
layouts and distinction of CTRL-J and Return.
Issue #3483
With the added modification-time support in the libc, the extract tool
requires a timer session, which is not plausible for the purpose of the
program.
This behavior stems from the fact that the libc implicitly writes the
mtime when closing a written file. For this update, it implicitly calls
'clock_gettime', which in turn initializes the timer subsystem within
the libc (creating a timer session).
For the extract tool, the implicitly updated mtime is useless because
the extract tool overwrites this modification time with the mtime stored
in the archive anyway. However, the dependency from a timer service
remains.
This patch explicitly disables the libc's implicit updating of the
file-modification when closing a written file.
Issue #1784
This adds complete character-generator configurations for English (US),
German (Germany and Switzerland), and French (France and Switzerland).
The configs are manually amended and stripped-down versions of
xkb2ifcfg generated configs.
Issue #3483
This patch handles the situation where the usb_block_drv exits for any
reason, in particular when the driver fails to initialize the device. In
such cases, the usb_block_drv used to stay stale in the system,
effectively preventing the device from being passed to a VM. With the
patch, the USB storage device gets flagged as failed, the usb_block_drv
is removed from the runtime, and the condition is reflected at the user
interface.
This situation occurred on the attempt to access an iomega zip drive
with a version of the usb_block_drv without support for the START-STOP
command, but it may potentially also occur in other circumstances.
Fixes#3468
This commit implements the ssh exec channel request. It also handles
some shortcommings on the interactive channel like exit and concurrent
session establishments.
Pipes into the channel do not work yet. E.g.:
echo foobar | ssh noux@localhost -p 5555 "cat > /rw/test.txt"
The issue described with FIXME in Ssh::Server::incoming_connection()
could not be reproduced and might have been fixed with the improved
file descriptor handling.
Fixes#3401
To enable the clipboard for a VM, add the following node to the
<Hardware> sub node of your machine.vbox configuration:
<Clipboard mode="Bidirectional"/>
Issue #3437
The triggering of a new depot query can happen more than once per
activation of the sculpt manager if multiple conditions call for updated
information about the depot. When this happens, the depot-query
component produces intermediate results, which are not consumed by the
sculpt manager. By deferring depot queries for a few milliseconds, we
avoid such intermediate queries, relieving the workload of the
depot-query component at system boot time.
Issue #3436
The diagnostic messages presented in the runtime dialog lacked the name
if the subsystem was created from a launcher, e.g., the 'vm'. Instead of
determining the subsystem name from the start-XML-node (a launcher has
no 'name' attribute but the name corresponds to the launcher's file
name), the name is now passed as a dedicated argument.
The labels of clipboard ROM and clipboard report sessions of WM clients
must be consistent with the client's nitpicker label. Hence, we must
route those sessions through the window manager, analogously to the
approach taken for shape reports in #3165.
Issue #3437
This patch introduces two caches to the depot-query tool.
- A stat cache remembers the results of 'Directory::file_exists'
calls.
- The 'Cached_rom_query' caches the result of scanning the depot
for a given ROM module and pkg path. To elminates the need to
parse 'archive' files of pkgs referenced from other pkgs or
for the repeated instantation of the same pkg.
Both caches are bypassed whenever referring to the 'local' depot user.
Fixes#3427
When resizing windows of clients that respond very slowly to resize
requests, the window's size sometimes snapped back to its original size
immediately after finishing the drag operation.
The problem was caused by the interplay of the layout rules (obtained
via the 'rules' ROM, generated by the 'rules' report) and the
temporary interactive state that occurs during drag operations.
The rules are updated only at the time of releasing the button to keep
the overhead while dragging the window low. However, when releasing the
mouse, the (now outdated) rules kicked back into effect, triggering
resize requests for the window to its old size.
The patch solves this problem by decoupling the dragged state of a
window from the physical release of the button. The button release
triggers a transition from a DRAGGING to a SETTLING state and programs
a timer. In the SETTLING state, the windows behave as in DRAGGING state,
giving the interactive geometry precedence over the rules-dictated
geometry. During this state, further responses of window-resize requests
may come in and are handled like dragging was still in progress. After a
timeout, however, the current window layout is conserved as a new rules
report and the state goes back to IDLE.
For clients that takes a very long time (in particular, VirtualBox when
resizing the desktop, which takes sometimes multiple seconds), the
snap-back artifact can still occur, but the effect is reduced.
This problem surfaced with the new tool chain that changes the stack
layout. A pointer to the the config XML data was kept in the main object
but pointed to a stack variable. This patch fixes it by removing the
pointer.
Fixes#3416
This patch adds the missing propagation of the maximized state from the
layout rules to the internal representation of a window. Without this
patch this state could be toggled by clicking on the maximizer button
only.
The decorator's detection of the hovered window element was inaccurate,
which resulted in "jumping" windows in some situations, ultimately
caused by a combination of three different mechanisms.
First, when moving the pointer into the area of a window, the decorator
would detect the hovering of the left border whenever the distance of
the pointer from the border was less than the half of the theme texture
(e.g., 64x64 pixels for the default theme). However, if the left border
margin is set to a small value (e.g., 1), there is an overlap of the
sensitive resize border area and the content. Hence, chances were quite
high that - when moving the pointer from the left into the window - the
hover report would contain the hovering of the left border.
Second, the window manager tries to hide pointer movements from the
decorator if possible. It informs the decorator of the pointer position
if any decoration is hovered or if a new window is hovered. But it does
not expose pointer movements within a window to the decorator. For this
reason, the decorator would not update the hover report as long as the
pointer stays within a once hovered window. In the situation described
above, the hover report would still contain the stale information about
the hovering of the left resize border.
Third, when the user clicks on the window, the decorator examines the
most recent hover report and - in the situation described above - finds
the left border hovered. Consequently, it initiates a window-drag
operation. While resizing the window with the left border, the window
layouter pins the right border of the window to its current position.
All window-size changes of the client will be applied towards the left
(dragged) border. In the case of the top view, which continuously
resizes the window by itself, the window would "jump". In reality, it
actually tries to respond an interactive resize operation. The window
layouter cannot guess that the client is not responding to window
layouter's resize request but is acting independently.
This patch fixes the jumping window problem for the case where the
pointer hovers the overlapping area of the resize border and the
content. However, when trying the to interactively resize the top window
via the bottom-left corner, the "jumping" can still be observed.
Fixes#3303
By decoupling the leitzentrale from the (contended) boot CPU, the fading
on F12 interferes much less with animations like nano3d deployed in the
runtime.
Fixes#3268
There are still nightly tests like test-tcp_bulk_lxip on sel4 x86_64 qemu
that manage to hit the test timeout of the run script although the test was
successful. So, raise the extra time added by the run script to 30 seconds.
Ref #3411
Some platforms (sel4 imx6/imx7) cannot manage to execute all tests in a single
boot. Thus, we re-boot them periodically after a given maximum number of tests
to avoid that arbitrary tests always fail due to the long uptime and not due to
the tests themselves.
If the maximum number of tests is set to 0, no limit is applied.
Fixes#3411
The terminal now got a configurable palette for 16 colors (8 normal, 8
bright/bold).
<config>
<palette>
<color index="0" value="#000000"/> <!-- black is real black -->
<color index="8" value="#101010"/> <!-- bright black stands out a bit -->
</palette>
</config>
Note, the old (undocumented) <color index="..." bg="..."> configuration
scheme is no longer supported.
Also, this commit adds a pleasing default palette that ensures
readability of ViM's standard hightlighting.
Fixes#3406
It might happen, in CPU intensive tests (like TCP bulk lxip), or when
printing debugging output after a failed test (as done currently on
staging), that the run script on the host gives up and reboots the
platform too early. Thus, we raise the buffer time. A reboot should
be necessary only in rare cases anyway.
Fixes#3387
* Make package buildable for ARM too
* Move usb library to src targets for explicitly named targets
* adapt remaining run-scripts to use the correctly named usb drivers
Ref #2190
This patch fixes the corner case where an animated geometry changes its
destination mid-way while an animation is already in progress. The
'_trigger_animated_geometry' method used to back out early in this case,
which was intended as an optimization.
Fixes#3296
This enforces the use of unsigned 64-bit values for time in the duration type,
the timeout framework, the timer session, the userland timer-drivers, and the
alarm framework on all platforms. The commit also adapts the code that uses
these tools accross all basic repositories (base, base-*, os. gems, libports,
ports, dde_*) to use unsigned 64-bit values for time as well as far as this
does not imply profound modifications.
Fixes#3208
As a preparatory step for introducing the new block-client API, we have
to turn the 'Block::Connection' into a class template. The template
argument will be used to tie an application-defined job type to the
block connection.
Issue #3283
This patch replaces the formerly fixed 2 KiB data alignment within the
packet-stream buffer by a server-defined alignment. This has two
benefits.
First, when using block servers that provide small block sizes like 512
bytes, we avoid fragmenting the packet-stream buffer, which occurs when
aligning 512-byte requests at 2 KiB boundaries. This reduces meta data
costs for the packet-stream allocator and also allows fitting more
requests into the buffer.
Second, block drivers with alignment constraints dictated by the
hardware can now pass those constraints to the client, thereby easing
the use of zero-copy DMA directly into the packet stream.
The alignment is determined by the Block::Session_client at construction
time and applied by the Block::Session_client::alloc_packet method.
Block-session clients should always use this method, not the 'alloc_packet'
method of the packet stream (tx source) directly. The latter merely
applies a default alignment of 2 KiB.
At the server side, the alignment is automatically checked by
block/component.h (old API) and block/request_stream.h (new API).
Issue #3274
This patch modernizes the 'Block::Session::info' interface. Instead of
using out parameters, the 'init' RPC function returns a compound 'Info'
object now. The rather complicated 'Operations' struct is replaced by
a 'writeable' attribute in the 'Info' object.
Fixes#3275
The 'aes_cbc_4k' library is simple wrapper around libsparkcrypto to
serve as a backend for storage encryption. It operates on data chunks of
4 KiB and uses AES-CBC while incorporating the block number and the
private key as salt values.
Replace the I/O response handler that is passed to the VFS at
construction with an object that is dynamically attached to handles.
This object shall also accept read-ready notifications, and plugins are
encouraged to keep handles awaiting ready-ready notifications separate
from handles that await I/O progress.
Replace the use of handle lists in plugins with handle queues, this
makes the code easier to understand and the ordering of notifications to
the application more explicit.
These changes replace the use of the Post_signal_hook from all VFS
plugins, applications must assume that read-ready and I/O notifications
occur during I/O signal dispatch and use an Io_progress_handler at its
entrypoints to defer response until after signal dispatching.
Fix#3257
The '_currently_constructed' pointer caches the information about which
'Launched_child' is currently configured in the menu. When discarding
the runtime (e.g., when un-using a file system) at this point, this
cached pointer was not invalidated while all 'Launched_child' objects
would be freed (including the currently constructed one). On the next
attempt to construct a new child, the sculpt manager attempted to
destruct the 'Launched_child' referred by the (now outdated)
'_currently_constructed' again.
Fixes#3240
This commit handles the corner case where a package could be installed
successfully but the package's runtime definition is inconsistent with
the content delivered by the package's dependencies, i.e., the <content>
of the runtime file lists ROM modules that do not exist.
With this patch, the '+' menu shows the message "installed but
incomplete" whenever a package is in such a state.
Issue #3241
The "Vfs::Vfs_handle" type should not contain any public members that
can be initialized by the VFS internally and by the application, so
remove inheritance from the "Genode::list::Element" class. The VFS
plugins must instead use lists of "Vfs::Vfs_handle" sub-classes, the
lifetime of which are always managed by the plugin.
Ref #3036
It turns out that the commit "window layouter: allow floating apps to
resize" interplays badly with the interactive toggling of the maximize
state of windows. In contrast to the window geometry and stacking, which
is always updated through the rules-feedback mechanism, interactive
changes of the maximize state omitted this loop and instead took a local
shortcut. Because of this shortcut, the maximized geometry eventually
ended up as window size in the window's assign rule. So unmaximizing the
window failed to revert the geometry to its original state.
This patch removes this inconsistency. The maximize state adheres to the
official chain of commands through the rules mechanism now. The state is
now maintained internally without affecting the window's geometry and is
evaluated while generating the window layout only.
As a minor loosely related improvement, this patch prevents the
highlighting of resize handles for non-resizable windows.
Issue #3200
This patch improves the transition from an interactive window geometry
change (dragging a window element) to the point where the resulting
new layout rules come into effect. During this short time, no resize
request must be issued because such a resize request would be based on
stale rules.
Fixes#3227
This is a follow-up commit to "Update <provides> info in pkg runtimes",
which adapts the users of the wm pkg to the changed label of the "focus"
nitpicker session.
This patch gives applications the ability to control the size of their
window whenever the window is floating, not tiled or maximized. See the
comment in the code for the rationale.
Fixes#3200
The default rate of 100 ms keeps Sculpt too busy because the menu that
displays the percentage values is drawn completely on each update.
Limiting the rate to 1/4 seconds relieves the effect.
By clicking on a yellow checkbox in the depot selection dialog, the
corresponding index files are removed. This way, index files can
be update by removing and downloading them again.
This patch also filters out sculpt-managed components from the graph to
avoid erratic graph-position changes while the '+' menu is open.
Fixes#3193
The fs_tool component performs file operations according to its
configuration. This initial version implements only the operation
<remove-file> as needed for Sculpt CE.
Issue #3222
Issue #3193
This patch refines the criterion of when the networking is considered as
ready to use. Until now, any IP reported by the NIC router was taken as
an indicator for connectivity. But as the NIC router reports an IP
0.0.0.0/32 when no network cable is plugged at the uplink, the condition
was too loose.
This patch improves the error handling of depot-download manager for the
case where a download is requested but the corresponding software
provider information is absent from the depot. Without this patch, the
update mechanism would get stuck in the failed depot-query step and
won't attempt to perform subsequent download jobs.
Fixes#3224
The storage dialog is folded when activating the runtime view (e.g., by
clicking on the Genode Logo). This should happen immediately as response
of the mouse click.
This patch improves the separation of the update and layout phases to
avoid superfluous geometry animations of its child widgets. Prior this
patch, 'Widget::geometry' was called in both phases, potentially
triggering geometry animations with intermediate values at the update
phase.
Related to issue #3221
The button widget already supported an animated transition between
hovered and unhovered states. This patch generalizes the mechanism to
allow animated transitions between arbitrary button states, including
style changes.
This way, the fade-out of non-TCB components in Sculpt CE happens not
abruptly but smooth.
Fixes#3221
The default 'Rect' constructor constructs an invalid rectangle where the
p1 coordinates are lower than the p2 coordinates. In particular, p1 is
set to (1, 1). The 'Widget' implementation uses the points individually
as input into the 'Animated_rect' mechanism. This way, widgets end up
being positioned at (1, 1) initially and are moved to (0, 0) once the
first layout update is applied. By explicitly initializing the
'_geometry' to (0x0+0+0), we avoid this initial artifact.
When entering/leaving sub menus of Sculpt's '+' menu, some parts of the
menu sometimes remain unchanged, in particular the back button.
Originally, a click would reset the hovering on clicks in the
expectation that any click would eventually result in a completely new
situation where the old hovering information does not make sense and
would only (potentially) confuse the menu. But this was apparently
overzealous. With the patch a once hovered back button stays hovered
even when actitivated and the back button of the upper-level menu
happens to stay under the current pointer position.
Issue #3209
This patch improves the hover handling in situations where the dialog
changes under the pointer. Previously, hover changes were reported
as response to user input only, which failed to cover this case. This
became a problem with Sculpt CE's '+' menu, which changes on the fly
when entering/leaving sub menus.
The patch also cleanly separates the hover handling from the focus
handling. Originally, the hovering was reset when the menu view got
unfocused. In situations like Sculpt's '+' menu where the menu view
receives a transient focus only while clicked and gets unfocused on the
button-release event (aka clack), each clack would invalidate the hover
information until a new input event comes in.
Finally, the patch introduces the clear distinction between situations
where the entire dialog is hovered or not. Previously, this state was
somehow implicitly kept by issuing an invalid hover report whenever a
leave event was observed.
Issue #3209
When a window is moved, the virtual pointer position must be updated,
taking the changed input coordinate into account. This patch propagates
such changes via absolute motion events to the client.
Without this patch, Sculpt CE's '+' menu wouldn't update the hovered
item correctly when entering/leaving sub menus (which happen to trigger
the repositioning of the menu on screen).
Issue #3209
When specifying the attribute 'dep_visible="false"' for a primary
dependency or the attribute 'visible="false"' for a secondary
dependency, the dependency is used for the layout calculation but not
displayed in the graph.
- Omit showing routes to uninteresting ROMs obtained from the parent,
i.e., the binaries requested by the sculpt-managed subsystems.
- Change the routes for the inspect subsystem such that the inspect-noux
instance is anchored at the config node (critical!) and the nit_fb
instance anchored at the used GUI.
This patch excludes the current "Construction" from the list of
"present" components in the runtime. Without the patch, a missing "wm"
would go unmissing once when the routing dialog of a new wm instance
appears. Now an already present window layouter that had a broken route
would prematurely re-appear in the config, which should not happen
because the new wm does not exist yet.
When buiding the sculpt image, the sculpt.run script used to integrate
the current version of the index of the 'depot_user' into the boot
image. At runtime, when the Sculpt partition is selected for "use" this
index - along with the 'pubkey' and 'download' files of the known
depot users - is written to the Sculpt partition.
This has the undesirable effect that a later version of the index
(published some time after the sculpt image was created) would always be
overwritten by the outdated index shipped with the boot image.
The built-in default index was actually a stop-gap solution needed
during the development of Sculpt CE, introduced when the downloading of
index files was not yet supported. Now, with the working download
mechanism, it is no longer needed. Hence, this patch removes the default
index from the sculpt image.
This commit removes most of the default launchers, which are now
superseded by the interactive component addition feature of the '+'
menu.
We keep the chroot components because we cannot easily create chroot
instances interactively yet.
The usb_devices_rom is still needed because its configuration is meant
to be edited at runtime.
It also adds a 'themed_wm' launcher to make the initial sculpt
experience easier. For knowledgeable users, the index contains all
ingredients needed to build a multi-component window manager manually.
This commit turns the '+' menu into a tool for the following tasks:
- Selecting and downloading of depot index files
- Browsing of the hierarchical depot index files
- Installation of packages found in the index files
- Interactive routing configuration of a selected package
- Deployment of configured component
Sculpt used to restrict the size of leitzentrale windows to the screen
area that is not obstructed by the menu and log. This is useful for the
runtime view and the inspect window. However, the menu should be allowed
to use the entire screen because it overlays the other content.
Before this patch, the menu wouldn't be displayed completely on small
resolutions (e.g., 1024x768 when using the VESA driver) because the log
at the bottom of the screen imposed the size constraint on the menu.
With the patch, the menu is able to overlay the log window.
This patch enhances the runtime view such that not only immediate
dependencies but also all transitive dependencies of the selected
component are displayed. This way, the graph nicely reveals the
trusted computing base of the selection.
Instead of parsing the runtime's configuration each time when generating
the graph dialog (e.g., when changing the hover state), extract the
relevant information only on configuration changes.
The runtime view, launcher query, and depot query increase the
complexity of the graph without providing a tangible value to the user.
This patch omits those components from the runtime view to make the
graph less confusing.
Append "..." to button labels whenever the button does not perform an
immediate action but merely toggles user-interface elements. This
tells the user that the button can be pressed without risk.
With this commit, the 'installation' input of the depot-download
subsystem accepts <index> nodes in addition to <archive> nodes. Each
index node refers to one index file specified via the 'path' attribute.
This commit also improves the tracking of failure states. Once an
installation job failed (due to a download of verification error),
it won't get re-scheduled. In the past, such failure states were not kept
across subsequent import iterations, which could result in infinite
re-attempts when an installation contained archives from multiple users.
The the progress of the download process is now reflected by the
"progress" attribute on the download manager's state report, which
allows the final report to contain the list of installed/failed archives
along with the overall progress/completed state. The detection of the
latter is important for the sculpt manager for reattempting the
deployment of the completed packages.
The patch enhances the depot_download.run script to stress the new
abilities. In particular, the scenario downloads a mix of index files
(one present, one missing) and archives, from two different depot users
(genodelabs and nfeske).
Issue #3172
The input for the pkg index is located at gems/run/sculpt/index.
The sculpt.run script uses this input for generating the depot index
file at depot/<user>/index/<version>.
The tool/depot/publish tool support arguments of the form
<user>/index/<version> where <version> corresponds to the Sculpt
version.
Issue #3172
This prevents the situation where the user has booted the system, has
not yet selected a storage target to "use" for Sculpt, yet clicks on the
'+' menu. Such clicks show no immediate response because Sculpt cannot
know where to deploy the selected package. But since the user is not
guided towards resolving this prerequisite, it's better to not present
the menu in the first place. The '+' appears as soon as a storage target
is selected for "use".
This error message may occur during the startup of a multi-component
application when the very first dialog is generated just after the menu
view is ready. It is not an error.
This commit adds the following styles:
button/enter - for entering a sub menu
button/back - for returning from a sub menu
button/radio - for picking one item of a list
button/checkbox - for making a selection
frame/transient - for temporary GUI elements
This message is diagnostic, but also occurs in legitimate situations
such as the wm in Sculpt's Leitzentrale where the focus is managed
completely outside the wm.
The zynq nic_drv also depends on hw, we therefore adapted the folder
structure for clarity. Also renamed the binary to 'zynq_nic_drv' to
prevent conflicts and to allow removing the cadence_gem spec.
Issue #3179
This patch simplifies the propagation of pointer shapes from
window-manager clients to the pointer. The "shape" report is routed to
the wm server, which, in turn, reports it to the pointer. This way, the
pointer can easily correlate the label of the application's "shape"
report with the label of the application's Nitpicker session. The
formerly used manual rewriting of the "shape" label is not needed
anymore.
Since the wm server provides a "Report" service now, its <provides>
declaration must cover "Report" in addition to "Nitpicker" to avoid
runtime error messages. Vice versa, the wm is now expected to request
"shape" reports, which should be routed to the pointer (using the
'label_last' routing attribute).
Fixes#3165
Refactor the graphical terminal server to internally represent
characters as 16-bit codepoints and handle the duplex terminal stream as
UTF-8.
- Make the Codepoint class printable to the Output interface
- Decode data received at the Terminal session from UTF-8 to a 16-bit
character
- Pass 16-bit characters through terminal decoder and char-cell arrays
- Send Unicode through terminal session in a burst of UTF-8 bytes
Fix#3148
The minimal-footprint Ada runtime for implementing library-like
functionality in SPARK is now called "spark" runtime.
The full Ada runtime for entire components written in Ada and using the
libc as glue to the underlying system will move to the world repository
as "ada" runtime.
Issue #3144
The 'run_genode_until' procedure only called 'run_power_on' to reset
the target machine. That works will with the softreset module, which
is used by all x86-based test system but falls short regarding ARM
boards. The way those boards are connected requires turning the power
off and on for a complete cycle.
The situation where a 'Session_policy' is constructed for a label with
no matching policy is in almost all cases a configuration problem.
A diagnostic message eases pin-pointing such mistaks. By adding the
message to the 'Session_policy', servers don't need to manually handle
the exception to provide diagnostic information. This simplifies the
server code in many components.
In less interactive mode, the run script doesn't give up on missing test
archives but instead removes the corresponding tests and marks them "missing".
This mode avoids total failure of a platform in automated test infrastructures
when only a few archives are missing.
Fixes#3120
After a certain number of tests, presumably some resource in core is exceeded
and loading the successive test fails. This quickfix looks out for the
characteristic Core error and then reboots to avoid that all successive tests
are marked as failed.
Since the timer and timeout handling is part of the base library (the
dynamic linker), it belongs to the base repository.
Besides moving the timer and its related infrastructure (alarm, timeout
libs, tests) to the base repository, this patch also moves the timer
from the 'drivers' subdirectory directly to 'src' and disamibuates the
timer's build locations for the various kernels. Otherwise the different
timer implementations could interfere with each other when using one
build directory with multiple kernels.
Note that this patch changes the include paths for the former os/timer,
os/alarm.h, os/duration.h, and os/timed_semaphore.h to base/.
Issue #3101