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58 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
555af315b3 Upgrade: improve Doxygen parameters and treat some warnings
- remove obsolete configuration settings
- walk through all settings according to the documentation
  https://www.doxygen.nl/manual/config.html
- now try to use the new feature to rely on Clang for C++ parsing
- walk through the doxygen-warnings.txt and fix some obvious misspellings
  and structural problems in the documentation comments.

With Debian-Trixie, we are now using Doxygen 1.9.8 —
which produces massively better results in various fine points.

However, there are still problems with automatic cross links,
especially from implementation to the corresponding test classes.
2025-04-27 05:00:14 +02:00
9393942366 Invocation: Analysis pertaining to storage for param data
During Render Node invocation, automation parameter data must be maintained.
For the simple standard path, this just implies to store the ''absolute nominal Time''
directly in the invoking stack frame and let some parameter adaptors do the translation.
However, it is conceivable to have much more elaborate translation functions,
and thus we must be prepared to handle an arbitrary number of parameter slots,
where each slot has arbitrary storage requirements.

The conclusion is to start with an intrusive linked list of overflow buckets.
2024-12-07 18:15:44 +01:00
806db414dd Copyright: clarify and simplify the file headers
* Lumiera source code always was copyrighted by individual contributors
 * there is no entity "Lumiera.org" which holds any copyrights
 * Lumiera source code is provided under the GPL Version 2+

== Explanations ==
Lumiera as a whole is distributed under Copyleft, GNU General Public License Version 2 or above.
For this to become legally effective, the ''File COPYING in the root directory is sufficient.''

The licensing header in each file is not strictly necessary, yet considered good practice;
attaching a licence notice increases the likeliness that this information is retained
in case someone extracts individual code files. However, it is not by the presence of some
text, that legally binding licensing terms become effective; rather the fact matters that a
given piece of code was provably copyrighted and published under a license. Even reformatting
the code, renaming some variables or deleting parts of the code will not alter this legal
situation, but rather creates a derivative work, which is likewise covered by the GPL!

The most relevant information in the file header is the notice regarding the
time of the first individual copyright claim. By virtue of this initial copyright,
the first author is entitled to choose the terms of licensing. All further
modifications are permitted and covered by the License. The specific wording
or format of the copyright header is not legally relevant, as long as the
intention to publish under the GPL remains clear. The extended wording was
based on a recommendation by the FSF. It can be shortened, because the full terms
of the license are provided alongside the distribution, in the file COPYING.
2024-11-17 23:42:55 +01:00
a20e233ca0 Library: now using controlled seed and replaced rand (closes #1378)
After augmenting our `lib/random.hpp` abstraction framework to add the necessary flexibility,
a common seeding scheme was ''built into the Test-Runner.''
 * all tests relying on some kind of randomness should invoke `seedRand()`
 * this draws a seed from the `entropyGen` — which is also documented in the log
 * individual tests can now be launched with `--seed` to force a dedicated seed
 * moreover, tests should build a coherent structure of linked generators,
   especially when running concurrently. The existing tests were adapted accordingly

All usages of `rand()` in the code base were investigated and replaced
by suitable calls to our abstraction framework; the code base is thus
isolated from the actual implementation, simplifying further adaptation.
2024-11-17 19:45:41 +01:00
39d614f55f Library: Testsuite maintenance
- SchedulerStress_test simply takes too long to complete (~4 min)
  and is thus aborted by the testrunner. Add a switch to allow for
  a quick smoke test.

- SchedulerCommutator_test aborts due to an unresolved design problem,
  which I marked as failure

- add some convenience methods for passing arguments to tests
2024-11-16 00:38:57 +01:00
7ed8486774 Library: rework detection of ''same object''
We use the memory address to detect reference to ''the same language object.''
While primarily a testing tool, this predicate is also used in the
core application at places, especially to prevent self-assignment
and to handle custom allocations.

It turns out that actually we need two flavours for convenient usage
 - `isSameObject` uses strict comparison of address and accepts only references
 - `isSameAdr` can also accept pointers and even void*, but will dereference pointers
This leads to some further improvements of helper utilities related to memory addresses...
2024-11-15 00:11:14 +01:00
0b9e184fa3 Library: replace usages of rand() in the whole code base
* most usages are drop-in replacements
 * occasionally the other convenience functions can be used
 * verify call-paths from core code to identify usages
 * ensure reseeding for all tests involving some kind of randomness...

__Note__: some tests were not yet converted,
since their usage of randomness is actually not thread-safe.
This problem existed previously, since also `rand()` is not thread safe,
albeit in most cases it is possible to ignore this problem, as
''garbled internal state'' is also somehow „random“
2024-11-13 04:23:46 +01:00
a90b9e5f16 Library: uniform definition scheme for error-IDs
In the Lumiera code base, we use C-String constants as unique error-IDs.
Basically this allows to create new unique error IDs anywhere in the code.

However, definition of such IDs in arbitrary namespaces tends to create
slight confusion and ambiguities, while maintaining the proper use statements
requires some manual work.

Thus I introduce a new **standard scheme**
 * Error-IDs for widespread use shall be defined _exclusively_ into `namespace lumiera::error`
 * The shorthand-Macro `LERR_()` can now be used to simplify inclusion and referral
 * (for local or single-usage errors, a local or even hidden definition is OK)
2024-03-21 19:57:34 +01:00
59390cd2f8 Library: reorder some pervasively used includes
reduce footprint of lib/util.hpp
 (Note: it is not possible to forward-declare std::string here)

define the shorthand "cStr()" in lib/symbol.hpp

reorder relevant includes to ensure std::hash is "hijacked" first
2024-03-21 19:57:34 +01:00
e0766f2262 Chain-Load: draft usage for Scheduler testing
- use a dedicated context "dropped off" the TestChainLoad instance
- encode the node-idx into the InvocationInstanceID
- build an invocation- and a planning-job-functor
- let planning progress over an lib::UninitialisedStorage array
- plant the ActivityTerm instances into that array as Scheduling progresses
2023-12-04 00:34:06 +01:00
3135887914 Scheduler: connect BlockFlow capacity announcement
...refine the handling of FrameRates close to the definition bounds
...implement the actual rule to scale allocator capacity on announcement
...hook up into the seedCalcStream() with a default of +25FPS

+ test coverage
2023-11-10 23:52:20 +01:00
a2a960f544 Scheduler: look for ways to propagate a capacity-hint
...whenever a new CalcStream is seeded, it would be prudent
not only to step up the WorkForce (which is already implemented),
but also to provide a hint to the BlockFlow allocator regarding
the expected calculation density.

Such a hint would allow to set a more ample »epoch« spacing,
thereby avoiding to drive the allocator into overload first.
The allocator will cope anyway and re-balance in a matter of
about 2 seconds, but avoiding this kind of control oscillations
altogether will lead to better performance at calculation start.
2023-11-10 05:14:55 +01:00
685be1b039 Library/Application: consolidate Monitor API and usage
This is Step-2 : change the API towards application

Notably all invocation variants to support member functions
or a reference to bool flags are retracted, since today a
λ-binding directly at usage site tends to be more readable.

The function names are harmonised with the C++ standard and
emergency shutdown in the Subsystem-Runner is rationalised.

The old thread-wrapper test is repurposed to demonstrate
the effectiveness of monitor based locking.
2023-10-15 20:42:55 +02:00
c37871ca78 Library/Application: switch Locking from POSIX to C++14
While not directly related to the thread handling framework,
it seems indicated to clean-up this part of the application alongside.

For »everyday« locking concerns, an Object Monitor abstraction was built
several years ago and together with the thread-wrapper, both at that time
based on direct usage of POSIX. This changeset does a mere literal
replacement of the POSIX calls with the corresponding C++ wrappers
on the lowest level. The resulting code is needlessly indirect, yet
at API-level this change is totally a drop-in replacment.
2023-10-13 23:46:38 +02:00
77622a3f2d Library/Application: switch CallQueue_test 2023-10-05 01:17:58 +02:00
4f50cbc386 Library/Application: rework TypedCounter and tests
The existing TypedCounter_test was excessively clever and convoluted,
yet failed to test the critical elements systematically. Indeed, two
bugs were hidden in synchronisation and instance access.

- build a new concurrent test from scratch, now using the threadBenchmark
  function for the actual concurrent execution and just invoked a
  random selected access to the counter repeatedly from a large number
  of threads.

- rework the TypedContext and counter to use Atomics where applicable;
  measurements indicate however that this has only negligible impact
  on the amortised invocation times, which are around 60ns for single-threaded
  access, yet can increase by factor 100 due to contention.
2023-10-04 22:41:00 +02:00
80f09cb33b Library/Application: switch DiagnosticContext_test 2023-10-03 23:44:12 +02:00
67b010ba7e Library: (re)introduce the distinction join / detach
While it would be straight forward from an implementation POV
to just expose both variants on the API (as the C++ standard does),
it seems prudent to enforce the distinction, and to highlight the
auto-detaching behaviour as the preferred standard case.

Creating worker threads just for one computation and joining the results
seemed like a good idea 30 years ago; today we prefer Futures or asynchronous
messaging to achieve similar results in a robust and performant way.

ThreadJoinable can come in handy however for writing unit tests, were
the controlling master thread has to wait prior to perform verification.

So the old design seems well advised in this respect and will be retained
2023-09-26 01:00:00 +02:00
fef0c05b64 Job-Planning: base implementation of job instance creation
* using a simplified preliminary implementation of hash chaining (see #1293)
 * simplistic implementation of hashing for time values (half-rotation)
 * for now just hashing the time into the upper part of the LUID

Maybe we can even live with that implementation for some time,
depending on how important uniform distribution of hash values is
for proper usage of the frame cache.

Needless to say, various further fine points need more consideration,
especially questions of portability (32bit anyone?). Moreover, since
frame times are typically quantised, the search space for the hashed
time values is drastically reduced; conceivably we should rather
research and implement a good hash function for 128bit and then combine
all information into a single hash key....
2023-04-30 22:33:42 +02:00
b1514f6632 Timeline: properly handling extreme scroll-steps 2022-12-17 01:15:34 +01:00
5e595c57ca Timeline: automatically orient and shift into allowed time domain
Note: changing behaviour of TimeSpan to possibly flip start and end,
and also to use Offset as Offset and then re-orient,
since this seems the least surprising behaviour.

These changes carry over into changed default and limiting
on ZoomWindow constructor and various mutators, and most
notably shifting the time span always into allowed domain.
2022-12-14 03:00:07 +01:00
006758f349 Library/Timeline: now able to scroll to extreme positions (closes #1263)
...building on these Library changes, plus the safe-add function
developed some days ago, it is now possible to mark a large displacement
as `time::Offset`, and apply this to yield any valid time position,
even extreme negative values
2022-12-05 03:34:04 +01:00
13adc56f34 Library: rectify confusingly named function on the Grid API
The APIs for time quantisation were drafted in an early stage of the project
and then never followed-up. Especially Grid::gridAlign has no
real-world usage yet, and is only massaged in some tests.

When looking at QuantiserBasics_test, I was puzzled and led astray,
since this function suggests to materialise a continuous time into
a quantised time -- which it doesn't (there is another dedicated
function Quantiser::materialise() to that end); so, without engaging
into the discussion if this function is of any use, I'll hereby
choose a name better reflecting what it does.
2022-12-05 01:05:23 +01:00
50c602ec3f Library: rectify clipping of time::Duration (see #1263)
This is a deep refactoring to allow to represent the distance
between all valid time points as a time::Offset or time::Duration.

By design this is possible, since Time::MAX was defined as 1/30 of
the maximum value technically representable as int64_t. However,
introducing a different limiter for offsets and durations turns
out difficult, due to the inconsistencies in the exiting hierarchy
of temporal entities. Which in turn seems to stem from the unfortunate
decision to make time entities immutable, see #1261

Since the limiter is hard wired into the `time::TimeValue` constructor,
we are forced to create a "backdoor" of sorts, to pass up values
with different limiting from child classes. This would not be so
much of a problem if calculations weren't forced to go through `TimeVar`,
which does not distinguish between time points and time durations.

This solution rearranges all checks to be performed now by time::Offset,
while time::Duration will only take the absolute value at construction,
based on the fact that there is no valid construction path to yield
a duration which does not go through an offset first.

Later, when we're ready to sort out the implementation base of time values
(see #1258), this design issue should be revisited
- either we'll allow derived classes explicitly to invoke the limiter functions
- or we may be able to have an automatic conversion path from clearly
  marked base implementation types, in which case we wouldn't use the
  buildRaw_() and _raw() "backdoor" functions any more...
2022-12-05 00:58:32 +01:00
421a2ed49a C++17: some related clean-up 2020-02-21 23:55:09 +01:00
38837da65e Timehandling: choose safer representation for fractional seconds (closes #939)
When drafting the time handling framework some years ago,
I foresaw the possible danger of mixing up numbers relating
to fractional seconds, with other plain numbers intended as
frame counts or as micro ticks. Thus I deliberately picked
an incompatible integer type for FSecs = boost::rational<long>

However, using long is problematic in itself, since its actual
bit length is not fixed, and especially on 32bit platforms long
is quite surprisingly defined to be the same as int.

However, meanwhile, using the new C++ features, I have blocked
pretty much any possible implicit conversion path, requiring
explicit conversions in the relevant ctor invocations. So,
after weighting in the alternatives, FSecs is now defined
as boost::rational<int64_t>.
2020-02-17 03:13:36 +01:00
8ffab2f002 Dependencies: get rid of boost-regexp (see #995)
Mostly, std::regexp can be used as a drop-in replacement.

Note: unfortunately ECMA regexps do not support lookbehind assertions.
This lookbehind is necesary here because we want to allow parsing values
from strings with additional content, which means we need explicitly to
exclude mismatches due to invalid syntax.

We can work around that issue like "either line start, or *not* one of these characters.


Alternatively we could consider to make the match more rigid,
i.e we would require the string to conain *only* the timecode spec to be parsed.
2019-06-24 02:41:02 +02:00
48a829d544 Library: clarify usage of the basic time scale
effectively we rely in the micro tick timescale promoted by libGAVL,
but it seems indicated to introduce our own constant definition.
And also clarify some comments and tests.

(this changeset does not change any values or functionality)
2018-12-10 00:12:52 +01:00
02c5809707 Global-Layer-Renaming: adjust namespace qualification 2018-11-15 23:59:23 +01:00
555ca0bff9 Global-Layer-Renaming: rename namespaces 2018-11-15 23:55:13 +01:00
2d5ebcd5fa Global-Layer-Renaming: adjust header includes 2018-11-15 23:42:43 +01:00
9e951e1eeb Global-Layer-Renaming: adapt lots of documentation 2018-11-15 21:13:52 +01:00
4e94dfd4d9 FailureHandling: improved ZombieCheck
now capturing the Zombie's ID

==> surprise, its ClassLock<gui::interact::LocationQuery>
2018-10-01 05:51:21 +02:00
433543a2c7 DOC: some doxygen fixes 2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
89d93a13e4 Modernise Unknown Exception handler and Exception messages 2018-04-02 01:48:51 +02:00
fc546f71b4 Reorganise some tests
Dependency-Injection rather fits into the "fundamentals" section.
It is more than a mere library facility
2018-03-31 17:12:45 +02:00
4d783770d0 Bugfix: CallQueue_test initialisation was not threadsafe (see also #1131)
...which showed up under high system load.
The initialisation of the member variables for the check sum
could be delayed while the corresponding thread was already running
2018-03-26 04:40:54 +02:00
685a9b84ee Library: replace boost::noncopyable by our own library solution
Benefits
 - get rid of yet another pervasive Boost dependency
 - define additional more fine grained policies (move only, clonable)
2018-03-24 05:35:13 +01:00
46fc900980 UI-Dispatch: get the multithreded test to work (#1098)
the (trivial) implementation turned out to be correct as written,
but it was (again) damn challenging to get the mulithreaded chaotic
test fixture and especially the lambda captures to work correct.
2017-08-07 05:19:58 +02:00
908d1a8faa test need to be linked against liblumierabackend
...while tests in the library subdirectory are linked only against
liblumierasupport, which does not provide the multithreading support

In this special case here the actual facility to be tested does not rely
on thread support, only on locking. But the stress test obviously needs
to create several threads. Simple workaround is to move the test into
a test collection linked against all of the application core...
2017-08-06 15:30:01 +02:00
9c21164ae6 Doxygen Fixes (#1062)
This changeset fixes a huge pile of problems, as indicated in the
error log of the Doxygen run after merging all the recent Doxygen improvements

unfortunately, auto-linking does still not work at various places.
There is no clear indication what might be the problem.
Possibly the rather unstable Sqlite support in this Doxygen version
is the cause. Anyway, needs to be investigated further.
2017-04-02 04:22:51 +02:00
05aaa74422 MERGE Doxygen clean-up done during the last months 2017-04-01 23:59:00 +02:00
155bf95ce5 Doxygen: magically insert a reference to the test class
this bit of Sed magic relies on the fact that we happen to write
the almost correct class name of a test into the header comment.

HOWTO:
for F in $(find tests -type f \( -name '*.cpp' \)  -exec egrep -q '§§TODO§§' {} \; -print);
  do sed -r -i -e'
    2          {h;x;s/\s+(.+)\(Test\).*$/\\ref \1_test/;x};
    /§§TODO§§/ {s/§§TODO§§//;G;s/\n//}'
    $F;
done
2017-02-22 03:17:18 +01:00
24b3bec4be Doxygen: prepare all unit tests for inclusion in the documentation
Doxygen will only process files with a @file documentation comment.
Up to now, none of our test code has such a comment, preventing the
cross-links to unit tests from working.

This is unfortunate, since unit tests, and even the code comments there,
can be considered as the most useful form of technical documentation.
Thus I'll start an initiative to fill in those missing comments automatically
2017-02-22 01:54:20 +01:00
3395d002bd Library: helper to produce threadsafe member-IDs for a family of objects
This is a little bit of functionality needed again and again;
first I thought to use the TypedCounter, but this would be overkill,
since we do not actually need different instances, and we do not need
to select by type when incrementing the counter. In fact, we do not
even need anything beyond just allocating a number.

So I made a new class, which can be used RAII style
2017-01-14 03:07:48 +01:00
3cc3f69471 SessionCommand: draft the idea of a function(integration) test 2017-01-11 04:19:43 +01:00
1a4b6545a0 maximum munch
...feels like X-mas
2016-12-23 04:23:03 +01:00
48e9b7594a Doxygen: identify all files lacking a @file comment
reason is, only files with a @file comment will be processed
with further documentation commands. For this reason, our Doxygen
documentation is lacking a lot of entries.

HOWTO:
find src -type f \( -name '*.cpp' -or -name '*.hpp' \) -not -exec egrep -q '\*.+@file' {} \; -print -exec sed -i -r -e'\_\*/_,$ { 1,+0 a\
\
\
/** @file §§§\
 ** TODO §§§\
 */
}' {} \;
2016-11-03 18:20:10 +01:00
615f112f5c clean-up(#985): unify various type-indicating helpers
over time, we got quite a jungle with all those
shome-me-the-type-of helper functions.

Reduced and unified all those into
- typeString : a human readable, slightly simplified full type
- typeSymbol : a single word identifier, extracted lexically from the type

note: this changeset causes a lot of tests to break,
since we're using unmangeled type-IDs pretty much everywhere now.
Beore fixing those, I'll have to implement a better simplification
scheme for the "human readable" type names....
2016-01-09 02:05:23 +01:00
2c20d407fc mass clean-up: adapt usage of std::cout pretty much everywhere
- remove unnecessary includes
- expunge all remaining usages of boost::format
- able to leave out the expliti string(elm) in output
- drop various operator<<, since we're now picking up
  custom string conversions automatically
- delete diagnostics headers, which are now largely superfluous
- use newer helper functions occasionally

I didn't blindly change any usage of <iostream> though;
sometimes, just using the output streams right away
seems adequate.
2016-01-07 20:12:46 +01:00