Commit graph

2307 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
b2b5cf0f6d MERGE: upgrade to Debian/Buster and to C++17 2020-02-22 02:16:25 +01:00
421a2ed49a C++17: some related clean-up 2020-02-21 23:55:09 +01:00
00c9ecb659 C++17: fix detector for function signatures
failure was likewise caused by `noexcept` being part of the signature type now
2020-02-21 20:16:59 +01:00
8c12e88fd3 C++17: fix detector for STL container iterability
the reason for the failure, as it turned out,
is that 'noexcept' is part of the function signature since C++17

And, since typically a STL container has const and non-const variants
of the begin() and end() function, the match to a member function pointer
became ambuguous, when probing with a signature without 'noexcept'

However, we deliberately want to support "any STL container like" types,
and this IMHO should include types with a possibly throwing iterator.
The rationale is, sometimes we want to expose some element *generator*
behind a container-like interface.

At this point I did an investigation if we can emulate something
in the way of a Concept -- i.e. rather than checking for the presence
of some functions on the interface, better try to cover the necessary
behaviour, like in a type class.

Unfortunately, while doable, this turns out to become quite technical;
and this highlights why the C++20 concepts are such an important addition
to the language.

So for the time being, we'll amend the existing solution
and look ahead to C++20
2020-02-21 18:57:49 +01:00
577592c66e C++17: isolate problematic code segments (see Ticket #1138)
as it turns out, "almost" the whole codebase compiles in C++17 mode.

with the exception of two metaprogramming-related problems:

 - our "duck detector" for STL containers does not trigger anymore
 - the Metafunction to dissect Function sigantures (meta::_Fun) flounders
2020-02-18 04:16:03 +01:00
3cfe5a13b1 fix failing test - boost::format is getting better
"%broken" is not broken anymore, but renders a boolean,
and we configured the formatter not to complain on missing values.

Fortunately "%madness" is still broken ;-)
2020-02-17 03:32:43 +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
cef7917d8e Diff-Listener: finished and unit test pass (closes: #1206) 2019-12-15 21:40:09 +01:00
d8b20ae497 Diff-Listener: fill in implementation
...basically just need to intercept three TreeMutator-operations
2019-12-15 04:04:25 +01:00
a33e236630 Diff-Listener: define API 2019-12-14 23:35:16 +01:00
806d569e06 Diff-Framework: resolve lurking problems with specific STL containers
basically the solution was a bit too naive and assumed everything is similar to a vector.
It is not, and this leads to some insidious problems with std::map, which hereby
are resolved by introducing ContainerTraits
2019-12-14 01:29:21 +01:00
8a5f1bc8d7 Diff-Listener: add a similar simplistic demo for opaque binding
based on a TreeMutator binding to a STL vector

...because this is probably the most frequently used case
2019-12-13 01:05:04 +01:00
3321e5bc6b Diff-Listener: need a really basic test
All of the existing "simple" tests for the »Diff Framework« are way to much low-level;
they might indeed be elementary, but not introductory and simple to grasp.
We need a very simplistic example to show off the idea of mutation by diff,
and this simple example can then be used to build further usage test cases.

My actual goal for #1206 to have such a very basic usage demonstration and then
to attach a listener to this setup, and verify it is actually triggered.

PS: the name "GenNodeBasic_test" is somewhat pathetic, this test covers a lot
of ground and is anything but "basic". GenNode in fact became a widely used
fundamental data structure within Lumiera, and -- admittedly -- the existing
implementation might be somewhat simplistic, while the whole concept as such
is demanding, and we should accept that as the state of affairs
2019-12-12 23:41:26 +01:00
c86f914915 Structure-Change: re-order entity naming
ViewHookable -> ViewHook
ViewHook -> ViewHooked
2019-12-12 17:02:24 +01:00
c501a38590 Structure-Change: fix test after refactoring / add lifecycle warning
now the lifecycle of widget and hook are tightly interwoven.
Indeed the test uncovered a situation where a call into the
already destroyed Canvas might halt the application.
2019-12-09 01:24:51 +01:00
0a20d18242 Structure-Change: implement the changed API and memory layout
NOTE: 2 test failures
2019-12-08 23:57:43 +01:00
99e367f33b Structure-Change: draft other API for hooking up widgets
...basically it occurred to me that in practice we will never have to deal
with isolated ViewHooks, rather with widgets-combinded-with-a-hook.
So the idea is to combine both into a template ViewHooked<W>
2019-12-08 21:09:25 +01:00
ffcac2ea1e Structure-Change: implement a simplistic implementation of re-ordering
...verified by the rather conceptual unit test
2019-12-06 23:19:09 +01:00
305ff8e6cc Structure-Change: draft API for re-ordering attached widgets
basically this attempts to work around an "impedance mismatch" caused by relying on Lumiera's Diff framework.
Applying a diff might alter the structural order of components, without those componets
being aware of the change. If especially those components are attached into some
UI layout, or otherwise delegate to display widgets, we need a dedicated mechanism
to reestablish those display elements in proper order after applying the change.

The typical examples is a sequence of sub-Tracks, which might have been reordert due
to applying rules down in the Steam Layer. The resulting diff will propagate the
new order of sub-Tracks up into the UI, yet now all of the elaborate layout and
space allocation done in the presentation code needs to be adjusted or even
recomputed to accomodate the change.
2019-12-06 21:53:43 +01:00
37d2e52c1e ClipDisplay: also verify invocation of widget relocation via ViewHook
...obviously this is just a dummy implementation and serves only to verify the design
2019-11-08 21:37:09 +01:00
bdf3351f55 ClipDisplay: basic implementation of ViewHook helper 2019-11-08 20:49:37 +01:00
f9d8f6eb55 ClipDisplay: draft desired properties of the ViewHook helper
...which serves to solve the problem with Canvas access.
Basically we do not want each and every Clip widget to be aware of the concrete canvas implementation widget;
and in addition, automated removal of widgets from the Canvas seems desirable
2019-09-30 02:49:02 +02:00
ec50407167 Timeline: start implementing some bits of the drawing code
Use a "catchy" style definition with lime background to make the drawing visible
2019-07-14 17:53:21 +02:00
6b4bf0a6ea Library: allow to check if Advice was explicitly given
For context: The »Advice System« was coined a long time ago, in 2010,
based on the vague impression that it might be useful for that kind of application
we are about to build here. And, as can be expected, none of the usage situations
envisioned at that time was brought to bear. Non the less, the facility came in
handy at times, precisely because it is cross-cutting and allows to pass
information without imposing any systematic relationship between the
communication partners.

And now we've got again such a situation.
The global style manager in the UI has to build a virtual CSS path,
which is needed by drawing code somewhere deep down, and we absolutely
do not want to pass a reference to the style manager over 20 recursive calls.

The alternatives would be
 (1) to turn the style manager into a public service
 (2) to have a static access function somewhere
 (3) to use a global variable.
For rationale, (1) would be overblown, because we do not actually request
a service to do work for us, rather we need some global piece of information.
(2) would be equivalent to (1), just more confusing. And (3) is basically
what the Advice system does, with the added benefit of a clear-cut service
access point and a well defined lifecycle.

This changeset adds the ability to check if actual Advice has been published,
which allows us to invoke the (possibly expensive) GTK path building and
style context building code only once.
2019-07-13 17:00:23 +02:00
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
ab90d9c71d Functions-Commands: discard the ability to compare functors for equivalence (closes #294)
evil hack R.I.P
2019-06-23 19:45:30 +02:00
94edb5de86 BufferMetadata: likewise abandon use of function comparison for buffer handlers
The existing implementation created a Buffer-Type based on various traits,
including the constructor and destructor functions for the buffer content.
However, this necessitates calculating the hash_value of a std::function,
which (see #294) is generally not possible to implement.

So with this changeset we now store an additional identity hash value
right into the TypeHandler, based on the target type placed into the buffer
2019-06-23 18:57:21 +02:00
d57770ca89 Commands: disable equivalence-test on command equality
This was prompted by a test failing under Boost-1.65 (--> see #294)
When reviewed now, the whole idea of testing Steam-Layer Commands for
equivalence feels a bit sketchy.

Just the comparison for the command ''identity'' alone seems sufficient,
i.e. the test if a command-ID is associated with the same backend-handle
and thus the same functor binding.
2019-06-23 17:35:21 +02:00
f6e5886348 Library: complete test coverage of VerbPack 2019-06-11 02:40:20 +02:00
3d5a67ed14 Library: finish and clean-up the solution for VerbPack dispatch 2019-06-10 16:08:50 +02:00
8f43c2591e Library: investigate malfunction in metaprogramming
the template lib::PolymorphicValue seemingly picked the wrong
implementation strategy for "virtual copy support": In fact it is possible
to use the optimal strategy here, since our interface inherits from CloneSupport,
yet the metaprogramming logic picked the mix-in-adapter (which requires one additional "slot"
of storage plus a dynamic_cast at runtime).

The reason for this malfunction was the fact that we used META_DETECT_FUNCTION
to detect the presence of a clone-support-function. This is not correct, since
it can only detect a function in the *same* class, not an inherited function.

Thus, switching to META_DETECT_FUNCTION_NAME solves this problem
Well, this solution has some downsides, but since I intend to rewrite the
whole virtual copy support (#1197) anyway, I'll deem this acceptable for now


TODO / WIP: still some diagnostics code to clean up, plus a better solution for the EmptyBase
2019-05-10 02:19:01 +02:00
23c9da7c62 Library: solve the dilemma by inheriting from VerbToken
...which, in the end, can even be considered the more logical design choice,
since the "verb visitor" is a more elaborated and sophisiticated Verb-Token,
adding the special twist of embedded storage for variable function arguments
2019-05-09 23:40:47 +02:00
a530665769 Library: fix some reference passing errors
...but bad news on the main issue:
the workaround consumes the tuple and thus is not tenable!

And what is even worse: the textbook implementation of std::apply is
equivalent to our workaround and also consumes the argument tuple
2019-04-22 16:54:22 +02:00
e28635a11a Library: investigate copy behaviour in forwarding calls 2019-04-21 03:52:34 +02:00
5191073558 Library: continue Investigation with workaround, inconclusive yet
A simple yet weird workaround (and basically equivalent to our helper function)
is to wrap the argument tuple itself into std::forward<Args> -- which has the
effect of exposing RValue references to the forwarding function, thus silencing
the compiler.

I am not happy with this result, since it contradicts the notion of perfect forwarding.

As an asside, the ressearch has sorted out some secondary suspicions..
- it is *not* the Varargs argument pack as such
- it is *not* the VerbToken type as such

The problem clearly is related to exposing tuple elements to a forwarding function.
2019-04-20 17:27:47 +02:00
6fbd1021ba Library: first attempt to get the flexible VerbToken to work
...still not decided yet if this whole apporach is sound...
2019-04-17 18:32:21 +02:00
9b5fdd39b8 Library: draft for a visitor-like VerbToken
this is a generalisation of what we use in the diff framework;
typically you'd package the VerbToken into some kind of container,
together with the concrete invocation argument.

However, the specific twist here is that we want *variable arguments*,
depending on the actual operation called on the interpreter interface.
2019-04-16 18:21:51 +02:00
ec9b2388da Timeline: consider how to integrate the drawing code
...which leads to a specific twist here; while in the simple version
we still could hope to get away with a simple uniform uint argument,
the situation has changed altogether now. The canvas has turned into
some generic component, since it is instantiated two times, onece for
the time ruler and once for the actual body content. Thus all of the
specifics of the drawing code need to be pushed into a new, dedicated
renderer component. And this more or less forces us to pass all the
actual presentation variations through the invocation arguments of
the visitor.

So we're now off again for a digression, we need a more generalised visitor
2019-04-14 15:38:57 +02:00
116600b20a Timeline: draft a concept to attack the custom layout
the core question is: how to translate time into pixel coordinates
2018-12-10 00:12:52 +01:00
7b7ec310b3 Dispatcher: rename in accordance to the layer
so now we've got a "SteamDispatcher" ... cute ;-)
2018-12-10 00:12:52 +01:00
2ea89fcb54 Dispatcher: rework loop control logic
- we got occasional hangups when waiting for disabled state
- the builder was not triggered properly, sometimes redundant, sometimes without timeout

As it turned out, the loop control logic is more like a state machine,
and the state variables need to be separated from the external influenced variables.

As a consequence, the inChange_ variable was not calculated properly when disabled in a race,
and then the loop went into infinite wait state, without propagating this to
the externally waiting client, which caused the deadlock
2018-12-10 00:12:52 +01:00
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
b68d0f24cb Library: settle long standing confusion regarding time border conditions
basically we can pick just any convention here, and so we should pick the convention in a way
that makes most sense informally, for a *human reader*. But what we previously did, was to pick
the condition such as to make it simple in some situations for the programmer....

With the predictable result: even with the disappointingly small number of usages we have up to now,
we got that condition backwards several times.

OK, so from now on!!!

Time::NEVER == Time::MAX, because "never" is as far as possible into the future
2018-12-10 00:12:43 +01:00
d3d7ea35ad Global-Layer-Renaming: fix remaining textual usages and IDs in the code
- most notably the NOBUG logging flags have been renamed now
 - but for the configuration, I'll stick to "GUI" for now,
   since "Stage" would be bewildering for an occasional user
 - in a similar vein, most documentation continues to refer to the GUI
2018-12-10 00:09:56 +01:00
480104b945 Global-Layer-Renaming: adapt the build system to the new layer names
...with one exception: I'll retain the name "gui" for the final product to be built.
2018-11-16 15:25:28 +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
72b15b8e45 Global-Layer-Renaming: transform header include guards
btw... we could change to #pragma once
2018-11-15 23:52:02 +01:00
2d5ebcd5fa Global-Layer-Renaming: adjust header includes 2018-11-15 23:42:43 +01:00
6261779531 Global-Layer-Renaming: rearrange directories
backend -> vault
proc -> steam
gui -> stage
2018-11-15 23:28:03 +01:00