- was filtering out the wrong URLs
- was not actually removing the invalid URLs
- extend API to make it possible to count / confirm the settings
- extend tests to demonstrate that API and the issues
- enforce consistent [PYTHON JOB]
- use CDebug() constructor, because the convenience macro's
introduce the function name -- that's the C++ function, so
it isn't useful for logging.
Just have **one** Retranslator object, and install it as event-filter
(this needs to be done manually on a top-level widget) and use
signals / slots to do the actual work, rather than filtering
in multiple places and doing our own mediocre version of binding-
signal-to-lambda.
Sending a Once to a logger that isn't enabled should not "consume"
that Once; it's still available for a subsequent logger that **is**
enabled (useful if you're using more than one log-level in a function).
This allows injecting arbitrary Python code before
the script of a module is even run. For testing
purposes, that gives us a chance to modify existing
(internal) modules before the script (e.g. to test
subprocess calls).
- The log **file** got every QDebug object, while stdout only
got the ones of sufficient logging level. A CDebug object checks the
logging level before writing anything -- so those already were
consistent, but any qDebug() in the program (not cDebug()!) would
reach the writing-function anyway, and so log to the file.
Fix this weird inconsistency by checking log-level just once,
for both writes.
- Map QtMsgType -- used by qDebug() and qWarning() -- to levels used
by Calamares in a consistent fashion.
- Drop unused log levels (INFO, EXTRA unused in any Calamares code).
- convenience method to install a (string) list of packages
(doesn't do the installation, but adds to GS the list, so
that the packages module can handle it).
- turn the translations-QRC phase into a function, just in
case other tests need translations as well.
- This CMake code might work as the base of translation-wrangling for
plugins (externally).
- convenience method to install a (string) list of packages
(doesn't do the installation, but adds to GS the list, so
that the packages module can handle it).
- There's still 49 enumeration values not handled, leading to
an annoying Clang warning, but there's just no **point**
in listing them all: that's what 'default' is for.