The bootloader model knows about both rows and
devices, so we can look up both at once. The
existing implementation as a non-member was rather
sketchy and wasn't used except as support for
restoreSelectedBootLoader().
If the pakcage manager fails in some way, convert to a readable
error message instead of leaking the exception to the caller
(which produces a traceback, which is harder to read and less
informative)
Widgets are easier to style if they have a name, and easier to spot
in the widget tree as well. Give the requirements-checker
parts meaningful names.
SEE #1685
- in legacy mode, *id* can have an effect and leads to
"packagechooser_<id>"; if unset, uses the the module
instance id instead, still as "packagechooser_<instanceid>".
- in packages mode, *id* is not used and only the whole
module Id (generally, "packagechooser@<instanceid>")
is used, but in packages mode there's no need for other
packages to mess with GS settings for this packagechooser.
When the module is loaded and the viewstep created, it doesn't have a
module Id **yet**. That is set after reading more of the configuration
file. It **is** set by the time setConfigurationMap() is called,
so pass it on to the Config object then. This means that packagechooser
modules can skip the *id* config key and use the module Id.
The model needs to be attached to the widget; because of changes
in the order that widget() and setConfigurationMap() are called,
the model is created earlier, but needs to be connected later.
- the %4 is left-over from the feature-summary string,
- replace it with ""; don't change the source string
because that will break translations right now.
- don't pass the item IDs to packages module, use the
packages lists for each item
- document the item list in more detail (including the packages member
and new install-method item)
Rip out most of the ViewStep that deals with configuration,
move it to a Config object (not one that supports QML yet,
though), and massage the model a little.
The single-values *package* member in a PackageItem was not used,
so remove it -- to show that it really isn't used. This is prep-
work for putting the package name *back*, as multi-valued,
and using the *packages* module.
- if the queue is emptied, there was no usable data; set
failure to NoData rather than BadData.
- FetchNextUnless::done() is done only if the parameter is true (that
is, it's done!); otherwise should continue.
- drop the debugging line because that has already been
logged by the call to `runCommand()` that backs
`target_env_call()`.
- use the same (top-level) function rather than having a
function and elsewhere a very-similar method.