- 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.
The partitioning header 'FileSystem.h' is for KPMCore support;
it is already included by Global.h and guarded by ifdefs for
KPMCore. Do not unconditionally include it from the implementation.
- make the functies that take a GS* first-class
- use the convenience functions from JobQueue for the others
- inline so only the explicit-GS* functions are in the library
Require a ; after RETRANSLATE macros. They are statement-like;
this makes it easier for some of them to be recognized by
clang-format and resolves some existing weird formatting.
- do some additions and check they work
- drop the ";add" annotation on the source, this is not
needed in the current situation with only adds available.
For methods that log a bunch of things, and which want to
consistently use SubEntry, but don't know when the **first**
log entry is within the method, Logger::Once can be used
to log one regular message (with function info) and the
rest are subentries.
- If the module knows about a preset, then it should be registered
even if there is not a value set for it specifically; this avoids
complaints from isEditable() for fields that are known, but
do not have a preset. (Reported by Anke)
- warn about fields applied twice (program error)
- warn about fields not used (configuration error)
- add operator<< for "clean" looking preset application
Build up the list of known presets by what the Config-object
expects, not by what the Config file provides. This allows
early detection of mis-matched configurations.
Presets can only apply to Q_PROPERTY properties, and the
preset must match the property name.
This adds support for checking whether a field is editable;
Config objects should reject changes if the field is not
editable. There is an "unlock" setting to override the
check, although this is currently always locked.
*If* the distro has GeoIP enabled and auto-selects the language for
Calamares, then Belarus now selects Russian, rather the Belarusian.
This is based on some personal input, mostly, and Wikipedia census data.
FIXES#1634
- It shouldn't be necessary to explicitly .get() pointers for
logging, and it's convenient to know when a pointer is smart.
* no annotation means raw (e.g. @0x0)
* S means shared
* U means unique
The popup now cuts down messages to a manageable length.
Hopefully the part that is preserved, will still show
something meaningful for the user (8 lines of text should
be sufficient for the kind of things we do).
FIXES#1613
Writing `Logger::NoQuote{}`` has annoyed me for a while, so
switch it to a constant, like SubEntry, so it looks more
like a regular manipulator object.
The value inside a unique_ptr can't be opaque, it needs to be known
at any site where the pointer may be deleted. shared_ptr does not
have that (deletion is part of the shared_ptr object, which is larger
than the unique_ptr) and so can be used for opaque deletions.
- Make explicit which one runs in the host, which one is selectable.
- Document *location* parameter in the selectable version.
- Tidy up alignment of apidox.
Some compile flags changed recently, triggering assert()
in the jobqueue when there is more than one. There's no
real reason for JobQueue to be a singleton, but it wants
to be. So clean up pointers a little more enthusiastically.
- gcc (up to at least version 10) is worse at recognizing that all
cases have been handled, so it complains about all the switches
that cover enum values.
- both clang and g++ support __builtin_unreachable(); (as Kevin
Kofler pointed out) so we don't need the macro to do different things;
- the compilers have gotten better at detecting unreachable code,
so instead of inserting macros or fiddly bits, just drop them
and the unreachable code they comment.
- reduce the difference between clang and g++ builds, factor
common flags out of the CMake-if
- drop special boost-warning-suppression, we do that differently
most of the time in the affected source files