- The InternalManager object should have at most one living
instance at a time.
- getInternal() hands out shared_ptr<>s to the one living instance,
or creates a new one.
- The creation of a new InternalManager shouldn't count as a reference
to it, and it mustn't be deleted after the shared_ptr<>s have done
their work.
- So static shared_ptr<InternalManager> was the wrong choice,
since that leads to double deletes.
- While here, be a little more chatty when loading KPMCore.
- Starting to centralize utility code for partitioning into
libcalamares instead of scattered and weirdly shared between
modules.
- This particular commit breaks compiling the modules, though.
- Update coding style (more braces!) and coding documentation,
reformat parts. The idea is to go through and re-do the
coding style across the whole codebase incrementally, but
systematically, in the next release or two.
- astyle can do some things that clang-format doesn't (e.g.
adding brackets; you need clang-tidy for that),
- clang-format does a much nicer job with lambdas and certain
other constructions,
- allow passing in directories at a time for formatting.
- since we mix Python (indentation is important) with C++ (it isn't),
having indented one-line blocks which suddenly need {} when a
statment is added is confusing and error-prone. Instead, make
the blocks explicit, always, in C++.
- From an exec section, next() is called automatically when
all the jobs in that section are done.
- If there **is** no next section (e.g. there's no finished
page to show after the exec), then m_steps.at() would assert
on an out-of-range index.
- Introdcuce a helper predicate isAtVeryEnd() which handles both
out-of-range and normal at-the-end scenarios.
- If there's no page following the exec section, stay with the
slideshow but update buttons to match the normal last-page
behavior, and don't ask about cancel (since we're done).
- This avoids processes that wait on stdin, and e.g. improves
reaction to having just "cat" (no file) in a command, or
a package manager that asks for input.
- JobQueue is only needed to get global settings, which are needed
when running in the target; for host commands, allow running
without a queue.
- Settings is needed for the value of debugsettings; assume if
there's no settings object, that we're in a test and should
print debugging information.
- This is the same as EFAIL: a block is indented as if it's a multi-
line else block. This isn't Python though, and the return always
applies.
- Add the necessary braces.
- Apparently noone uses this code path (until ProcessJob was re-
factored to do so).