Commit Graph

6 Commits (ece91e87fc1031763d560640abbcaba18fdc685e)

Author SHA1 Message Date
lyyn ece91e87fc
Migrate tests from gtest to catch2 3 years ago
Jason Rhinelander ebd2142114 Don't use std::optional::value() because f u macos
This replaces all use of std::optional's `opt.value()` with `*opt`
because macOS is great and the ghost of Steve Jobs says that actually
supporting std::optional's value() method is not for chumps before macOS
10.14.  So don't use it because Apple is great.

Pretty much all of our use of it actually is done better with operator*
anyway (since operator* doesn't do a check that the optional has a
value).

Also replaced *most* of the `has_value()` calls with direct bool
context, except for one in the config section which looked really
confusing at a glance without a has_value().
4 years ago
Jason Rhinelander 1697bf90fe C++17
Compiles with C++17, replaces ghc::filesystem with std::filesystem,
nonstd::optional with std::optional, and llarp::string_view with
std::string_view.
4 years ago
Jason Rhinelander b4440094b0 De-abseil, part 2: mutex, locks, (most) time
- util::Mutex is now a std::shared_timed_mutex, which is capable of
  exclusive and shared locks.

- util::Lock is still present as a std::lock_guard<util::Mutex>.

- the locking annotations are preserved, but updated to the latest
  supported by clang rather than using abseil's older/deprecated ones.

- ACQUIRE_LOCK macro is gone since we don't pass mutexes by pointer into
  locks anymore (WTF abseil).

- ReleasableLock is gone.  Instead there are now some llarp::util helper
  methods to obtain unique and/or shared locks:
    - `auto lock = util::unique_lock(mutex);` gets an RAII-but-also
      unlockable object (std::unique_lock<T>, with T inferred from
      `mutex`).
    - `auto lock = util::shared_lock(mutex);` gets an RAII shared (i.e.
      "reader") lock of the mutex.
    - `auto lock = util::unique_locks(mutex1, mutex2, mutex3);` can be
      used to atomically lock multiple mutexes at once (returning a
      tuple of the locks).
  This are templated on the mutex which makes them a bit more flexible
  than using a concrete type: they can be used for any type of lockable
  mutex, not only util::Mutex.  (Some of the code here uses them for
  getting locks around a std::mutex).  Until C++17, using the RAII types
  is painfully verbose:

  ```C++
  // pre-C++17 - needing to figure out the mutex type here is annoying:
  std::unique_lock<util::Mutex> lock(mutex);
  // pre-C++17 and even more verbose (but at least the type isn't needed):
  std::unique_lock<decltype(mutex)> lock(mutex);
  // our compromise:
  auto lock = util::unique_lock(mutex);
  // C++17:
  std::unique_lock lock(mutex);
  ```

  All of these functions will also warn (under gcc or clang) if you
  discard the return value.  You can also do fancy things like
  `auto l = util::unique_lock(mutex, std::adopt_lock)` (which lets a
  lock take over an already-locked mutex).

- metrics code is gone, which also removes a big pile of code that was
  only used by metrics:
  - llarp::util::Scheduler
  - llarp:🧵:TimerQueue
  - llarp::util::Stopwatch
4 years ago
Jason Rhinelander ac1486d0be Replace absl::optional with optional-lite
Step 1 of removing abseil from lokinet.

For the most part this is a drop-in replacement, but there are also a
few changes here to the JSONRPC layer that were needed to work around
current gcc 10 dev snapshot:

- JSONRPC returns a json now instead of an optional<json>.  It doesn't
  make any sense to have a json rpc call that just closes the connection
  with returning anything.  Invoked functions can return a null (default
  constructed) result now if they don't have anything to return (such a
  null value won't be added as "result").
4 years ago
Michael edd0ec398f
Move thread stuff to subdirectory 5 years ago