Summary:
In the case when you have multiple future in flight related to one object, you
couldn't use the previous version of efl_future_then. Now all function calls
take a void* pointer that allow multiple future to have their private data
request data accessible in all the callback.
This should not break released API as Eo.h is not released yet and so
was efl_future_Eina_FutureXXX_then.
Depends on D7332
Reviewers: felipealmeida, segfaultxavi, vitor.sousa, SanghyeonLee, bu5hm4n
Reviewed By: segfaultxavi
Subscribers: #reviewers, #committers
Tags: #efl
Maniphest Tasks: T7472
Differential Revision: https://phab.enlightenment.org/D7379
This changes a lot of things all across the EFL. Previously,
methods tagged @const had both their external prototype and
internal impl generated with const on object, while property
getters only had const on the external API. This is now changed
and it all has const everywhere.
Ref T6859.
On destructor we're not supposed to emit events, I even thought that
would be implicit, but it's not. If we do, for example an event
handler that would 'efl_del()' on "EFL_IO_CLOSER_EVENT_CLOSED" would
trigger too-many unrefs.
On Windows SOCKET is unsigned, thus will cause sign errors when
formatting with "%d" or comparing with signed values.
On UNIX it was quiet and easy to miss, thus a new #define can be used
to check for those. It will use 'unsigned long' as SOCKET, thus will
complain out loud and not even work correctly when using pointers on
64bits UNIX on mistakes -- which should improve the situation.
This helped to fix lots of missing conversions, all fixed.
This partially addresses D4357.
This introduces AF_UNIX server and dialer, these are not available on
Windows as in that platform we'll create a custom class for native
'local' communication.
In the future we can add a wrapper class Efl.Net.Local that will use
the class for each platform, but won't expose its details.
For instance, if we ever expose 'credentials' (which I didn't because
they are not portable), then it doesn't make sense to try to match
that on Windows. The 'Efl.Net.Local' would just stick to the basics:
Reader, Writer and Closer APIs.