Being able to indivually initialize individual modules was initially
"good", but at end it's putting complexities on users that would try
to "optimize" by doing just what they used, but in the end most people
would get them wrong, users would have to do lots of code and etc. At
the end it does not worth.
Most module init just register handful errors and log domains, so are
cheap. The exception is mempool users, that would dlopen() stuff, but
people that are concerned (embedded) can just compile those statically
in eina.
Since at the end any real application would use most of modules, we
actually end saving lots of function calls that would do nothing other
than increment a global counter.
I also did the init/shutdown use an array, making it easier to
maintain. The inital dependencies were analysed by a script I wrote, I
hope it's all right.
Please fix any breakages you find!
SVN revision: 42300
I was replicating this code in many places, it should go into eina itself.
It's the right way to change strings that you don't know are
stringshared before, since it will first add a reference and then
remove, making it impossible to have references to go 0 and string
being released before adding new references, fixing the following
possible problem:
x = eina_stringshare_add("x");
replace(x, x);
then:
incorrect_replace(const char **b, const char *a) {
eina_stringshare_del(*b); /* reference gets to 0 */
eina_stringshare_add(a); /* BUG!!! */
*b = a;
}
SVN revision: 39903
this should help with optimizations and code correctness, please see
"info gcc" for detailed explanation on these.
if you experience some functions not working as expected, please
double check if they're not marked with EINA_PURE or EINA_CONST, maybe
I misused them. Remove the macro and try again.
brief explanation:
* EINA_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT: if you forgot to use the return of some
function, it will emit a warning (and -Werror will make it an
error). This way it will be harder to miss the attribution
"l = eina_list_append(l, v)".
* EINA_ARG_NONNULL(index, index...): if you give it an explicit NULL
argument, or some tool (ie: clang) finds it could get a NULL but
this is not accepted by API, then a warning will be emitted. This
will help those that still use eina_hash_add() as if it is
evas_hash_add().
* EINA_MALLOC: any non-NULL pointer it returns cannot alias any other
pointer valid when function returns.
* EINA_PURE: function have no effects other than the return and this
return just depend on parameters and/or globals. You might call
this function in a loop a thousand times and it will return the
same value, thus you may move this function outside the loop and
remove it.
* EINA_CONST: stricter version of EINA_PURE, it will not check for
global parameters, that is, you cannot consider pointer
arguments. Use it for math things like "int sqrt(int)".
* EINA_PRINTF(fmt, arg): will check format parameter specified in
position "fmt" and passed arguments starting at position "arg", it
will check for things like giving integers where short or strings
were expected.
* EINA_SCANF(fmt, arg): similar to eina_printf().
* EINA_FORMAT(fmt): for use with things like dgettext(), it will get
a printf-like format string and modifies it.
Please review and test it with your software, make sure you make clean
before you install the new version so it has any effect.
If you find some functions are missing EINA_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT and
EINA_ARG_NONNULL or others, please add them.
SVN revision: 38323
This is a faster "add", if we know we're using a shared string we know
the node without any need to search it, just increment reference and
exit.
SVN revision: 37458
* reorganize a bit more. it's not finished
* fix spellingg and formatting
* gnuplot file names generated by our bechmarks tests have an
absolute time description and not H:M:S description, as this
breaks the check out of the repo on Windows.
SVN revision: 36090