Instead of one item keeping the item + its position and sorting that
list, keep the items in 1 array and put the positions into a 2nd array.
This is generally slower while sorting, but allows multiple improvements:
1. We can replace items with keys
This allows avoiding multiple slow lookups when using complex
comparisons
2. We can keep multiple position arrays
This allows doing a sorting in the background without actually
emitting items-changed() until the array is completely sorted.
3. The main list tracks the items in the original model
So only a single memmove() is necessary there, while the old version
had to upgrade the position in every item.
Benchmarks:
sorting a model of simple strings
old new
256,000 items 256ms 268ms
512,000 items 569ms 638ms
sorting a model of file trees, directories first, by size
old new
64,000 items 350ms 364ms
128,000 items 667ms 691ms
removing half the model
old new
512,000 items 24ms 15ms
1,024,000 items 49ms 25ms
Simplify all view model APIs and always return G_TYPE_OBJECT as the
item-type for every model.
It turns out nobody uses item-type anyway.
So instead of adding lots of APIs, forcing people to think about it and
trying to figure out how to handle filter or map models that modify item
types, just having an easy life is a better approach.
All the models need to be able to deal with any type of object going
through anyway.
All the list model tests were leaking items,
because g_list_model_get_item is transfer full.
Fixing these unveils a crash in the treelistmodel
and maplistmodel tests.
The calls used old bugzilla URLs and nobody cared about that.
So apparently they are very unused.
There's also a potential conflict between gitlab and bugzilla URLs and
what base bug to use there.
The old usages have been converted to comments.