This almost gets gms to be iwyu clean. The last bit is around gm.cpp
and the tracing framework and its use of atomic. Will also need a way
of keeping things from regressing, which is difficult due to needing to
do this outside-in.
Change-Id: I1393531e99da8b0f1a29f55c53c86d53f459af7d
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/211593
Reviewed-by: Herb Derby <herb@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Ben Wagner <bungeman@google.com>
Current strategy: everything from the top
Things to look at first are the manual changes:
- added tools/rewrite_includes.py
- removed -Idirectives from BUILD.gn
- various compile.sh simplifications
- tweak tools/embed_resources.py
- update gn/find_headers.py to write paths from the top
- update gn/gn_to_bp.py SkUserConfig.h layout
so that #include "include/config/SkUserConfig.h" always
gets the header we want.
No-Presubmit: true
Change-Id: I73a4b181654e0e38d229bc456c0d0854bae3363e
Reviewed-on: https://skia-review.googlesource.com/c/skia/+/209706
Commit-Queue: Mike Klein <mtklein@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Hal Canary <halcanary@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Osman <brianosman@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Florin Malita <fmalita@chromium.org>
'static const' means, there must be at most one of these, and initialize it at
compile time if possible or runtime if necessary. This leads to unexpected
code execution, and TSAN* will complain about races on the guard variables.
Generally 'constexpr' or 'const' are better choices. Neither can cause races:
they're either intialized at compile time (constexpr) or intialized each time
independently (const).
This CL prefers constexpr where possible, and uses const where not. It even
prefers constexpr over const where they don't make a difference... I want to have
lots of examples of constexpr for people to see and mimic.
The scoped-to-class static has nothing to do with any of this, and is not changed.
* Not yet on the bots, which use an older TSAN.
BUG=skia:
GOLD_TRYBOT_URL= https://gold.skia.org/search?issue=2300623005
Review-Url: https://codereview.chromium.org/2300623005
This fixes every case where virtual and SK_OVERRIDE were on the same line,
which should be the bulk of cases. We'll have to manually clean up the rest
over time unless I level up in regexes.
for f in (find . -type f); perl -p -i -e 's/virtual (.*)SK_OVERRIDE/\1SK_OVERRIDE/g' $f; end
BUG=skia:
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/806653007
Remove SkLCGRandom. We already decided the new one was better, which is
why we wrote the new SkRandom.
Convert GMs that were using SkLCGRandom to use the improved SkRandom.
Motivated by the fact that these GMs draw differently on some runs. We
believe this to be a result of using the old SkLCGRandom.
Add each of the tests that were using SkLCGRandom to ignore-tests.txt,
since we expect they'll draw differently using SkRandom.
Move a trimmed down version of SkLCGRandom into SkDiscretePathEffect.
In order to preserve the old behavior, trim down SkLCGRandom to only
the methods used by SkDiscretePathEffect, and hide it in
SkDiscretePathEffect's cpp file.
BUG=skia:3241
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/805963002
- Rename TileGrid -> Quilt to avoid the name overload.
- Tag all failing GMs with kSkipTiled_Flag.
You may be wondering, do any GMs pass? Yes, some do! And that trends towards all of them as we increase --quiltTile.
Two GMs only fail in --quilt mode in 565. Otherwise all GMs which fail are skipped, and those which don't fail aren't. (The 8888 variants of those two GMs are skipped even though they pass.)
BUG=skia:2477
R=reed@google.com, mtklein@google.com
Author: mtklein@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/256373002
git-svn-id: http://skia.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@14457 2bbb7eff-a529-9590-31e7-b0007b416f81