Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master'
This commit is contained in:
commit
a679ecb534
@ -2,9 +2,9 @@
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## AuroraRuntime
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The Aurora Runtime is an extensive platform abstraction layer for cross-platform C++ development
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across embedded and PC systems. Simply fetch a binary package for your toolchain or integrate
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our build scripts into your applications build pipeline to get started.
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The Aurora Runtime is an platform abstraction layer for cross-platform C++ development targeting<br>
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embedded and PC systems. Simply fetch a binary package for your toolchain or integrate the build<br>
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scripts into your applications build pipeline to get started.
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## Features
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@ -26,45 +26,51 @@ our build scripts into your applications build pipeline to get started.
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## Links
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API:
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Doxygen:
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Examples:
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Tests:
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Cmake-stable:
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API: <br>
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Doxygen: <br>
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Examples: <br>
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Tests: <br>
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Cmake-stable:<br>
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Build Pipeline:
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## Utilities
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Aurora Runtime provides macros and some template apis to make writing common C++ idioms and
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tricks easier.
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Aurora Sugar: https://git.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/AuroraRuntime/src/branch/master/Include/AuroraUtils.hpp <br>
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Aurora Macro Sugar: https://git.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/AuroraRuntime/src/branch/master/Include/AuroraMacros.hpp <br>
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Aurora Overloadable Type Declerations: https://git.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/AuroraRuntime/src/branch/master/Include/AuroraTypedefs.hpp
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## Logging
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Aurora Runtime does not attempt to implement your favourite production logger. We instead
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implement a subscription based log message dispatcher with some default backends including
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a file logger, Windows debug logging, Windows conhost stdin/out using UTF-8, UNIX stdin/out
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respecting the applications codepage, a wxWidgets toolkit GUI, and hopefully more to come.
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Additionally, consoles that provide an input stream can be used in conjunction with the parse
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Aurora Runtime does not attempt to implement your favourite production logger. We instead<br>
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implement a subscription based log message dispatcher with some default backends including<br>
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a file logger, Windows debug logging, Windows conhost stdin/out using UTF-8, UNIX stdin/out<br>
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respecting the applications codepage, a wxWidgets toolkit GUI, and hopefully more to come. <br>
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Additionally, consoles that provide an input stream can be used in conjunction with the parse<br>
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subsystem to provide basic command-based deserialization, tokenization, and dispatch.
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## Loop [WIP]
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Aurora Runtime offers a main loop that connects multiple input sources into one delegate.
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Timers, semaphores, mutexes, events, X11, FDs, Win32 msg loop, macos, IPC, file aio handles, and
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async runner main loop sources will be supported. This equates to a cross-platfom equivalent of
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Aurora Runtime offers a main loop that connects multiple input sources into one delegate. <br>
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Timers, semaphores, mutexes, events, X11, FDs, Win32 msg loop, macos, IPC, file aio handles, and<br>
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async runner main loop sources will be supported. This equates to a cross-platfom equivalent of<br>
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NT's MsgWaitForMultipleObjects in the form of a MainLoop object and a WaitMultiple function.
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## Thread Primitives
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The Aurora Runtime provides platform optimized threading primitives inheriting from a featureful
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The Aurora Runtime provides platform optimized threading primitives inheriting from a featureful<br>
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IWaitable interface. Each method is guaranteed.
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- IWaitable
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::TryLock()
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::Lock(timeout)
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::Lock()
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::Unlock()
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```
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IWaitable
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bool TryLock()
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void Lock(relativeTimeoutInMilliseconds)
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void Lock()
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void Unlock()
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```
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Included high performance primitives
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- arbitrary IWaitable condition variable
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- condition mutex : IWaitable
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- condition variable : IWaitable
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@ -77,152 +83,147 @@ IWaitable interface. Each method is guaranteed.
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IWaitable ::GetWrite()
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- spinlocks
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We acknowledge and wish to solve the two problems cross-platform developers frequently face.
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Problem one:
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Most STL implementations have generally awful to unnecessarily inefficient abstraction.
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Problem one (1): <br>
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Most STL implementations have generally awful to unnecessarily inefficient abstraction. <br> <br>
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Defer to libc++'s abuse of spin while (cond) yield loops and msvc/stl's painfully slow
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std::mutex and semaphore primitives.
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Problem Two:
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Moving to or from linux, macos, bsd, and win32 under varous kernels, there is no one
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Problem Two (2): <br>
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Moving to or from linux, macos, bsd, and win32 under varous kernels, there is no one <br>
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standard (even in posix land) for the key thread primitives.
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Bonus point NT:
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Bonus point NT (3): <br>
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The userland CriticalSection/CV set of APIs suck, lacking timeouts and try lock
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Bonus point UNIX:
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Bonus point UNIX (4): <br>
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No wait multiple mechanism
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If you wish to wait on primitives in an asynchronous application, look into runloop sources
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1, 2, 4: Use the high performance AuThreadPrimitives objects<br>
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4: Consider using loop sources, perhaps with the async subsystem, in your async application. <br>
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Performance of loop sources will vary wildly between platforms, always being generally worse than <br>
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the high performance primitives. They should be used to observe kernel-level signalable resources.<br>
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4 ex: Windows developers could use loop sources as a replacement to WaitMultipleObjects with more overhead
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## Strings
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Currently using a typedef of `std::string`, the Aurora Runtime is looking to switch over the
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string type over to `tiny-utf8`'s string type. **All** strings are assumed to be UTF-8.
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The Aurora Runtime defines an `AuString` type as an `std::string`; however, it should be assumed this type<br>
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represents a binary blob of UTF-8. Looking to switch to `tiny-utf8` for UTF-8 safety.
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## Memory
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Assumes using AuSPtr, AuWWPtr = std::xxx or app wide redefinition to an alternative smart ptr
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implementation. Macros AU_WEAK_FROM_THIS, AU_SHARED_FROM_THIS provide decltype(this) Au[W/S]Ptrs
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when the std::enable_shared_from_this or equivalent is utilized. UnsafeRaiiToShared converts raw
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pointers to ownerless shared pointers for use with shared apis.
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User-overloadable type declerations and generic access utilities are defined under [utilities](#utilities)<br>
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Aurora provides a bring your own container and shared pointer model overloadable in your configuration header.
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```
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Types:
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AuSPtr<Type_t>
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AuWPtr<Type_t>
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AuUPtr<Type_t, Deleter_t>
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Functions:
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AuSPtr<T> AuMakeShared<T>(Args&& ...)
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AuSPtr<T> AuUnsafeRaiiToShared<T>(T *)
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AuSPtr<T> AuUnsafeRaiiToShared<T>(AuUPtr<T>)
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Macros:
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AuSPtr<This_T> AuSharedFromThis()
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AuWPtr<This_T> AuWeakFromThis()
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AuFunction<...> AuBindThis(This_t *::?, ...)
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```
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Most Aurora Runtime APIs provide generic new and release functions should you not need the overhead of reference counting or unique ptrs <br>
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However, strict C codebases would need to shim to C, perhaps using AuUnsafeRaiiToShared to convert T\*s to unsafe `AuSPtr<T>`s, the namespaced C++ functions <br>
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It should be noted that most language bindings and generator libraries (^swig, v8pp, nbind, luabind) work with shared pointers. <br>
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## IO
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The IO subsystem consists of three interfaces, StreamReaders, StreamWriters, and
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ArbitraryStreamReaders; an FS namespace; a network namespace; and an optional
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async file io namespace.
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[TODO] Summary
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A note about encoding; stdin, file encoding, text decoders, and other IO resources work with
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codepage UTF-8 as the internal encoding scheme. String overloads and dedicated string APIs in
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the IO subsystem will always write BOM prefixed UTF-8 and attempt to read a BOM to translate
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A note about encoding; stdin, file encoding, text decoders, and other IO resources work with<br>
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codepage UTF-8 as the internal encoding scheme. String overloads and dedicated string APIs in<br>
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the IO subsystem will always write BOM prefixed UTF-8 and attempt to read a BOM to translate<br>
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any other input to UTF-8.
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## NIO
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The networking stack supports a handful of architectural paradigms
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- block on write
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- delegate write to end of network frame on write
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- read with an all-or-nothing flag and an async flag
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The networking stack supports a handful of architectural paradigms<br>
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- block on write<br>
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- delegate write to end of network frame on write<br>
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- read with an all-or-nothing flag and an async flag<br>
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- read with an asynchronous stream callback
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- peaking
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- peaking<br>
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- async read/write pump whenever or all
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## FIO
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We suspect most developers delegate IO to a worker thread, don't wish to deal with an extern
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async model nor want excessively buffered streams, therefore the FIO API implements a read/write
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seekable C-like file stream interface. An alternative AFIO namespace exists for the few platforms
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that provide posix AIO, win32 overlap, or linux's io syscalls.
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File stream, buffered read/write utilities, stat, exists, copy, move, remove, and readdir backed
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by the best platform specific blocking apis.
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Guaranteed 64-bit file pointer safety across seek functions.
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[Open]Write to a file under a path of missing directories guarantees creation of missing sub
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directories.
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[TODO] async, fio abstraction, utf8 read/write, blob read/write, stat, dir recursion, stream abstraction
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### Paths
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We assume all paths are messy. Incorrect splitters, double splitters, relative paths, and
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keywords are resolved internally. No such URL or path builder, data structure to hold a
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tokenized representation, or similar concept exists in the codebase. All string 'paths' are
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simply expanded, similar to MSCRT 'fullpath'/UNIX 'realpath', at time of usage.
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We assume all paths are messy. Incorrect splitters, double splitters, relative paths, and<br>
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keywords are resolved internally. No such URL or path builder, data structure to hold a <br>
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tokenized representation, or similar concept exists in the codebase. All string 'paths' are<br>
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simply expanded, similar to MSCRT 'fullpath'/UNIX 'realpath', at time of usage. <br>
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Path tokens include:
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[0] == '.' = cwd
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[0] == '~' = platform specific user directory / brand / Profile
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[0] == '!' = platform specific app config directory / brand / System
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[0] == '?' = ., !, or ~
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.. = go back
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/ = splitter
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Path tokens include:<br>
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[0] == '.' = cwd<br>
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[0] == '~' = platform specific user directory / brand / Profile<br>
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[0] == '!' = platform specific app config directory / brand / System<br>
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[0] == '?' = ., !, or ~<br>
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.. = go back<br>
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/ = splitter<br>
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\ = splitter
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## Aurora Async
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The Aurora Runtime offers an optional asynchronous task driven model under the Aurora::Async
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namespace. Featuring promises, thread group pooling, functional-to-task wrapping, and
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task-completion callback-task-dispatch idioms built around 3 concepts.
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The Aurora Runtime offers an optional asynchronous task driven model under the AuAsync <br>
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namespace. Featuring promises, thread group pooling, functional-to-task wrapping, and <br>
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task-completion callback-task-dispatch idioms built around 3 concepts. <br>
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Jobs are callee provided interfaces providing ::onSuccess/onFailure(const in, const out)
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Tasks are an internally-provided interface providing optional<out> onFrame(const in)
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WorkItems adapt a job and a task into one concept. They take a minimum sched delay, promises,
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initial delay, and other requirements; to provide a Dispatch routine capable of handling
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promises and other abstract developer requirements
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We will not define a standard way to use these concepts.
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For instance, there is no guidance on whether or not you should use public task state structs
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and request a Task pointer from a public API or you should accept Job and return a WorkItem;
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when or where you should dispatch; whether or not to use C or Functional interfaces.
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Example:
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## Proccesses
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The Aurora Runtime provides worker process monitoring, worker Stdin/out stream redirection,
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The Aurora Runtime provides worker process monitoring, worker Stdin/out stream redirection,<br>
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process spawning, file opening, and url opening functionality.
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## Locale
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Encoding and decoding UTF-8, UTF-16, UTF-32, GBK, GB-2312, and SJIS support using platform
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specific APIs. Fetch system language and country backed by environment variables, the OS
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Encoding and decoding UTF-8, UTF-16, UTF-32, GBK, GB-2312, and SJIS support using platform<br>
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specific APIs. Fetch system language and country backed by environment variables, the OS<br>
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system configuration, the unix locale env variable, and/or the provided overload mechanism.
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## Philosophies
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- Assume C++17 language support in the language driver
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- To avoid reinventing the wheel, solve the large issues nobody is tackling, and accept
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third party solutions weighted against relevant legal constraints and developer time
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- Solve the large issues nobody is tackling. To avoid reinventing the wheel accept third party <br>
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solutions when the pros (developer time) weighted against the negatives (legal, bulk) makes
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sense.
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- Use AuXXX type bindings for std types, allow customers to overload the std namespace
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- Keep the code and build chain simple such that any C++ developer could maintain
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their own software stack built around aurora components.
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- Dependencies should be cross-platform friendly
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It is recommended to fork and replace any legacy OS specific code with equivalent
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AuroraRuntime concepts
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- Dependencies, excluding core reference algorithms (eg compression), must be rewritten
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and phased out over time.
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- Dependencies should not be added if most platforms provide some degree of native support
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Examples: -> Don't depend on a pthread shim for windows; implement the best thread
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primitives that lie on the best possible api for them
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Don't depend on ICU when POSIX's iconv and Win32's multibyte apis cover
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everything a conservative developer cares about; chinese, utf-16, utf-8,
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- Dependencies should not be added if most platforms provide some degree of native support<br>
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Examples:<br>
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-> Don't depend on a pthread shim for windows; implement the best thread <br>
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primitives that lie on the best possible api for them <br>
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Don't depend on ICU when POSIX's iconv and Win32's multibyte apis cover<br>
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everything a conservative developer cares about; chinese, utf-16, utf-8,<br>
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utf-32 conversion, on top of all the ancient windows codepages
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- Dependencies should only be added conservatively when it saves development time and
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provides production hardening
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Examples: -> Use embedded crypto libraries; libtomcrypt, libtommath
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-> While there are some bugs in libtomcrypt and others, none appear to
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cryptographically cripple the library. Could you do better?
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-> Use portable libraries like mbedtls, O(1) heap, mimalloc
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-> Writing a [D]TLS/allocator stack would take too much time
|
||||
-> Linking against external allocators, small cross-platform utilities, and
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so on is probably fine
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-> Shim libcurl instead of inventing yet another http stack
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provides production hardening <br>
|
||||
Examples:<br>
|
||||
-> Use embedded crypto libraries; libtomcrypt, libtommath<br>
|
||||
-> While there are some bugs in libtomcrypt and others, none appear to <br>
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||||
cryptographically cripple the library. Could you do better?<br>
|
||||
-> Use portable libraries like mbedtls, O(1) heap, mimalloc<br>
|
||||
-> Writing a [D]TLS/allocator stack would take too much time<br>
|
||||
-> Linking against external allocators, small cross-platform utilities, and <br>
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||||
so on is probably fine <br>
|
||||
-> Shim libcurl instead of inventing yet another http stack <br>
|
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