Reece Wilson
70418df761
> StartSimpleLSWatchEx > StartSimpleIOWatchEx > StartIOWatchEx [*] Update README
538 lines
25 KiB
Markdown
538 lines
25 KiB
Markdown
## PREALPHA (in-dev, missing polish and APIs are volatile)
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## Minimum viable product ETA: September 2022
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## AuroraRuntime
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The Aurora Runtime is a low level platform abstraction layer for modern cross-platform C++
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development targeting powerful embedded and PC systems. Simply fetch a binary package for
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your toolchain or integrate the self-contained buildscripts into your applications build
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pipeline to get started.
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![console](https://gitea.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/AuroraRuntime/raw/branch/master/Media/wxHello.png)
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![picture](https://gitea.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/AuroraRuntime/raw/branch/master/Media/Hello%20Aurora.png)
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![picture](https://gitea.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/AuroraRuntime/raw/branch/master/Media/Hello%20Linux.png)
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## Features
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- Reduced C++ standard template library dependence (^1)
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- High performance threading and synchronization primitives (os userland sched optimized)
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- Async even driven subsystem with high perf sync primitives
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- Abstract kernel file/net transaction, IPC, timer, semaphore, et al abstraction in the form of LoopQueues (eg, MacOS RunLoops)
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- Asynchronous and synchronous IO (network, character, file, buffered, process, and io watcher)
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- Optional event driven async programming paradigm
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- Consoles; graphical and standard, file archives
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- Logging; UTF-8 logger, common sink backends
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- Debug and Telementry; asserts, exception logging, fio, nio backends
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- Crypto ECC/[25519, P-384, P-256], [AES, RSA, X509], [common digests]
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- Basic cmdline parsing from any module
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- Exit and fatal save condition callbacks
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- IPC
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- Network [WIP]
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- Random; secure and fast
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- Hardware Info; memory and cpu info (including features, topology, e-core, and cache info)
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- Software Stack Info (kernel, version, brand, build string, etc)
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- FIO settings registry
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- Compression
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- Locale and encoding
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- C++ utility templates and macros
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- Follows all strings are UTF-8 convention
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^1 bring your own types [auROXTL](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/auROXTL)
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## Links
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API:
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* [Runtime](https://gitea.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/AuroraRuntime/src/branch/master/Include/Aurora)
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* [auROXTL](https://gitea.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/auROXTL/src/branch/master/Include)
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API Docs: \
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Tests and Examples: [Hello Aurora](https://gitea.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/HelloAurora) \
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Build Pipeline: [Aurora Build](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraPipeline/Build) (Lua/Premake) \
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Donate / Other Links: [Reece.SX](https://reece.sx/#contact) \
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Discord: [Invite](https://discord.gg/XYjCGWWa4J)
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## Support
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| Platform | Support |
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| ----------- | ------- |
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| NT/Win32-like |✅ |
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| NT/UWP | 🕖 |
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| NT/GameOS|❌ |
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| Linux |🕖 |
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| FreeBSD 9 | ❌ |
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| FreeBSD 11 | ❌ |
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| XNU/NS-like | ❌ |
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## Performance
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Performance of each system should ideally be that of the best implementation on the platform,
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and no worse than the STL. Due to heavyweight requirements and spiral model defined objectives,
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a handful of portable C libraries have been brought into achieve compression, crypto, alloc, and
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str formatting objectives using known good industry standard libraries. Footprint is expected to
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be on the heavier side for optimal performance (incl toll for C++ tradeoffs) and flexibility.
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Runtime as of 2022-02-01 *without the wxWidgets toolkit, with all compression libraries* on Windows LTSC 2019:
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DLL Disk: 4.2MB \
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Size Of Image: 0x50B000 (5MB) \
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Real Commit Charge of a Console App: 9.7MB \
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...the task manager lie: 3,168K (3.1MB -> less than our DLL) \
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...HWInfo reports
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[13:07:38] [Info] | RamInfo Private Allocation: 10215424/71987290112 (^1) \
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[13:07:38] [Info] | RamInfo Address Space: 11669504/71987290112
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^1 ...on LTSC 2019. Modern Windows 10 and 11 will return the exact task manager value of 3,168K (3.1MB).
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Defer to benchmarks
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## Utilities
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Aurora Sugar: [Main Header](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/auROXTL/src/branch/master/Include/auROXTLUtils.hpp), [(*.)Utils.hpp](https://gitea.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/auROXTL/src/branch/master/Include/auROXTL) \
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Aurora Macro Sugar: [Main Header](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/auROXTL/src/branch/master/Include/auROXTL/AU_MACROS.hpp) \
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Aurora Overloadable Type Declerations: [Main Header](https://gitea.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/auROXTL/src/branch/master/Include/auROXTLTypes.hpp)
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## Logging
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Logging is implemented through 2 subsystems, console and logging. Console provides IO abstraction
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to the logger subsystem sinks. Sinks are user implementable interfaces that can be either synchronous
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or asynchronous. Loggers are defined as an internal object the takes logger messages and dumps
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them to the relevant subscriber.
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Flushing occurs at a fixed rate on a low prio background thread without any configuration requirement.
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The resources spent on the background thread is shared with the telemetry and debug subsystems to
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reduce the overall thread count of the runtime. Flushes also occur during panic events and other
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relevant problematic points.
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Asynchronous logger sinks may double buffer log lines between the asynchronous callback and
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OnFlush callback, where the latter call is guaranteed after one or more delegated dispatch. The
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Windows Event Log backend takes advantage of this to multi-line group messages by approx time
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and log level.
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Additionally, in the console subsystem, consoles that provide an input stream can be used in
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conjunction with the parse subsystem to provide basic command-based deserialization, tokenization,
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and dispatch of UTF-8 translated strings regardless of the system locale. Command processing
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comes under the namespace of consoles, not logging.
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## Exceptions
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![ICanHasStackTraces](https://gitea.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/AuroraRuntime/raw/branch/master/Media/ICanHasStackTraces.png)
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Through the use of compiler internal overloads, ELF hooking, and Win32
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`AddVectoredExceptionHandler`, Aurora Runtime hooks exceptions at the time of throw, including
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*some* out of ecosystem exceptions, providing detailed telemetry of the object type, object
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string, and backtrace. In addition, the `AuDebug` namespace provides TLS based last-error and
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last-backtrace methods. <br>
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EXCEPTIONS ARE NOT CONTROL FLOW...<br>
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- Aurora Runtime WILL attempt to mitigate exceptions in internal logic
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- Aurora Runtime WILL NOT abuse exceptions to communicate failure
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- Aurora Runtime WILL try to decouple internal exceptions from the API
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- Aurora Runtime WILL NOT use anything that automatically crashes on exception catch (no-noexcept)
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- Aurora Runtime WILL provide extended exception information to telemetry backends and through
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the `AuDebug` namespace
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- Aurora Runtime WILL NOT make any guarantees of being globally-noexcept; however, it should be a
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safe assumption in non-critical environments
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`SysPanic` can be used to format a `std::terminate`-like exit condition, complete with telemetry
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data and safe cleanup.
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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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IWaitable interface. Each method is guaranteed. Each primitive is user-land scheduler optimized.
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```
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struct IWaitable
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{
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virtual bool TryLock() = 0;
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virtual void Lock(relativeTimeoutInMilliseconds) = 0;
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virtual void Lock() = 0;
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virtual void Unlock() = 0;
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}
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```
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Included high performance primitives
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- arbitrary condition variable ^1
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- condition mutex
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- condition variable
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- critical section ^2
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- event
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- mutex
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- semaphore
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- rwlock ^3
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- spinlocks
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^1 Accepts __any__ IWaitable as the mutex \
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^2 Reentrant Mutex \
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^3 Includes extended read to write upgrades and permits write-entrant read-routines to prevent
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writer deadlocks.
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### Fixing problems in other scheduler apis
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Problem one (1): \
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Most STL implementations have generally awful to unnecessarily inefficient abstraction.
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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 (2): \
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Moving to or from linux, macos, bsd, and win32 under varous kernels, there is no one
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standard (even in posix land) for the key thread primitives.
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Bonus point NT (3): \
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The userland CriticalSection/CV set of APIs suck, lacking timeouts and try lock
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Bonus point UNIX (4): \
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No wait multiple mechanism
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1, 2, 3: Use the high performance AuThreadPrimitives objects
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4: Consider using loop sources, perhaps with the async subsystem, in your async application.
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Performance of loop sources will vary wildly between platforms, always being generally worse
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than the high performance primitives. They should be used to observe kernel-level signalable
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resources.
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4 ex: Windows developers could use loop sources as a replacement to WaitMultipleObjects with
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more overhead
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## IO
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The Aurora Runtime implements a multiple io wait loop sub-subsystem, file io, network io,
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various adapters and connectors, io processors, io/character, io/buffered, and other such
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concepts to aid with writing low-level cross-platform IO.
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An important note about texting encoding. Stdin, file encoding, text decoders, and other IO
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resources work with codepage UTF-8 as the internal encoding scheme. String overloads and
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dedicated string APIs in the IO subsystem will always write BOM prefixed UTF-8, and attempt
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to read a BOM to translate any other arbitrary user generated text input to UTF-8.
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### Loop
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The Aurora Runtime implements a kernel-scheduler optimized IO subsystem for managing GUIs,
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Network AIO, File AIO, IPC AIO, and thread synchronization objects through loop the loop subsystem.
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ILoopSource is an interface defined by the loop subsystem for IO objects with a signalable state.
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Attached to an ILoopQueue, the ILoopQueue will provide wait-on and similar functionality; and
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subscription notifications of signal state change. ILoopQueue's are thread-safe allowing for
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cross-thread or mid-wait work scheduling. Subscription notifications allow for optimized loop
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source removal or no-action/non-removal replies from subscription implementer. In addition to
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the synchronization provided by the ILoopQueue, the ILoopSource interface permits arbitrary
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is-signaled-and-latch (TryLock) queries and timed-wait (WaitOn) calls on a per IO object basis.
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### IPC
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Included in the IPC subsystem are pipes, as used by AuProcesses; events; mutexes; semaphores;
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and shared memory views. IPC objects are exported by an internally generated non-standard string
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which contains platform specific information to import such object in a compatible application.
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Aurora IPC is not bound by processes bound by a common worker, instead, UNIX sockets and procfs
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are used to implement IPC within the applications namespace/sandbox.
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### FIO
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A simple file stream interface is provided by an Open function which accepts an Aurora path and
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an advisory lock level. However, all such functions are blocking in face of platform specific
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asynchronous alternatives. An alternative `IAsyncFileStream` is provided to supply the user with
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an supplier of `IAsyncTransaction`'s - an overlapped IO style interface for starting a read/write
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transaction, registering an APC-like callback, requesting a loop subsystem waitable object, and
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clearing the request. AIO is backed by `io_submit` under Linux, POSIX AIO under BSD, and Overlapped
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IO under NT. A glibc approach of spamming threads akin to libuv and skipping the synchronization
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on completion step isn't our style. Instead, you are reliant on the native async capabilities of the
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underlying operating system. Special consideration must be made for alignment, cached/uncached access,
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and supported file systems.
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Additional utility functions exist outside of the two file interfaces for: stat, directory iteration,
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UTF-8 string reading and writing, blocking binary read/writes, and more.
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### Paths
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We assume all paths are messy. Incorrect splitters, double splitters, relative paths, and keywords are resolved internally.
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No URL or path builder, data structure to hold a tokenized URI expression, or similar concept exists in the codebase.
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All string paths are simply expanded, similar to MSCRT's `fullpath` or UNIX's `realpath`, at time of usage.
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| Expression | Meaning |
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|------------------|-------------------------------------|
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| `Path[0] == '.'` | Current Working Directory |
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| `Path[0] == '^'` | Executable module's Directory |
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| `Path[0] == '~'` | User Profile Storage + SDK brand |
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| `Path[0] == '!'` | All User Shared Storage + SDK brand |
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| `..` | Go up a directory |
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| `/` | Agnostic Directory Splitter |
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| `\` | Agnostic Directory Splitter |
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| `.` [SPLITTER] | Nothing |
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### Resources
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The Aurora Runtime provides reports system, application, and user specific paths under the `Aurora::IO::FS` subsystem.
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These include the users home directory, a per vendor sandboxed application user directory, a per vendor sandboxed application
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all users directory, the user-installable program directory, the user's real home directory, and other such relevant paths.
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### Networking
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### Character IO
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## Proccesses
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The Aurora Runtime provides child process monitoring, asynchronous child stdin/out/err transactions, child synchronization
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(via a primitive threading event and an io event), process spawning, file opening, and url opening functionality.
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## Locale
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Encoding and decoding of UTF-8, UTF-16, UTF-32, GBK, GB-2312, and SJIS is supported through platform provided decoders.
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System localization information, including system codepage, country, and system language, is provided by the envrionment variables which
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are available, OS specific interfaces, or the user overload mechanism.
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## Memory
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### Allocator
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Objects are allocated across API/Module boundaries. So long as the high level API design isn't horribly inefficient to an extent
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that cache invalidation and indirect lookups are minimalized, object-heavy code can optimized. On modern hardware, legitmate indirect
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branching versus short jumps aren't so expensive between modules in real world usage; and in combination with a fast enough allocator,
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there is little reason why couldn't achieve reasonable OOP performance through a C-with-classes-like API.
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As for allocation, we generally expect a dependence on Microsoft's mimalloc. Linking against the Aurora Runtime in the Aurora
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Ecosystem will automatically replace global allocators with `Aurora::Memory`, which in turn, proxies any other suitable allocator
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interface with extended zero, array, and alignment respecting APIs. A suitably fast allocator, such as mimalloc, should reduce the
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cost of the OOP design.
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### Memory Heap
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Aurora provides a heap allocator for dividing up a large preallocated region of memory
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### Shared Pointers
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Memory objects, including shared pointers, and the object allocation model is defined by AuROXTL. The `AuSPtr` class template
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is backed by the standard `std::shared_ptr`, extended by `#include <auROXTL/auMemoryModel.hpp>,` in the default configuration.
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AuROXTL memory primitives, and most STL containers, are source compatible with the base STL classes, such that any Aurora
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specific behaviour is lost during type reduction.
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There are benefits of using the Aurora extended classes, include redefining null dereference on shared ptrs to throw
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an AU_THROW_STRING. Without support for native behaviour within the C++ driver, such features are rather expensive using the performace
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hacks we have available (outside of ripping the compiler apart to emit special debug info for hacky trap handlers). Arguably, it's an
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experiment worth trying now that modern hardware can make up for software and microcode flaws; and architecture translation. Most users
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probably wont even notice the performance loss, until it saves them from a hard crash and they realize dereferences are bloated.
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This is default behaviour, and can be easily disabled or configured from within your ecosystem's AuroraConfiguration.h to globally
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modify the behaviour and subsequent ABI of the AuSPtr's.
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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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_new (pseudo no-throw new operator)
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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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### Note
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Aurora provides a bring your own container and shared pointer model overloadable in your configuration header.<br>
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User-overloadable type declerations and generic access utilities are defined under [auROXTL](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/auROXTL)
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## Debug
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### Error Markers
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SysPushError[EFailureCategory shorthand] can be used to include additional side-channel telemetry
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information about the execution of a program. SysPushError_(...) takes a string format sequence and
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a variadic sequence of substitute values - or no arguments whatsoever.
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#### Example:
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```cpp
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IBufferedCharacterConsumer *BufferConsumerFromProviderNew(const AuSPtr<ICharacterProvider> &provider)
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{
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if (!provider)
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{
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SysPushErrorArg("Missing ICharacterProvider");
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return {};
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}
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return _new BufferedCharacterConsumer(provider);
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}
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```
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### Asserts
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[TODO]
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#### Example:
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Debug, Release, and Ship (all) assertions:
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```cpp
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SysAssert(AuFunction{}, "unexpected default function")
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```
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Debug and Release (debug and optimized ship-with-debug) assertions:
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```cpp
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SysAssertDbg(AuFunction{}, "unexpected default function")
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```
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### Something went wrong
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You should ensure AuDebug::CheckErrors() or a SysPushError-like function is called to ensure enchanced TLS-state telemetry is
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captured. AuDebug::PrintErrors() will print the the errors gathered by the debug subsystem for telemetry purposes. These may
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include the crts errno, the last reported posix return value, the last Win32 error code, and/or last reported microkernel error.
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#### Example
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Try/Catch:
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```
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try
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{
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}
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catch (...)
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{
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SysPushErrorCatch(); // THIS IS NOT REQUIRED FOR EXCEPTION TELEMETRY
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}
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```
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Windows System Error Messages: \
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CRT:
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```cpp
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```
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POSIX:
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```cpp
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```
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## Binding
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Aurora Runtime provides C++ APIs; however, it should be noted that two libraries are used to extend interfaces and enums
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to help with porting and internal utility access. One, AuroraEnums, wraps basic enumerations and provides value vectors;
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value strings; look up; iteration; and more. The other, AuroraInterfaces, provides *TWO* class types for each virtual interface.
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Each interface can be backed by a; C++ class method overriding a superclass's `virtual ...(...) = 0;` method, or a `AuFunctional`
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-based structure.
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It should be noted that most language bindings and generator libraries (^swig, v8pp, nbind, luabind) work with shared pointers.
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Other user code may wish to stuff pointers into a machineword-sized space, whether its a C library, a FFI, or a size constraint.
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One handle or abstraction layer will be required to integrate the C++ API into the destination platform, and assuming we have a
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C++ language frontend parsing our API, we can use `AuSPtr` for all caller-to-method constant reference scanerios.
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Furthermore, `AuSPtrs` can be created, without a deletor, using `AuUnsafeRaiiToShared(unique/raw pointer)`. To solve the raw
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pointer issue, `AuSPtrs` are created in the public headers with the help of exported/default visibility interface create and
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destroy functions. These APIs provide raw pointers to public C++ interfaces, and as such, can be binded using virtually any
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shim generator. Method and API mapping will likely involve manual work from the library developer to reimplement AU concepts
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under their language runtime instead of using the C++ platform, or at least require manual effort to shim or map each runtime
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prototype into something more sane across the language barrier.
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Memory is generally viewed through a `std::span` like concept called MemoryViews. `MemoryViewRead` and `MemoryViewWrite`
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provide windows into a defined address range. `MemoryViewStreamRead` and `MemoryViewStreamWrite` expand upon this concept by
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accepting an additional offset (`AuUInt &: reference`) that is used by internal APIs to indicate how many bytes were written
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or read from a given input region. Such requirement came about from so many APIs, networking, compression, encoding, doing the
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exact same thing in different not-so-portable ways. Unifying memory access to 4 class types should aid with SWIG prototyping.
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Unrelated note, structure interfacing with questionable C++ ABI reimplementations is somewhat sketchy in FFI projects (^ CppSharp)
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can lead to some memory leaks.
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## Aurora Async
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The Aurora Runtime offers an optional asynchronous task driven model under the AuAsync namespace. Featuring promises,
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thread group pooling, functional-to-task wrapping, and task-completion callback-task-dispatch idioms built around 3
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concepts.
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Example:
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## Strings
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The auROXTL header only library defines an `AuString` type as an `std::string`; however, it should be assumed this type represents
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a binary blob of UTF-8. Further locale processing is delegated to `Aurora::Locale[::Encoding]`
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|
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## Dependencies
|
|
|
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Aurora
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- [AuroraPipeline Include](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraPipeline/Include) ^2
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- [auROXTL](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/auROXTL) ^2
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- [AuroraEnum](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/AuroraEnum) ^1
|
|
- [AuroraInterfaces](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/AuroraInterfaces) ^1
|
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- [AuroraForEach](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraSupport/AuroraForEach) ^1
|
|
|
|
Crypto (third party)
|
|
- [LibTomCrypt](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraMiddleware/libtomcrypt) / [LibTomMath](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraMiddleware/libtommath) ^5
|
|
- [mbedTLS](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraMiddleware/mbedtls)
|
|
|
|
Compression (third party)
|
|
- [zstd](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraMiddleware/zstd)
|
|
- [zlib](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraMiddleware/zlib)
|
|
- [bzip2](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraMiddleware/bzip2)
|
|
|
|
Utility (third party)
|
|
- [stduuid](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraMiddleware/stduuid) ^6
|
|
- [fmtlib](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraMiddleware/fmt) ^4 ^6
|
|
- [nl. json](https://git.reece.sx/AuroraMiddleware/nlohmannjson) ^6
|
|
|
|
|
|
^1 Include-only macro library \
|
|
^2 Provides core utilities and stl decoupling \
|
|
^3 Provides platform information, included by default by the Aurora build pipeline \
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|
^4 C++ 20 saw another pathetic adoption attempt of an open source library, this one actually passed, but hardly \
|
|
anyone implements std::format. Not to mention such is only a subset of the original library. \
|
|
^5 Public Domain \
|
|
^6 Potentially STL heavy, still potentially portable w/ a modern-ish toolchain
|
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|
|
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|
## Philosophies
|
|
|
|
- Assume C++17 language support in the language driver
|
|
|
|
- Use AuXXX type bindings for std types, allow customers to overload the std namespace \
|
|
We assume *some* containers and utility APIs exist, but where they come from is up to you
|
|
|
|
- Keep the code and build chain simple such that any C++ developer could maintain
|
|
their own software stack built around aurora components.
|
|
|
|
- Dependencies and concepts should be cross-platform, cross-architecture, cross-ring friendly
|
|
|
|
It is recommended to fork and replace any legacy OS specific code with equivalent
|
|
AuroraRuntime concepts, introducing a circular dependency with the Aurora Runtime
|
|
|
|
APIs shouldn't be designed around userland, mobile computing, or desktop computing;
|
|
AuroraRuntime must provide a common backbone for all applications.
|
|
|
|
Locale and user-info APIs will be limited due to the assumption userland is not a
|
|
concept
|
|
|
|
- Dependencies, excluding core reference algorithms (eg compression), must be rewritten
|
|
and phased out over time.
|
|
|
|
- Dependencies should not be added if most platforms provide some degree of native support<br>
|
|
Examples:<br>
|
|
-> Don't depend on a pthread shim for windows; implement the best thread <br>
|
|
primitives that lie on the best possible api for them <br>
|
|
-> Don't depend on ICU when POSIX's iconv and Win32's multibyte apis cover<br>
|
|
everything a conservative developer cares about; chinese, utf-16, utf-8,<br>
|
|
utf-32 conversion, on top of all the ancient windows codepages
|
|
|
|
- Dependencies should only be added conservatively when it saves development time and
|
|
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>
|
|
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>
|
|
so on is probably fine <br>
|
|
-> Shim libcurl instead of inventing yet another http stack <br>
|