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Fiddle exists on all Ruby 1.9.2+ installations and seems
alright. Since splice is a Linux-only API, we don't need to
worry about the values of constants changing (and they're
architecture-independent).
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A bunch of minor fixes and cleanups accumulating for the past
two years since the last release. It's tough to remember to
make releases when I'm always running the latest version from
git :x
Most notably, "io_splice" is no longer used for dtas-linux
users since "sleepy_penguin" includes all the functionality
we use. This is to reduce memory overhead from extra DSOs(*)
There's also some deprecation warning fixes for the
still-undocumented "dtas-mlib" command.
12 changes since v0.15.0 (2017-04-07):
pipeline: new module for running process pipelines
console: ensure time calculations are done in UTC
Rakefile: update path for uploads
player: support guessing encodings for comments
get rid of Windows-31J regexps
mlib: compatibility with Sequel 5.x
mlib: remove redundant tag massaging and encoding
mlib: use flock to get around SQLite busy errors
mlib: ignore files with nil times
dtas/watchable: check SystemCallError
mlib: fix unused variable warning
use sleepy_penguin 3.5+ for splice and tee support
(*) https://udrepper.livejournal.com/8790.html
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Eliminate loading of the io_splice RubyGem to reduce memory overhead.
Extra DSOs are wasteful and io_splice is being phased oiut for
sleepy_penguin, which encapsulates more Linux-specific functionality
anyways.
cf. https://udrepper.livejournal.com/8790.html
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We do not need it at runtime, only for testing on Linux-like
systems
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HTTPS allows some level of security(*) and we've actually
supported it on 80x24.org for many months, now. So, point new
readers to it.
Moving away from hostname-based homepages will allow us to save
on subjectAltName space (and bandwith) when negotiating an HTTPS
connection. We'll also have an .onion mirror for Tor users,
soon, too; in case we can't afford to pay ICANN in the future.
(assuming TLS libraries don't have any more Heartblead-level
bugs in them, CAs aren't compromised, MITM HTTPS stripping
proxies don't get in your way, and your certificate bundle isn't
compromised).
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Using the 'update-copyright' script from gnulib[1]:
git ls-files | UPDATE_COPYRIGHT_HOLDER='all contributors' \
UPDATE_COPYRIGHT_USE_INTERVALS=2 \
xargs /path/to/gnulib/build-aux/update-copyright
[1] git://git.savannah.gnu.org/gnulib.git
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While we're in the area, make a wording change from "GPLv3 or later"
to "GPL-3.0+", as the latter is favored by SPDX.org
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The documentation part is managed by the new
Documentation/update-copyright script. For the future, the rest may
be managed by the update-copyright tool in gnulib
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I'm still normal, and still trolling, but 80x24.org will be epic :)
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Avoid an additional select syscall in the splice path by injecting
the target checks into the main loop. We can do this because we
always process writers before readers. This adds additional
userspace processing, but it avoids one potentially expensive (and
potentially task-switching) syscall in many cases; so it should be
worth it to avoid skipping with small buffer.
This should avoid buffer underuns with mixed-sized buffers when
using multiple sinks.
This could work for the read_write path, too, but I don't
use that enough and this change may still be buggy even
for splice users.
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We do not need this for single sink situations (the common case)
at all. We also do not need to check IO#nread for splice, either;
we can just do non-blocking I/O. The only common path where we
might still need it is the non-splice case with multiple sinks.
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Having it return nil in a noop function seems wrong.
We can't silently discard the value (unlike pipe_size=)
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This is to avoid annoying deprecation warnings in minitest 5, while
still preserving compatibility with minitest 4 (which is distributed
in Ruby 2.0.0 and part of the standard library).
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We don't need it since IO#read(bytes, buf) will convert to
ASCII-8BIT anyways. Everywhere else, we ensure path names are
already binary. We do this mainly at the client layer before using
Shellwords to escape the paths.
We also must be careful about parsing output from soxi/avprobe
which can show us metadata in whatever encoding is in the file.
We must still handle data from parsing command output as binary,
as the encoding of file metadata tends to vary.
This also should buy us Syck compatibility for Ruby 1.9.3 users
on Debian systems where Ruby 1.9.3 still uses Syck.
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All files we distribute in the tarball need to have a
copyright/license specified for Savannah.
We don't need the example state file anymore.
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