- New dogear icons in Mosaic cover view to indicate each
possible book status: 'Reading', 'On hold', 'Finished'
- Progress bar redesigned to be floating, taller, thicker
bordered in Mosaic cover view
- Don't show progress bar if book is finished
- FakeCover bottom text (filename) adjusted to not overlap
with progress bar and dogear if they exist
- Mosaic book shortcut letter moved from bottom left to
top left
- filemanagerutil.resetDocumentSettings()'s doc_settings:close() -> doc_settings:flush()
- Remove current_status from filemanagerutil.getStatusButtonsRow() args, get it inside from file
- Move genStatusButton() inside filemanagerutil.getStatusButtonsRow()
- Move "Reset settings" button generation to filemanagerutil
- Rename "Reset settings" button to "Reset" and update popup box text
- Disable "Reset settings" for file if it's currently open in Collections (same as History)
* Move natural sorting algo to a dedicated sort module to avoid code duplication
* Use a slightly more accurate algorithm, and speed it up by caching intermediary strings
* Calibre: Use natural sorting in metadata search (fix#10009)
Get rid of the doc & seqtext fields, as they are not actually used (nor
are they particularly useful, the event handler's name should be pretty
self-explanatory).
Also, tweak the key_events documentation to highlight the quirks of the
API, especially as far as array nesting is involved...
Random drive-by cleanup of the declarations of key_events & ges_events
to re-use the existing instance object (now that we know they're sane
;p) for tables with a single member (less GC pressure).
Broken since b0eb0ce0: the custom callbacks for the "Reset settings"
& "Book information" buttons are not being called anymore because
patching those is done to early (before instead of after creating
the new modified dialog).
Basically:
* Use `extend` for class definitions
* Use `new` for object instantiations
That includes some minor code cleanups along the way:
* Updated `Widget`'s docs to make the semantics clearer.
* Removed `should_restrict_JIT` (it's been dead code since https://github.com/koreader/android-luajit-launcher/pull/283)
* Minor refactoring of LuaSettings/LuaData/LuaDefaults/DocSettings to behave (mostly, they are instantiated via `open` instead of `new`) like everything else and handle inheritance properly (i.e., DocSettings is now a proper LuaSettings subclass).
* Default to `WidgetContainer` instead of `InputContainer` for stuff that doesn't actually setup key/gesture events.
* Ditto for explicit `*Listener` only classes, make sure they're based on `EventListener` instead of something uselessly fancier.
* Unless absolutely necessary, do not store references in class objects, ever; only values. Instead, always store references in instances, to avoid both sneaky inheritance issues, and sneaky GC pinning of stale references.
* ReaderUI: Fix one such issue with its `active_widgets` array, with critical implications, as it essentially pinned *all* of ReaderUI's modules, including their reference to the `Document` instance (i.e., that was a big-ass leak).
* Terminal: Make sure the shell is killed on plugin teardown.
* InputText: Fix Home/End/Del physical keys to behave sensibly.
* InputContainer/WidgetContainer: If necessary, compute self.dimen at paintTo time (previously, only InputContainers did, which might have had something to do with random widgets unconcerned about input using it as a baseclass instead of WidgetContainer...).
* OverlapGroup: Compute self.dimen at *init* time, because for some reason it needs to do that, but do it directly in OverlapGroup instead of going through a weird WidgetContainer method that it was the sole user of.
* ReaderCropping: Under no circumstances should a Document instance member (here, self.bbox) risk being `nil`ed!
* Kobo: Minor code cleanups.
* This removes support for the following deprecated constants: `DTAP_ZONE_FLIPPING`, `DTAP_ZONE_BOOKMARK`, `DCREREADER_CONFIG_DEFAULT_FONT_GAMMA`
* The "Advanced settings" panel now highlights modified values in bold (think about:config in Firefox ;)).
* LuaData: Isolate global table lookup shenanigans, and fix a few issues in unused-in-prod codepaths.
* CodeStyle: Require module locals for Lua/C modules, too.
* ScreenSaver: Actually garbage collect our widget on close (ScreenSaver itself is not an instantiated object).
* DateTimeWidget: Code cleanups to ensure child widgets can be GC'ed.
Titlebar button navigation in menu, including ListMenu and MosaicMenu in FileManager, History, Favourites and Shortcuts.
Hide show password checkbox in non-touch devices
* Rejig frontlight warmth API to more closely match the existing API, and, hopefully, clarify some of its quirks, and reduce boilerplate and duplicate code in platform implementations.
* Tweak Kindle:setDateTime to prefer using the platform's custom script, as in interacts better with the stock UI. And make the fallbacks handle old busybox versions better.
* Add Kindle PW5 support ;).
* Add warmth support to the Kindle platform.
* Random TextBoxWidget cleanups: make sure we immediately free destroyed instances.
* FrontLightWidget: Refactor to make it slightly less obnoxious to grok and update; i.e., separate layout from update, and properly separate brightness from warmth handling. Move to simpler widgets instead of reinventing the wheel.
* TextBoxWidgets: Implement `setText` to match TextWidget's API, as some callers may be using the two interchangeably (i.e., Button).
* NaturalLightWidget: Make sure we pass a string to InputText
* InputText: Add debug guards to catch bad callers not passing strings ;).
FocusManager: fix round x use y layout
FocusManager: add tab and shift tab focus navigation support
FocusManager: handle Press key by default
FocusManager: make sure selected in instance level
FocusManager: add hold event support
FocusManager: Half move instead of edge move
FocusManager: add keymap override support
FocusManager: refocusWidget will delegate to parent FocusManager
Focusmanager: refocusWidget can execute on next tick
inputtext: can move out of focus on back
inputtext: fix cannot exit for non-touch device
inputtext: fix cannot input text with kindle dx physical keyboard
fontlightwidget: add non-touch support
datetimewidget: add non-touch support
datetimewidget: fix set date failed in kindle DX, fix datetimewidget month range to 1~23 by default
datetimewidget: make hour max value to 23
multiinputdialog: add non-touch support
checkbox: focusable and focus style
virtualkeyboard: no need to press two back to unfocus inputtext
virtualkeyboard: collect FocusManager event key names to let VirtualKeyboard disable them
openwithdialog: add non-touch support
inputdialog: can close via back button
enable all InputDialog and MultiInputDialog can be close by back
keyboardlayoutdialog: non-touch support
readertoc: non touch device can expand/collapse in toc
bookstatuswidget: non touch support
keyvaluepage: non-touch support
calendarview: non-touch support
Reword "Purge .sdr" to "Reset settings".
When purging, remove only the known document metadata
files, and not those for a document with the same name but
a different suffix.
* Don't run multiple collectSubprocesses tasks in parallel.
UIManager:scheduleIn doesn't return anything, using that as a boolean trap made no sense.
* Make the in-place removal of collected pids use a slightly more common idiom
(table.remove in a reverse iteration of said array).
cores
* Only keep a single core online most of the time.
* Device: Add an enableCPUCores method to allow controlling the amount of
online CPU cores.
* Move the initial core onlining setup to Kobo:init, instead of the startup script.
* Enable two CPU cores while hinting new (e.g., cache miss) pages in PDF land.
* Enable two CPU cores while processing book metadata.
* Drive-by fix to isolate the DocCache pressure check to KoptInterface
and actually apply it when it matters most (e.g., k2pdfopt stuff).
* Cleanup util.secondsFrom*Clock stuff (simpler maths, tail calls, meaningful printf tokens).
* Use util.secondsToClockDuration in ReadTimer instead of reinventing the wheel three different ways.
* Reschedule unexpired timers properly on resume (as best as we can, given the unreliable nature of REALTIME).
* Make clock timers tick on the dot, instead of at the same second as when being set.
* Speaking of clock timers, leave the math to os.date & os.time, don't reinvent the wheel yet again.
* ReaderDictionary: Port delay computations to TimeVal
* ReaderHighlight: Port delay computations to TimeVal
* ReaderView: Port delay computations to TimeVal
* Android: Reset gesture detection state on APP_CMD_TERM_WINDOW.
This prevents potentially being stuck in bogus gesture states when switching apps.
* GestureDetector:
* Port delay computations to TimeVal
* Fixed delay computations to handle time warps (large and negative deltas).
* Simplified timed callback handling to invalidate timers much earlier, preventing accumulating useless timers that no longer have any chance of ever detecting a gesture.
* Fixed state clearing to handle the actual effective slots, instead of hard-coding slot 0 & slot 1.
* Simplified timed callback handling in general, and added support for a timerfd backend for better performance and accuracy.
* The improved timed callback handling allows us to detect and honor (as much as possible) the three possible clock sources usable by Linux evdev events.
The only case where synthetic timestamps are used (and that only to handle timed callbacks) is limited to non-timerfd platforms where input events use
a clock source that is *NOT* MONOTONIC.
AFAICT, that's pretty much... PocketBook, and that's it?
* Input:
* Use the <linux/input.h> FFI module instead of re-declaring every constant
* Fixed (verbose) debug logging of input events to actually translate said constants properly.
* Completely reset gesture detection state on suspend. This should prevent bogus gesture detection on resume.
* Refactored the waitEvent loop to make it easier to comprehend (hopefully) and much more efficient.
Of specific note, it no longer does a crazy select spam every 100µs, instead computing and relying on sane timeouts,
as afforded by switching the UI event/input loop to the MONOTONIC time base, and the refactored timed callbacks in GestureDetector.
* reMarkable: Stopped enforcing synthetic timestamps on input events, as it should no longer be necessary.
* TimeVal:
* Refactored and simplified, especially as far as metamethods are concerned (based on <bsd/sys/time.h>).
* Added a host of new methods to query the various POSIX clock sources, and made :now default to MONOTONIC.
* Removed the debug guard in __sub, as time going backwards can be a perfectly normal occurrence.
* New methods:
* Clock sources: :realtime, :monotonic, :monotonic_coarse, :realtime_coarse, :boottime
* Utility: :tonumber, :tousecs, :tomsecs, :fromnumber, :isPositive, :isZero
* UIManager:
* Ported event loop & scheduling to TimeVal, and switched to the MONOTONIC time base.
This ensures reliable and consistent scheduling, as time is ensured never to go backwards.
* Added a :getTime() method, that returns a cached TimeVal:now(), updated at the top of every UI frame.
It's used throughout the codebase to cadge a syscall in circumstances where we are guaranteed that a syscall would return a mostly identical value,
because very few time has passed.
The only code left that does live syscalls does it because it's actually necessary for accuracy,
and the only code left that does that in a REALTIME time base is code that *actually* deals with calendar time (e.g., Statistics).
* DictQuickLookup: Port delay computations to TimeVal
* FootNoteWidget: Port delay computations to TimeVal
* HTMLBoxWidget: Port delay computations to TimeVal
* Notification: Port delay computations to TimeVal
* TextBoxWidget: Port delay computations to TimeVal
* AutoSuspend: Port to TimeVal
* AutoTurn:
* Fix it so that settings are actually honored.
* Port to TimeVal
* BackgroundRunner: Port to TimeVal
* Calibre: Port benchmarking code to TimeVal
* BookInfoManager: Removed unnecessary yield in the metadata extraction subprocess now that subprocesses get scheduled properly.
* All in all, these changes reduced the CPU cost of a single tap by a factor of ten (!), and got rid of an insane amount of weird poll/wakeup cycles that must have been hell on CPU schedulers and batteries..