Apparently, toggling the rtc interrupt doesn't quite work on some boards? (fix#10031)
(Drive-by tweak to UIManager: Less confusing logging when quit gets tripped both via quit
and _gated_quit (i.e., on poweroff))
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.
* UIManager: Support more specialized update modes for corner-cases:
* A2, which we'll use for the VirtualKeyboards keys (they'd... inadvertently switched to UI with the highlight refactor).
* NO_MERGE variants of ui & partial (for sunxi). Use `[ui]` in ReaderHighlight's popup, because of a Sage kernel bug that could otherwise make it translucent, sometimes completely so (*sigh*).
* UIManager: Assorted code cleanups & simplifications.
* Logger & dbg: Unify logging style, and code cleanups.
* SDL: Unbreak suspend/resume outside of the emulator (fix#9567).
* NetworkMgr: Cache the network status, and allow it to be queried. (Used by AutoSuspend to avoid repeatedly poking the system when computing the standby schedule delay).
* OneTimeMigration: Don't forget about `NETWORK_PROXY` & `STARDICT_DATA_DIR` when migrating `defaults.persistent.lua` (fix#9573)
* WakeupMgr: Workaround an apparent limitation of the RTC found on i.MX5 Kobo devices, where setting a wakealarm further than UINT16_MAX seconds in the future would apparently overflow and wraparound... (fix#8039, many thanks to @yfede for the extensive deep-dive and for actually accurately pinpointing the issue!).
* Kobo: Handle standby transitions at full CPU clock speeds, in order to limit the latency hit.
* UIManager: Properly quit on reboot & exit. This ensures our exit code is preserved, as we exit on our own terms (instead of being killed by the init system). This is important on platforms where exit codes are semantically meaningful (e.g., Kobo).
* UIManager: Speaking of reboot & exit, make sure the Screensaver shows in all circumstances (e.g., autoshutdown, re: #9542)), and that there aren't any extraneous refreshes triggered. (Additionally, fix a minor regression since #9448 about tracking this very transient state on Kobo & Cervantes).
* Kindle: ID the upcoming Scribe.
* Bump base (https://github.com/koreader/koreader-base/pull/1524)
Long story short: the LeaveStandby event is sent via `tickAfterNext`, so if we tear down the plugin right after calling it (in this case, that means that the very input event that wakes the device up from suspend is one that kills ReaderUI or FileManager), what's in UIManager's task queue isn't the actual function, but the anonymous nextTick wrapper constructed by `tickAfterNext` (c.f.,
https://github.com/koreader/koreader/issues/9112#issuecomment-1133999385).
Tweak `UIManager:tickAfterNext` to return a reference to said wrapper, so that we can store it and unschedule that one, too, in `AutoSuspend:onCloseWidget`.
Fix#9112 (many thanks to [@boredhominid](https://github.com/boredhominid) for his help in finding a repro for this ;)).
Re: #8638, as the extra debugging facilities (i.e., ebb81b9845) added during testing might help pinpoint the root issue for that one, too.
Also includes a minor simplification to `UIManager:_checkTasks`, and various other task queue related codepaths (e.g., `WakeupMgr`) ;).
* Disable all non power management related input during suspend. (This prevents wonky touch events from being tripped when closing a sleep cover on an already-in-suspend device, among other things).
* Kobo: Use our WakeupMgr instance, not the class.
* WakupMgr: split `removeTask` in two:
* `removeTask`, which *only* takes a queue index as input, and only removes a single task. Greatly simplifies the function (i.e., it's just a `table.remove`).
* `removeTasks`, which takes an epoch or a cb ref, and removes *every* task that matches.
* Both of these will also *always* re-schedule the next task (if any) on exit, since we can have multiple WakeupMgr tasks queued, but we can only have a single RTC wake alarm set ;).
* `wakeupAction` now takes a `proximity` argument, which it passes on to its `validateWakeupAlarmByProximity` call, allowing call sites to avoir having to duplicate that call themselves when they want to use a custom proximity window.
* `wakeupAction` now re-schedules the next task (if any) on exit.
* Simplify `Kobo:checkUnexpectedWakeup`, by removing the duplicate `WakerupMgr:validateWakeupAlarmByProximity` call, now that we can pass a proximity window to `WakeuoMgr:wakeupAction`.
* The various network activity timeouts are now halved when autostandby is enabled.
* Autostandby: get rid of the dummy deadline_guard task, as it's no longer necessary since #9009.
* UIManager: The previous change allows us to simplify `getNextTaskTimes` into a simpler `getNextTaskTime` variant, getting rid of a table & a loop.
* ReaderFooter & ReaderHeader: Make sure we only perform a single refresh when exiting standby.
* Kobo: Rewrite sysfs writes to use ANSI C via FFI instead of stdio via Lua, as it obscured some common error cases (e.g., EBUSY on /sys/power/state).
* Kobo: Simplify `suspend`, now that we have sane error handling in sysfs writes.
* Kobo.powerd: Change `isCharging` & `isAuxCharging` behavior to match the behavior of the NTX ioctl (i.e., Charging == Plugged-in). This has the added benefit of making the AutoSuspend checks behave sensibly in the "fully-charged but still plugged in" scenario (because being plugged in is enough to break PM on `!canPowerSaveWhileCharging` devices).
* AutoSuspend: Disable our `AllowStandby` handler when auto standby is disabled, so as to not interfere with other modules using `UIManager:allowStandby` (fix#9038).
* PowerD: Allow platforms to implement `isCharged`, indicating that the battery is full while still plugged in to a power source (battery icon becomes a power plug icon).
* Kobo.powerd: Implement `isCharged`, and kill charging LEDs once battery is full.
* Kindle.powerd: Implement `isCharged` on post-Wario devices. (`isCharging` is still true in that state, as it ought to).
* Unify logging with AutoSuspend (e.g., keep ourselves to showing the delay in seconds, not the raw timestamp, as that's way harder to interpret, and the RTC module and/or logger will do that for us when the time comes).
* Speaking of, minor revamp of RTC related logging to make it more human-readable.
* On Kobo, if we hit the unexpected wakeup limit, re-engage AutoSuspend's *suspend* check, so that the device has a chance to poweroff instead of being kept awake.