As of 6249a24, align() is not allowed on packed struct fields
and as such the align(4) was removed from the first field of
EdidOverrideProtocolAttributes. The endgame here is packed struct
backed by explicit integers, in this case a u32, but until that
is implemented put the align(4) on the pointer to avoid breaking
someone's UEFI code in a hard to debug way.
This implements #10113 for the self-hosted compiler only. It removes the
ability to override alignment of packed struct fields, and removes the
ability to put pointers and arrays inside packed structs.
After this commit, nearly all the behavior tests pass for the stage2 llvm
backend that involve packed structs.
I didn't implement the compile errors or compile error tests yet. I'm
waiting until we have stage2 building itself and then I want to rework
the compile error test harness with inspiration from Vexu's arocc test
harness. At that point it should be a much nicer dev experience to work
on compile errors.
Windows does Unicode-aware case-insensitivity comparisons for environment variable names. Before, os.getenvW was only doing ASCII case-insensitivity. We can take advantage of RtlEqualUnicodeString in NtDll to get the proper Unicode case insensitivity.
I found that after switching from my custom Guid parser to the one in std that it increased zigwin32 build times substantially (from 40 seconds to over 10 minutes). More information can be found in the benchmark PR I created here: https://github.com/ziglang/gotta-go-fast/pull/21 . This PR ports my GUID parser to std so all projects can leverage the faster comptime performance.
The size of a GUID is not platform-dependent, it's always a fixed number of bits. So I've updated guid to use fixed bit integer types rather than platform-dependent C integer types.
Beyond adding default zero-initialization, this commit changes undefined
initialization to zero, as some cases reserved the padding and on other
cases, I've found some systems act strange when giving uninit instead of
zero even when it shouldn't be an issue, one example being
FileProtocol.Open's attributes, which *should* be ignored when not
creating a file, but ended up giving an unrelated error.
I've seen having this be wrong break some cross-compilers, and it's
also how it is in other files so it's best to be consistent.
It's also just the actual casing of the file.
This allows users to add file paths to device paths, which is often used
in methods like `boot_services.loadImage` and `boot_services.startImage`,
which take a device path with an additional file path appended to locate
the image.
copy_cqes() is not guaranteed to return as many CQEs as provided in the
`wait_nr` argument, meaning the assert in `copy_cqe` can trigger.
Instead, loop until we do get at least one CQE returned.
This mimics the behaviour of liburing's _io_uring_get_cqe.
The semantics of this function are that it moves both files and
directories. Previously we had this `is_dir` boolean field of
`std.os.windows.OpenFile` which required the API user to choose: are we
opening a file or directory? And the other kind would either cause
error.IsDir or error.NotDir. But that is not a limitation of the Windows
file system API; it was self-imposed.
On Windows, rename is implemented internally with `NtCreateFile` so we
need to allow it to open either files or directories. This is now done
by `std.os.windows.OpenFile` accepting enum{file_only,dir_only,any}
instead of a boolean.
For renameat, unlinkat, mkdirat, symlinkat and linkat the error code
differs between kernel 5.4 which returns EBADF and kernel 5.10 which returns EINVAL.
Fixes#10466