- 06 Apr, 2018 1 commit
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Hisham Muhammad authored
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- 07 Jul, 2017 1 commit
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Explorer09 authored
See DragonFlyBSD source "sys/sys/proc.h". Fixes #646
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- 19 Apr, 2017 1 commit
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Diederik de Groot authored
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- 30 Aug, 2016 1 commit
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Explorer09 authored
Specifically, Platform_signals[] and Platform_numberOfSignals. Both are not supposed to be mutable. Marking them 'const' puts them into rodata sections in binary. And for Platform_numberOfSignals, this aids optimization (aids only Link Time Optimization for now). :) Signed-off-by: Kang-Che Sung <explorer09@gmail.com>
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- 28 Apr, 2016 1 commit
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Andy Pilate authored
This reverts commit f554f08f.
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- 14 Feb, 2016 1 commit
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Bernard Spil authored
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- 12 Feb, 2016 2 commits
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Hung-Yi Chen authored
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Bernard Spil authored
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- 15 Jan, 2016 1 commit
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Explorer09 authored
With the CLAMP macro replacing the combination of MIN and MAX, we will have at least two advantages: 1. It's more obvious semantically. 2. There are no more mixes of confusing uses like MIN(MAX(a,b),c) and MAX(MIN(a,b),c) and MIN(a,MAX(b,c)) appearing everywhere. We unify the 'clamping' with a single macro. Note that the behavior of this CLAMP macro is different from the combination `MAX(low,MIN(x,high))`. * This CLAMP macro expands to two comparisons instead of three from MAX and MIN combination. In theory, this makes the code slightly smaller, in case that (low) or (high) or both are computed at runtime, so that compilers cannot optimize them. (The third comparison will matter if (low)>(high); see below.) * CLAMP has a side effect, that if (low)>(high) it will produce weird results. Unlike MIN & MAX which will force either (low) or (high) to win. No assertion of ((low)<=(high)) is done in this macro, for now. This CLAMP macro is implemented like described in glib <http://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/glib-Standard-Macros.html> and does not handle weird uses like CLAMP(a++, low++, high--) .
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- 13 Dec, 2015 2 commits
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Martin "eto" Misuth authored
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Martin "eto" Misuth authored
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- 12 Dec, 2015 1 commit
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Martin "eto" Misuth authored
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- 03 Dec, 2015 1 commit
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Michael Klein authored
- currently implemented for darwin and linux
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- 06 Oct, 2015 5 commits
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Martin "eto" Misuth authored
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Hisham Muhammad authored
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Martin "eto" Misuth authored
FreeBSD Linux Other platforms will have it undefined for now.
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Martin "eto" Misuth authored
htop fails to compile with: ```text SignalsPanel.c:32:49: error: use of undeclared identifier 'Platform_signals' Panel_set(this, i, (Object*) ListItem_new(Platform_signals[i].name, Platform_signals[i].number)); ^ 1 error generated. *** Error code 1 ```
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Hisham Muhammad authored
Implementations for Linux (tested) and FreeBSD (still untested, thanks to @etosan for providing the table). Darwin and OpenBSD(ping @mmcco) builds should be broken now, pending their own tables.
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- 16 Mar, 2015 1 commit
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Hisham Muhammad authored
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- 27 Nov, 2014 6 commits
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Hisham Muhammad authored
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Hisham Muhammad authored
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Hisham Muhammad authored
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Hisham Muhammad authored
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Hisham Muhammad authored
This will produce too much replicated code. I think I'll use a lighter abstraction in things like this.
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Hisham Muhammad authored
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- 24 Nov, 2014 1 commit
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Hisham Muhammad authored
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