According to the documentation for eglQueryString:
> EGL_BAD_DISPLAY is generated if display is not an EGL display connection,
> unless display is EGL_NO_DISPLAY and name is EGL_EXTENSIONS.
Therefore, we should check EGL by doing:
eglQueryString(EGL_NO_DISPLAY, EGL_EXTENSIONS)
Indeed, the old way of eglQueryString(EGL_NO_DISPLAY, EGL_VERSION) works on
libglvnd but not using mesa's libEGL.so directly.
Also added a warning to make it more obvious that EGL is not available.
With the new keymap feature, we are now able to properly support letting
the user enter exact values into the sliders. This commit adds a tooltip
to help the user discover this feature.
Note that this currently only works on Wayland. The X11 backend will need
to call app_handleKeyboardModifiers.
Due to the way assert is defined in standard C, compilers in release mode
will not treat it as unreachable. This explains a lot about those pesky
uninitialized variable bugs, actually.
This lets us mark code as unreachable and signals the compiler that this
is the case with __builtin_unreachable().
We also mark DEBUG_FATAL as unreachable.
This, unlike the standard assert macro, is guaranteed to print the failed
assertion to our log file, and tests the assertion even with NDEBUG defined
so we can more easily catch failures in production binaries without crashing
the program.
The motivation of this is how MinGW handles assertion failures: it creates a
dialog window that the headless user will not be able to see, and blocks the
program from being restarted by the service. Since the failed assertion is
displayed in the dialog, it doesn't print anything to the log, making it
impossible to diagnose issues.
Before, if the size is exactly the multiple of the page size, an extra padding
page is added for no reason. This commit fixes the logic and also uses the
page size obtained dynamically.
This commit makes the crash handler show relative paths instead of absolute
ones, which makes the stack traces generated easier to read.
On the other hand, absolute paths makes sense on Linux, since the user is
expected to build the binaries themselves, and gdb will be able to find the
source code.