We've had a perpetual sequencing problem with addon startup. Users need to be
able to specify options to addons on the command-line, before addons are
actually loaded. This is only exacerbated with the new async core, where load
order can't be relied on.
This patch introduces deferred options. Options passed with "--set" on the
command line are deferred if they are unknown, and are automatically applied by
the addon manager once matching addons are registered and their options are defined.
We now have two options: block_global blocks global networks, block_private
blocks private networks. The block_global option is true by default, and
block_private is false by default. The addon name is "block" so the options are
correctly prefixed.
Also make option documentation precise, reduce verbosity of logs.
- Instead of listening for a pseudo-event, we periodically check whether client
replay, server replay or file reading is active.
- Adjust server replay not to
use tick.
- Adjust readfile to expose a command to check whether reading is in progress.
Also add a periodic refresh every 0.5 seconds for the statusbar. This is in
addition to refreshes upon event update notifications, and picks up replay
status changes not linked to flow events.
Re-design the way client replay works. Before, we would fire up a thread,
replay, wait for the thread to complete, get the next flow, and repeat the
procedure. Now, we have one replay thread that starts when the addon starts,
which pops flows off a thread-safe queue. This is much cleaner, removes the
need for busy tick, and sets the scene for optimisations like server connection
reuse down the track.
The granularity of mtime is surprisingly bad. Make the tests more robust
against this, and promote has_log back to a public method, now that we have a
few legitimate examples.
The tick event is a nasty compromise, left over from when we didn't have an
event loop. This is the first patch in a series that explores moving our
built-in addons to managing coroutines on the eventloop directly for periodic
tasks.