A source file (.cpp) must include its own header first.
This insures that the header is self-contained and
doesn't depend on arbitrary (and accidental) includes
before it to compile.
Furthermore, system headers should go next, followed by
C then C++ headers, then libraries (Poco, etc) and, finally,
project headers come last.
This makes sure that headers and included in the same dependency
order to avoid side-effects. For example, Poco should never rely on
anything from our project in the same way that a C header should
never rely on anything in C++, Poco, or project headers.
Also, includes ought to be sorted where possible, to improve
readability and avoid accidental duplicates (of which there
were a few).
Change-Id: I62cc1343e4a091d69195e37ed659dba20cfcb1ef
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/25262
Reviewed-by: Ashod Nakashian <ashnakash@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ashod Nakashian <ashnakash@gmail.com>
The new function takes a map from keywords to integer values, and accepts
parameters in the form of either name=keyword, or for backward compatibility,
name='keyword'. Use it to parse the type parameter of the key, mouse,
selecttext and selectgraphic messages. This restricts the accepted keywords to
those actually valid for each message.
Works now for the trivial 'connect' test program. Still need to add
pre-spawning of a new child process as soon as an existing one from the pool
has been taking into use. And need to test with the actual JS client.
Add a new program, loadtest, that runs a requested number of client sessions
in parallel to a loolwsd server. A client session loads one of a list of test
documents, and does some operations on it.
Move the getTokenInteger() and getTokenString() functions out from LOOLSession
into a new namespace LOOLProtocol, as they are neeeded also in the loadtest
program.
Add, also in LOOLProtocol, functions to parse some of the messages from the
server. (In general that is done in client JavaScript code, of course; only
for testing purposes needed in C++ code.)