The superclock rate is variable and is stored in session files since
7.0 . It is set globally when reading from a session file, and it really
should be reset to a known state whenever a new blank session is
created from an existing one. Currently, that doesn't happen. We fix
that by resetting it in Temporal::reset().
For now, we are duplicating the default superclock rate 282240000 from
superclock.h , but we can drop that when all code paths that use
superclock also use Temporal::reset().
This will provide an (extra) guarantee that
set_superclock_ticks_per_second() always is invoked before creating
TempoMap or using superclock_ticks_per_second() in other ways. The
DEBUG_EARLY_SCTS_USE in superclock.h is thus closer to passing.
Ardour uses some global variables and singletons. These global variables
can be initialized with a value prior to program execution (especially
if they are const), but some of the static variables are modified, and
it is crucial that they always are reset when switching to another
session. To keep things simple and explicit and consistent, we thus
introduce Temporal::reset() to reset TempoMap (and later on also the
superclock rate). This is somewhat similar to Temporal::init(), which
usually only is invoked once (on program start) to initialize singletons
(such as the TempoMap).
9964f20c added TempoMap initialization to Session::create() ... but only
when not using a template. This create method is mainly preparing the
filesystem for a new session, and TempoMap initialization doesn't seem
like a perfect fit for it. It also seemed odd that it only initialized
TempoMap for clean new sessions, while existing sessions and templates
initialized it elsewhere.
Instead, invoke the TempoMap initialization early in the Session
creation process. This might introduce an extra and unnecessary TempoMap
initialization when loading an existing session or using a template, but
that will be cheap and do no harm, while providing a guarantee that we
always use the same default value.
cb78043adc "Indicate selection extents in time ruler" introduced use of
superclock before it has been set. But as it only is used at time 0, the
actual superclock doesn't matter. Still, we work around it in order to
avoid triggering any warnings of uninitialized use.
In some startup flows, the entire loading process happens inside
StartupFSM::start(). In others, that call gets things moving but
we return from it and loading is not complete until later.
Deleting the StartupFSM while still inside the ::start() call
led to a use-after-free error. This new code will leak the StartupFSM
in some startup flows.
The old state in this commit would lead to an existing session
being loaded with the claim that it was a new session. This went
unnoticed until 4bed642d71, where newness impacted the time
domain of the session (and actually led to it being set to a random memory
value).
cut/copy section does copy the tempo-map, so copying
a 4 Bar MIDI section will be 4 Bars after the paste.
This does not work the other way around:
With a tempo-map, 4 bars may correspond to 10 seconds
at the source position. While 4 bars at the target
position may correspond to a different audio-time
duration. This can lead to gaps or overlaps.
Variables by these names are only used from the local wscript and when
running "waf configure", which already for other reasons only can run at
the top-level.
These variables are thus not mandatory and not used.
'top' was a constant that was set to '.', even when inside
subdirectories. It is thus not really top.
I don't know if the intent was to use the actual top (which is available
as bld.top_dir), but for now we make it explicit what we have and do.
https://waf.io/book/ says
By default, the project name and version are set to noname and 1.0. To
change them, it is necessary to provide two additional variables in
the top-level project file
- and waf code inspection confirms that waf itself only will use the top
level APPNAME.
Also, the 'waf dist' comment doesn't seem relevant - especially after
this change - and is removed too.
(Note: libs/evoral/wscript and libs/temporal/wscript still use APPNAME
for other purposes.)
https://waf.io/book/ says
By default, the project name and version are set to noname and 1.0. To
change them, it is necessary to provide two additional variables in the
top-level project file
- and waf code inspection confirms that waf itself only will use the top
level VERSION.
Some wscripts will use
bld.env['VERSION']
but that will also just use the value set in the top wscript.
Done with ad hoc scripting hacks processing unused imports found by pyflakes:
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.Logs.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i 's/^import waflib.Logs as Logs,/import/g' $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.Options.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i 's/import waflib.Options as Options, /import /g' $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.Options.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i 's/^from waflib import Options,/from waflib import/g' $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep ' imported but unused$' | sed "s/^\([^:]*\):[0-9]*:[0-9]* '\(.*\)'.*/\1 \2/g" | while read f lib; do sed -i "/^import $lib$/d" $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.Options.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i '/from waflib import Options$/d' $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.TaskGen.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i '/from waflib import TaskGen$/d' $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.Task.Task.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i '/^from waflib.Task import Task$/d' $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.Tools.winres.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i '/^from waflib.Tools import winres$/d' $f; done
for f in $( find * -name wscript ); do echo; pyflakes $f; done | grep 'waflib.Utils.* but unused' | cut -d: -f1 | while read f; do sed -i '/^import waflib.Utils as Utils$/d' $f; done