* C++ modernize: Replace MIN/MAX with type safe std::min/std::max
* Template std::min/max invocations now explicitly use largest integer type
* torrent.cc did not have <algorithm> included
* MIN/MAX Changes for subprocess-win32.cc
* Using type{} style cast instead of template parameter in std::min/max
* 32-bit type cast errors with uint64_t versus size_t
* 32-bit type cast errors inout.cc and file.cc
* Missing include in windows code; Type cast error fixed
* Missing macro in win32 daemon; Replaced MIN in commented code with std::min
* Update libtransmission/tr-getopt.cc
Co-authored-by: Mike Gelfand <mikedld@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update libtransmission/file-posix.cc
Co-authored-by: Mike Gelfand <mikedld@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update tests/libtransmission/copy-test.cc
Co-authored-by: Mike Gelfand <mikedld@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update libtransmission/peer-mgr.cc
Co-authored-by: Mike Gelfand <mikedld@users.noreply.github.com>
* Strlen returns size_t, remove cast
Co-authored-by: Charles Kerr <charles@charleskerr.com>
Co-authored-by: Mike Gelfand <mikedld@users.noreply.github.com>
This way all the qualifiers (`const`, `volatile`, `mutable`) are grouped
together, e.g. `T const* const x` vs. `const T* const x`. Also helps reading
types right-to-left, e.g. "constant pointer to constant T" vs. "constant
pointer to T which is constant".
There're places where manual intervention is still required as uncrustify
is not ideal (unfortunately), but at least one may rely on it to do the
right thing most of the time (e.g. when sending in a patch).
The style itself is quite different from what we had before but making it
uniform across all the codebase is the key. I also hope that it'll make the
code more readable (YMMV) and less sensitive to further changes.
Factor out demonization implementation to platform-specific files.
Implement daemonization on Windows using service API. Improve *NIX
implementation by handling signals asynchronously to prevent potential
issues of running complex code inside the handler.