There were complaints about no patch files being created from CI when
the examples pre-gen fails for people who don't build with bazel. This
adds a new action step to run just the non-robotpy pregen.
I also added an argument to the diff tests to make it a unified diff,
which might make it easier to hand fix.
This primarily fixes up the bazel publishing to match the gradle
publishing again, as some new libraries were added but not hooked up to
the maven publishing.
During the process, I noticed that the 3rd party libraries (googletest,
catch2, and imgui_suite) were still getting published on the old
`edu.wpi` namespace. I tried to clean up all the other references to
that that I could. Note: opencv and libssh are handled outside
`allwpilib` so they need to be updated separately.
Was caused by checking assignability like`Protobuf<Scheduler,
ProtoMessage>` instead of `Protobuf<Scheduler, ? extends
ProtoMessage<?>>`
This epilogue bug would have also applied to other protobuf-serializable
types
The framework fundamentally relies on the continuation API added in Java 21 (which is currently internal to the JDK). Continuations allow for call stacks to be saved to the heap and resumed later.
The async framework allows command bodies to be written in an imperative style. However, an async command will need to be actively cooperative and periodically call coroutine.yield() in loops to yield control back to the command scheduler to let it process other commands.
There are also some other additions like priority levels (as opposed to a blanket yes/no for ignoring incoming commands), factories requiring names be provided for commands, and the scheduler tracking all running commands and not just the highest-level groups. However, those changes aren't unique to an async framework, and could just as easily be used in a traditional command framework.