This allows us to error out on deprecation warnings for thirdparty
libraries and standard library features.
Co-authored-by: Starlight220 <53231611+Starlight220@users.noreply.github.com>
I started with the output of styleguide#217, then renamed a few classes
to fix compilation.
ntcore's StorageTest needed some manual renaming since it put the Test
word in the middle instead of at the end.
One limitation of wpiformat is test cases that were only named "Test"
were unmodified, and an error was generated. These test cases were
manually given more descriptive names:
* TimedRobotTest mode test cases had "Mode" appended to the name. Java
tests were renamed to match.
* UvAsyncTest and UvAsyncFunctionTest cases were given alternate names
Supersedes #2358 with updates and cleanups.
Closes#2482 and closes#2487 because we shouldn't support both
time-based and count-based debouncing approaches.
Co-authored-by: oblarg <emichaelbarnett@gmail.com>
Inconsistent names were found using the following regular expressions.
* `rg "TEST(_F|_P)?\(\w+,\s+\w+Test\)"`
* `rg "TEST(_F|_P)?\(\w+,\s+Test\w+\)"`
* `rg "TEST(_F|_P)?\(\w+Tests,\s+\w+\)"`
Fixes#3495.
A lot of these are breaking changes. frc::Timer was replaced with the
contents of frc2::Timer. The others were in-place argument changes or
removing deprecated non-unit overloads.
The wpimath APIs use std::array, which doesn't do size checking. Passing
an array with the wrong size can result in uninitialized elements
instead of a compilation error.
This is a breaking change but is worthwhile to avoid hard-to-debug errors.
* Add .clang-tidy configuration.
* A separate .clang-tidy is used for hal includes to suppress modernize-use-using
(as these are C headers).
* Add NOLINT where necessary for a clean run.
* Add clang-tidy job to lint-format workflow. This workflow is now only run on PRs.
To reduce runtime, clang-tidy is only run on files changed in the PR.
Two wpilibc changes; both are unlikely to break user code:
* BuiltInAccelerometer: Make SetRange() final
* Counter: Make SetMaxPeriod() final
After these cleanups, the only file that does not run cleanly is
cscore_raw_cv.h due to it not being standalone.
This makes code easier to read and more consistent between C++ and Java.
Also update clang-format settings to always add a line break (even if no braces are used).
Old behavior is available via StepTimingAsync.
This makes it significantly easier to use simulation timing with notifiers.
Also update tests to use simulation framework. This also speeds up the
timing-dependent tests by using simulation timing. ResourceLock is used
in the Java tests to prevent parallel execution.
While we're here, tweak HAL Notifier implementation:
- Use wait_for instead of wait_until in WaitForNotifierAlarm
- Check for triggerTime = UINT64_MAX in UpdateNotifierAlarm
Currently, these two tests take several seconds to complete and fail
intermittently in Windows CI. This is caused by relying on wall clock
time.
Sampling the trajectory with wall clock time means the simulation must
run for several seconds to reach the end of the trajectory. Also, the
controller can become unstable when Windows CI experiences process
scheduling delays of several hundred milliseconds. Feedback controllers
don't cope well with large delays on systems with fast dynamics.
This patch uses the mocking functionality of frc::Timer to advance the
clock by 5ms at every timestep instead of using the wall clock time.
This has two benefits:
1. The tests complete much faster because the simulation can step
forward faster than real time.
2. The controller is more stable because the sample period is uniform,
which should fix the occasional failures.
pose.Translation().X() and pose.Translation.Y() are common operations,
so shortening them to pose.X() and pose.Y() would be convenient.
Java uses the getX() convention so that is used instead of X() for Java.
Also move some things in HAL for consistency.
WAS:
C++:
- C APIs: #include "mockdata/AccelerometerData.h"
- User side class: #include "simulation/AccelerometerSim.h"
Java:
- JNI APIs: hal.sim.mockdata.AccelerometerData (and a few classes in hal.sim)
- User side classes: hal.sim.AccelerometerSim
IS:
C++:
- C APIs: #include "hal/simulation/AccelerometerData.h"
- C++ class: #include "frc/simulation/AccelerometerSim.h"
Java:
- JNI APIs: hal.simulation.AccelerometerData
- User side class: wpilibj.simulation.AccelerometerSim