This removes that function, using file-io readFile' instead.
Had to deal with newline conversion, which readFileStrict does on
Windows. In a few cases, that was pretty ugly to deal with.
Sponsored-by: Kevin Mueller
In 793ddecd4b, writeSshConfig was made to
writeFile a ByteString, which lost the newline conversion on Windows.
Added linesFile to fix it. This will also be useful for other writeFile
conversions.
And follow-on changes.
Note that relatedTemplate was changed to operate on a RawFilePath, and
so when it counts the length, it is now the number of bytes, not the
number of code points. This will just make it truncate shorter strings
in some cases, the truncation is still unicode aware.
When not building with the OsPath flag, toOsPath . fromRawFilePath and
fromRawFilePath . fromOsPath do extra conversions back and forth between
String and ByteString. That overhead could be avoided, but that's the
non-optimised build mode, so didn't bother.
Sponsored-by: unqueued
Works around this bug in unix-compat:
https://github.com/jacobstanley/unix-compat/issues/56
getFileStatus and other FilePath using functions in unix-compat do not do
UNC conversion on Windows.
Made Utility.RawFilePath use convertToWindowsNativeNamespace to do the
necessary conversion on windows to support long filenames.
Audited all imports of System.PosixCompat.Files to make sure that no
functions that operate on FilePath were imported from it. Instead, use
the equvilants from Utility.RawFilePath. In particular the
re-export of that module in Common had to be removed, which led to lots
of other changes throughout the code.
The changes to Build.Configure, Build.DesktopFile, and Build.TestConfig
make Utility.Directory not be needed to build setup. And so let it use
Utility.RawFilePath, which depends on unix, which cannot be in
setup-depends.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
This fixes all instances of " \t" in the code base. Most common case
seems to be after a "where" line; probably vim copied the two space layout
of that line.
Done as a background task while listening to episode 2 of the Type Theory
podcast.