This largely copies over Spicy's `.clang-format` configuration file. The
one place where we deviate is header include order since Zeek depends on
headers being included in a certain order.
The Zeek code base has very inconsistent #includes. Many sources
included a few headers, and those headers included other headers, and
in the end, nearly everything is included everywhere, so missing
#includes were never noticed. Another side effect was a lot of header
bloat which slows down the build.
First step to fix it: in each source file, its own header should be
included first to verify that each header's includes are correct, and
none is missing.
After adding the missing #includes, I replaced lots of #includes
inside headers with class forward declarations. In most headers,
object pointers are never referenced, so declaring the function
prototypes with forward-declared classes is just fine.
This patch speeds up the build by 19%, because each compilation unit
gets smaller. Here are the "time" numbers for a fresh build (with a
warm page cache but without ccache):
Before this patch:
3144.94user 161.63system 3:02.87elapsed 1808%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 2168608maxresident)k
760inputs+12008400outputs (1511major+57747204minor)pagefaults 0swaps
After this patch:
2565.17user 141.83system 2:25.46elapsed 1860%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 1489076maxresident)k
72576inputs+9130920outputs (1667major+49400430minor)pagefaults 0swaps
The two hooks being added are:
void HookLogInit(const std::string& writer, const std::string& instantiating_filter, bool local, bool remote, const logging::WriterBackend::WriterInfo& info, int num_fields, const threading::Field* const* fields);
which is called when a writer is being instantiated and contains
information about the fields being logged, as well as
bool HookLogWrite(const std::string& writer, const std::string& filter, const logging::WriterBackend::WriterInfo& info, int num_fields, const threading::Field* const* fields, threading::Value** vals);
which is called for each log line being written by each writer. It
contains all the data being written. The data can be changed in the
function call and lines can be prevented from being written.
This commit also fixes a few small problems with plugin hooks itself,
and extends the tests that were already there, besides introducing tests
for the added functionality.