Instead of lengthy blurbs, switch to single-line, machine-readable
standardized (https://spdx.dev) license identifiers. The Linux kernel
switched long ago, so there is strong precedent.
Three cases are handled: AGPL-only, Apache-only, and dual licensed.
For the latter case, I chose (AGPL-3.0-or-later and Apache-2.0),
reasoning that our changes are extensive enough to apply our license.
The changes we applied mechanically with a script, except to
licenses/README.md.
Closes#9937
C++20 makes string literals defined with u8"my string" as using
a new type char8_t. This is sensible, as plain char might not
have 8 bits, but conflicts with our bytes type.
Adjust by having overloads that cast back to char*. This limits
us to environments where char is 8 bits, but this is already a
restriction we have.
Reviewed-by: Dejan Mircevski <dejan@scylladb.com>
Message-Id: <20200512101646.127688-1-avi@scylladb.com>
C++20 makes string literals defined with u8"foo" return a new char8_t.
This is sensible but is noisy for us. Cast them to plain const char.
Message-Id: <20200512104751.137816-1-avi@scylladb.com>
Instead of keeping the LIKE pattern in a restriction object (as we
currently do), keep it in like_matcher. Also move the
pattern-idempotence check from the restriction to the matcher.
Signed-off-by: Dejan Mircevski <dejan@scylladb.com>
1. Move tests to test (using singular seems to be a convention
in the rest of the code base)
2. Move boost tests to test/boost, other
(non-boost) unit tests to test/unit, tests which are
expected to be run manually to test/manual.
Update configure.py and test.py with new paths to tests.