We need to silence the warning about this because Steinberg doesn't
declare their base class destructors as virtual (because of Windows ABI
compatibility issues). But we can still do it inside of yabridge to have
at least a bit more safety.
We had to add an even hackier hack now to get Boost.Process to
interoperate with Asio's IO contexts. This will be replaced later when
we replace Boost.Process.
I'm not a fan of Hungarian notation, but C++ kind of needs it with its
implicit `this`. And of all the common options for this, I find
suffixing members with an underscore the least offensive one.
This does what we did for a few functions in the last few commits for
every function. We now use either the `std::invocable` concept or our
own `invocable_returning` concept wherever possible to make sure we pass
function types to these template functions, since constraint errors are
a lot more readable than template deduction errors. And instead of
having to specify the return type as a template argument, we now just
use `std::invoke_result_t<F>` instead. The VST3 message handling
functions are still using the good old `typename F` since those are
overloaded polymorphic functions. This was also a good moment to modify
`AdHocSocketHandler::send()` to allow functions returning void (this got
rid of an old fixme where we had to return some dummy value from a
function instead of just not returning anything).
This makes much more sense, since all plugin instances will be sharing a
single GUI thread. What would happen was that resize calls from one
instance and GUI thread function calls from another instance would
collide. Using a single shared mutual recursion mechanism (just like on
the Wine side) fixes this.
With this we should be able to handle `setState()`s that try to resize
the currently open editor. This could pop up when using the preset
browser in REAPER with plugins that recall their old size when loading a
preset.
By directly stopping the IO context there was a chance that a task would
get cancelled outright if all stars aligned in the wrong way. Stopping
the IO context could happen between posting the task to the context and
waiting for it. This approach is much safer as we cannot drop any work
this way.
This would cause crashes in Bitwig, as `RunLoopTasks`' destructor would
not be run after the event handler has been unregistered, and we
unregister the event handler in that destructor.
I've never seen this happen, but now this too would support deeply
nested mutual recursion just like we implemented in
`Vst3PlugViewProxyImpl`. Better safe than sorry.
This was a bit of a tricky one because it requires simulating mutual
recursion, but it's needed for REAPER as otherwide calls to
`IPlugFrame::resizeView()` and `IContextMenu::popup()` might cause
REAPER to segfault because its GUI is not thread safe.