We had a ton of helper functions in qt-gui.cpp which really didn't make
much sense. So I moved them all into qthelper.cpp.
Also moved the UserAgent helper that didn't belong in the UpdateHandler to
begin with - that's a generic helper used in many places...
With this we can successfully build using cmake again.
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
This one is less verbose and very easy to parse. It's guaranteed to have
five components, separated by ':' with no other ':' in the string:
Subsurface:<version>:<PrettyOSName>:<appCpuArch[/osCpuArch]>:<UILang>
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
The access manager is only one, while we can make requests from
different parts of the application, so relying on the manager
finished() signal to see if something was done or not was a
not very good move.
The QNetworkReply is created when a get() is invocked on the
AccessManager and that's unique. connect it's finished()
signal instead.
bonus: code cleanup.
Signed-off-by: Tomaz Canabrava <tomaz.canabrava@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
This switches the QTextEdit fields to QPlainTextEdit (I don't see a reason
why we should allow HTML here), no longer tries to have a default text but
instead adds labels for the two fields, connects the UI so th data is
collected and uses a bastardized WebServices subclass to send the data to
our backend.
Fixes#546
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
The idea is that a week after the user starts using Subsurface we ask them
if they would like to submit a survey response.
If you are running a development build, don't wait seven days.
This patch doesn't do anything with the user's selections, doesn't submit
anything to our server, etc. It's just a placeholder to tune what we
should ask, etc.
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>