I think this was inadvertently left out of
75257e759b. Prior to removing this,
`sbt --client exit` took about 200ms on my computer compared to about
50ms for sbtn. The sbt --client result dropped to about 80ms after this
change.
On terminals with virtual io disabled, we'd spin up a thread for each
watch iteration that performed a blocking read from the terminal input
stream. This thread could not be joined which would cause the triggered
execution to be delayed by 1 second while sbt blocked trying to join
that thread. It also meant that input probably didn't work correctly
since the user would end up with many threads polling from system in.
The fix to this problem is to poll the terminal input stream if it is
unsafe to do a blocking read, which is the case for dumb terminals or if
virtual io is disabled.
With sbt 1.4.x, non-ascii utf-8 characters are not handled correctly in
the console. It was not clear from the jline 3 documentation but the
NonBlockingReader.read method is supposed to return unicode points
rather than utf8 bytes. To fix this, we can decode the input and return
the code point rather than the directy byte from the input stream.
Ref https://github.com/sbt/sbt/pull/4443
Fixes https://github.com/sbt/sbt/issues/5750
In #4443 I implemented an optimization where the metabuild would no longer re-resolve numerous sbt artifacts for metabuilds each time, and instead use whatever the JARs provided by the launcher. At the time, this technique didn't work for Coursier so I've placed in some workarounds for it. Now that Coursier's resolution has improved, it seems like the workaround is actually causing more harm. This removes the bandaid, and local testing shows that it seems to be working.
For instance, we no longer need to put in `ThisBuild / useCoursier := false` in sbt/sbt's `project/plugins.sbt`.
* Refactor so as to be testable
* Queue stores the _beginning_ timestamp of each GC time delta
* Message states the correct time over which the GC time was recorded
* Add heap stats from java.lang.Runtime to the message