* Update vcpkg ports to use a manifest json file instead of a CONTROL file.
* Update vcpkg ports to use a manifest json file instead of a CONTROL file
for remaining packages.
* Add the new vcpkg manifet json files and also update the template
package.
* Update paths in the cmake and eng scripts to find the right file now
that CONTROL is gone.
* Update the Azure.Core changelog to be more consise and complete for the beta.8
release.
* Fix the new feature section since `GetDeadline` was added this release.
* Add note about types moving between header files.
* Make identity related fixes.
Co-authored-by: Victor Vazquez <victor.vazquez@microsoft.com>
* Add back-ticks around `Response<void>` in changelog
* Remove extra whitespace after type name in identity CL.
* Add back-ticks around type name in identity CL.
Co-authored-by: Victor Vazquez <victor.vazquez@microsoft.com>
* Move changelog entry to correct place
* Reformat breaking changes
* New feature in the right place
* body_stream.hpp
* Backtick
* Add changes made for Context
* More updates
* More updates
Co-authored-by: Anton Kolesnyk <antkmsft@users.noreply.github.com>
Part of https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-cpp/issues/1789
From Jeff:
> BodyStream is only exposed to users when uploading/downloading bytes. Except for Storage almost no services do this at all; they read the stream and deserialize into a structure and the customer gets the structure - not the stream. Azure::Core:IO is a fine namespace.
* For consistency within the SDK, move Azure::Core::Context to be the last
parameter for various Azure::Core APIs.
* Fix merge conflict due to log policy file change.
* Update new client options tests
* Moved `BodyStream` and its derived types from `Azure::Core::Http`
namespace to `Azure::IO`, and update headers.
* Fix up clang formatting.
* Add missing winhttp bodystream namespace change.
* Update merge conflict related changes.
* Update header paths in includes.
* Defend public headers against inclusion of Windows.h
... which defines some nasty function-like macros `min` and `max` when `_NOMINMAX` isn't defined. We prevent expansion as a function-like macro by inserting some token(s) between `min`/`max` and the following `(`. Most commonly that means wrapping the entire qualified-name in `()` a la `(std::min)(x, y)`, but an explicit template argument list (`std::min<int>(x, y)`) works as well.
* clang-format all the things
* Test coverage
I assume that the `azure-meow-common` headers are fully covered by the tests for the `azure-meow-woof` SDKs.
Partial work from #1342
Moving the Http Pipeline to the internal layer.
The HTTP pipeline is yet exposed through the Storage protocol layer headers which only use it from its Details namespace but still expose it. Fixing that would require re-doing its protocol layer, which is not ideal, so the expectation is to just leave it as Internal to be enough to be considered as non-for-end-users