Our private implementation of FailFast was likely introduced
when each individual application needed it's own code to
get Watson reports. The CLR takes care of this for us now,
so we don't need our implementation.
Our method CheckForSevereException was also introduced in
the early days of the CLR - the exceptions it was checking
for aren't actually raised the CLR anymore, they just FailFast.
I removed them as there is a tiny bit of overhead (in code size)
and also in the generated code, e.g. dynamic sites called the method.
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimCmdlets
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PackageManagement.ArchiverProviders
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PackageManagement.CoreProviders
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PackageManagement.MetaProvider.PowerShell
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PackageManagement.MsiProvider
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PackageManagement.MsuProvider
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PackageManagement.NuGetProvider
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PackageManagement.PackageSourceListProvider
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PackageManagement
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.Activities
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.Commands.Diagnostics
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.Commands.Management
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.Commands.Utility
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.ConsoleHost
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.Core.Activities
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.CoreCLR.AssemblyLoadContext
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.CoreCLR.Eventing
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.Diagnostics.Activities
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.GraphicalHost
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.LocalAccounts
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.Management.Activities
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.PSReadLine
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.PackageManagement
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.ScheduledJob
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.Security.Activities
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.Security
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.Utility.Activities
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.PowerShell.Workflow.ServiceCore
* spelling: comments in src/Microsoft.WSMan.Management.Activities
* spelling: comments in src/Modules
* spelling: comments in src/Schemas
* spelling: comments in src/libpsl-native
* spelling: comments in src/powershell-native
* spelling: comments in build.psm1
* spelling: comments in src/System.Management.Automation/CoreCLR
* spelling: comments in src/System.Management.Automation/DscSupport
* spelling: comments in src/System.Management.Automation/cimSupport
* spelling: comments in src/System.Management.Automation/commands
* spelling: comments in src/System.Management.Automation/engine/Modules
I (Jason Shirk) ran https://github.com/dotnet/codeformatter with the default rules, basically:
codeformatter /nocopyright "/c:DEBUG,UNIX,CORECLR" @files.rsp
This caused a few problems building, which were fixed up manually.
Notable changes:
`this.` is removed unless needed to disambiguate.
private instance fields are renamed to have a `_` prefix.
private static fields are renamed to have a `s_` prefix.
I left some projects alone (like PackageManagement) and also left some generated code alone.