Marking variables as const when they won't be modified after
initialization helps programmers trying to understand a codebase to
manage the cognative load.
This pull request uses a clang-tidy fixit (Hard to automate, since the
code needs to be temporarily compiled as C++ for it to work) to try to
mechanically apply the const keyword to code where the automated tool
can determine that the variable won't be modified.
I then follow this up with a manual improvement pass to
turnutils_uclient, where I address const correctness of local variables,
as well as do some adjustments to loops and scoping to help with
reducing complexity.
Co-authored-by: redraincatching <redraincatching@disroot.org>
Co-authored-by: Pavel Punsky <eakraly@users.noreply.github.com>
Use the include-what-you-use program to (partially) clean up header
includes, so that only includes which are needed, and no includes that
are not needed (or at least closer to that ideal) are done.
For a c-language project, the build-time improvements from this change
is minimal. This would have a much bigger impact on a C++ project than a
C-project for build times.
So for coturn, this change is mostly intended to just provide
consistency and make it easier to locate weird issues like strange
dependencies, and unnecessary connections between code.