I'm not sure why we used the elaborate formula to convert the io-priority
to the priority of the mainloop idle when emulating async i/o with idles.
However, it causes the default io priority to be less than the normal
idle prio, so the i/o won't be scheduled if there is an idle outstanding.
There is really no great mapping to use here, doing blocking i/o in an
idle of any prio is generally bad and apps doing a lot of async i/o should
initialize threads. However, if we use the io-priority directly we at least
avoid the starvation problem above and make things easier to understand.
Add API for starting/stopping drives. This new API will enable
GVolumeMonitor and GVfs implementations to add support for the
following features
1. Powering down external hard disk enclosures / drives
2. Starting/stopping multi-disk devices (such as RAID/btrfs/ZFS)
3. Connecting/disconnecting iSCSI devices
4. Reacting to the user pressing e.g. the "remove drive" button on
a IBM/Lenovo Ultrabay: http://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/Ultrabay
See the bug for the corresponding GVfs and Nautilus changes.
The icon names are folder-documents, folder-download, folder-music,
folder-pictures, folder-publicshare, folder-templates, folder-videos.
See bug 541276.
Change the logic in g_socket_listener_add_inet_port() as per the
reasoning in the bug report.
- If the OS supports neither IPv6 or IPv4, fail.
- If the OS supports only IPv6, do that.
- If the OS supports only IPv4, do that.
- If the OS supports IPv6 and IPv6 "speaks" IPv4 then bind it
and be done.
- If the OS supports IPv6 and IPv6 doesn't "speak" IPv4 then
create an additional socket for IPv4.
- If binding any socket fails then fail the entire call.
Also, remove the ability to call this function with port == 0. This
is a useless thing to do anyway since you have no way to know what
port number was actually allocated. We should have a separate
function to deal with this.
... as g_cancellable_cancel()
Rework a g_critical() that would (rarely) trigger when _reset() was
called in a thread different from _cancel() by making _reset() wait for
the cancel function to be finished the same way
g_cancellable_disconnect() uses.
The default implementation of g_file_copy() checked the size of the file
to copy to give useful progress updates unconditionally. This can cause
long delays on 1-connection FTP servers while it tries to open a second
connection before it returns EBUSY. This patch makes this query only
happen when we actually send progress updates.
In particular, targets with weight 0 should be very UNlikely to be
selected, not very likely, as they were before. However, even ignoring
that bug in the logic, there was an additional bug (swapping list
items would cause the 0-weight items to get re-ordered incorrectly
anyway), and the code contained several fencepost errors.
This patch also adds gio/tests/srvtarget.c, which confirms that for a
sample list of targets, we now generate all possible correct random
sortings and no incorrect sortings, and the correct sortings occur in
roughly the expected proportions (though if the current code is
still wrong, those proportions may be wrong as well).
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=583398
Do proper referencing and unreferencing of
GWinHttpFileInputStream::file and
GWinHttpFileInputStream::file::vfs. Implement
GWinHttpFileInputStream::close_fn.
The docs mentions a separate seekable API for the various file streams
which don't actually exists. Change this to refer to the generic
GSeekable calls.
It was possible for a signal handler to remove the last reference and
dispose the monitor. If there were remaining pending_file_changes they
tried to dereference the disposed monitor.
This patch simply calls g_object_{ref,unref} around the loop that signals
the changes.
It's a bit lame, but some of our C++ wrapping scripts expect objects to be
typedefed like:
typedef struct _FooClass FooClass;
struct {} _FooClass;
Rather than:
typedef struct {} FooClass;
Functionally they're the same, but the former makes our lives easier in the
short term
The whole protocol name thing is pretty weird. The getprotobyname functions
seem to only specify one mapping for name <-> ids, so all families/types
must use the same values. Plus the values used for the protocols are
standardized by IANA, so are always the same.
So, we drop using names for protocols, intead introducing an enum with
a few commonly availible and used protocols.
Mention g_socket_set_listen_backlog in g_socket_listen.
Explain that listen backlock needs to be set before calling
listen. Also verify this with a g_return_if_fail.
Previously we saved the location in various places which is unnecessary
and sometimes even wrong. For instance, we saved the address we bound to
which may not have the final port set.
The main error would be "not supported" which could happen for e.g.
unix domain sockets, we don't really care, as this is mainly something
for TCP to help out a bit.
This is nice for some callers so they can report an error.
It is also required to support opional address types like
abstract paths for unix domain sockets.
When you're using the threaded resolver and using a sync call
without a cancellable the resolve_sync forgot to unlock the
initial req->mutex lock, leading to a deadlock when unrefing
the request.
We want to use the protocol id for lookup in the GSocketConnection
code, so we expose it. We also make GSocket store the protocol
as an int for less memory use and to allow platform specific protocols
to be specified.
Also added g_socket_protocol_id_lookup_by_name() to allow the higher
level code to specify the name by string, and g_socket_get_protocol_name()
to get it.
We were sometimes failing in g_socket_check_pending_error because
we were not setting optlen on input and it was sometimes randomly
less than sizeof(int).
This adds:
GInitable - failable object constructor interface
GAsyncInitable - async failable object constructor interface
GSocket - Platform independent lowlevel berkely socket style object
GSocketControlMessage - For passing control messages over GSocket
GUnixFDMessage - unix fd passing socket control message
Some changes were done during the import from gnio to make things
work in glib. For instance, types were moved to other headers, header
file boiler plate were updated to glib style and gio.symbols stuff
was added.
This implements all the GIOStream file ops for local files.
We use the "fallback to output stream" for all GFileIOStream ops.
Some helpers stuff was added to the local input and output streams
so they could be reused.
There is no need to have a GIOChannel in the GPollFD in
g_cancellable_create_pollfd. All we need is an Event object that
we signal when cancelling and reset when resetting.
Also, supporting g_cancellable_get_fd on Windows using _pipe is useless
as it doesn't work with any corresponding poll() function, so just don't
support that on win32.
I tested this with the cancellation support in GSocket from gnio.
glib/pcre/pcre_ucp_search_funcs.c, glib/pcre/pcre_valid_utf8.c: add
back missing config.h includes, and this time add them to the copies
in glib/update-pcre/ too so they don't get lost again on the next PCRE
update.
glib/garray.c, glib/gbase64.c: fix signed/unsigned pointer casts
gio/xdgmime/xdgmimeglob.c: remove unused variable
gio/tests/live-g-file.c: fix printf args on x86_64
tests/Makefile.am, tests/regex-test.c: remove redundant -DENABLE_REGEX
It turns out that just calling g_inet_address_get_type() isn't
enough, since its marked G_GNUC_CONST, so the call is optimized
away. If we assign the return value to a volatile location we ensure
it is called.
OS X's headers split up the current and old (BIND 4) nameserver stuff
slightly differently than Linux does, but explicitly including
arpa/nameser_compat.h does the right thing on both. Part of #580301
In glibc, IN6_IS_ADDR_UNSPECIFIED() et al. cast their argument to a
uint32_t*, so it doesn't matter whether you pass them the in6_addr
itself (which is what you're supposed to do) or one of its union
members (which is what we were actually doing). Solaris's macro
accesses the in6_addr fields directly though, and so only works if you
pass the actual in6_addr. #580194.
Bug 579862 – requesting xattr::foo ends up calling getxattr(...,
user.:foo,...)
The patch makes sure we escape xattr::, not xattr:, before adding user.
and calling getxattr.
Higher-level wrappers around GResolver. GSocketConnectable provides an
interface for synchronously or asynchronously iterating multiple
socket addresses, with GNetworkAddress and GNetworkService providing
interfaces based on hostname and SRV record resolution.
Part of #548466.
GResolver provides asynchronous (and synchronous-but-cancellable) APIs
for resolving hostnames, reverse-resolving IP addresses back to
hostnames, and resolving SRV records. Part of #548466.
Types and methods for dealing with IPv4 and IPv6 addresses (and UNIX
domain socket addresses under UNIX). This does not include code for
actual socket I/O.
Originally from "gnio". Much of the code was written by Christian
Kellner, Samuel Cormier-Iijima, and Ryan Lortie.
Part of #548466.
There are race conditions when connecting and disconnecting from the
"cancelled" signal on GCancellable which you need to do when
implementing cancellable operations. This adds helper functions that
avoid these races and mentions these races in the docs. (#572844)
Apps don't generally create backup directories, etc. So, if the file
ends with ~ but is not a regular file shouldn't be considered a backup
file. (#573673)
When returning a filesystem type id, say "ext3/ext4" instead of "ext3",
since both use the same superblock magic, so we can't discriminate
them without more work.
Sometimes it seems like the trash dir and the file are on the same
filesystem but the rename fails with EXDEV anyway (can happen
e.g. with bind mounts or multiple mounts of the same device). In this
case we want to return the right error so that apps can fallback to
regular delete.
Update various README files to refer to git instead of svn.
Add a README.commits that is pretty much a copy of the same file
in GTK+. Also discontinue ChangeLog files.
2009-03-26 Carlos Garnacho <carlosg@gnome.org>
Bug 575270 – GVolumeMonitor::mount-pre-unmount not being emitted
* gunixmount.c (eject_unmount_cb) (eject_unmount_do_cb)
(eject_unmount_do): Emit ::mount-pre-unmount and wait 500msec before
actually trying to unmount.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=8020
2009-03-17 Colin Walters <walters@redhat.com>
Bug 575708 - runaway inotify madness ...
* gfilemonitor.c: Queue up events in a local list and
fire one idle, instead of queuing lots of individual
idles which has bad performance behavior.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=8010
2009-03-16 Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com>
Bug 575555 – Use fsync() when replacing files to avoid data loss on crash
* configure.in:
Look for fsync().
* glib/gfileutils.c:
(write_to_temp_file):
fsync temp file if destination file exists
2009-03-16 Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com>
Bug 575555 – Use fsync() when replacing files to avoid data loss on crash
* glocalfileoutputstream.c:
(g_local_file_output_stream_close):
(_g_local_file_output_stream_replace):
fsync temp file before closing if replacing target file
svn path=/trunk/; revision=7991