Split win32 functions off into their own section, instead
of having large and unwieldy ifdef sections inside each function.
Also move the compat versions of env functions over from gutils.c
This was used as an optimisation for the macro hackery that used to live
in gthread.h. If a particular library or program knew that it could
rely on thread support being enabled, it would allow for static
evaluation of conditionals in some of those macros.
Since the macros are dead and thread support is now always-on, we can
get rid of this bit of legacy.
g_thread_init() is now a deprecated API, so drop G_DISABLE_DEPRECATED
from the CFLAGS for gthread/. Add the missing declaration for
g_thread_init_with_errorcheck_mutexes() back to deprecated/gthread.h.
This function was never put in a header and was only used internally
from libgthread, but we should keep the symbol around to avoid
triggering any false-positives on ABI checkers.
For -Wmissing-prototypes compatibility with this unusual case, we should
add a private prototype in the .c file just before.
This has uncovered two unused testcases in option-context.c. They are
currently broken and require more investigation (which is probably why
they are unused).
Document the previously uncovered case of calling g_spawn_async_with_pipes()
without a full path but no G_SPAWN_SEARCH_PATH. This runs programs from the
current directory, which might be unexpected and even dangerous in some corner
cases.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=656621
Adds g_key_file_ref and g_key_file_unref, to be used by a future
GKeyFile boxed type for language bindings.
Based on the patch by Christian Persch and Emmanuele Bassi.
Author: Christian Persch
Signed-off-by: Johan Dahlin
Signed-off-by: Giovanni Campagna
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=590808
gutils.[hc] is a bit of a grab bag, so lets start cleaning
things up by moving all the environment-related functions
into separate genviron.[hc] files.
The private _g_getenv_nomalloc has been moved to its sole caller.
When spawning a child process, it is not safe to call setenv() before
the fork() (because setenv() isn't thread-safe), but it's also not
safe to call it after the fork() (because it's not async-signal-safe).
So the only safe way to alter the environment for a child process from
a threaded program is to pass a fully-formed envp array to
exec*/g_spawn*/etc.
So, add g_environ_getenv(), g_environ_setenv(), and
g_environ_unsetenv(), which act like their namesakes, but work on
arbitrary arrays rather than working directly on the environment.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=659326
01ed78d525cf2f8769022e27cc2573ec7ba123b3 introduced assertion checks for
creating a main context, forking, and attempting to use the main context
from the child side of the fork.
Some code (such as gnome-keyring-daemon) daemonise after calling
GMainContext. That's probably still mostly safe since we still only
have one side of the fork touching the context afterwards.
This use case is still troubling, however, since if any worker threads
have been created at the time of the fork(), we could end up in the
classic situation of leaving some mutexes in a locked state when the
other threads disappear from the copy of the image that the child gets.
This will require some deeper thinking...
Some code using GLib (gnome-keyring-daemon, for example) assumes that
they can catch signals by masking them out in the main thread and
calling sigwait() from a worker.
The problem is that our new worker thread catches the signals before
sigwait() has a chance and the default action occurs (typically
resulting in program termination).
If we mask all the signals in our worker, then this can't happen.