Define GStatBuf as the type used by g_stat() and g_lstat(). Replaces
the non-public struct tag _g_stat_struct. Mostly relevant for Windows
where there are several variants of stat-style structs. On POSIX, is
just another name for struct stat.
Actually, also on many POSIX systems there are in fact several
variants of struct stat and corresponding stat() and lstat()
functions, but as g_stat and g_lstat are normally on POSIX just macros
that expand to stat and lstat, this should not cause a problem. It's
only when it's the actual g_stat() or g_lstat() implementation inside
GLib that gets called that one needs to be sure the passed struct is
the same as what GLib expects.)
We need to check priv->cancelled after taking the lock. Previously we
only checked it just before taking the lock, which left a small chance
for a race.
Don't keep the lists of source files for libglib, libgobject and
libgio in the VS project files in addition to the canonical location,
the corresponding Makefile.am files.
Instead, generate the corresponding .vcproj files at make dist time
using the C preprocessor, from template files called .vcprojin. We
still list explicitly in the .vcprojin files some of the
Windows-specific source files, and the sources files of gnulib and
pcre.
There might be a GSource attached to a GMainContext, about to be removed by a
pending cancellation. Deleting the handle too early will trigger a g_warning in
the "select()" call in GMainContext. Attached patch fixes this by deferring
destruction of WSAEVENT object until GSocket's finalize().
Patch from bug #612702.
Signed-off-by: Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
It turns out that the way this worked did not work out for the current
main usecase (gedit) due to issues with how this is best integrated
with GtkTextView. So, in order to not have to support an unused non-ideal
API forever we remove this before its been in a stable release.
The basic feature seems to have some utility though, so we hope for it
to eventually return in a better form.
Some buildd environments have an unwritable $HOME, which makes the
test that looks for an unexisting file there fail. Use $TMP instead,
which should be more reliable.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=610860
root can access and write to a directory when it doesn't have
exec and write permissions respectively. So expect the tests that
check that to succeed rather than to fail when running as root.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=552912
This adds support for G_FILE_MONITOR_SEND_MOVED events when requested by
the user to the inotify backend. Last part to fix bug #547890.
Based heavily on a patch by Martyn Russel <martyn@lanedo.com>.