Like all macros, we need to parenthesize arguments to ensure the order
of operations is correct.
See the mail thread starting at
<http://lists.fedoraproject.org/pipermail/devel/2013-March/180302.html>
"GCC produced wrong code in gvfs-1.14.2-3.fc18.x86_64" for how this
caused trouble with GVFS (which in turn caused trouble with
LibreOffice, where running "soffice sftp://.../.../test.odt" to access
an .odt file via GVFS failed to properly type-detect that file as a
Writer document and produced bogus error messages about the file being
broken).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695925
We were using PATH_MAX to size a static array for reading lines from
the .hidden file. Some platforms (Hurd) don't declare a PATH_MAX.
Switch to using g_file_get_contents() and g_str_split('\n') instead.
Also take the time to clean up a bit with a switch to using a 'set mode'
GHashTable (since this code was originally written before we had those).
This patch is largely based on a patch from Emilio Pozuelo Monfort (who
also reported the bug).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695147
Unicode corrigendum #9 spells out in no uncertain terms that on
conversion interfaces we should not reject characters like U+FFFE and
U+FFFF which we were doing before.
Commit f91ef4ef15 started accepting these
characters, but we had some testcases that were checking that strings
containing these characters should be rejected.
Update the tests.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=694669
Commit f641699 (for bug 675333) introduced a check whether the Exec= program in
a .desktop actually exists. This broke the /appinfo/mime/* test cases which use
executable names like "my_app".
Use real ones instead (like "echo" and "sleep"), and add a new
/appinfo/mime/ignore-nonexisting test case which verifies that
g_desktop_app_info_new() indeed ignores nonexisting executables.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695191
I added these because the older mingw32 toolchain didn't have
MemoryBarrier(). The newer mingw-w64 toolchain however has.
As reported by John Emmas this was causing build failure with
MSVC because of inline issues. But that reminded me that we
may be taking this path even if the system implements
MemoryBarrier as a function, which is a waste. So, just remove
it.