This incidentally also exercises the intended pattern for sending fds in
a D-Bus message: the fd list is meant to contain exactly those fds that
are referenced by a handle (type 'h') in the body of the message, with
numeric handle value n corresponding to g_unix_fd_list_peek_fds(...)[n].
Being able to send and receive file descriptors that are not referenced by
a handle (as in OpenFile here) is a quirk of the GDBus API, and while it's
entirely possible in the wire protocol, other D-Bus implementations like
libdbus and sd-bus typically don't provide APIs that make this possible.
Reproduces: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/2074
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This test ensures that g_socket_client_connect_to_host_async() fails if
it is cancelled, but it's not cancelled until after 1 millisecond. Our
CI testers are hitting that race window, and Milan is able to reproduce
the crash locally as well. Switching it from 1ms to 0ms is enough for
Milan to avoid the crash, but not enough for our CI, so let's move the
cancellation to a GSocketClientEvent callback where the timing is
completely deterministic.
Hopefully fixes#2221
By default, when using g_subprocess_launcher_take_fd() to pass an
FD to a child, the GSubprocessLauncher object also takes ownership
of the FD in the parent, and closes it during finalize(). This is
a reasonable assumption in the majority of the cases, but sometimes
it isn't a good idea.
An example is when creating a GSubprocessLauncher in JavaScript:
here, the destruction process is managed by the Garbage Collector,
which means that those sockets will remain opened for some time
after all the references to the object has been droped. This means
that it could be not possible to detect when the child has closed
that same FD, because in order to make that work, both FDs
instances (the one in the parent and the one in the children) must
be closed. This can be a problem in, as an example, a process that
launches a child that communicates with Wayland using an specific
socket (like when using the new API MetaWaylandClient).
Of course, it isn't a valid solution to manually call close() in
the parent process just after the call to spawn(), because the FD
number could be reused in the time between it is manually closed,
and when the object is destroyed and closes again that FD. If that
happens, it will close an incorrect FD.
One solution could be to call run_dispose() from Javascript on the
GSubprocessLauncher object, to force freeing the resources.
Unfortunately, the current code frees them in the finalize()
method, not in dispose() (this is fixed in !1670 (merged) ) but it
isn't a very elegant solution.
This proposal adds a new method, g_subprocess_launcher_close(),
that allows to close the FDs passed to the child. To avoid problems,
after closing an FD with this method, no more spawns are allowed.
Fix: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/merge_requests/1677
Expose a function that prepares an attribute query string to be passed
to g_file_query_info() to get a list of attributes normally copied with
the file. This function is used by the implementation of
g_file_copy_attributes, and it's useful if one needs to split
g_file_copy_attributes into two stages, for example, when nautilus does
a recursive move of a directory. When files are moved from the source
directory, its modification time changes. To preserve the mtime on the
destination directory, it has to be queried before moving files and set
after doing it, hence these two stages.
Signed-off-by: Maxim Mikityanskiy <maxtram95@gmail.com>
The previous parsing code could read off the end of a URI if it had an
incorrect %-escaped character in.
Fix that, and more closely implement parsing for the syntax defined in
RFC 6874, which is the amendment to RFC 3986 which specifies zone ID
syntax.
This requires reworking some network-address tests, which were
previously treating zone IDs incorrectly.
oss-fuzz#23816
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
This doesn't trigger the cancellation assertion issue when run locally
(the task didn't return yet, so the error is simply overwritten), but
perhaps it ever does in CI. Anyhow, it's good to have a cancellation
test.
This currently just implements the same functionality as the existing
`stat()`/`fstat()`/`fstatat()`/`lstat()` calls, although where a reduced
field set is requested it may return faster.
Helps: #1970
* Add g_tls_connection_get_channel_binding_data API call
* Add g_dtls_connection_get_channel_binding_data API call
* Add get_binding_data method to GTlsConnection class
* Add get_binding_data method to GDtlsConnection interface
* Add GTlsChannelBindingType enum with tls-unique and
tls-server-end-point types
* Add GTlsChannelBindingError enum and G_TLS_CHANNEL_BINDING_ERROR
quark
* Add new API calls to documentation reference gio-sections-common
This speeds up the `cancellable` test a little by stopping waiting for
the threads to start up as soon as they have started, rather than after
an arbitrary timeout.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1764
This should fix some sporadic test failures in this test, although I
can’t be sure as I was unable to reproduce the original failure.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #1764
It seems that allowing the GCancellable to be finalised in either the
main thread or the worker thread sometimes leads to crashes when running
on CI.
I cannot reproduce these crashes locally, and various analyses with
memcheck, drd and helgrind have failed to give any clues.
Fix this for this particular test case by deferring destruction of the
`GCancellable` instances until after the worker thread has joined.
That’s OK because this test is specifically checking a race between
`g_cancellable_cancel()` and disposal of a `GCancellableSource`.
The underlying bug remains unfixed, though, and I can only hope that we
eventually find a reliable way of reproducing it so it can be analysed
and fixed.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This was mostly machine generated with the following command:
```
codespell \
--builtin clear,rare,usage \
--skip './po/*' --skip './.git/*' --skip './NEWS*' \
--write-changes .
```
using the latest git version of `codespell` as per [these
instructions](https://github.com/codespell-project/codespell#user-content-updating).
Then I manually checked each change using `git add -p`, made a few
manual fixups and dropped a load of incorrect changes.
There are still some outdated or loaded terms used in GLib, mostly to do
with git branch terminology. They will need to be changed later as part
of a wider migration of git terminology.
If I’ve missed anything, please file an issue!
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Some editors automatically remove trailing blank lines, or
automatically add a trailing newline to avoid having a trailing
non-blank line that is not terminated by a newline. To avoid unrelated
whitespace changes when users of such editors contribute to GLib,
let's pre-emptively normalize all files.
Unlike more intrusive whitespace normalization like removing trailing
whitespace from each line, this seems unlikely to cause significant
issues with cherry-picking changes to stable branches.
Implemented by:
find . -name '*.[ch]' -print0 | \
xargs -0 perl -0777 -p -i -e 's/\n+\z//g; s/\z/\n/g'
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This ensures that we do really export the symbols for Visual
Studio-style builds, by using _GLIB_EXTERN to decorate the generated
prototypes and including config.h so that we are sure the symbols are
actually exported.
Sometimes this test was timing out due to the file monitor notifications
taking longer than the arbitrary 2s delay before ending the test and
checking its results at the end of `iclosed_cb()`.
Avoid that timing-dependence by ending the test when the expected file
monitor notifications are seen, or after a 10s timeout (if so, the test
is failed).
This makes the test run 4× faster in the normal case, as it’s no longer
waiting for a timeout to elapse if the file monitor notifications come
in sooner.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
The test added for #1841 spawned 100000 threads. That was fine on a
desktop machine, but on a heavily loaded CI machine, it could result in
large (and unpredictable) slowdowns, resulting in the test taking over
120s in about 1 in 5 runs, and hence failing that CI pipeline due to a
timeout. When passing normally on CI, the test would take around 90s.
Here’s a histogram of time per iteration on a failing (timed out) test
run. Each iteration is one thread spawn:
Iteration duration (µs) | Frequency
------------------------+----------
≤100 | 0
100–200 | 30257
200–400 | 13696
400–800 | 1046
800–1000 | 123
1000–2000 | 583
2000–4000 | 3779
4000–8000 | 4972
8000–10000 | 1027
10000–20000 | 2610
20000–40000 | 650
40000–80000 | 86
80000–100000 | 10
100000–200000 | 2
>200000 | 0
There’s no actual need for the test to spawn 100000 threads, so rewrite
it to reuse a single thread, and pass new data to that thread.
Reverting the original commit (e4a690f5dd) reproduces the failure on
100 out of 100 test runs with this commit applied, so the test still
works.
The test now takes 3s, rather than 11s, to run on my computer, and has
passed when run with `meson test --repeat 1000 cancellable`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
When multiple tests were run in parallel, this would race on its access
to `~/.dbus-keyrings` to authenticate with the D-Bus server, since the
keyring directory was not appropriately sandboxed to the unit test.
Use `G_TEST_OPTION_ISOLATE_DIRS` to automatically isolate each unit
test’s directory usage.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1954
Commit 721e385 left one remaining race in the filter test, with a
comment associated with it. Unfortunately, the (seemingly unrelated)
changes in #1841 to `GCancellable` seem to have made this remaining race
a lot more likely to fail on FreeBSD than before.
What’s likely to have happened (although I was unable to reproduce the
failure, due to not having a FreeBSD system; I was only able to
reproduce the problem as a 3/1000 failure on Linux, which is still worth
fixing) is that the atomic write of the `FilterData.serial` to be
expected by the filter function sometimes happened after the filter
function had executed, so the expected message was dropped and didn’t
result in an update to the `FilterData` state.
Rework the test so that instead of setting some expectations (on
`FilterData`) in one thread and then checking them in another thread,
the worker thread just unconditionally returns messages from the filter
function to the main thread, and then the main thread checks whether the
expected one has been filtered.
With this change applied, the `gdbus-connection` test passes 5000 times
in a row for me, on Linux; and doesn’t seem to fail any more on the
FreeBSD CI machines over a few runs. (Previously it failed on 4/5 runs.)
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #2092Fixes: #1957
The GIO tests memory-monitor-dbus and memory-monitor-portal use a number
of third party Python modules that may not be present when running the
test case.
Instead of failing due to missing imports, catch the ImportError and
mock a test case that skips. This can't use the usual unittest.skip
logic because the test case class itself uses a 3rd party module.
Closes#2083.
There are two memory monitor tests that use Python's unittest module directly,
but GLib tests should be outputting TAP. Use the embedded TAPTestRunner to
ensure that TAP is output for these tests too.
D-Bus filter functions run in a worker thread. The `gdbus-connection`
test was sharing a `FilterData` struct between the main thread and the
filter function, which was occasionally (on the order of 0.01% of test
runs) causing spurious test failures due to racing on reads/writes of
`num_handled`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #480
g_assert() can be compiled out with G_DISABLE_ASSERT, which renders the
test rather useless.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #480
There’s a minor race condition between cancellation of a `GCancellable`,
and disposal/finalisation of a `GCancellableSource` in another thread.
Thread A Thread B
g_cancellable_cancel(C)
→cancellable_source_cancelled(C, S)
g_source_unref(S)
cancellable_source_dispose(S)
→→g_source_ref(S)
→→# S is invalid at this point; crash
Thankfully, the `GCancellable` sets `cancelled_running` while it’s
emitting the `cancelled` signal, so if `cancellable_source_dispose()` is
called while that’s high, we know that the thread which is doing the
cancellation has already started (or is committed to starting) calling
`cancellable_source_cancelled()`.
Fix the race by resurrecting the `GCancellableSource` in
`cancellable_source_dispose()`, and signalling this using
`GCancellableSource.resurrected_during_cancellation`. Check for that
flag in `cancellable_source_cancelled()` and ignore cancellation if it’s
set.
The modifications to `resurrected_during_cancellation` and the
cancellable source’s refcount have to be done with `cancellable_mutex`
held so that they are seen atomically by each thread. This should not
affect performance too much, as it only happens during cancellation or
disposal of a `GCancellableSource`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1841
`g_assert()` is compiled out if `G_DISABLE_ASSERT` is defined, and
`g_assert_*()` gives more detailed failure messages.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Distributions will likely want to update GLib before
GObject-Introspection, to avoid circular dependencies.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
Clang warns about string+int not appending to the string (to try and
catch newbie mistakes). While this test didn’t expect that to happen, it
was substituting the same constant string in multiple places for no good
reason. Switch to a single static const string, which should also fix
the compiler warning.
We have to define the string length since it’s used in various
stack-allocated array lengths. This is the easiest fix without more
major refactoring of the test to be less 90s.
Also make things a bit more static.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
When running under CI, each iteration takes so long that the total test
time is around 200s. If the CI runner is highly loaded, this can tip it
over the timeout of 360s.
Reduce the iteration counts unless running the test thoroughly.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1515
Currently the test waits for 1s before deciding that a refcount has been
leaked. But slow test machines might take longer than that between
scheduling different threads to sort out the refcount, so increase the
timeout.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1515
bindfs is part of the setup process, so if it fails (as can happen if
the `fuse` kernel module has not been loaded — not much we can do about
that) then skip the test.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
When testing that signals are delivered to the correct thread, and are
delivered the correct number of times, call `EmitSignal()` on the
`gdbus-testserver` to trigger a signal emission, and listen for that.
Previously, the code listened for `NameOwnerChanged` and connected to
the bus again to trigger emission of that. The problem with that is that
other things happening on the bus (for example, an old
`gdbus-testserver` instance disconnecting) can cause `NameOwnerChanged`
signal emissions. Sometimes, the `gdbus-threading` test was failing the
`signal_count == 1` assertion due to receiving more than one
`NameOwnerChanged` emission.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1515
This is equivalent, but makes the loop exit conditions a little clearer,
since they’re actually in a `while` statement, rather than being a
`g_main_loop_quit()` call in a callback somewhere else in the file.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1515
As with the previous commit, don’t stop iterating the `context` in
`test_delivery_in_thread_func()` until the unsubscription from a signal
is complete, and hence there’s a guarantee that no callbacks are pending
in the `thread_context`.
This commit uses the `GDestroyNotify` for
`g_dbus_connection_signal_subscribe()` as a synchronisation message from
the D-Bus worker thread to the `test_delivery_in_thread_func()` thread
to notify of signal unsubscription.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1515
Previously, the code in `ensure_gdbus_testserver_up()` created a proxy
object and watched its `name-owner` to see when the
`com.example.TestService` name appeared.
This ended up subscribing to three signals (one of them for name
ownership, and two unused for properties of the proxy), and was racy. In
particular, the `name-owner` property could be set before all D-Bus
messages had been processed — it could have been derived from getting
the owner of the name, for example.
This left unprocessed messages hanging around in the `context`, but that
context was never iterated again, which essentially leaked the
references held by those messages. That included a reference to the
`GDBusConnection`.
The first part of the fix is to simplify the code to use
`g_bus_watch_name_on_connection()`, so there’s only one signal
subscription to worry about.
The second part of the fix is to use the `GDestroyNotify` callback for
the watch data to be notified of when all D-Bus traffic has been
processed and the signal unsubscription is complete. At this point, it’s
guaranteed that there are no idle callbacks pending in the
`GMainContext`, since the `GDestroyNotify` callback is the last one
invoked on the `GMainContext`.
Essentially, this commit uses the `GDestroyNotify` callback as a
synchronisation message between the D-Bus worker thread and the thread
calling `ensure_gdbus_testserver_up()`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1515
Iterate the given `context` while waiting, rather than sleeping. This
ensures that if the errant `GDBusConnection` ref is held by some pending
callback in the given `context`, it will actually be released.
Typically `context` is going to be the global default main context.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1515
This introduces no functional changes, but makes the code a little more
explicit about which connection and main context it’s operating on.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1515
These checks used to be a precondition on test_threaded_singleton(); but
the earlier tests could leave the refcount of the shared connection in a
bad state, and this wouldn’t be caught until later.
Factor out the check, increase the iteration count to 1000 (so the check
blocks for up to 1s rather than 100ms), and call it in more places.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1515
g_assert() can be compiled out with G_DISABLE_ASSERT, which renders the
test rather useless.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1515
There was a slight race in name ownership: a gap between calling
`RequestName` (or receiving its reply) and subscribing to `NameLost`. In
that gap, another process could request and receive the name, and this
one wouldn’t know about it.
Fix that by subscribing to `NameAcquired` and `NameLost` before calling
`RequestName`, and then unsubscribing again if the subscriptions turn
out not to be necessary (if the process can’t own the requested name).
Spotted and diagnosed by Miika Karanki.
One of the tests needs an additional iteration of the main loop in order
to free all the signal closures before it can complete its checks.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1517
There were some problems about where to install `gio-launch-desktop` to
support multiarch systems without circular dependencies. Simon McVittie
suggested that, actually, given the current set of platforms supported
by `GDesktopAppInfo` (they’re all POSIX), we could just use `sh`.
That simplifies things nicely. `gio-launch-desktop` can always be
resurrected (and the multiarch debate continued and resolved) if needed
in future.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1633
Some CI platforms invoke these tests with euid != 0 but with
capabilities. Detect whether we have Linux CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE or other
OSs' equivalents, and skip tests that rely on DAC permissions being
denied if we do have that privilege.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/2027
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/2028
The loops should continue iterating if the timeout is non-zero and we're
still waiting for the updated value. Otherwise, if things break, we'll
be waiting until we receive a value that never arrives.
This reverts commit b6d8efbebc.
This GLib API is good, but the implentation is not ready, so there's no
reason to commit to the API in GLib 2.64. We can reland again when the
implementation is ready.
There are three problems: (a) The glib-networking implementation normally
works, but the test has been broken for a long time. I'm not comfortable
with adding a major new feature without a working test. This is
glib-networking#104. (b) The WebKit implementation never landed. There
is a working patch, but it hasn't been accepted upstream yet. This API
isn't needed in GLib until WebKit is ready to start using it.
https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=200805. (c) Similarly, even if
the WebKit API was ready, that itself isn't useful until an application
is ready to start using it, and the Epiphany level work never happened.
Let's try again for GLib 2.66. Reverting this commit now just means we
gain another six months before committing to the API forever. No reason
to keep this in GLib 2.64 when nothing is using it yet.
This complements the `--glib-min-required` argument, just like the
`GLIB_MIN_REQUIRED` and `GLIB_MAX_ALLOWED` preprocessor defines which
control access to APIs in C.
Currently, it doesn’t affect code generation at all. When we next change
code generation, we will need to gate any new API usage on this
argument.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1993
This makes it consistent with the `GLIB_MIN_REQUIRED` defines which are
used for API stability/versioning in C code.
It doesn’t otherwise change the behaviour of the `--glib-min-version`
argument.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1993
This fixes the following build failure on FreeBSD:
```
In file included from ../gio/tests/win32-appinfo.c:24:
/usr/include/malloc.h:3:2: error: "<malloc.h> has been replaced by <stdlib.h>"
#error "<malloc.h> has been replaced by <stdlib.h>"
```
Hopefully it doesn’t break Windows.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
As with all D-Bus signal subscriptions, it’s possible for a signal
callback to be invoked in one thread (T1) while another thread (T2) is
unsubscribing from that signal. In this case, T1 is the main thread, and
T2 is the D-Bus connection worker thread which is unsubscribing all
signals as it’s in the process of closing.
Due to this possibility, all `user_data` for signal callbacks needs to
be referenced outside the lifecycle of the code which
subscribes/unsubscribes the signal. In other words, it’s not safe to
subscribe to a signal, store the subscription ID in a struct,
unsubscribe from the signal when freeing the struct, and dereference the
struct in the signal callback. The data passed to the signal callback
has to have its own strong reference.
Instead, it’s safe to subscribe to a signal and add a strong reference
to the struct, store the subscription ID in that struct, and unsubscribe
from the signal when the last external reference to your struct is
dropped. That unsubscription should break the refcount cycle between the
signal connection and the struct, and allow the struct to be completely
freed. Only with that approach is it safe to dereference the struct in
the signal callback, if there’s any possibility that the signal might be
unsubscribed from a separate thread.
The tests need specific additional main loop cycles to completely emit
the NameLost signal callback. Ideally they need refactoring, but this
will do (1000 test cycles passed).
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #978
1) When parsing the executable name out of the command line,
see if the executable is rundll32.exe. If that is the case,
use the DLL name from its first argument as the "executable"
(this is used only for matching, and Windows Registry matches
these programs by their DLLs, so this is correct; for running
the application GLib would still use the command line, with
rundll32).
2) If an app runs with rundll32, ensure that rundll32 arguments
can be safely quoted. Otherwise GLib will break them with its
protective quotation.
Currently the code generated by gdbus-codegen uses
G_DBUS_CALL_FLAGS_NONE in its D-Bus calls, which occur for each method
defined by the input XML, and for proxy_set_property functions. This
means that if the daemon which implements the methods checks for
G_DBUS_FLAGS_ALLOW_INTERACTIVE_AUTHORIZATION and only does interactive
authorization if that flag is present, users of the generated code have
no way to cause the daemon to use interactive authorization (e.g. polkit
dialogs).
If we simply changed the generated code to always use
G_DBUS_FLAGS_ALLOW_INTERACTIVE_AUTHORIZATION, its users would have no
way to disallow interactive authorization (except for manually calling
the D-Bus method themselves).
So instead, this commit adds a GDBusCallFlags argument to method call
functions. Since this is an API break which will require changes in
projects using gdbus-codegen code, the change is conditional on the
command line argument --glib-min-version having the value 2.64 or
higher.
The impetus for this change is that I'm changing accountsservice to
properly respect G_DBUS_FLAGS_ALLOW_INTERACTIVE_AUTHORIZATION, and
libaccountsservice uses generated code for D-Bus method calls. So
these changes will allow libaccountsservice to continue allowing
interactive authorization, and avoid breaking any users of it which
expect that. See
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/accountsservice/accountsservice/merge_requests/46
It might make sense to also let GDBusCallFlags be specified for property
set operations, but that is not needed in the case of accountsservice,
and would require significant work and breaking API in multiple places.
Similarly, the generated code currently hard codes -1 as the timeout
value when calling g_dbus_proxy_call*(). Add a timeout_msec argument so
the user of the generated code can specify the timeout as well.
Also, test this new API. In gio/tests/codegen.py we test that the new
arguments are generated if and only of --glib-min-version is used with a
value greater than or equal to 2.64, and in gio/tests/meson.build we
test that the generated code with the new API can be linked against.
The test_unix_fd_list() test also needed modification to continue
working now that we're using gdbus-test-codegen.c with code generated
with --glib-min-version=2.64 in one test.
Finally, update the docs for gdbus-codegen to explain the effect of
using --glib-min-version 2.64, both from this commit and from
"gdbus-codegen: Emit GUnixFDLists if an arg has type `h` w/
min-version".
For the check "if (error != NULL)" to work as expected, the
create_server() (and create_server_full()) functions need to make
sure to return an error for all the possible failures, but this
might not always be the case.
Catch all the failures by testing for a non-NULL return value if there
was no error.
They didn’t match the prototype generated by `gdbus-codegen`, which
meant that the FD list was being iterated incorrectly. Secondly, the
document ID list returned by the method was not NULL terminated, which
could lead to reading off the end of the list.
Somehow, neither of these bugs caused problems on Linux, but they did
cause problems on FreeBSD.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1983
Reduce the number of iterations of things sent over a mock session bus
from different threads, to avoid the test spending quite so long
contested over the `gsignal.c` lock.
The test now takes about 10 seconds, according to `time`, rather than
around 100 or longer.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
By removing the cached global proxy in gdocumentportal.c, we can
re-enable the checks for proper shutdown of the session bus connection
in the dbus-appinfo.c test.
We can't use session_bus_down() in the test since gdocumentportal.c
holds a reference to the session bus connection, preventing it from
being finalised.
Those tests require Python, gobject-introspection and python-dbusmock
making them unsuitable to be run within the uninstalled test suite.
There are no restrictions of dependencies when it comes to installed
tests so use those to exercise GMemoryMonitor.
This is a reimplementation of commit
4aba03562b from Will Thompson, but
conditional on the caller passing `--glib-min-version 2.64` to
`gdbus-codegen` to explicitly opt-in to the new behaviour.
From the commit message for that commit:
Previously, if a method was not annotated with org.gtk.GDBus.C.UnixFD
then the generated code would never contain GUnixFDList parameters, even
if the method has 'h' (file descriptor) parameters. However, in this
case, the generated code is essentially useless: the method cannot be
called or handled except in degenerate cases where the file descriptors
are missing or ignored.
Check the argument types for 'h', and if present, generate code as if
org.gtk.GDBus.C.UnixFD annotation were specified.
Includes a unit test too.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1726
This can be used by callers to opt-in to backwards-incompatible changes
to the behaviour or output of `gdbus-codegen` in future. This commit
doesn’t introduce any such changes, though.
Documentation and unit tests included.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1726