Do not write it in multiple lines, to ensure it's going to be written
all together, and nothing else could be written in the middle.
Also optimize a bit the code.
We used to send the test log to stderr in pieces, but this could be
problematic when running multiple tests in parallel, so let's just prepare
the string in pieces and write it all at once.
In some cases if verbose output was enabled we were using wrong output
format in TAP mode, so let's fix these cases and run the 'testing' test
case in --verbose mode to ensure we won't regress.
When running multiple tests in parallel using meson, the output could be
mixed and if we write the TAP reports in multiple steps the output could
be mangled together with other results.
An example is: https://gitlab.gnome.org/3v1n0/glib/-/jobs/2507620
Where we have:
ok 5 /cancellable/poll-fd# GLib-GIO-DEBUG: Collecting capable appnames: 0ms
# Allocating hashtables:...... 0ms
# Reading capable apps: 63ms
# Reading URL associations:... 0ms
# Reading extension assocs: 78ms
# Reading exe-only apps:...... 47ms
# Reading classes: 312ms
# Reading UWP apps: 47ms
# Postprocessing:..............16ms
# TOTAL: 563ms
# SKIP Platform not supported
Leading to a clear TAP parsing error
This is not required, but meson may warn about in future versions, so it's
safer to define it.
However, we must be sure that we only expose it once and in the root binary
if a test file launches another subprocess test file.
To avoid this, we set an environment variable at test init, so that it can
be inherited by children.
It's not the best solution, but for sure the best-effort one without having
to change gtest arguments and called binaries.
Non mentioning a version was considered as assuming we were using TAP
version 12, while no version earlier than 13 can be specified
explicitly so let's use it.
See: https://testanything.org/tap-specification.html
And: https://testanything.org/tap-version-13-specification.html
As per meson default, the project name is a suite per se that is always
added to a test, so running `meson test --suite=glib` is the same as not
passing the `--suite` argument at all, and so making all the tests to run.
To be able to only run the *glib* tests without using the `--no-suite` args,
add a `core` suite that only targets the glib folder tests.
In all these cases we don't really care about running the test file,
while building and basic execution it is relevant.
Also they don't support TAP at all.
Meson supports tap protocol results parsing, allowing us to track better
the tests that are running (and the ones that are actually skipped) without
manually parsing the test output.
However this also implies that using the verbose mode for a test doesn't
show its output by default (unless there are failures).
Setting the main thread's scheduler settings is not reliably possible,
especially not if SELinux or similar mechanisms are used to limit what
can be done.
As such, get rid of all the complicated code that tried to do this
better and use a separate thread for spawning threads for the global
shared thread pool. These will always inherit the priority of the main
thread (or rather the thread that created the first shared thread pool).
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/2769
g_print(), g_printerr() and all the g_log() functions used to always
duplicating a string when printing even if there's nothing to format.
This can be avoided in many cases though, so if a string has no formatting
directive, we can just write it as it is without duplicating and free'ing
it.
From my tests the potential `strchr` overhead is minimal.
To try and debug why the following assert sometimes fails on
`msys2-clang64`, such as in this job:
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/jobs/2515166.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #1371
We may not be able to fix GTasks broken design,
but at least we should document it and not let
users stumble into this bear trap without warning.
Helps: #1346
Add static inline versions of these functions
that boil down to just an memcpy. ag_string_append_len
is used quite a bit in GMarkup and GTK's css parser.
Due to an oversight (I guess), per-desktop default values (which come
from override files such as this one:
https://github.com/endlessm/gnome-shell/blob/master/data/00_org.gnome.shell.gschema.override)
were not checked when getting a GSettings value via a `GSettingsAction`.
Per-desktop default values are correctly returned via all other
GSettings query paths (see calls to
`g_settings_schema_key_get_translated_default()`).
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
`memcpy(NULL, ., n)` and `memcpy(., NULL, n)` are undefined behaviour,
even if *n* is zero.
When len is 0 here, callers are allowed to pass in null data, and
GPtrArray also does not guarantee to have allocated rarray->pdata yet.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
ptr_array_new(len, ., TRUE) ensures that there are at least len+1
elements in pdata, and that pdata[0] is null, but leaves the rest of
pdata uninitialized. After copying the array data into pdata[1] to
pdata[len-1] inclusive, we still need to make sure pdata[len] is a
null terminator.
Note that if len is 0, then pdata is not guaranteed to be non-null. If
it's null, then we can't add null-termination to it until its size
is updated.
Resolves: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/2877
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This has historically failed on Debian autobuilders, and as a result we
have had a patch for a long time that turned a failure here into a
g_test_skip(). It's not clear whether this still happens, so I'm now
assessing whether the patch can be dropped; but if the prlimit() call
can fail for whatever reason, it would be useful for the error message
to say what limit we were trying to set.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>