Queries the charset used by the associated console, which does not
necessarily match the charset of the current locale as returned by
g_get_charset.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1270
This is a new function along the same lines as g_test_bug(): to allow
developers to annotate unit tests with information about the test (what
it tests, how it tests it) for future developers to read and learn from.
It will also output this summary as a comment in the test’s TAP output,
which might clarify test results.
Includes a unit test.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1450
This adds two new helpers that allow for inserting pre-allocated GList
elements to the queue similar to existing helpers. This may be advantagous
in some situations such as statically allocated GList elements.
Add a new G_TEST_OPTIONS_ISOLATE_XDG_DIRS option for g_test_init() which
automatically creates a temporary set of XDG directories, and a
temporary home directory, and overrides the g_get_user_data_dir() (etc.)
functions for the duration of the unit test with the temporary values.
This is intended to better isolate unit tests from the user’s actual
data and home directory. It works with g_test_subprocess(), but does not
work with subprocesses spawned manually by the test — each unit test’s
code will need to be amended to correctly set the XDG_* environment
variables in the environment of any spawned subprocess.
“Why not solve that by setting the XDG environment variables for the
whole unit test process tree?” I hear you say. Setting environment
variables is not thread safe and they would need to be re-set for each
unit test, once worker threads have potentially been spawned.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/538
This is a utility function which I find myself writing in a number of
places. Mostly in unit tests.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This is along the same lines as g_assert_cmpstr(), but for variants.
Based on a patch by Guillaume Desmottes.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1191
This is a variant of g_utf8_validate() which requires the length to be
specified, thereby allowing string lengths up to G_MAXSIZE rather than
just G_MAXSSIZE.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Previously, GVariant has allowed ‘arbitrary’ recursion on GVariantTypes,
but this isn’t really feasible. We have to deal with GVariants from
untrusted sources, and the nature of GVariantType means that another
level of recursion (and hence, for example, another stack frame in your
application) can be added with a single byte in a variant type signature
in the input. This gives malicious input sources far too much leverage
to cause deep stack recursion or massive memory allocations which can
DoS an application.
Limit recursion to 128 levels (which should be more than enough for
anyone™), document it and add a test. This is, handily, also the limit
of 64 applied by the D-Bus specification (§(Valid Signatures)), plus a
bit to allow wrapping of D-Bus messages in additional layers of
variants.
oss-fuzz#9857
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Expands to the GNU C fallthrough statement attribute if the compiler is gcc.
This allows declaring case statement to explicitly fall through in switch
statements. To enable this feature, use -Wimplicit-fallthrough during
compilation.
A lot of GLib APIs provide a string length and explicitly say that the strings
are not NUL terminated. For instance, parsing XML using GMarkupParser or
reading packed binary strings from mmapped data files.
The last part of the reference counting saga.
Now that we have:
- reference counter types
- reference counted allocations
we can finally add reference counted strings using reference counted
allocations to avoid creating a new String type, and reimplementing
every single string-based API.
GArcBox is the atomic reference counting version of GRcBox. Unlike
GRcBox, the reference acquisition and release on GArcBox are guaranteed
to be atomic, and thus they can be performed from different threads.
This is similar to Rust's Arc<Box<T>> combination of traits.
It is useful to provide a "reference counted allocation" API that can
add reference counting semantics to any memory allocation. This allows
turning data structures that usually are placed on the stack into memory
that can be placed on the heap without:
- adding a public reference count field
- implementing copy/free semantics
This mechanism is similar to Rust's Rc<Box<T>> combination of traits,
and uses a Valgrind-friendly overallocation mechanism to store the
reference count into a private data segment, like we do with GObject's
private instance data.
Add a new process spawning function variant which allows the caller
to pass specific file descriptors for stdin, stdout and stderr.
It is otherwise identical to g_spawn_async_with_pipes.
Allow the same fd to be passed in multiple parameters. To make this
workable, the child process logic that closes the fd after the first time
it has been dup2'ed needed tweaking; we now just set those fds to be
closed upon exec using the CLOEXEC flag. Add a test for this case.
This will be used by gnome-shell to avoid performing equivalent
dup2 actions in a child_setup function. Dropping use of child_setup will
enable use of an upcoming optimized process spawning codepath.
We have a common pattern for reference counting in GLib, but we always
implement it with ad hoc code. This is a good chance at trying to
standardise the implementation and make it public, so that other code
using GLib can take advantage of shared behaviour and semantics.
Instead of simply taking an integer variable, we should create type
aliases, to immediately distinguish the reference counting semantics of
the code; we can handle mixing atomic reference counting with a
non-atomic type (and vice versa) by using differently signed values for
the atomic and non-atomic cases.
The gatomicrefcount type is modelled on the Linux kernel refcount_t
type; the grefcount type is added to let single-threaded code bases to
avoid paying the price of atomic memory barriers on reference counting
operations.
Add a test macro that allows comparing two floating point values for
equality within a certain tolerance.
This macro has been independently reimplemented by various projects:
* Clutter
* Graphene
* colord
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/914
This is a combination of g_hash_table_lookup_extended() and
g_hash_table_steal(), so that users can combine the two to reduce code
and eliminate a pointless second hash table lookup by
g_hash_table_steal().
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=795302
Getting the canonical filename is a relatively common
operation when dealing with symbolic links.
This commit exposes GLocalFile's implementation of a
filename canonicalizer function, with a few additions
to make it more useful for consumers of it.
Instead of always assuming g_get_current_dir(), the
exposed function allows passing it as an additional
parameter.
This will be used to fix the GTimeZone code to retrieve
the local timezone from a zoneinfo symlink.
(Tweaked by Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com> to drop g_autofree
usage and add some additional tests.)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=111848
This is a non-trivial accessor which gets the identifier string used to
create the GTimeZone — unless the string passed to g_time_zone_new() was
invalid, in which case the identifier will be `UTC`.
Implementing this required reworking how timezone information was loaded
so that the tz->name is always set at the same time as tz->t_info, so
they are in sync. Previously, the tz->name was unconditionally set to
whatever was passed to g_time_zone_new(), and then not updated if the
tz->t_info was eventually set to the default UTC information.
This includes tests for the new g_time_zone_get_identifier() API, and
for the g_date_time_get_timezone() API added in the previous commit.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=795165
g_key_file_get_locale_string() returns a translated string from the
keyfile. In some cases, it may be useful to know the locale that that
string came from.
Add a new API, g_key_file_get_locale_for_key(), that returns the locale
of the string.
Include tests.
(Modified by Philip Withnall to rename the API and fix some minor review
issues. Squash in a separate test case commit.)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=605700
It's a very common pattern to see code that looks like this in
dispose() or finalize() implementations:
if (priv->source_id > 0)
{
g_source_remove (priv->source_id);
priv->source_id = 0;
}
This API allows to accomplish the same goal with a single line:
g_clear_handle_id (&priv->source_id, (GClearHandleFunc) g_source_remove);
Thanks to Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@gnome.org> for making the patch
generic.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788489
This supports a subset of ISO 8601 since that is a commonly used standard for
storing date and time information. We support only ISO 8601 strings that contain
full date and time information as this would otherwise not map to GDateTime.
This subset includes all of RFC 3339 which is commonly used on the Internet and
the week and ordinal day formats as these are supported in the GDateTime APIs.
(Minor modification by Philip Withnall to change API versions from 2.54
to 2.56.)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753459