When creating a binding between two object properties we might want to
automatically synchronize the two values at the moment of the binding
creation, instead of waiting for the next change.
The G_BINDING_SYNC_CREATE flag does exactly what it says on the tin.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=622281
If we know the expected interface (e.g. :g-interface-info is set),
then we always warned when calling a method on a different
interface. Don't do that, there's no way the expected interface can
know anything about this method.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Either child_watch_source or timeout_source will already have been
destroyed after we finish the loop, and it's not safe to call
g_source_destroy() on it a second time unless we're still holding a
ref on it.
When disposing a GSocketConnection, don't explicitly close the
underlying GSocket. The GSocket will close itself if it gets
destroyed, and if it doesn't get destroyed, that presumably means the
app still wants to use it. Eg, this lets you use GSocketClient to
create a GSocketConnection, and then take the GSocket and destroy the
GSocketConnection.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=616855
The GSocket docs point out that g_socket_send/g_socket_receive may
return G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK even if g_socket_condition_check claimed
that they wouldn't. Fix the socket streams to check for that.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=603309
Add lots of padding for public class structures. Notably, we seemed to
lack any padding whatsoever in the GDBusMessageClass struct (spotted
by Dan Winship). Also switch to using
gpointer padding[N];
instead of
void (*_g_reserved1) (void);
...
void (*_g_reservedN) (void);
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Note that it does not actually work, though. Maybe because
g_io_channel_set_flags() is not implemented for file descriptor based
GIOChannels on Windows.
This patch breaks some rarely-used public API (only known user is
dconf).
This patch is based on work from Peng Huang <shawn.p.huang@gmail.com>.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=621945
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
This is a minimal patch-out of the galias functionality. We will do a
release like this so that we can easily back it out if there are
reported problems.
A more substantial cleanup (mostly removing #includes from every file)
will follow if there are no issues.
Having this tool in GLib is a bad idea for a number of reasons:
- experience has shown that the simple file format was a bad idea
- the tool is currently implemented with a hack that would require a
dependency inversion to solve (the tool needs to depend on Python
GVariant bindings)
- the tool itself is unmaintained
It will be moved to the GConf git repository so people can continue to
use it for the purpose of converting GConf schemas.