I’ve finally found the right place in the docs to put this stuff.
This doesn’t auto-link this section from every string in the GLib
documentation, but I think that at this point (with gtk-doc in
maintenance mode, and gi-docgen not fully applied to GLib) I don’t think
we can do any better. The perfect is the enemy of the good, and having
this stuff documented somewhere means that someone can link to it from
multiple places in future *somehow*.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #116
By default, if a host environment has the `rst2html5` application
available, builds will automatically perform some HTML documentation
generation from the documentation's glib reference content (e.g.
creating `gvariant-specification-1.0.html`). The creation of this
documentation is not required for all use cases.
This commit tweaks the building of the HTML-based GLIB specification
document to be guarded by `gtk_doc`.
Signed-off-by: James Knight <james.d.knight@live.com>
Most of the document was about traps, which have not existed since
commit 58cdf0b474, 10 years ago.
The rest of the document was about `GOBJECT_DEBUG`, and that information
would be more easily findable in the full GObject documentation — so
move it there and update it a bit.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Without a timeout, some lookup requests can go on forever, typically due
to bugs in underlying systems.
This can have particularly significant effects on the Happy Eyeballs
algorithm in `GSocketClient`, which relies on multiple name lookups as
its first step.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #2866
We need a way to initialise refcounted types placed in static storage,
or on the stack. Using proper macros avoids knowing the magic constant
used for grefcount and gatomicrefcount.
The documentation previously implicitly said in a few places that
interfaces are classed, but reading through the implementation of
`GType`, I don’t think they are. If they were, the registration of the
fundamental `G_TYPE_INTERFACE` in `gobject_init()` would specify
`G_TYPE_FLAG_CLASSED`. It only specifies `G_TYPE_FLAG_DERIVABLE`.
I think this makes sense, because you can’t subclass an interface.
Subclassing is a key property of being classed.
Tweak the `GType` tutorial to remove that implicit statement, and expand
the documentation for `G_TYPE_IS_CLASSED`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #252
Keep the API for ABI compatibility.
See
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/merge_requests/2935#note_1650099
for a summary of the reasoning for this change:
- The performance of system-provided allocators has improved since
GSlice was written, and they are now similarly as performant, or more
performant, than GSlice.
- The code is unmaintained and nobody understands it.
- It doesn’t integrate with tooling and system security features which
have been written for the system `malloc()` implementation (such as
sanitisers, valgrind, etc.).
- It’s confusing for developers: should they use `g_slice_new()` or
`g_new()`?
- GSlice is faster than the libc allocator for allocating and
(particularly) freeing linked lists, but since these are a rubbish
data structure, that’s not a great thing to optimise for.
For the cases where application performance is negatively impacted by
the implementation of GSlice being dropped (and we don’t think there’ll
be many), applications can use a drop-in `malloc()` replacement which is
more suited to their particular workload. Choosing an allocator in GLib
to suit all application workloads is not possible.
Including documentation updates and cleanups by Philip Withnall.
Fixes: #1079
Historically GPtrArray made possible to compare pointers of pointers values
that it holds, however this is inconvenient in most cases as it requires
wrapper functions and not friendly castings.
So, add two functions that allow to perform the comparisons between the
pointer values that a GPtrArray holds following the same syntax that we
share everywhere in the codebase.
It allows to create a GPtrArray from a null-terminated C array computing its
size and in case performing copies of the its values using the provided
GCopyFunc.
GPtrArray is a nice interface to handle pointer arrays, however if a classic
array needs to be converted into a GPtrArray is currently needed to manually
go through all its elements and do new allocations that could be avoided.
So add g_ptr_array_new_take() which steals the data from an array of
pointers and allows to manage it using the GPtrArray API.
Add functions to steal all the keys or values from a ghash (especially
useful when it's used as a set), passing the ownership of then to a
GPtrArray container that preserves the destroy notify functions.
GPtrArray's are faster than lists and provide more flexibility, so add
APIs to get hash keys and values using these containers too.
Given that we know the size at array initialization we can optimize the
allocation quite a bit, making it faster than the API using GList both at
creation time and for consumers.
This solves problems with validating untrusted inputs from D-Bus, where
invalid numbers of added and removed menu entries, and positions, could
be specified.
Original patch from
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728733#c7, tweaked by Philip
Withnall to add a few code comments and make
`G_MENU_EXPORTER_MAX_SECTION_SIZE` public so callers can check their
inputs against it if they want. Also tweaked to use `g_warning()` instead
of the nonexistent `g_dbus_warning()`.
Fixes: #861
Some applications (eg., gnome-photos) really want a large thumbnail,
if one can be created. Simply falling back to a smaller one (probably
created by an old nautilus), without giving the application a chance
to create a bigger thumbnail, is undesirable because they will appear
fuzzy.
Therefore, at separate attribute sets for all the thumbnail sizes
that are supported in the spec: normal/large/x-large/xx-large.
The old attribute will now return by default the biggest available, as
it used to be, but also including the x-large and xx-large cases.
Co-Authored-by: Marco Trevisan <mail@3v1n0.net>
Fixes: #621
This reverts commit 19353017a7.
The freedesktop SDK, which is used by gnome-build-meta, only has Meson
0.63. Bumping GLib’s Meson dependency to 0.64 means that, at the moment,
GLib is not buildable in gnome-build-meta and hence can’t be tested in
nightly pipelines against other projects, etc.
That’s bad for testing GLib.
It’s arguably bad that we’re restricted to using an older version of
Meson than shipped by Debian Testing, but that’s a separate discussion
to be had.
Revert the Meson 0.64 dependency until the freedesktop SDK ships Meson ≥
0.64. This also means reverting the simplifications to use of
`gnome.mkenum_simple()`.
See https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/merge_requests/3077#note_1601064
Because Meson complains about using `configure_file(copy: true)`.
Includes improvements by Xavier Claessens.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
It’s been broken since we ported to Meson and nobody has complained, so
let’s deprecate it this cycle and remove it in GLib ≥ 2.78.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #2786
Sadly, in C++ there's not an universal way to get what language standard
is used to compile GLib-based programs, in fact while most compilers
relies on `__cplusplus`, MSVC is defining that, but it does not use it
to expose such information (unless `/Zc:__cplusplus` arg is used).
On the other side, MSVC reports the language standard via _MSVC_LANG [1].
This complication makes us defining some macros in a very complex way
(such as glib_typeof()), because we need to perform many checks just to
understand if a C++ compiler is used and what standard is expecting.
To avoid this, define multiple macros that can be used to figure out
what C++ standard is being used.
[1] https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/reference/zc-cplusplus?view=msvc-170
This can be used to mark entire types as deprecated,
and trigger a warning when they are instantiated
and `G_ENABLE_DIAGNOSTIC=1` is set in the environment.
There's currently no convenient macros for defining
types with the new flag, but you can do:
```c
_G_DEFINE_TYPE_EXTENDED_BEGIN (GtkAppChooserWidget,
gtk_app_chooser_widget,
GTK_TYPE_WIDGET,
G_TYPE_FLAG_DEPRECATED)
...
_G_DEFINE_TYPE_EXTENDED_END ()
```
Includes a unit test by Philip Withnall.
This will make it clear what the bigger changes are between versions.
Kind of like a `NEWS` file for the specification.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
This should clarify object paths and signatures a little, if anyone
needs that. This introduces no semantic changes.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
reStructuredText doesn’t support cross-references unless always built
with Sphinx (as I understand it). `rst2html5` doesn‘t support them.
So reword this (currently manual) cross-reference so it’s less awkward.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
I believe the specification was originally a shorter extract of
Allison’s thesis. This left a few dangling references to requirements
which were listed in a part of the thesis not included in the
specification.
Reword them slightly so they’re not quite so awkward.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
The licensing for the original GVariant specification was not specified
in the original PDF.
However, CC-BY-SA-3.0 has been agreed by Allison, the sole copyright
holder, here:
https://gitlab.gnome.org/Teams/documentation/developer-www/-/merge_requests/108/#note_1586866
The diagrams were redrawn by me, so their licensing/copyright status is
clear.
Tested with `reuse lint` to ensure the data is machine-readable.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
This is a verbatim conversion of the GVariant Specification from
https://people.gnome.org/~desrt/gvariant-serialisation.pdf /
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ostreedev/gvariant-rs/master/docs/gvariant-serialisation.pdf
to reStructuredText.
This is for several reasons:
1. The canonical copy has gone offline due to people.gnome.org being
shut down.
2. GLib is the reference implementation of GVariant, so should probably
host the specification (unless someone wants to host it on
freedesktop-specs).
3. Moving it out of a PDF and into reStructuredText should allow for
amendments. The specification has a few problems, typos and
oversights in its original form, and it would be good to canonically
fix them without having to write a separate addendum document.
This conversion is verbatim, and does not change the content of the
document at all, even to fix typos and broken links (which there are a
small number of in the PDF).
This describes what I’m labelling as version 1.0 of the GVariant
serialisation format. Updates to the specification can bump this version
number, in subsequent commits.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Similar to g_source_set_static_name, this avoids
strdup overhead for debug-only information in
possibly hot code paths.
We also add a macro wrapper for g_task_set_name that
uses __builtin_constant_p to decide whether to use
g_task_set_name or g_task_set_static_name.
Given that it can be computed using an error-prone strings comparisons it
is better to provide a variable everywhere, so that we don't have the
risk of comparing values that are always false.
Inspired by libglnx's glnx_close_fd() and glnx_autofd, these let us
have the same patterns as g_clear_object() and g_autoptr(GObject), but
for file descriptors. g_clear_fd() is cross-platform, while g_autofd
is syntactic sugar requiring a supported compiler (gcc or clang).
Now that g_close() checks for EBADF as a programming error, we can
implement the equivalent of glnx_autofd as an inline function without
needing to have errno and EBADF in the header file.
g_clear_fd() is like glnx_close_fd(), but with error checking.
The private _g_clear_fd_ignore_error() function used to implement
g_autofd is a closer equivalent of glnx_close_fd().
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
GBookmarkFile has everything for being introspectable, but it lacks a
GType, because it can't be copied. So provide a copy function that
deeply copies all the bookmark structures.
Add tests for this.
This is like our other suite of g_set_*() based APIs to simplify and
improve correctness of setters for fields, properties, and more.
This implementation specifically handles setting string values that may
point to an offset within the current string by copying before free.
strcmp() is used directly (as opposed to g_strcmp0() due to it being in
gtestutils.h as well as to increase the chance that the compiler will
hoist the implementation.
Fixes#2747
There is currently no `dllimport` attribute on any of our function,
which prevents MSVC to optimize function calls.
To fix that issue, we need to redeclare all our visibility macros for
each of our libraries, because when compiling e.g. GIO code, we need
dllimport in GLIB headers and dllexport in GIO headers. That means they
cannot use the same GLIB_AVAILABLE_* macro.
Since that's a lot of boilerplate to copy/paste after each version bump,
this MR generate all those macros using a python script.
Also simplify the meson side by using `gnu_symbol_visibility : 'hidden'`
keyword argument instead of passing the cflag manually.
This leaves only API index to add manually into glib-docs.xml when
bumping GLib version. That file cannot be generated because Meson does
not allow passing a buit file to gnome.gtkdoc()'s main_xml kwarg
unfortunately.
Building the references requires libraries with all their symbols
available. Passing `-Dgtk_doc=true` and `-Ddefault_library=static`
should be considered a configuration error.
glib_debug is an auto option. This is clever because it allows us to
guess the best default based on the build type, while also allowing an
easy way to override if the guess is not good. Sadly, the attempt to
guess based on the build type does not work well. For example, it
considers debugoptimized builds to be debug builds, but despite the
name, it is definitely a release build type (except on Windows, which
we'll ignore here). The minsize build type has the exact same problem.
The debug option is true for both build types, but this only controls
whether debuginfo is enabled, not whether debug extras are enabled.
The plain build type has a different problem: debug is off, but the
optimization option is off too, even though plain builds are distro
builds are will almost always use optimization.
I've outlined an argument for why we should make these changes here:
https://blogs.gnome.org/mcatanzaro/2022/07/15/best-practices-for-build-options/
Specifically, Rule 4 shows all the build types and whether they
correspond to release builds or debug builds. Rule 6 argues that we
should provide good defaults for plain builds.
We had gcc-only implementations for them while both can be used in all
the supported platforms we have.
So let's just provide generic definitions, while we keep the old ones
for both consistency and retro-compatibility.
We should mention glib-mkenums in the documentation for
G_DEFINE_ENUM_TYPE and G_DEFINE_FLAGS_TYPE.
We should also mention the macros in the documentation for glib-mkenums.
This way, developers can choose the most appropriate tool for their use
case.
We have fallback in places for GNU's variadic arguments in macros, and
for static inline functions with variadic arguments as an fallback of
last resort, but going forward we are going to depend on `__VA_ARGS__`
for macros that cannot be re-implemented using a static inline function.
Fixes: #2681
Atomic primitives allow to do conditional compare and exchange but also
to get the value that was previously stored in the atomic variable.
Now, we provided an exchange function that allows to do an exchange if
the atomic value matches an expected value but we had no way to know
at the same time what was the value in the atomic at the moment of the
exchange try, an this can be useful in case that the operation fails,
for example if the current value is still acceptable for us, allowing
to do a kind of "OR" check:
gint old_value;
gint valid_value = 222;
while (!g_atomic_pointer_compare_and_exchange_value (&atomic,
valid_value, 555,
&old_value)
{
if (old_value == 555 || old_value == 222)
valid_value = old_value;
}
While it's possible to create a directory synchronously via
g_dir_make_tmp(), there's no such API that performs it asynchronously.
So implement it using GFile, using a thread to perform such task.
Listing a user in `glib.doap` is important for ensuring their access
rights are correct in GitLab (as they are synced from the DOAP file by a
sysadmin script).
When `CODEOWNERS` was written, we were assuming that GNOME’s GitLab
would get support for the `CODEOWNERS` feature in GitLab. Unfortunately,
that’s not happened, and it remains an enterprise-only feature.
As such, that means that listing a co-maintainer of GLib in `CODEOWNERS`
is not sufficient to grant them permissions to actually merge MRs or
triage issues. That means they can’t really do any co-maintaining.
So fix that by updating the DOAP from `CODEOWNERS`. This doesn’t change
the list of co-maintainers at all, or the amount of trust assumed of
anybody.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
This documents what we already do, rather than trying to make any
improvements to the process. They can happen separately, later, as
they’re a little more involved than just writing a Markdown document.
For example, we really should automate some of this.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
iconv is complicated to look up. That complexity now resides in
Meson, since 0.60.0, via a `dependency('iconv')` lookup, so use that
instead.
No effort is made to support the old option for which type of iconv to
use. It was a false choice, because if only one was available, then
that's the only one you can use, and if both are available, the external
iconv shadows the builtin one and renders the builtin one unusable,
so there is still only one you can use.
This meant that when configuring glib with -Diconv=libc on systems that
had an external iconv, the configure check would detect a valid libc
iconv, try to use it, and then fail during the build because iconv.h
belongs to the external iconv and generates machine code using the
external iconv ABI, but fails to link to the iconv `find_library()`.
Meson handles this transparently.
Rather than carrying the copylib around inside GLib, which is a pain to
synchronise and affects our code coverage statistics.
This requires updating the CI images to cache the new subproject,
including updating the `cache-subprojects.sh` script to pull in git
submodules.
It also requires adding `gioenumtypes_dep` to be added to the
dependencies list of `libgio`, since it needs to be build before GVDB as
it’s pulled in by the GIO headers which GVDB includes.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #2603
The interface was ready for this API but it was not provided.
So implement this, using a thread that calls the sync API for now.
Add tests.
Helps with: GNOME/glib#157
This documents our existing testing best practices, and tries to explain
some of the rationale around them.
There’s some new policy around performance tests, specifying that they
are good to keep around if they are high quality (so they can be used
again, the effort put into them not thrown away, and the numbers
compared over time) and that they should be runnable automatically to
avoid bitrot.
Everything else just documents existing practice.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Atomic APIs provide a way to exchange values only if we compare a value
that is equal to the old value, but not to just exchange the value
returning the old one.
However, compilers provide such built-in functions, so we can use them
to expose such functionality to GLib.
The only drawback is that when using an old version of gcc not providing
atomic APIs to swap values, we need to re-implement it with an
implementation that may not be fully atomic, but that is safe enough.
However this codepath should really not be used currently as gcc
introduced __atomic_exchange_n() at version 4.7.4, so 8 years ago.
GArray supports a "zero_terminated" flag, but GPtrArray doesn't.
This is odd, because especially for a pointer array it makes sense
to have a %NULL sentinel. This would be for example useful to track
or construct a strv array with a GPtrArray.
As workaround for this missing feature you could use a GArray instead
(ugly) or to explicitly add the %NULL element. However the latter increases
the "len" of the array, which can be problematic if you want to still use
the GPtrArray for other purposes.
Add API for marking a GPtrArray as %NULL terminated. In that case, the
API will ensure that there is always a valid %NULL sentinel after the
array. Note that the API does not enforce that a %NULL terminated API
actually has any data allocated. That means, even with a %NULL terminated
array, pdata can still be %NULL (only if len is zero).
Add g_ptr_array_new_null_terminated() constructor. The null-terminated flag
cannot be cleared. Once the GPtrArray is flagged to be %NULL terminated, it
sticks. The purpose is that once a user checks whether a GPtrArray instance
is safe to be treated as a %NULL terminated array, the decision does
not need to be re-evaluated.
Also add a g_ptr_array_is_null_terminated(). That is useful because it
allows you to check whether a GPtrArray created by somebody else is safe
to use as a %NULL terminated array. Since there is no API to make an
array not %NULL terminated anymore, this is not error prone.
The new flag is tracked as a guint8 in GRealPtrArray. On common 64 bit
architectures this does not increase the size of the struct as it fits
in an existing hole. Note that this is not a bitfield because it's
probably more efficient to access the entire guint8. However, there is
still a 3 bytes hole (on common 32 and 64 architectures), so if we need
to add more flags in the future, we still have space for 24 bits,
despite the new flag not being a bitfield.
The biggest downside of the patch is the runtime overhead that most
operations now need to check whether %NULL termination is requested.
Includes some tweaks and additional tests by Philip Withnall.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/353
Many idle and timeout sources are installed as "one shot": called once
and immediately removed. While it's easy to write a simple callback that
returns G_SOURCE_REMOVE, it would also be useful to have some sort of
"visual" marker when reading the code; a way to immediately see that a
callback (which may be defined elsewhere in the code) is meant to be
invoked just once.
Includes additional unit tests by Philip Withnall.
This is more efficient than calling
g_datalist_id_remove() multiple times
in a row, since it only takes the locks
once.
Allow up to 16 keys to be removed in one go.
That is enough for the use we have in GObject,
and it avoids any danger of blowing the stack.
This describes how releases are planned and scheduled, and where users
of GLib can look to see what the current (loose) roadmap is.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Make it a bit clearer in the documentation that using
`G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS` everywhere is a good thing.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
This tries to encode all the decision making which goes on when working
out whether to backport a commit from the unstable to stable branch.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
This just updates the list to reflect what we currently have in CI,
rather than any radical changes.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
These files are Markdown-ified versions of the following wiki pages:
* https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/GLib/CompilerRequirements
* https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/GLib/SupportedPlatforms
Keeping the files in version control with the rest of the documentation
means they should be easier to find, and easier to remember to keep up
to date.
They have not been modified other than to change to Markdown and tweak
the formatting. Content updates to them will be done in future commits.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
This is part of an effort to rationalise our developer documentation a
bit, putting it all in one directory rather than cluttering up the root
directory.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
libgamin was last released in 2007 and is dead
[upstream](https://gitlab.gnome.org/Archive/gamin). Distributions may
still ship it (although Fedora no longer does), but we want people to
use inotify on Linux since it’s actively supported.
BSDs use kqueue. Windows uses win32filemonitor.
FAM might still be used on some commercial Unix distributions, but there
are no contributors from those distributions, and certainly no CI for
them to prevent regressions.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #2614
It used to exist on Solaris, but GLib’s support for it was mostly
removed in 2015 in commit 21ab660cf8.
Remove the final few references.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
This allows the controller to explicitly be removed from the bus, in a
way that allows the caller to synchronise with it and know that all
other references to the controller should have been dropped (i.e. after
this method returns, there should be no in-flight D-Bus calls still
holding a reference to the object).
This is needed to be able to guarantee finalisation of the controller in
unit tests (and comparable real-world situations).
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #1190
The resources data is generated for both GCC and MSVC toolchains, even
though we know beforehand which toolchain we're going to compile it for.
By dropping the data duplication we make the generated resources file
faster to compile, especially when dealing with large embedded data,
instead of relying on the C pre-processor to walk the whole file and
discard the branch we're not using.
When working with storage (especially GInputStream or GOutputStream) it
is preferred to use page-aligned buffers so that the operating system
can do page-mapping tricks as the operation passes through the kernel.
Another use case is allocating memory used for vectorised operations,
which must be aligned to specific boundaries.
POSIX and Windows, as well as the C11 specification, provide this kind
of allocator functions, and GLib already makes use of it inside GSlice.
It would be convenient to have a public, portable wrapper that other
projects can use.
Fixes: #2574
If `GDebugControllerDBus` remains as the only, or default,
implementation of `GDebugController`, `dup_default()` cannot work.
`GDebugControllerDBus` requires a `GDBusConnection` at construction
time, which the `GIOModule` construction code can’t provide it.
Either we use a default D-Bus connection (but which one? and how would
it be changed by the user later if it was the wrong one?), or delegate
singleton handling of the `GDebugController` to the user.
The latter approach seems more flexible.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #1190
Much like GBindingGroup, the GSignalGroup object allows you to connect many
signal connections for an object and connect/disconnect/block/unblock them
as a group.
This is useful when using many connections on an object to ensure that they
are properly removed when changing state or disposing a third-party
object.
This has been used for years in various GNOME projects and makes sense to
have upstream instead of multiple copies.
Originally, GBindingGroup started with Builder as a way to simplify all
of the third-degree object bindings necessary around Model-Controller
objects such as TextBuffer/TextView.
Over time, it has grown to be useful in a number of scenarios outside
of Builder and has been copied into a number of projects such as GNOME
Text Editor, GtkSourceView, libdazzle, and more.
It makes sense at this point to unify on a single implementation and
include that upstream in GObject directly alongside GBinding.
This is intended to provide a uniform interface for controlling whether
the debug output from an application (or service) is emitted, typically
to journald, but actually to wherever the application chooses to output
it.
The main implementation of `GDebugController` is `GDebugControllerDBus`,
which is intended to be used on Linux. Other implementations may be
added in future for other platforms, or larger applications may want to
provide their own implementation which integrates with their ecosystem.
The `GDebugControllerDBus` implementation exposes a D-Bus interface at
`/org/gtk/Debugging` with a method to enable or disable debug
output at runtime.
This could be used by external harnesses, such as GNOME Builder or
systemd, to give a uniform way to get debug output from an application.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #1190
This is an API analogue of the G_MESSAGES_DEBUG environment variable. It
is intended to be exposed outside applications (for example, as a D-Bus
interface — see follow-up commits) so that there is a uniform interface
for controlling the debug output of an application.
Helps: #1190
On !UNIX, return an error for send_fd() & receive_fd().
(the unixfdmessage unit is not compiled on !UNIX)
The header is installed under the common GIO include directory.
Ensure G_TYPE_UNIX_CONNECTION is registered on all platforms.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
The header is now also installed under the common GIO include directory.
Sorry if it breaks any build, you had to use the correct header path.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
Move the header under the common GIO include directory.
Sorry if it breaks any build, you had to use the correct header path.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
This function creates a new hash table, but inherits the functions used
for the hash, comparison, and key/value memory management functions from
another hash table.
The primary use case is to implement a behaviour where you maintain a
hash table by regenerating it, letting the values not migrated be freed.
See the following pseudo code:
```
GHashTable *ht;
init(GList *resources) {
ht = g_hash_table_new (g_str_hash, g_str_equal, g_free, g_free);
for (r in resources)
g_hash_table_insert (ht, strdup (resource_get_key (r)), create_value (r));
}
update(GList *resources) {
GHashTable *new_ht = g_hash_table_new_similar (ht);
for (r in resources) {
if (g_hash_table_steal_extended (ht, resource_get_key (r), &key, &value))
g_hash_table_insert (new_ht, key, value);
else
g_hash_table_insert (new_ht, strdup (resource_get_key (r)), create_value (r));
}
g_hash_table_unref (ht);
ht = new_ht;
}
```
Added `g_alloca0()` which wraps `g_alloca()` and initializes
allocated memory to zeroes.
Added `g_newa0()` which wraps `g_alloca0()` in a typesafe manner.
Refreshed and tweaked by Nishal Kulkarni.
Use g_macro__has_attribute to detect it instead of
hardcoding __GNUC__ || __clang__. This adds support
for a few compiler and is consistent with the rest
of the gmacros.h file.
This allows the flag to allow interactive auth to be set. Previously, it
was unconditionally unset.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
This allows a pattern like
g_test_message ("cannot reticulate splines: %s", error->message);
g_test_fail ();
to be replaced by the simpler
g_test_fail_printf ("cannot reticulate splines: %s", error->message);
with the secondary benefit of making the message available to TAP
consumers as part of the "not ok" message.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Forming the g_test_skip() message from printf-style arguments seems
common enough to deserve a convenience function.
g_test_incomplete() is mechanically almost equivalent to g_test_skip()
(the semantics are different but the implementation is very similar),
so give it a similar mechanism for symmetry.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
g_source_set_name duplicates the string, and this is
showing up as one of the more prominent sources of strdups
in GTK profiles, despite all the names we use being literals.
Add a variant that avoids the overhead.
This should maintain equivalent functionality, apart from that now you
have to pass `--force-fallback-for libpcre` to `meson configure` in
order to use the subproject; rather than specifying
`-Dinternal_pcre=true` to use the internal copy.
This also fixes#642, as the wrapdb copy of libpcre is version 8.37.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #962Fixes: #642
On Unix platforms, wait() and friends yield an integer that encodes
how the process exited. Confusingly, this is usually not the same as
the integer passed to exit() or returned from main(): conceptually it's
an integer encoding of this tagged union:
enum { EXITED, SIGNALLED, ... } tag;
union {
int exit_status; /* if EXITED */
struct {
int terminating_signal;
bool core_dumped;
} terminating_signal; /* if SIGNALLED */
...
} detail;
Meanwhile, on Windows, wait statuses and exit statuses are
interchangeable.
I find that it's clearer what is going on if we are consistent about
referring to the result of wait() as a "wait status", and the value
passed to exit() as an "exit status".
GSubprocess already gets this right: g_subprocess_get_status() returns
the wait status, while g_subprocess_get_exit_status() genuinely returns
the exit status. However, the GSpawn family of APIs has tended to
conflate the two.
Confusingly, g_spawn_check_exit_status() has always checked a wait
status, and it would not be correct to pass an exit status to it; so
let's deprecate it in favour of g_spawn_check_wait_status(), which
does the same thing that g_spawn_check_exit_status() always did.
Code that needs backwards-compatibility with older GLib can use:
#if !GLIB_CHECK_VERSION(2, 69, 0)
#define g_spawn_check_wait_status(x) (g_spawn_check_exit_status (x))
#endif
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This works in the same way as g_variant_take_ref(), and for the same
reason.
Updated and Rebased by Nitin Wartkar <nitinwartkar58@gmail.com>
Closes#1112
This adds g_tls_connection_get_protocol_version(),
g_tls_connection_get_ciphersuite_name(), and DTLS variants. This will
allow populating TLS connection information in the WebKit web inspector.
This is WIP because we found it's not quite possibly to implement
correctly with GnuTLS. See glib-networking!151.
This changeset exposes
* `not-valid-before`
* `not-valid-after`
* `subject-name`
* `issuer-name`
on GTlsCertificate provided by the underlying TLS Backend.
In order to make use of these changes,
see the related [glib-networking MR][glib-networking].
This change aims to help populate more of the [`Certificate`][wk-cert]
info in the WebKit Inspector Protocol on Linux.
This changeset stems from work in Microsoft Playwright to [add more info
into its HAR capture][pw] generated from the Inspector Protocol events
and will bring feature parity across WebKit platforms.
[wk-cert]: 8afe31a018/Source/JavaScriptCore/inspector/protocol/Security.json
[pw]: https://github.com/microsoft/playwright/pull/6631
[glib-networking]: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib-networking/-/merge_requests/156
Because sometimes you don't want a lone "%s", and you don't
want the compiler yelling at you about format strings that
don't have any format in them.
Closes#663
It is cleaner to define glib_typeof() in a header included after
gversionmacros.h so we can use GLIB_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED directly
instead of doing it everywhere glib_typeof() is used.
This allows introspection to properly handle them as GPatternSpec
methods, as per this deprecate g_pattern_match() and
g_pattern_match_string() functions.
Fall back to compiler version checks only when `__has_attribute()` is not
available.
clang-cl doesn't define `__GNU__`, but still accepts attributes. This change
gets rid of a lot of warnings when building GLib with clang-cl. For GCC and
non-cl Clang nothing should change.
This is basically glnx_steal_fd() from libglnx. We already had two
private implementations of it in GLib.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This is a simple wrapper around the new source/target FD mapping
functionality in `fork_exec()`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #2097
This adds g_string_replace(), a function that replaces instances of one string
with another in a GString. It allows the caller to specify the maximum number
of replacements to perform, and returns the number of replacements performed
to the caller.
Fixes: #225
This will replace the existing `g_memdup()` function, which has an
unavoidable security flaw of taking its `byte_size` argument as a
`guint` rather than as a `gsize`. Most callers will expect it to be a
`gsize`, and may pass in large values which could silently be truncated,
resulting in an undersize allocation compared to what the caller
expects.
This could lead to a classic buffer overflow vulnerability for many
callers of `g_memdup()`.
`g_memdup2()`, in comparison, takes its `byte_size` as a `gsize`.
Spotted by Kevin Backhouse of GHSL.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: GHSL-2021-045
Helps: #2319
That changes the return type of functions like g_object_ref() that can
break C++ applications like Webkit. Note that it is not an ABI break.
It must thus be opt-in the same way we did when adding this to
g_object_ref() for GNU C compilers in the first place. Unfortunately it
cannot be done directly in gmacros.h because GLIB_VERSION_2_68 is not
defined there, and gversionmacros.h cannot be included there because
there is some strict ordering in which those headers must be included.
This means that applications that does not define
GLIB_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED will still get an API break, so we encourage
them to declare their minimum requirement to avoir such issues in the
future too.
I found myself wanting to know the test that is currently being run,
where e.g. __func__ would be inconvenient to use, because e.g. the place
the string was needed was not in the test case function. Using __func__
also relies on the test function itself containing the whole path, while
loosing the "/" information that is part of the test path.
These two APIs are useful to publish an object which path content is not
controlled (e.g. dynamically built or coming from external source).
Closes#968
(Rebased and tweaked by Frederic Martinsons)
Signed-off-by: Frederic Martinsons <frederic.martinsons@sigfox.com>
Even if the modules in the given directory never get chosen to be used,
loading arbitrary code from a user-provided directory is not safe when
running as setuid, as the process’ environment comes from an untrusted
source.
Also ignore `GIO_EXTRA_MODULES`.
Spotted by Simon McVittie.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #2168
Just embed a PNG instead. gdk-pixbuf deprecated its pixdata support in
version 2.32, in 2015.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #1281
This command will try to execute a desktop file, before that
it will load the input as a keyfile for checking its existence
and its validity (as a keyfile).
File arguments are allowed after the desktop file.
Closes#54
Signed-off-by: Frederic Martinsons <frederic.martinsons@sigfox.com>
It search for attribute trash::orig-path and move the input file to it.
Possibly recreating the directory of orignal path and/or overwritting
the destination.
Closes#2098
Signed-off-by: Frederic Martinsons <frederic.martinsons@sigfox.com>
http://isvolatileusefulwiththreads.in/c/
It’s possible that the variables here are only marked as volatile
because they’re arguments to `g_once_*()`. Those arguments will be
modified in a subsequent commit.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #600
Add a new variant of `g_time_zone_new()` which returns `NULL` on
failure to load a timezone, rather than silently returning UTC.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #553
This commit is the unmodified results of running
```
black $(git ls-files '*.py')
```
with black version 19.10b0. See #2046.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
This function returns the most specific instantiatable type
that is a prerequisite for a given interface.
This type is necessary in particular when dealing with GValues
because a GValue contains an instance of a type.
This commit includes tests for the new API.