More files now have their copyright and/or licensing tagged explicitly,
so let’s reduce the wiggle room for regressions.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
See: #1415
These were accidentally left off the list of files checked before,
because they don’t have `.sh` suffixes.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
These scripts use $(readlink -f) to guess their own path if necessary,
but macOS readlink doesn't support the -f option, and POSIX doesn't
guarantee that readlink even exists.
Resolves: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/3289
Fixes: d7601f7e "Incorporate some lint checks into `meson test`"
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This will make it easier and more obvious for developers to run them
locally: I'm sure I'm not the only developer who had assumed that
`.gitlab-ci/` is private to the CI environment and inappropriate (or
perhaps even destructive) to run on a developer/user system.
The lint checks are automatically skipped (with TAP SKIP syntax) if we
are not in a git checkout, or if git or the lint tool is missing. They
can also be disabled explicitly with `meson test --no-suite=lint`,
which downstream distributions will probably want to do.
By default, most lint checks are reported as an "expected failure"
(with TAP TODO syntax) rather than a hard failure, because they do not
indicate a functional problem with GLib and there is a tendency for
lint tools to introduce additional checks or become more strict over
time. Developers can override this by configuring with `-Dwerror=true`
(which also makes compiler warnings into fatal errors), or by running
the test suite like `LINT_WARNINGS_ARE_ERRORS=1 meson test --suite=lint`.
One exception to this is tests/check-missing-install-tag.py, which is
checking a functionally significant feature of our build system, and
seems like it is unlikely to have false positives: if that one fails,
it is reported as a hard failure.
run-style-check-diff.sh and run-check-todos.sh are not currently given
this treatment, because they require search-common-ancestor.sh, which
uses Gitlab-CI-specific information to find out which commits are in-scope
for checking.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This doesn’t change the tests’ behaviour, but moves them to a slightly
more logical location.
They are still not installed or run by default.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #1434
Make the 'complex construction' case more
realistic by adding a string property.
And mark the properties as G_PARAM_STATIC_STRINGS,
since this is commonly done, and doing so will
enable some optimizations.
Also, use g_object_class_install_properties,
to test optimizations that will be tied to using
that function.
These were made redundant in 5b08ef84e4
and cddce179f5,
when the test data was moved into the test program as strings.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Modified by Philip Withnall to omit the subdirectory and drop the
`refcount` suite as both seem like unnecessary over-categorisation.
Related to issue #1434