The merge request !2848 added code to automatically detect the module
prefix on macOS, with a test for the Mac #define TARGET_OS_OSX. However,
older versions of the SDK (at least 10.11) don't provide this #define,
leading to build failure. If the #define is missing, fall back to
checking TARGET_OS_MAC. On newer SDKs this symbol is also true for
watchOS, etc., but in those situations TARGET_OS_OSX is available.
Even though having NULL as nullptr should be the standard for newer C++
versions, it may break some headers, so let's not touch it for now.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/2973
A context iteration we're doing lots of lock/unlocks and that's fine to give
other threads contexts a chance to run, but we're doing it also just to call
other functions that require locking, and this can be avoided.
Other threads can still have a chance to run while releasing the ownership
of the context.
Various gio modules include gmodule.h that requires the
gmodule-visibility.h to be already built.
To make this easier, just provide a dependency and use it where we are
building modules that do not depend on libgio_dep (that already includes
that).
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/2982
The generated gir file marks the size parameter as "out" by default. This is wrong in the context of a caller allocated buffer with a given size. Explicitly marking the size parameter as (in) fixes the issue.
In practice, this will never happen.
If `getcwd()` returns `ERANGE` whenever the working directory is ≥
`PATH_MAX`, though, the previous implementation of the loop would run
until `max_len == G_MAXULONG`, and would then overflow when adding `1`
to it for a nul terminator in the allocation.
Avoid that problem by always keeping `buffer_len` as a power of two, and
relying on `getcwd()` to write a nul terminator within the buffer space
it’s given. It seems to do this on all platforms we care about, because
the previous version of the code never explicitly wrote a nul terminator
anywhere.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #98
Various projects are running tests under valgrind, and they are using
the GLib suppresions to avoid false-positive results.
While this is stored in a well-known path for some years, and easy to
figure out from the GLib prefix, it's better to expose it through a
proper pkgconfig variable so that it's easy to get it from any build
system.
This reverts commit 4cad66580b.
Downgrading the criticals was only temporary. Now we’ve branched for
GLib 2.78, the criticals can be reinstated early this cycle, so people
have the maximum time to fix latent bugs in their code.
Fixes: #2951
We were working around that with a call to chdir("."). Internally chdir()
sets up cmd shell-related environment variables, but only if the current
working directory belongs to a volume with a drive letter. For example,
if the current working directory is on a UNC volume like a network share,
the call to chdir() won't help.
Reference:
https://developercommunity.visualstudio.com/t/UCRT-Crash-in-_wspawne-functions/10262748
Add three classes of test case for which g_utf8_normalize() should
safely return NULL:
- Strings ending with a truncated multibyte character which would
extend past the NUL terminator
- Strings ending with a multibyte character which extends past the
length limit provided by the max_len argument
- Strings containing an invalid multibyte character in any position
_g_utf8_normalize_wc() could read past the end of the provided buffer if
it ends with a truncated multibyte character. If max_len is -1, it can
continue reading until it encounters either a NUL or unreadable
memory. Avoid this with extra bounds checks prior to g_utf8_get_char()
to ensure that it does not read past either max_len or a NUL
terminator.
The ref on the timeout source owned by `SendMessageData` was being
dropped just after attaching the source to the main context, leaving it
unowned in that struct. That meant the only ref on the source was held
by the `GMainContext` it was attached to.
This ref was dropped when returning `G_SOURCE_REMOVE` from
`send_message_with_reply_timeout_cb()`. Before that happens,
`send_message_data_deliver_error()` is called, which normally calls
`send_message_with_reply_cleanup()` and destroys the source.
However, if `send_message_data_deliver_error()` is called when the
message has already been delivered, calling
`send_message_with_reply_cleanup()` will be skipped. This leaves the
source pointer in `SendMessageData` dangling, which will cause problems
when `g_source_destroy()` is subsequently called on it.
I’m not sure if it’s possible in practice for this situation to occur,
but the code certainly does nothing to prevent it, and it’s easy enough
to avoid by keeping a strong ref on the source in `SendMessageData`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #1264
It already implicitly held a strong ref on its `GTask` values, but
didn’t have a free function set so that they would be automatically
unreffed on removal from the map.
This meant that the functions handling removals from the map,
`on_worker_closed()` (via `cancel_method_on_close()`) and
`send_message_with_reply_cleanup()` had to call unref once more than
they would otherwise.
In `send_message_with_reply_cleanup()`, this behaviour depended on
whether it was called with `remove == TRUE`. If not, it was `(transfer
none)` not `(transfer full)`. This led to bugs in its callers.
For example, this led to a direct leak in `cancel_method_on_close()`, as
it needed to remove tasks from `map_method_serial_to_task`, but called
`send_message_with_reply_cleanup(remove = FALSE)` and erroneously didn’t
call unref an additional time.
Try and simplify it all by setting a `GDestroyNotify` on
`map_method_serial_to_task`’s values, and making the refcount handling
of `send_message_with_reply_cleanup()` not be conditional on its
arguments.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #1264