In the writev() tests, the handling of cancellation is tested. However,
the GCancellable was cancelled after the writev_async() call was
started. Depending on the implementation of the writev() vfunc, the
operation could be done in a thread or in callbacks on the current
thread’s main loop. If done in a separate thread, there’s a chance that
enough of the write could happen before cancellation reaches that thread
that the overall operation returns success with a short write.
That would cause the test to fail, sometimes.
Avoid that by cancelling the GCancellable before starting the writev()
operation.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Reviewed-by: nobody
It would always be initialized but initialize it to NULL to silence the
compiler, and also check that it is not NULL anymore when we expect it
to contain a valid value.
../gio/tests/desktop-app-info.c: In function ‘test_fallback’:
../gio/tests/desktop-app-info.c:191:18: warning: ‘app’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
g_assert_true (g_app_info_equal (info1, app));
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It needs investigating and fixing properly, but let’s not let it disrupt
the CI in the meantime.
Follow-up in https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1653.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
There's a race here, as revealed by Debian's buildds.
We call g_dbus_proxy_new() to create a proxy for the test server, with
callback proxy_ready() Then we call g_spawn_command_line_async() to
start the test server, and then start the main loop.
proxy_ready() assumes that the test server hasn't been started when it
is called. But there is no guarantee that these asynchronous operations
involving spawning a process won't happen in a different order that mean
the bus name *does* have an owner.
What we can do is move starting the server inside of proxy_ready(), so
we know that the test server isn't started until after the proxy is
created. We also add an assertion to check that it is indeed not running
before we execute it.
If we can't find the mount point for target or tmp (as currently
happens on Launchpad autobuilders, and perhaps relatedly, on a
development system that uses btrfs), that's probably not great but is
not really the point of this test.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
In a minimal autobuilder environment, this test could conceivably be
the first thing to refer to ~/.local.
Modified by Iain Lane <laney@debian.org>: Don't try to create ~/.local
from tests, but skip if it doesn't exist.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
So long, and thanks for everything. We’re a Meson-only shop now.
glib-2-58 will remain the last stable GLib release series which is
buildable using autotools.
We continue to install autoconf macros for autotools-using projects
which depend on GLib; they are stable API.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Calling
g_list_model_get_item (store, 0);
g_list_model_get_item (store, -1u);
does not return NULL for the second call, as it should.
This was showing up in GTK+ list model tests.
Add option to not encode resource data into the C source file
in order to embed the data using `ld -b binary`. This improves compilation
times, but can only be done on Linux or other platforms with a
supporting linker.
(Rebased by Philip Withnall, fixing minor rebase conflicts.)
Fixes#1489
This reverts commit 52bab0254a.
It silently conflicted with another commit,
90ca3b4dd0, which was merged later than
it. I’ve kept commit 90ca3b because it also frees the GError; 52bab
doesn’t.
This is my failure to rebase and test old branches before merging them,
instead of assuming that the lack of automatically detected merge
conflicts actually means there are no merge conflicts.
Allow any type of private key in PEM files by treating PEM guards ending
with "PRIVATE KEY-----" as a private key instead of looking for a
pre-defined set of PEM guards. This enables the possibility for custom
GTlsBackend to add support for new key types.
Test cases have been expanded to ensure PEM parsing works for private
key when either header or footer is missing.
Encrypted PKCS#8 is still rejected. Test case has been added for this to
ensure behaviour is the same before and after this change.
The `apps` subprocess is spawned by desktop-app-info to interpret the
forest of .desktop files, and its output is provided on stdout. If debug
output is mixed up with that output, tests which parse the output fail.
Disable the debug output from the subprocess to prevent this.
The new debug output appeared as a result of recent changes to the
desktop file dir monitoring code in gdesktopappinfo.c.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
The appinfo-test.desktop file is set up with an Exec= path which points
to the compiled and installed appinfo-test utility. When running the
tests uninstalled, however, this might not be present, which causes
loading appinfo-test.desktop to fail.
Split appinfo-test.desktop in two: keep the existing
appinfo-test.desktop for tests which need to launch appinfo-test, and
add a new appinfo-test-static.desktop for tests which don’t launch
anything (and, for example, just inspect GAppInfo properties).
appinfo-test-static.desktop uses an Exec= line which should always be
present (`true`) so it should never fail to load.
Allow the tests using appinfo-test-static.desktop to be run uninstalled
or installed. Allow the tests using appinfo-test.desktop to be skipped
if loading appinfo-test.desktop fails, which is an indicator that the
test is running uninstalled.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
g_assert() is for runtime code, and can be compiled out. g_assert_*()
cannot be compiled out, and give more helpful failure messages for
specific types.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
g_assert() can be compiled out with G_DISABLE_ASSERT, which renders the
test useless. The g_assert_*() functions provide more helpful feedback
on failure too.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
By encoding the path to the appinfo-test binary in the .desktop files,
we can avoid a chdir() call in the tests, which was a bit ugly.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/538
This partially reverts commit 27b5fb5892.
The infrastructure for disabling a test is kept, but the appinfo and
desktop-app-info tests no longer need to be run serially.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1601
This checks if the stream is writable before writing
to it. If the write succeeded with no error, then the
stream has to be also writable after the write
As RFC 8305 recommends we can start multiple DNS queries in parallel
to more quickly make an initial response, especially when one is
particularly slow/broken.
This is to ensure that the generated code is still compilable by the
running compiler, and see whether we can read the things in there
properly.
See issue #1580.
Otherwise they fill your real ~/.config/mimeapps.list with rubbish and
race for access to it. This is arguably not good.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1514
With the changes to limit GVariant type nesting (commit 7c4e6e9fbe),
it’s now possible to have a valid type signature which is not a valid
GVariant type when enclosed in parentheses (to make it a tuple).
Check for that when parsing the signature field in a D-Bus message.
Includes a unit test.
oss-fuzz#11120
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This test is intended to verify the fix for
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=787731, which was that
g_file_query_filesystem_info() would return stale information for the
mount. After replacing a read-only mount with a read-write mount, this
test used to only fail if G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_FILESYSTEM_READONLY was TRUE
and yet the file could be opened for writing. In particular, if (due to
a test bug) the file really was still on a read-only filesystem, the
test would pass.
Now that we have fixed that bug in the test, we can make a stronger
assertion.
fusermount -z behaves like umount --lazy, which is documented thus:
> Detach the filesystem from the file hierarchy now, and clean up all
> references to this filesystem as soon as it is not busy anymore.
Without this, the call to `fusermount -u` often fails with:
/usr/bin/fusermount: failed to unmount /home/wjt/src/gnome/glib/_build/dir_bindfs_mountpoint: Device or resource busy
which causes the subsequent call to bindfs to fail:
fuse: mountpoint is not empty
fuse: if you are sure this is safe, use the 'nonempty' mount option
It's not clear what is causing the mount to be busy. Inserting a
g_usleep (100 * 1000) before the calls to `fusermount -u` also works to
make the problem go away, but for the purposes of this test the
important point is that the mount is detached from the directory, for
which a lazy unmount is fine.
Fixes#1590.
In practice, fusermount -u often fails:
/usr/bin/fusermount: failed to unmount /home/wjt/src/gnome/glib/_build/dir_bindfs_mountpoint: Device or resource busy
which causes the subsequent calls to bindfs to fail:
fuse: mountpoint is not empty
fuse: if you are sure this is safe, use the 'nonempty' mount option
This may or may not cause the current test run to fail, but it reliably
causes a repeat run of the test to fail. This change causes the current
run to fail instead.
Currently, GDBusProxy:g-name-owner only notifies changes to the unique
name owner of the remote object in case the proxy was constructed for a
well-known name.
That sounds like an artificial restriction, and it's convenient to
connect to notify::g-name-owner if a proxy instance has already been
created for an unique name, instead of additionally using
g_bus_watch_name() to track the owner.
To fix this, always connect to NameOwnerChanged after the proxy is
initialized, instead of only doing so when the proxy was constructed for
a well-known name.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=791316https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1310
test_c_args is defined in the root meson.build with unfiltered list of
compiler flags, then redefined in gio/tests/meson.build after the
subdir() call. Move it before.
Similarly to g_source_set_name(), this sets a name on a GTask for
debugging and profiling. Importantly, this name is propagated to the
GSource for idle callbacks for the GTask, ending the glorious reign of
`[gio] complete_in_idle_cb`.
The name can be queried using g_task_get_name(). Locking is avoided by
only allowing the name to be set before the GTask is used from another
thread.
Includes tests.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This is the most degenerate possible test but it does exercise this code
path.
(Tweaked by Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com> to also add the flag
to the autotools build.)
The executable depends only on the generated header file at compile
time, and on the library at link time. So meson can decide to compile
gdbus-peer.c before compiling the library and thus won't have generated
the header yet, causing the build error.
So declare_dependency() should only have the header file in its sources,
to force generating files before compiling gdbus-peer.c without
including objectmanager-gen.c into gdbus-peer's sources.
We use libgdbus_example_objectmanager_dep as dependency for various
tests, but this implies only a link dependency while it doesn't ensure
that the sources are generated.
Make this explicit
Test symlink expansion in find_mountpoint_for() function over
_g_local_file_find_topdir_for(). find_mount_for() is crucial for many
of glocalfile.c functionality (e.g. to determine correct trash location)
and symlink expansion has to work properly.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1522
This introduces no real functional changes (except when compiling with
G_DISABLE_ASSERT, in which case it fixes the test). Mostly just a code
cleanup.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
The code was checking whether the signature provided by the blob was a
valid D-Bus signature — but that’s a superset of a valid GVariant type
string, since a D-Bus signature is zero or more complete types. A
GVariant type string is exactly one complete type.
This meant that a D-Bus message with a header field containing a variant
with an empty type signature (for example) could cause a critical
warning in the code parsing it.
Fix that by checking whether the string is a valid type string too.
Unit test included.
oss-fuzz#9810
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Parsing a D-Bus message with the signature field in the message header
of type other than ‘g’ (GVariant type signature) would cause a critical
warning. Instead, we should return a runtime error.
Includes a test.
oss-fuzz#9825
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
There were tests for invalid UTF-8 output when asynchronously
communicating with a subprocess, but nothing for synchronous
communication. Add such a test, and refine the code as a result.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
On Windows NTFS symlinks are implemented as reparse points,
which are special kinds of files *or directories*. A directory
symlink should link to a directory. A file symlink should link
to a file. Mismatching (such as a file symlink pointing to a
directory) produces symlinks that simply do not function.
Therefore GFileType file vs directory vs symlink distinction is
too simplistic to correctly represent a NTFS filesystem object type.
Since we can't turn back time and choose a better way of representing
file types, make GFileType reflect the file vs directory type on
Windows, meaning that all FS objects are either files or
directories (or shortcuts, which are also files), but never symlinks.
A test for symlinkiness will have to be made via GFileInfo - it
tracks symlinkiness separately from file/directory/whatever.
When using glib as a meson subproject on Windows the build currently fails
due to too long paths during the build process. See
https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/4226 for the upstream bug.
To work around the issue shorten the filenames of the generated gdbus files.
The tests were making assumptions about the order of the returned D-Bus
introspection nodes. However, these are semantically unordered and
changes to e.g. GHashTable would break the tests.
Fix this by applying a sort prior to validation.
This method drops the last reference *it* owns to the GTask, but then
continues to call methods on the GTask. This wasn’t resulting in
failures because a ref in another thread kept the GTask alive, but
that’s quite dodgy.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
The X-Flatpak-RenamedFrom key is used in .desktop files to identify past
names for the desktop file. It is defined to be a list of strings.
However, there was previously no correct way to retrieve a list of
strings from the GKeyFile wrapped by GDesktopAppInfo, short of
re-parsing the file with GKeyFile.
Note that doing something like:
g_strsplit (g_desktop_app_info_get_string (...), ";", -1)
is not correct: the raw value "a\;b;" represents the one-element list
["a;b"], but g_key_file_get_string() rejects the sequence "\;", and so
g_desktop_app_info_get_string() returns NULL in this case. (Of course, a
.desktop file with a semicolon in its name is a pathological case.)
Add g_desktop_app_info_get_string_list(), a trivial wrapper around
g_key_file_get_string_list(), similar to g_desktop_app_info_get_string()
and co.
The change from g_key_file_free() to g_key_file_unref() in the test is
needed because g_key_file_free() clears the contents of the keyfile.
This is fine for all the fields which are eagerly loaded and copied into
GDesktopAppInfo, but not when we want to access arbitrary stuff from the
keyfile.
This makes it easier to debug test failures, by ensuring that g_debug()
and g_test_message() are printed as TAP diagnostics.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1528
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
None of these files starts with a #! line, and they are not native
binary executables, so if a user attempts to execute them as a program,
Unix shells will run them as /bin/sh scripts. This is not going to end
well, since none of them are shell scripts (the gio bash completion
is for bash, which is not a lowest-common-denominator POSIX shell, and
in any case is designed to be sourced rather than executed).
Fixes: #1539
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
These keep on taking just longer than 30s on my local machine when run
in parallel with the rest of the tests (i.e. with `ninja test`). Testing
them individually, they do terminate correctly.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
g_icon_new_for_string() docs states that it should return a single name
when created with a single name. I add a second condition to this case:
the themed icon must not include default fallbacks (i.e. it must not
have been created with `g_themed_icon_new_with_default_fallbacks()`).
Otherwise the return value of `g_icon_new_for_string()` would not
recreate the same icon list when passed to `g_icon_new_for_string()`
(which would be another documentation inconsistency).
g_icon_new_for_string() is now back to old behavior for this specific
case.
I also revert the unit test for this case, and add a new unit test when
using g_themed_icon_new_with_default_fallbacks() with a single name as
well.
Closes#1513.
1) Remove the non-Windows-only condition for subdir('tests').
2) Add libiphlpapi, libws2_32 and libsecur32 deps, needed for W32 tests.
3) Remove the -no-undefined argument (gcc doesn't understand it,
it *does* understand -Wl,-no-undefined; either way, the test
compiles without this argument just fine; maybe meson adds it
by itself - you can hardly build shared modules without it).
4) Add or fix a number of includes
5) Disable gdbus-objectmanager tests when building with MSVC
(right now these tests don't work on Windows anyway, so the fact
that MSVC can't even build them properly is irrelevant;
most likely gdbus-codegen needs changes to put _GLIB_EXTERN
before each function)
It wasn’t being tested. It should behave the same as
g_list_model_get_item(), so write a wrapper for the two.
This brings the code coverage of glistmodel.c up to 100%.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
There are many cases where a default TLS database is not able to be
defined within the constraints of a system. For example glib-networking
(or glib-openssl) cannot retrieve the default certificate store on iOS
or Android and need to be initialized from a cert file of certificates
bundled with the application.
Previously GStreamer was relying on a custom patch to glib-networking to
populate the default database from the file pointed to by the
CA_CERTIFICATES environment variable however the mechanism that enabled
this was recently remove from glib-networking.
Adding a more generic g_tls_backend_set_default_database() API allows
application developers to override the default database using their own
certificates as well as allowing equivalent functionality on Android/iOS
(or others) as on the default database handling Linux.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib-networking/issues/35
This is a follow-up to commit 614adf8a75,
which started generating two new files as part of the test; they need to
be cleaned up before distcheck will pass.
Ideally, the test should run a temporary directory and wipe that
directory itself before exiting, but that’s a bit of a big change to
make right now. Deferred to
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1495.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Similar issue was fixed with commit f929d148, but it's happening again.
Define G_MESSAGES_DEBUG=all when running CI to ensure we won't regress
anymore.
In order to determine whether to trash a file to the home directory, we
compare its st_dev to our home directory's st_dev field.
This is the wrong thing to do on overlayfs when deleting files, because
st_dev contains the ID of the filesystem providing the file (which can
be the lower or upper filesystem), but directories always return the ID
of the overlayfs. Thus the comparison fails and we are unable to trash
the file.
Fix this by checking st_dev of the parent directory when we are deleting
a file.
Also adjust `test_trash_not_supported` for this - make its st_dev check
look at the parent directory's `st_dev` rather than the temporary file's
own.
Fixes#1027.
The documentation was unclear about what error codes would be returned
on attempting to open an empty or corrupt GVDB file. Previous versions
of the documentation incorrectly said that corrupt GVDB files were
considered equivalent to empty ones.
A recent commit has clarified the documentation to include its error
handling behaviour.
Update the two users of GVDB within GLib, GResource and GSettingsSource,
to follow this change, and add unit tests for them both.
Other users of the GVDB copylib will need to update their copy and make
appropriate changes if they have bugs in their handling of this
situation. dconf is one example of this. GVDB should be updated from
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gvdb.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1454
It is a bug if we distribute files which are generated at build time —
they should be built on the machine which is compiling GLib, not be
shipped in the tarball.
This brings the autotools-generated tarball in line with the
ninja-generated one, with the exception of man pages and gtk-doc HTML
output.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Use g_test_skip() so that the TAP output is correct for the tests,
rather than printing using g_printerr().
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/640
Use either g_get_real_time() or g_date_time_new_now_local(). This means
we don’t need to worry about time_t being 32b in future (the year 2038
problem), and it makes the need for error handling a bit more explicit.
Improve the error handling in several cases.
Based on a patch by Niels De Graef
(https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/merge_requests/142).
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1402
The tests array was being wiped out by an assignment instead of an
append. This adds another 19 tests to what’s typically being run
already.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This was missed in !137 because some of the GIO tests weren’t being run
under Meson (see following commits).
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Adds tests to cover this case and similar cases for various GResource
methods in future.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/927
When changing the locale using setlocale(), duplicate the old locale
value before updating it, so that we can safely restore the old locale
after running the test.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Add an app-launching function which allows standard file descriptors
to be passed to the child process.
This will be used by gnome-shell to pass systemd journal descriptors
as stdout/stderr. gnome-shell's child_setup function can then be
eliminated, which will enable use of the posix_spawn optimized
gspawn codepath for desktop app launching.
In order to use the new posix_spawn gspawn codepath, for more robust
app launching when available memory is low, we need to meet some
conditions.
child_setup needs to be NULL for this optimization to work, so drop
the internal child_setup that is used here. Replace it with a lightweight
wrapper binary (gio-launch-desktop) that sets GIO_LAUNCHED_DESKTOP_FILE_PID
before executing the app.
Adjust PATH for gio tests so that it can execute the new binary from the
build directory.
They’re network file systems, but not system file systems (in the sense
that procfs is a system file system). This fixes them disappearing from
the sidebar in the UI.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1424
There were previously no tests for it. These take gmountoperation.c up
to 85.5% coverage of lines.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1423
check_expected_events is heavily modified in this commit to tolerate
event loss and allow renaming to be reported as creation and deletion.
This fixes test failure on FreeBSD.
Previously, calling:
g_dbus_is_supported_address ("some-imaginary-transport:", NULL)
correctly returned FALSE; but calling:
g_dbus_is_supported_address ("some-imaginary-transport:", &error)
crashed with:
GLib-GIO:ERROR:../gio/gdbusaddress.c:434:g_dbus_is_supported_address:
assertion failed: (ret || (!ret && (error == NULL || *error != NULL)))
This was because, if the address component did not start with a known
transport, no error was set. Fix this, reusing an error string used by
the corresponding else branch in g_dbus_address_connect(), and adjust
the test to pass both NULL and non-NULL GError **s to this function in
every test case. This case:
g_assert (!g_dbus_is_supported_address ("some-imaginary-transport:foo=bar;unix:path=/this/is/valid", NULL));
would have caught this bug with a non-NULL GError **.
Meson has the ability to classify tests according to "suites", a list of
tags. This is especially useful when we want to run specific sets of
tests — e.g. only GLib's tests — instead of the whole test suite. It
also allows us to classify special tests, like "slow" ones, so that we
can only run them when needed.
Non-glibc gettext implementation seems to decide the language from
LC_MESSAGES environment variable instead of LC_MESSAGES locale, so
we should set both environment variable and locale when running tests
which need translation from specific languages.
Main changes were:
- take into account that style variants are added to the list of icon
names.
- In the test of icons set with 3 names ("first", "testicon" and
"last"), I also changed "first" to "first-symbolic" so that we can
test in such a case that the variant is the regular icon (only for
this name, out of the 3).
- Finally icon hashes are necessarily changed, and since emblems are
sorted by their hash in emblem icons, I had to invert an order which
was now different in one of the tests.
The previously implementation considered a file to be a mountpoint if
its parent is on a different device. / is its own parent, so by this
definition it is not a mountpoint.
But / is (generally) listed in fstab, and fstab(5) defines the
directories it contains to be mountpoints. This attribute should follow
that definition (and reasonable expectation): the root directory is a
mountpoint.
So, add a special-case for the case where the file's parent has the same
st_dev and st_ino as the file, which is true only at the root.
Test this attribute at / (only on POSIX), /proc (but only on Linux), and
at many files and directories created by the test suite (which cannot be
mountpoints).
Sometimes file monitor events may be slow to emit. Using g_idle_add
makes it less possible for events to be scheduled later than the main
loop quit, preventing test failure caused by missing events.
This fixes test failure on FreeBSD.
Kqueue isn't good at detecting rapid file creation and deletion. It
tends to miss events because events returned by the kernel don't include
filename information. Since the size of struct kevent is fixed, it is
probably not possible to extend the API to include file names without
breaking ABI. Therefore, we disables the test here to avoid test failure
that is impossible to fix in a reliable way.
The test 'file' uses non-standard '--bytes' option when running du,
which may cause error on non-GNU systems. To keep the test working,
we skips the du check as if we don't find a du command when du fails.
-export-dynamic is a libtool flag. It is also supported by GCC as an
undocumented flag, but it is not supported by Clang. Since we don't use
libtool in meson, we should use -Wl,--export-dynamic instead.
This test assumes the subprocess does not print anything else on stdout
other than the dbus address, otherwise g_test_trap_assert_stdout()
fails to match. But if the env running tests has G_MESSAGES_DEBUG=all
then it will also print "PATH=%s".
Fixes this build error on macOS when inside an ssh terminal:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "[...]/gio/tests/gengiotypefuncs.py", line 23, in <module>
for line in f:
File "[...]/lib/python3.6/encodings/ascii.py", line 26, in decode
return codecs.ascii_decode(input, self.errors)[0]
UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xe2 in position 2625: ordinal not in range(128)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=796328
On non-glibc platforms gettext is provided by extra libintl dependency.
We wrongly thought libintl is an internal dependency and applications
needs to explicitly link on it, but turns out that breaks many
applications and with autotools the .pc generated actually has -lintl in
public "Libs:".
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=796085
It inserted the new items one position after the given one and inserted all new items
at the same position resulting in the items being in the reverse order of the
input array.
It was decided to make these behavioural changes because this function has according to
https://codesearch.debian.net/search?q=g_list_store_splice only one real user (nautilus)
and it didn't do what one would expect from reading the documentation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=795307
All those logging functions already add a newline to any message they
print, so there’s no need to add a trailing newline in the message
passed to them.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Reviewed-by: nobody
The monitor_path comes from g_file_get_path(), so should be freed with
g_free() rather than free(). This makes no difference because they are
the same function in practice, but using free() is a bit confusing.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Reviewed-by: nobody
This continues one of the const-correctness fixes from the previous
commit (it needed some more transitive fixes), and reverts another of
them, since it was over-zealous.
This fixes CI failure: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/jobs/27125.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Reviewed-by: nobody
Spotted when temporarily compiling with -Wwrite-strings. This only goes
a small way towards making the code base -Wwrite-strings–clean. It
introduces no functional changes, and fixes no bugs.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Reviewed-by: nobody