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.
Rather than using a mixture of ‘instantiable’ and ‘instantiatable’
everywhere, standardise on the term which is already in the public API.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
For legacy reasons, Meson's gtk-doc helper script launches the
gtkdoc-mkhtml tool in the `html` directory under the build root. This
means that all paths must be relative to that location.
g_has_typeof macro is wrongly in the public g_ namespace, internaly
symbols are usually in the glib_ namespace. This will also allow to
define glib_typeof differently on non-GNUC compilers (e.g. c++11
decltype).
GLib uses NULL-terminated string arrays (GStrv) in a number of places, however
these are quite hard to construct in C when the number of elements is not known
in advance. GStrvBuilder wraps GPtrArray to make these easy to create with
type safety and does the memory management for you.
By default, when using g_subprocess_launcher_take_fd() to pass an
FD to a child, the GSubprocessLauncher object also takes ownership
of the FD in the parent, and closes it during finalize(). This is
a reasonable assumption in the majority of the cases, but sometimes
it isn't a good idea.
An example is when creating a GSubprocessLauncher in JavaScript:
here, the destruction process is managed by the Garbage Collector,
which means that those sockets will remain opened for some time
after all the references to the object has been droped. This means
that it could be not possible to detect when the child has closed
that same FD, because in order to make that work, both FDs
instances (the one in the parent and the one in the children) must
be closed. This can be a problem in, as an example, a process that
launches a child that communicates with Wayland using an specific
socket (like when using the new API MetaWaylandClient).
Of course, it isn't a valid solution to manually call close() in
the parent process just after the call to spawn(), because the FD
number could be reused in the time between it is manually closed,
and when the object is destroyed and closes again that FD. If that
happens, it will close an incorrect FD.
One solution could be to call run_dispose() from Javascript on the
GSubprocessLauncher object, to force freeing the resources.
Unfortunately, the current code frees them in the finalize()
method, not in dispose() (this is fixed in !1670 (merged) ) but it
isn't a very elegant solution.
This proposal adds a new method, g_subprocess_launcher_close(),
that allows to close the FDs passed to the child. To avoid problems,
after closing an FD with this method, no more spawns are allowed.
Fix: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/merge_requests/1677
This allows programs that want to change how log messages are printed,
such as gnome-terminal (gnome-terminal#42) and Flatpak, to override
the log-writer or the legacy log-handler without having to reimplement
the G_MESSAGES_DEBUG filtering logic.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
GLib code normally prints info and debug messages to stdout,
but that interferes with programs that are documented to produce
machine-readable output such as JSON or XML on stdout. In particular,
if such a program uses a GLib-based library, setting G_MESSAGES_DEBUG
will typically result in that library's debug messages going to the
program's stdout and corrupting the machine-readable output.
Unix programs can avoid this by using dup2() to move the original stdout
to another fd, then dup2() again to make the new stdout a copy of stderr,
but it's easier if we provide a way to not write debug messages to
stdout in the first place. Calling
g_log_writer_default_set_use_stderr (TRUE) results in behaviour
resembling Python's logging.basicConfig(), with all diagnostics going
to stderr.
Suggested by Allison Karlitskaya on glib#2087.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
The basic API that this commit adds allows in-order iterating over a GTree.
For this the following API were implemented or exported:
1) Returning the first or the last node in the tree,
2) Taking a pointer to a node in the tree and returning the previous or the
next in-order node,
3) Allowing to do a binary search for a particular key value and returning
the pointer to its node,
4) Returning the newly inserted or set node from both insert and replace
functions, so this node is immediately available and does not have to be
looked up,
5) Traversing the tree in-order providing a node pointer to the
caller-provided traversal function.
Most of the above functions were already present in the code, but they
returned the value that is stored at a particular node instead of the
pointer to the node itself.
So most of the code for these new API calls is shared with these existing
ones, just adapted to return the pointer to the node.
Additionally, the so called "lower bound" and "upper bound" operations
were implemented.
The first one returns the first element that is greater than or equal to
the searched key, while the second returns the first element that is
strictly greater than the searched key.
Signed-off-by: Maciej S. Szmigiero <maciej.szmigiero@oracle.com>
Expose a function that prepares an attribute query string to be passed
to g_file_query_info() to get a list of attributes normally copied with
the file. This function is used by the implementation of
g_file_copy_attributes, and it's useful if one needs to split
g_file_copy_attributes into two stages, for example, when nautilus does
a recursive move of a directory. When files are moved from the source
directory, its modification time changes. To preserve the mtime on the
destination directory, it has to be queried before moving files and set
after doing it, hence these two stages.
Signed-off-by: Maxim Mikityanskiy <maxtram95@gmail.com>
Like G_SOURCE_REMOVE and G_SOURCE_CONTINUE, these make it clearer what
it means to return TRUE or FALSE.
In particular, in GDBus methods that fail, the failure case still needs
to return TRUE (unlike the typical GError pattern), leading to comments
like this:
g_dbus_method_invocation_return_error (invocation, ...);
return TRUE; /* handled */
which can now be replaced by:
g_dbus_method_invocation_return_error (invocation, ...);
return G_DUS_METHOD_INVOCATION_HANDLED;
G_DBUS_METHOD_INVOCATION_UNHANDLED is added for symmetry, but is very
rarely (perhaps never?) useful in practice.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
There is already g_unix_mount_at function which allows to find certain
unix mount for given mount path. It would be useful to have similar
function for mount points, which will allow to replace custom codes in
gvfs. Let's add g_unix_mount_point_at.
This is a new version of the g_file_set_contents() API which will allow
its safety to be controlled by some flags, allowing the user to choose
their preferred tradeoff between safety (`fsync()` calls) and speed.
Currently, the flags do nothing and the new API behaves like the old
API. This will change in the following commits.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1302
This will allow to further enhance the parsing, without breaking API,
and also makes argument on call side a bit clearer than just TRUE/FALSE.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
Add some internal wrappers around sysprof tracing, so that it can be
used throughout GLib without exposing all the details of sysprof
internally.
This adds an optional dependency on `libsysprof-capture-4`. sysprof
support is disabled without it.
This depends on the GLib dependency of `libsysprof-capture` being
dropped in https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/sysprof/-/merge_requests/30,
which has bumped the soname of `libsysprof-capture` and added subproject
support.
The next few commits will add marks that trace out each `GMainContext`
iteration and each `GSource` `check`/`prepare`/`dispatch` call.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
* Add g_tls_connection_get_channel_binding_data API call
* Add g_dtls_connection_get_channel_binding_data API call
* Add get_binding_data method to GTlsConnection class
* Add get_binding_data method to GDtlsConnection interface
* Add GTlsChannelBindingType enum with tls-unique and
tls-server-end-point types
* Add GTlsChannelBindingError enum and G_TLS_CHANNEL_BINDING_ERROR
quark
* Add new API calls to documentation reference gio-sections-common
Add a set of new URI parsing and generating functions, including a new
parsed-URI type GUri. Move all the code from gurifuncs.c into guri.c,
reimplementing some of those functions (and
g_string_append_uri_encoded()) in terms of the new code.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/110
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
This was mostly machine generated with the following command:
```
codespell \
--builtin clear,rare,usage \
--skip './po/*' --skip './.git/*' --skip './NEWS*' \
--write-changes .
```
using the latest git version of `codespell` as per [these
instructions](https://github.com/codespell-project/codespell#user-content-updating).
Then I manually checked each change using `git add -p`, made a few
manual fixups and dropped a load of incorrect changes.
There are still some outdated or loaded terms used in GLib, mostly to do
with git branch terminology. They will need to be changed later as part
of a wider migration of git terminology.
If I’ve missed anything, please file an issue!
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
These are alternatives to the existing `time_t`-based APIs, which will
soon be deprecated due to `time_t` only being Y2038-safe on 64-bit
systems.
The new APIs take a GDateTime instead.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1931
This updates gdbus-codegen.xml to include documentation for the
--symbol-decorator, --symbol-decorator-header and
--symbol-decorator-define options, which is used to help to export
symbols in the generated code.
gtk-doc 1.33 hasn’t been released yet, but when it is, it’ll contain
three fixes which are necessary for correctly detecting which symbols
are undocumented/undeclared/unused in GLib:
• gtk-doc@b866a90b
• gtk-doc@ca42972c
• gtk-doc@b922e148
1.32.1 is the development version number which will eventually be
released as 1.33.
Until then, we can’t run the gtk-doc tests in CI because they reliably
fail spuriously. See !1488.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This adds support to be able to explicitely stored interned strings into
G_TYPE_STRING GValue.
This is useful for cases where the user:
* *knows* the string to be stored in the GValue is canonical
* Wants to know whther the string stored is canonical
This allows:
* zero-cost GValue copy (the content is guaranteed to be unique and exist
throughout the process life)
* zero-cost string equality checks (if both string GValue are interned, you just
need to check the pointers for equality or not, instead of doing a strcmp).
Fixes#2109
This reverts commit c0146be3a4.
The revert was originally added because the original change broke
gnome-build-meta. Now that the problem has been diagnosed, the original
commit can be fixed — see the commit which follows this one.
See: !1487
The glib-mkenums program allows generating code to handle enums/flags
with very different purposes. One of its purposes could be generating
per-enum/flag methods to be exposed in a library API, and while doing
that, it would be nice to have a way to specify in which API version
the enum/flag was introduced, so that the same version could be shown
in the generated API methods.
E.g. From the following code:
/**
* QmiWmsMessageProtocol:
* @QMI_WMS_MESSAGE_PROTOCOL_CDMA: CDMA.
* @QMI_WMS_MESSAGE_PROTOCOL_WCDMA: WCDMA.
*
* Type of message protocol.
*
* Since: 1.0
*/
typedef enum { /*< since=1.0 >*/
QMI_WMS_MESSAGE_PROTOCOL_CDMA = 0x00,
QMI_WMS_MESSAGE_PROTOCOL_WCDMA = 0x01
} QmiWmsMessageProtocol;
The template would allow us to generate a method documented like this,
including the Since tag with the value given in the mkenums 'since' tag.
/**
* qmi_wms_message_protocol_get_string:
* @val: a QmiWmsMessageProtocol.
*
* Gets the nickname string for the #QmiWmsMessageProtocol specified at @val.
*
* Returns: (transfer none): a string with the nickname, or %NULL if not found. Do not free the returned value.
* Since: 1.0
*/
const gchar *qmi_wms_message_protocol_get_string (QmiWmsMessageProtocol val);
Signed-off-by: Aleksander Morgado <aleksander@aleksander.es>
The public functions exposed as static inlines currently don't have
annotations to describe when they were introduced. This means that
compiling this file:
#include <glib.h>
void foo (void)
{
g_rec_mutex_locker_new (NULL);
}
with:
gcc -c test.c \
-I/tmp/glib/include/glib-2.0 \
-I/tmp/glib/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/glib-2.0/include \
-Werror \
-DGLIB_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED=GLIB_VERSION_2_28 \
-DGLIB_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED=GLIB_VERSION_2_28
will not produce any error message, despite using
`g_rec_mutex_locker_new`, a function that was introduced after 2.28.
This patch adds some annotations to all the publicly exposed static
inline functions I could find.
I could not use the existing G_AVAILABLE* macros, because they may
expand to `extern`. This would then clash with the `static` keyword and
produce:
../glib/gthread.h:397:1: error: multiple storage classes in declaration specifiers
397 | static inline GRecMutexLocker *
| ^~~~~~
So I opted for adding a new set of macros,
GLIB_AVAILABLE_STATIC_INLINE_IN_2_XY.
With this patch applied, the example from above produces the expected
warning:
test.c: In function ‘foo’:
test.c:5:3: error: ‘g_rec_mutex_locker_new’ is deprecated: Not available before 2.60 [-Werror=deprecated-declarations]
5 | g_rec_mutex_locker_new (NULL);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In file included from /tmp/glib/include/glib-2.0/glib/gasyncqueue.h:32,
from /tmp/glib/include/glib-2.0/glib.h:32,
from test.c:1:
/tmp/glib/include/glib-2.0/glib/gthread.h:398:1: note: declared here
398 | g_rec_mutex_locker_new (GRecMutex *rec_mutex)
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In cases where performance are critical it can be useful to disable
checks and asserts. GStreamer has those options too, using the same name
and setting them yielding means we can set those options on the main
project (e.g. gst-build) and glib will inherit the same value when built
as subproject.
New features were added for gio tool, but they are not mentioned in
man pages as it is not generated from GOptionEntry in contrast to the
help output. Let's update the man pages to reflect the recent changes.
Skip the gdbus-object-manager-example which is generated as part of
testing.
Program xsltproc found: YES (/usr/bin/xsltproc)
Run-time dependency gtk-doc found: YES 1.32
docs/reference/gio/gdbus-object-manager-example/meson.build:1:0: ERROR:
Unknown variable "libgdbus_example_objectmanager_dep".
This is for use in testing POSIX-style functions like `rmdir()`, which
return an integer < 0 on failure, and return their error information in
`errno`.
The new macro prints `errno` and `g_strerror (errno)` on failure.
Includes a unit test.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Making this validation code public allows projects to validate a
GParamSpec name before creating it. While hard-coded GParamSpec don't
need this, we can't afford crashing the main program for dynamically
generated GParamSpec from user-created data.
In such case, we will need to validate the param names and return errors
instead of trying to create a GParamSpec with invalid names.
Includes modifications from Philip Withnall and Emmanuele Bassi to
rearrange the new function addition and split it into one function for
GParamSpecs and one for GSignals.
We're using Meson for GLib itself, and we recommend people to use it
for their own projects, so it would be good to have our documentation
present examples on how to use Meson with our tools.
We're using Meson for GLib itself, and we recommend people to use it
for their own projects, so it would be good to have our documentation
present examples on how to use Meson with our tools.
Let's move the template example into its own section while we're at it,
since it's referenced by both Meson and Autotools examples.
Fixes: #1783
The relevant parts of the generated example documentation are already
`xi:include`d into the `migrating-gdbus.xml` page, so are turned into
HTML there. Installing them separately means they also get installed
into `/usr/share/gtk-doc/html/gdbus-object-manager-example/`, which
seems redundant.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This reverts commit b6d8efbebc.
This GLib API is good, but the implentation is not ready, so there's no
reason to commit to the API in GLib 2.64. We can reland again when the
implementation is ready.
There are three problems: (a) The glib-networking implementation normally
works, but the test has been broken for a long time. I'm not comfortable
with adding a major new feature without a working test. This is
glib-networking#104. (b) The WebKit implementation never landed. There
is a working patch, but it hasn't been accepted upstream yet. This API
isn't needed in GLib until WebKit is ready to start using it.
https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=200805. (c) Similarly, even if
the WebKit API was ready, that itself isn't useful until an application
is ready to start using it, and the Epiphany level work never happened.
Let's try again for GLib 2.66. Reverting this commit now just means we
gain another six months before committing to the API forever. No reason
to keep this in GLib 2.64 when nothing is using it yet.
Now that we require Meson 0.52 to build the doc, we can also pull
gtk-doc as subproject when missing from the system. This requires
to pull gtk-doc master because needed changes there haven't been release
yet.
This has the side effect of always rebuilding the doc at each build when
gtk_doc option is enabled (not by default). Most importantly, this will
enable doc check on our CI.
This reverts commit 398c048c66.
It got removed because it used to cause build issues, but now that we
have a CI let's hope it won't be a problem any more.
This complements the `--glib-min-required` argument, just like the
`GLIB_MIN_REQUIRED` and `GLIB_MAX_ALLOWED` preprocessor defines which
control access to APIs in C.
Currently, it doesn’t affect code generation at all. When we next change
code generation, we will need to gate any new API usage on this
argument.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1993
This makes it consistent with the `GLIB_MIN_REQUIRED` defines which are
used for API stability/versioning in C code.
It doesn’t otherwise change the behaviour of the `--glib-min-version`
argument.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1993
This adds support for specifying multiple directories in the
GSETTINGS_SCHEMA_DIR environment variable by separating the values
using G_SEARCHPATH_SEPARATOR_S (colon on UNIX-like systems).
While programs could already register multiple custom GSettings schema
directories, it was not possible to achieve the same without writing
custom code, e.g. when using the gsettings command line tool.
Fixes#1998.
Currently the code generated by gdbus-codegen uses
G_DBUS_CALL_FLAGS_NONE in its D-Bus calls, which occur for each method
defined by the input XML, and for proxy_set_property functions. This
means that if the daemon which implements the methods checks for
G_DBUS_FLAGS_ALLOW_INTERACTIVE_AUTHORIZATION and only does interactive
authorization if that flag is present, users of the generated code have
no way to cause the daemon to use interactive authorization (e.g. polkit
dialogs).
If we simply changed the generated code to always use
G_DBUS_FLAGS_ALLOW_INTERACTIVE_AUTHORIZATION, its users would have no
way to disallow interactive authorization (except for manually calling
the D-Bus method themselves).
So instead, this commit adds a GDBusCallFlags argument to method call
functions. Since this is an API break which will require changes in
projects using gdbus-codegen code, the change is conditional on the
command line argument --glib-min-version having the value 2.64 or
higher.
The impetus for this change is that I'm changing accountsservice to
properly respect G_DBUS_FLAGS_ALLOW_INTERACTIVE_AUTHORIZATION, and
libaccountsservice uses generated code for D-Bus method calls. So
these changes will allow libaccountsservice to continue allowing
interactive authorization, and avoid breaking any users of it which
expect that. See
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/accountsservice/accountsservice/merge_requests/46
It might make sense to also let GDBusCallFlags be specified for property
set operations, but that is not needed in the case of accountsservice,
and would require significant work and breaking API in multiple places.
Similarly, the generated code currently hard codes -1 as the timeout
value when calling g_dbus_proxy_call*(). Add a timeout_msec argument so
the user of the generated code can specify the timeout as well.
Also, test this new API. In gio/tests/codegen.py we test that the new
arguments are generated if and only of --glib-min-version is used with a
value greater than or equal to 2.64, and in gio/tests/meson.build we
test that the generated code with the new API can be linked against.
The test_unix_fd_list() test also needed modification to continue
working now that we're using gdbus-test-codegen.c with code generated
with --glib-min-version=2.64 in one test.
Finally, update the docs for gdbus-codegen to explain the effect of
using --glib-min-version 2.64, both from this commit and from
"gdbus-codegen: Emit GUnixFDLists if an arg has type `h` w/
min-version".
This reverts commit 398c048c66.
It got removed because it used to cause build issues, but now that we
have a CI let's hope it won't be a problem any more.
This can be used by callers to opt-in to backwards-incompatible changes
to the behaviour or output of `gdbus-codegen` in future. This commit
doesn’t introduce any such changes, though.
Documentation and unit tests included.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1726
This is a convenience wrapper around getpwnam_r() which handles all the
memory allocation faff.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1687
Although not quite as often-occurring, this should help with constructs
like this:
if (list)
{
g_list_free_full (list, foo);
list = NULL;
}
Closes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1943
Tools like this should be configurable in a cross or native file. In
particular, if we are cross-compiling (with an executable wrapper like
qemu-arm), the build system ld is not necessarily able to manipulate
host system objects.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This is like `GMutexLocker`, in that if you are able to use
`g_autoptr()`, it makes popping a `GMainContext` off the thread-default
main context stack easier when exiting a function.
A few uses of `G_GNUC_{BEGIN,END}_IGNORE_DEPRECATIONS` are needed to
avoid warnings when building apps against GLib with
`GLIB_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED < GLIB_VERSION_2_64`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
In many places the pattern
static gboolean warned_once = FALSE;
if (!warned_once)
{
g_warning ("This and that");
warned_once = TRUE;
}
is used to not spam the same warning message over and over again. Add a
helper in glib for this, allowing the above statement to be changed to
g_warning_once ("This and that");
This sets the `G_FILE_COPY_DEFAULT_PERMS` flag on the operation,
creating the copied file with default permissions rather than the same
permissions as the source file.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #174
Currently, there is no quick way to find whether and element is already
part of a list store, except for manually writing a for-loop and calling
`g_list_model_get_item()` and breaking when you find the item.
This is mostly just a small API addition to support this use case.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1011
Add the private members referred to in the property setting/getting
example, and a finalize function for them, to make the tutorial code
more self-contained.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1858
The class has used `G_DECLARE_FINAL_TYPE` for a while now, so doesn’t
have a `priv` struct. Private members are declared inline.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1858
This means that if you compile with `-Wswitch-enum`, the compiler will
warn you about properties which you’ve forgotten to handle in
`set_property()` or `get_property()`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1858
These are alternatives to g_file_info_{get,set}_modification_time(),
which will soon be deprecated due to using the deprecated GTimeVal
type, which is not year 2038 safe.
The new APIs take a GDateTime instead.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1438
This is a simple wrapper around g_date_time_format_iso8601() which
always produces ISO 8601 dates, without people having to remember the
format string for them (and with the convenience of terminating UTC
dates with ‘Z’ rather than ‘+00’).
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1438
Commit 8cc92bcca ("meson: Turn selinux into a meson feature and make it
auto by default") update the selinux option to be a feature with
instead of a boolean. Update the documentation to reflect this.
Closes: #1823
example lists [(1, 2), (3, 4.0)], but mentions numbers
1 and 4 being parsed as integrers, this seems wrong as
4.0 its explicitly parsed as double.
Signed-off-by: Simental Magana, Marcos <marcos.simental.magana@intel.com>
The `gio move` tool has plenty of options, which are listed by
`gio help move`, however, the `man gio` page doesn't mention them.
Let's add these missing options to the man page as well.
Queries the charset used by the associated console, which does not
necessarily match the charset of the current locale as returned by
g_get_charset.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1270
This is a new function along the same lines as g_test_bug(): to allow
developers to annotate unit tests with information about the test (what
it tests, how it tests it) for future developers to read and learn from.
It will also output this summary as a comment in the test’s TAP output,
which might clarify test results.
Includes a unit test.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1450
It allows to disconnect a signal handler from GObject instance and at the same
time to nullify the signal handler.
Provided also a macro for handler type conversion.
Add warnings about their deprecation everywhere. The tools will continue
to work until we break API, but will be less well maintained. You should
use TAP for communicating test results to the test harness provided by
your build system or CI system instead.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1441
This adds two new helpers that allow for inserting pre-allocated GList
elements to the queue similar to existing helpers. This may be advantagous
in some situations such as statically allocated GList elements.
Some of these have a negative master/slave connotation, and they add no
value. Change or drop them.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
dep-list.c isn’t generated, but contains non-documentation gtk-doc-style
comments which are probably better left in place, since the code is
partially external to GLib.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Those lists were getting very long. We can’t quite entirely automate the
list generation since Meson doesn’t have a range() function, but we can
at least combine three of them into one.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Install a Vectored Exception Handler[0]. Its sole purpose is to catch
some exceptions (access violations, stack overflows, illegal
instructions and debug breaks - by default, but it can be made to catch
any exception for which a code is known) and run a debugger in response.
This allows W32 glib applications to be run without a debugger,
but at the same time allows a debugger to be attached in case
something happens.
The debugger is run with a new console, unless an environment variable
is set to allow it to inherit the console of the crashing process.
The short list of handleable exceptions is there to ensure that
this handler won't run a debugger to "handle" utility exceptions,
such as the one that is used to communicate thread names to a debugger.
The handler is installed to be called last, and shouldn't interfere
with any user-installed handlers.
There's nothing fancy about the way it runs a debugger (it doesn't even
support unicode in paths), and it deliberately avoids using glib code.
The handler will also print a bit of information about the exception
that it caught, and even more information for well-known exceptions,
such as access violation.
The whole scheme is similar to AeDebug[1] and, in fact, the signal-event
gdb command was originally implemented for this very purpose.
[0]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/desktop/debug/vectored-exception-handling
[1]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/desktop/debug/configuring-automatic-debugging
The g_app_info_launch_uris_async() and g_app_info_launch_uris_finish()
functions are crucial to fix g_app_info_launch_default_for_uri_async()
to be really asynchronous.
This patch also adds GDesktopAppInfo implementation of that vfuncs.
The implementation may still use some synchronous calls to local MIME DB.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1347https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1249
This allows returning WOULD_BLOCK without allocating a GError, and
should later be used for various functions of GPollableOutputStream,
GPollableInputStream and anything else that can potentially block.
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>
The behaviour of the Meson build has changed a little vs what we did in
autotools. In autotools, --enable-debug was a tristate (yes, no,
undefined), with all three options resulting in different macro
definitions.
In Meson, we have a bistate of --buildtype={debug,debugoptimized} vs
--buildtype=(anything else). There is no way to automatically define
G_DISABLE_ASSERT or G_DISABLE_CHECKS while building GLib — you need to
define them in your CPPFLAGS in your environment instead.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Drop mentions of autotools. In particular, update the list of configure
options to reflect what’s available in the Meson build.
Further work is needed as a follow-up to improve our handling of (what
was formerly) the --enable-debug option.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Right now this can only be set at construction but not read back.
That seems unnecessarily restrictive, and we'll need to read these
flags from outside of gdbusconnection.c in the next commit, so let's
just make it public.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1620
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
There was no distinction between literals which need to be typed, and
normal words in the prose.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Add a new G_TEST_OPTIONS_ISOLATE_XDG_DIRS option for g_test_init() which
automatically creates a temporary set of XDG directories, and a
temporary home directory, and overrides the g_get_user_data_dir() (etc.)
functions for the duration of the unit test with the temporary values.
This is intended to better isolate unit tests from the user’s actual
data and home directory. It works with g_test_subprocess(), but does not
work with subprocesses spawned manually by the test — each unit test’s
code will need to be amended to correctly set the XDG_* environment
variables in the environment of any spawned subprocess.
“Why not solve that by setting the XDG environment variables for the
whole unit test process tree?” I hear you say. Setting environment
variables is not thread safe and they would need to be re-set for each
unit test, once worker threads have potentially been spawned.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/538
Add a new internal function, g_set_user_dirs(), which will safely
override the values returned by g_get_user_data_dir() and friends, and
the value returned by g_get_home_dir().
This is intended to be used by unit tests, and will be hooked up to them
in a following commit.
This can be called as many times as needed by the current process. It’s
thread-safe. It does not modify the environment, so none of the changes
are propagated to any subsequently spawned subprocesses.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/538
This is a utility function which I find myself writing in a number of
places. Mostly in unit tests.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This is along the same lines as g_assert_cmpstr(), but for variants.
Based on a patch by Guillaume Desmottes.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1191
This allows higher levels to have more control over resolving
(ipv4 or ipv6 for now) which allows for optimizations such
as requesting both in parallel as RFC 8305 recommends.
<link> can only be used for links to DocBook IDs. <ulink> is for URI
links. (Why does it have to be this complex?)
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
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>
Currently, there isn't API to determine root path for mounts created
over bind operation (or btrfs subvolumes). This causes issues to our
volume monitors if there is multiple mounts for one device, which can
happen with libmount-based implementation currently. Let's propagate
root path from libmount over g_unix_mount_get_root_path, so we can
handle this somehow in our volume monitors.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1271
This is a variant of g_utf8_validate() which requires the length to be
specified, thereby allowing string lengths up to G_MAXSIZE rather than
just G_MAXSSIZE.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Previously, GVariant has allowed ‘arbitrary’ recursion on GVariantTypes,
but this isn’t really feasible. We have to deal with GVariants from
untrusted sources, and the nature of GVariantType means that another
level of recursion (and hence, for example, another stack frame in your
application) can be added with a single byte in a variant type signature
in the input. This gives malicious input sources far too much leverage
to cause deep stack recursion or massive memory allocations which can
DoS an application.
Limit recursion to 128 levels (which should be more than enough for
anyone™), document it and add a test. This is, handily, also the limit
of 64 applied by the D-Bus specification (§(Valid Signatures)), plus a
bit to allow wrapping of D-Bus messages in additional layers of
variants.
oss-fuzz#9857
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 is detected by Debian's Lintian tool, which suggests
"allows one to" as a replacement. I've rephrased the documentation
in question to avoid both of those.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Expands to the GNU C fallthrough statement attribute if the compiler is gcc.
This allows declaring case statement to explicitly fall through in switch
statements. To enable this feature, use -Wimplicit-fallthrough during
compilation.
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
The goal of this commit is to reduce differences between the autotools and meson build.
With autotools AC_FUNC_ALLOCA was used which defines HAVE_ALLOCA_H, HAVE_ALLOCA,
C_ALLOCA. meson tried to replicate that with has_function() but alloca can be a macro
and and is named _alloca under Windows. Since we require a working alloca anyway
and only need to know if the header exists replace AC_FUNC_ALLOCA with a simple
AC_CHECK_HEADERS.
There is still one user of HAVE_ALLOCA in the embedded gnulib, but since alloca is
always provided through galloca.h just force define HAVE_ALLOCA there and add a comment.
The docs were mentioning alloca as an example for cross compiling. Since that variable no
longer exists now replace it with another one.
They should either be generated at build time, or ignored completely,
depending on the presence of --[enable|disable]-man.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
A lot of GLib APIs provide a string length and explicitly say that the strings
are not NUL terminated. For instance, parsing XML using GMarkupParser or
reading packed binary strings from mmapped data files.
The last part of the reference counting saga.
Now that we have:
- reference counter types
- reference counted allocations
we can finally add reference counted strings using reference counted
allocations to avoid creating a new String type, and reimplementing
every single string-based API.
GArcBox is the atomic reference counting version of GRcBox. Unlike
GRcBox, the reference acquisition and release on GArcBox are guaranteed
to be atomic, and thus they can be performed from different threads.
This is similar to Rust's Arc<Box<T>> combination of traits.
It is useful to provide a "reference counted allocation" API that can
add reference counting semantics to any memory allocation. This allows
turning data structures that usually are placed on the stack into memory
that can be placed on the heap without:
- adding a public reference count field
- implementing copy/free semantics
This mechanism is similar to Rust's Rc<Box<T>> combination of traits,
and uses a Valgrind-friendly overallocation mechanism to store the
reference count into a private data segment, like we do with GObject's
private instance data.
meson.build was already passing --rebuild-types option but not
Makefile.am. Copy the IGNORE_HFILES list from meson.build because it was
outdated in Makefile.am and it's causing build issues when using the
generated gio.types file because it would contain win32 types when
building on linux.
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.
Add a new process spawning function variant which allows the caller
to pass specific file descriptors for stdin, stdout and stderr.
It is otherwise identical to g_spawn_async_with_pipes.
Allow the same fd to be passed in multiple parameters. To make this
workable, the child process logic that closes the fd after the first time
it has been dup2'ed needed tweaking; we now just set those fds to be
closed upon exec using the CLOEXEC flag. Add a test for this case.
This will be used by gnome-shell to avoid performing equivalent
dup2 actions in a child_setup function. Dropping use of child_setup will
enable use of an upcoming optimized process spawning codepath.
These generate basic .c and .h files containing the GDBusInterfaceInfo
for a D-Bus introspection XML file, but no other code (no skeletons,
proxies, GObjects, etc.).
This is useful for projects who want to describe their D-Bus interfaces
using introspection XML, but who wish to implement the interfaces
manually (for various reasons, typically because the skeletons generated
by gdbus-codegen are too simplistic and limiting). Previously, these
projects would have had to write the GDBusInterfaceInfo manually, which
is painstaking and error-prone.
The new --interface-info-[body|header] options are very similar to
--[body|header], but mutually exclusive with them.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=795304
We have a common pattern for reference counting in GLib, but we always
implement it with ad hoc code. This is a good chance at trying to
standardise the implementation and make it public, so that other code
using GLib can take advantage of shared behaviour and semantics.
Instead of simply taking an integer variable, we should create type
aliases, to immediately distinguish the reference counting semantics of
the code; we can handle mixing atomic reference counting with a
non-atomic type (and vice versa) by using differently signed values for
the atomic and non-atomic cases.
The gatomicrefcount type is modelled on the Linux kernel refcount_t
type; the grefcount type is added to let single-threaded code bases to
avoid paying the price of atomic memory barriers on reference counting
operations.
It's mostly not used anymore and doesn't do what it says it does.
The docs state that it affects GList, GSList, GNode, GMemChunks, GSignal,
GType n_preallocs and GBSearchArray while:
* GList, GSList and GNode use GSlice and are not affected
* GMemChunks is gone
* GType npreallocs is ignored
It also states that it can be used to force the usage of g_malloc/g_free,
which is handled by G_SLICE=always-malloc now.
The only places where it's used is in signal handling through GBSearchArray
and in GValueArray (deprecated). Since it's unlikely that anyone wants to
reduce allocation sizes just for those cases remove the build option.