The previous code dedup'd when thawing and threw nasty warnings your way
if you notified too often. This can now easily be avoided.
Performance should be roughly identical, as both are O(n²).
The g_object_bind_property_with_closures() function should set a
marshaller if the two GClosures don't have one already. This simplifies
the caller code and avoids duplication.
We need to add a new marshaller to the gmarshal.list matching the
signature of the GBindingTransformFunc function.
Since GSettings got the same functionality and flag in commit ca3b7b75b
GBinding should also have the ability to automatically invert a boolean
value without requiring a custom transformation function.
Since using the function pointer version muddles the memory management
requirements of language bindings, we should implement a GClosure-based
variant on top of g_object_bind_property_full().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=622278
This reverts commit 0201a81f04 and adds
locks in the right place.
As this file is a public header (see last commit), we cannot just remove
functions from it.
gobjectnotifyqueue.c is a public header, so we cannot remove files from
it. (Yes you read that right, this .c file is a public header. See your
installation directory.)
Adds locking around object property change notification handling. The
notifications are only emitted after all threads have called
g_object_thaw_notify().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=166020
You can pass a NULL GValue * to any of g_value_array_insert, _prepend or
_append to add a new, uninitialized value. This is a very useful
shortcut, and it should be documented rather than left languishing in a
comment in the implementation.
Fixes Gnome bug #552363.
When creating a binding between two object properties we might want to
automatically synchronize the two values at the moment of the binding
creation, instead of waiting for the next change.
The G_BINDING_SYNC_CREATE flag does exactly what it says on the tin.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=622281
This is a minimal patch-out of the galias functionality. We will do a
release like this so that we can easily back it out if there are
reported problems.
A more substantial cleanup (mostly removing #includes from every file)
will follow if there are no issues.
Since an object instance might have a lot of bindings, using a list
might become a performance issue when removing them. Using a simple
hash table guarantees constant time lookup, which is the most common
operation.
GBinding is a simple, opaque object that represents a binding between a
property on a GObject instance (source) and property on another GObject
instance (target).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=348080
g_object_notify_by_pspec() will emit the "notify" signal on the given
pspec, short-circuiting the hash table lookup needed by
g_object_notify(). The suggested and documented way of using
g_object_notify_by_pspec() is similar to the way of emitting signals
with their ID.
Emission tests (with no handler attached to the notify signal) show a
10-15% speedup over using g_object_notify().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=615425
This adds static markers and systemtap tapsets for:
* type creation
* object lifetimes (creation, ref, unref, dispose, finalize)
* signal creation and emission
Signal emissions and finalization marker have a corresponding
*_end (or *-end in dtrace) version that is when the corresponding
operation is finished.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=606044
Add a @valuenum@ substitution that outputs the integer value of a
particular enum value. The value is determined by using (sandboxed)
perl to evaluate C expression. If evaluation fails then glib-mkenums
dies loudly. Evaluation is only enabled if '@valuenum@' appears in the
template file, so existing users will not be affected.