We were getting our length zero, yet NULL-terminated arrays in
a twist in some places. Stop passing around ignored length arguments
at the same time.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=635099
This will help applications such as zeitgeist's datahub to collect
more complete information about application launches, as the "actor"
of a launch is important for zeitgeist's magic to work properly.
If we were the initial connection owner, unref will destroy the
connection immediately, and we may lose messages. Asynchronously
flush to avoid that.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=641411
Some people are trying to write code that calls g_application_register()
then checks to see if we became the primary name owner before exporting
objects. This sort of approach worked with libdbus-1 because method
calls to the freshly-acquired name would not be dispatched until the
application returned to the mainloop. With GDBus, however, dispatches
can occur at any time (including in the brief space between acquiring
the name and actually registering the object).
Add documentation to make it clear that you should not expect this to
work.
The existing docs are a bit inconsistent in that they say to follow
the dbus convention, but then give an example that doesn't.
This commit changes things to be how Ryan says they should be.
There are now fallback functions in the Win32 portion of
g_app_info that were previously only available under UNIX,
so add them here so that they can be exported as well.
The symbols are as follows:
g_app_info_get_fallback_for_type
g_app_info_get_recommended_for_type
If code creates a GDesktopAppInfo via g_desktop_app_info_new_from_keyfile(),
we'd try to send a NULL pointer down into GVariant.
Since in this case we don't have a filename, just send the empty
string. In the future we should either:
1) Change panel to use g_desktop_app_info_new_from_filename(), and
take the hit of parsing the file twice.
2) Add a g_key_file_get_origin_filename()
3) Add g_desktop_app_info_new_from_keyfile_and_name()
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=638838
Add missing properties in the GDummyTlsConnection class. Also add
namespaces to property enumerations to avoid conflicts between classes.
Reviewed-by: Dan Winship <danw@gnome.org>
This property is now a GList of GByteArray values. Each
GByteArray contains the raw DER DN of the certificate authority.
This is far more useful for looking up a certificate (with the
relevant issuer) than a string encoded DN.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=637262
A new GDesktopAppInfo specific function which provides more control
over launched processes. Intended basically only for use in GNOME
Shell, where we want:
*) To directly know the GPid for each launched program, without
having to listen to a DBus signal emitted in our own process
*) Possibly control over the process environment; for example,
we may want to call setsid() or redirect file descriptors.
And in the future:
*) To avoid recursively calling ourself via DBus, when a later
patch causes g_app_info_launch() to indirect via the shell.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=606960
This signal contains the full path of the .desktop file, along with
the process id, which allows multiple interested components (like
GNOME Shell) to better know the state of the system (which processes
correspond to which .desktop files).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=606960
We want to be compatible with the following situation:
- there's no explicit default set in mimeapps.list
- we add support for a content type to a specific application, and that
list is empty
- the default should be picked from the system list, not overridden by
the user-added application.
So we make the default explicit in this case, by adding it to the
relevant section in mimeapps.list.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=637675
This commit also changes (maintaining compatibility) the way
user-specified default applications are stored (as in, those for which
g_app_info_set_as_default_for_type() has been called.
We now store the default application for a content type in a new group
in the mimeapps.list keyfile, and "Added Associations" tracks only the
applications that have been added by the user, following a
most-recently-used first order.
This is useful in GtkAppChooser-like widgets to pre-select the last used
application when constructing a widget.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=636311
Hiding the object/class structs in the source file makes this class not
subclassable.
Move them to the public header, and add a property for the icon, so that
subclasses can just use
g_object_new (DERIVED_TYPE,
"gicon", icon,
NULL);
to create an emblemed icon.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=636892
The necessary review and integration work has not happened, and
we don't want to enshrine it in this unproven state.
It will be back when the world is ready for it.
Previously, the code only initialized the enumerator if the address
hadn't had cached addresses. But creating an enumerator cached the
addresses, so the second one failed to work.
Make the certificate and peer-certificate properties virtual, and add
peer-certificate-errors as well. Change the documentation on
peer-certificate to say that it's not set until after the handshake
succeeds (which means notify::peer-certificate can be used to tell
when a handshake has completed).
We were combining "allow un-notified closes" and "close without
notifying" into a single property, which meant that it was impossible
to "be liberal in what you accept and conservative in what you send".
Change require-close-notify to only be about the peer behavior, and
make our connections always close-notify properly when closing (while
noting that you can just close the base-io-stream directly if you want
to do an unclean close).
Trying to do this as a signal won't work well with either
GTlsCertificateDB (in which case looking up a certificate in the db is
a blocking/asynchronous act) or session resumption support (in which
case the certificate or lack thereof is part of the session definition
and so needs to be known immediately). Make the caller use
g_tls_connection_set_certificate() ahead of time (or when retrying)
instead.
Add a method to verify a certificate against a CA; this can be used
for apps that need to test against non-default CAs.
Also make the GTlsCertificate::issuer property virtual
This adds an extension point for TLS connections to gio, with a
gnutls-based implementation in glib-networking.
Full TLS support is still a work in progress; the current API is
missing some features, and parts of it may still be changed before
2.28.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=588189
GProxyConnection is a class that was added for proxy support;
g_socket_client_connect() returns a GSocketConnection, but in some
cases (eg, encrypted SOCKS), GProxy might return a GIOStream that is
not a GSocketConnection. In that case, GSocketClient would wrap the
stream up in a GProxyConnection, which is a subclass of
GSocketConnection but uses the input/output streams of the wrapped
connection.
GTlsConnection is not a GSocketConnection, so it has the same problem,
so it will need the same treatment. Rename the class to
GTcpWrapperStream, and make it public, so people can extract the base
stream from it when necessary.
(This is not ideal and GSocketClient will need to be revisited as an
API at some point...)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=588189
When interfacing with APIs that expect unix-style async I/O, it is
useful to be able to tell in advance whether a read/write is going to
block. This adds new interfaces GPollableInputStream and
GPollableOutputStream that can be implemented by a GInputStream or
GOutputStream to add _is_readable/_is_writable, _create_source, and
_read_nonblocking/_write_nonblocking methods.
Also, implement for GUnixInput/OutputStream and
GSocketInput/OutputStream
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=634241
g_cancellable_create_source() returns a GSource that triggers when its
corresponding GCancellable is cancelled. This can be used with
g_source_add_child_source() to add cancellability to a source.
Port gasynchelper's FDSource to use this rather than doing its own
cancellable handling, and also fix up its callback argument order to
be more normal.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=634239
Otherwise you break the fallback + recommended distinction for a content
type, as you end up adding support for a given content type to *all* of
the applications claiming to support the supertype.
This ways UIs can differentiate between them, and show them in different
section.
- a recommended app is an application that claims to support a content
type directly, not by a supertype derivation.
- a fallback app is an application that claims to support a supertype of
a given content type.
So that if we already have a list of emblems we know we want to add to
the icon, we can use e.g. a for loop to add them all, without picking
the first and looping from the second.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=634504
Removing an extension point is an API and ABI break. In particular, it
causes (older) gvfs versions to fail loading with a linkage error from
ld which in turn makes the desktop unusable.
So this reinstate the extension point and API provided by it, but
deprecates and does not use it. So no functionality is changed.
This reverts parts of commit 9b262f1c5f.
Complaints-Also-To: Ryan Lortie <desrt@desrt.ca>
-gdbusmessage.c and gregistrysettingsbackend.c is updated to fix C99-style declarations
-also fixed typo for displaying registry entry in gregistrysettingsbackend.c (\% -> \\%)
If specified, the signal subscription is setup client-side but the match
rule is not sent to the server. This allows the caller to manually
register more detailed match rules.
glib is trying to move toward using microseconds-in-gint64 as its
universal time format.
No real API breaks here since GTimeSpec is new this unstable release
series.
Add g_simple_async_result_new_take_error and
g_simple_async_result_take_error, which take over ownership of the
given error. Based on a patch by Christian Persch.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=629247
This is similar to gconftool-2 -R, which is very handy
for collecting information for bug reports, etc. It is now
possible to say gsettings list-recursively org.foo.bar, and
this will produce a list of schemas, keys and values for
org.foo.bar and all its child and grandchild schemata,
recursively.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=632571
Add support for passing the full contents of the environment to the
primary instance (by storing it in the platform_data) when
G_APPLICATION_SEND_ENVIRONMENT is in the flags.
RFC 2782 says that if there is no SRV record for
_SERVICE._PROTOCOL.DOMAIN, you should fall back to trying just DOMAIN,
with the default port for SERVICE. Do that.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=629274
Otherwise, attempting to create a GSocketConnection from the socket
will likely return the wrong type, since the protocol won't match any
of the registered subtypes.
Also add the start of a GSocket test program (from davidz).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=627171
Makes explicit the fact that you are interacting with the individual
action rather than the group and removes potential namespace conflicts
with classes implementing the interface (like g_application_activate()
vs g_application_activate_action()).
Create the gobject property for it.
Tweak the logic of having a pending timeout at the time that the
application starts -- run the mainloop with a use count of zero if there
is a timeout active.
Provides access to the g_settings_get_range() functionality, converting
its return value to something that's reasonable for printing at the
console and potentially parseable. The format may change.
Bug #631264.
Prevent assertion messages from spewing forth and also ensure that we
exit with an error status in the event that the value was out of range.
Bug #631264.
Don't store the "none" value for flags into the compiled schema file.
"none" should never appear as a value -- no flags set is indicated by an
empty array.
Ensure that the strinfo is output in little-endian byte order on big
endian machines.
GSettings is now passing all of its tests on PowerPC.
Bug #630968 is closed.
GSettings relies on parts of the schema infromation remaining
unbyteswapped (the strinfo database, for example) while requiring other
parts to be in native order (the default value, constraints, etc.).
Lift the byteswapping into a place where we can do it selectively.
The test case was passing a guint16 to g_object_get() for a guint
property. That's invalid on all systems, although it works (more or
less) on little endian ones. On big endian it's a total no-go.
For GSettings.
Use the functionality introduced in the last commit to simplify our
notify dispatching and increase the safety of doing so (by ensuring that
the context is acquired in the current thread for the duration of the
dispatch).
This closes bugs #623400 and #629849.
Rewrite the GSettings tool.
Improvements/changes:
- simplify the code by performing common actions (like creating a
schema) in only one place instead of one per-command
- new features (list schemas, list keys, monitor multiple, etc)
- factor-out bash completion and implement in shellscript
- input validation: should never abort due to invalid inputs
Still to do:
- proper error checking for ranges/choices
- support for querying range/choice information
- bash completion support for enums
Closes bug #629289, possibly among others.
In its previous form, g_settings_list_schemas() was not useful as a tool
to prevent aborts due to using g_settings_new() with an invalid schema
name. This is because g_settings_list_scheams() also listed relocatable
schemas, and calling g_settings_new() for those would abort just the
same as if you called it for a non-existent schema.
Modify g_settings_list_schemas() so that it only returns schemas for
which it is safe to call g_settings_new(). Add another call for sake of
completeness: g_settings_list_relocatable_schemas().
Implement the second feature requested in the bug: silently ignore
override files that attempt to override schemas that are not currently
installed.
Also, support 'strictness' being optional for other errors when parsing
override files (ie: inability to open the file, unknown key name, parse
errors, out of range). We don't completely back out the file in this
case — as that is difficult with the current implementation — but just
ignore the override for the single key.
Implement the first of two features requested in the bug: when
encountering a broken .xml schema file, back out the changes in that
file and continue to parse other files.
This prevents a single broken .xml file from messing up GSettings for
everyone else.
Add a --strict option to get the old behaviour. Use this from the test
cases.