GSocketAddressEnumerator encapsulates the details of how DNS happens, so
we don't have to think about it. But we may have taken encapsulation a
bit too far, here. Usually, we resolve a domain name to a list of IPv4
and IPv6 addresses. Then we go through each address in the list and try
to connect to it. Name resolution happens exactly once, at the start.
It doesn't happen each time we enumerate the enumerator. In theory, it
*could*, because we've designed these APIs to be agnostic of underlying
implementation details like DNS and network protocols. But in practice,
we know that's not really what's happening. It's weird to say that we
are RESOLVING what we know to be the same name multiple times. Behind
the scenes, we're not doing that.
This also fixes#1994, where enumeration can end with a RESOLVING event,
even though this is supposed to be the first event rather than the last.
I thought this would be hard to fix, even requiring new public API in
GSocketAddressEnumerator to peek ahead to see if the next enumeration is
going to return NULL. Then I decided we should just fake it: always emit
both RESOLVING and RESOLVED at the same time right after each
enumeration. Finally, I realized we can emit them at the correct time if
we simply assume resolving only happens the first time. This seems like
the most elegant of the possible solutions.
Now, this is a behavior change, and arguably an API break, but it should
align better with reasonable expectations of how GSocketClientEvent
ought to work. I don't expect it to break anything besides tests that
check which order GSocketClientEvent events are emitted in. (Currently,
libsoup has such tests, which will need to be updated.) Ideally we would
have GLib-level tests as well, but in a concession to pragmatism, it's a
lot easier to keep network tests in libsoup.
This isn't an API guarantee, but it's a potentially-surprising
behavior difference between the sync and async functions that is good
to know about, especially because our sync and async functions are
normally identical.
The linux kernel does not know that the socket will be used
for connect or listen and if you bind() to a local address it must
reserve a random port (if port == 0) at bind() time, making very easy
to exhaust the ~32k port range, setting IP_BIND_ADDRESS_NO_PORT tells
the kernel to choose random port at connect() time instead, when the
full 4-tuple is known.
`g_local_file_fstatat()` needs to fall back to returning an error if
`fstatat()` isn’t defined, which is the case on older versions of macOS
(as well as Windows, which was already handled). Callers shouldn’t call
`g_local_file_fstatat()` in these cases. (That’s already the case.)
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #2203
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>
The GSubprocessLauncher class lacks a dispose() method, and frees
all their resources in the finalize() method.
This is a problem with Javascript because the sockets passed to a
child process using g_subprocess_launcher_take_fd() aren't closed
in the parent space until the object is fully freed. This means
that if the child closes a socket, it won't be detected until the
GSubprocessLauncher object has been freed by the garbage
collector.
Just closing the socket externally is not a valid solution,
because the finalize() method will close it again, and since
another file/pipe/socket could have been opened in the meantime
and use the same FD number, the finalize() method would close
an incorrect FD.
An example is launching a child process that uses its own
socket for Wayland: the parent creates two sockets with
socketpair(), passes one to the Wayland API (wl_client_create()),
and the other is passed to the child process using
g_subprocess_launcher_take_fd(). But now there are two instances
of that second socket: one in the parent, and another one in the
child process. That means that, if the child closes its socket (or
dies), the Wayland server will not detect that until the
GSubprocessLauncher object is fully destroyed. That means that a
GSubprocessLauncher created in Javascript will last for several
seconds after the child dies, and every window or graphical element
will remain in the screen until the Garbage Collector destroys the
GSubprocessLauncher object.
This patch fixes this by moving the resource free code into a
dispose() method, which can be called from Javascript. This allows
to ensure that any socket passed to the child with
g_subprocess_launcher_take_fd() can be closed even from Javascript
just by calling the method run_dispose().
Fix https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/merge_requests/1670
This combines a massive code re-folding with functionlity expansion
that allows us to track multiple verbs per handler or per application.
Also fixes a few issues and removes a function that made no sense.
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>
The previous parsing code could read off the end of a URI if it had an
incorrect %-escaped character in.
Fix that, and more closely implement parsing for the syntax defined in
RFC 6874, which is the amendment to RFC 3986 which specifies zone ID
syntax.
This requires reworking some network-address tests, which were
previously treating zone IDs incorrectly.
oss-fuzz#23816
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Emptying trash over `gio trash` is a bit slow in comparison to plain
`rm -r`. On my system, it took about 3 min to empty the trash with a
folder containing 600 000 files, which is not ideal as `rm -r` call
took just a few seconds. I found that `g_file_delete` is implemented
differently for locations provided by the trash backend. The trash
backend prevents modifications of trashed content thus the delete
operation is allowed only for the top-level files and folders. So it
is not necessary to recursive delete all files as the permission
denied error is returned anyway. Let's call `g_file_delete` only for
top-level items, which reduces the time necessary for emptying trash
from minutes to seconds...
See: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/nautilus/-/issues/1589
Some filesystems don't have meaningful access times under at least some
circumstances (see #2189, #2205). In this situation the traditional stat()
and related kernel interfaces have to put something meaningless in the
st_atime field, and have no way to signal that it is meaningless.
However, statx() does have a way to signal that the atime is meaningless:
if the filesystem doesn't provide a useful access time, it will unset
the STATX_ATIME bit (as well as filling in the same meaningless value
for the stx_atime field that stat() would have used, for compatibility).
We don't actually *need* the atime, so never include it in the required
mask. This was already done for one code path in commit 6fc143bb
"gio: Allow no atime from statx" to fix#2189, but other callers were
left unchanged in that commit, and receive the same change here.
It is not actually guaranteed that *any* of the flags in the
returned stx_mask will be set (the only guarantee is that items in
STATX_BASIC_STATS have at least a harmless compatibility value, even if
their corresponding flag is cleared), so it might be better to follow
this up by removing the concept of the required mask entirely. However,
as of Linux 5.8 it looks as though STATX_ATIME is the only flag in
STATX_BASIC_STATS that might be cleared in practice, so this simpler
change fixes the immediate regression.
Resolves: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/2205
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
It is not allowed to be `NULL` or unset if requested by the file
attribute matcher. Derive it from the basename. This doesn’t handle the
situation of a failed UTF-16 to UTF-8 conversion very well, but will at
least return something.
Note that the `g_filename_display_basename()` function can’t be used as
`GWinHttpFile` provides its URI in UTF-16 rather than in the file system
encoding.
This fixes a crash when using GIMP on Windows. Thanks to lillolollo for
in-depth debugging assistance.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #2194
For interoperability with libdbus, we want to use compatible timeouts.
In particular, this fixes a spurious failure of the `gdbus-server-auth`
test caused by libdbus and gdbus choosing to expire the key (cookie) at
different times, as diagnosed by Thiago Macieira. Previously, the libdbus
client would decline to use keys older than 7 minutes, but the GDBus
server would not generate a new key until the old key was 10 minutes old.
For completeness, also adjust the other arbitrary timeouts in the
DBUS_COOKIE_SHA1 mechanism to be the same as in libdbus. To make it
easier to align with libdbus, create internal macros with the same names
and values used in dbus-keyring.c.
* maximum time a key can be in the future due to clock skew between
systems sharing a home directory
- spec says "a reasonable time in the future"
- was 1 day
- now 5 minutes
- MAX_TIME_TRAVEL_SECONDS
* time to generate a new key if the newest is older
- spec says "If no recent keys remain, the server may generate a new
key", but that isn't practical, because in reality we need a grace
period during which an old key will not be used for new authentication
attempts but old authentication attempts can continue (in practice both
libdbus and GDBus implemented this logic)
- was 10 minutes
- now 5 minutes
- NEW_KEY_TIMEOUT_SECONDS
* time to discard old keys
- spec says "the timeout can be fairly short"
- was 15 minutes
- now 7 minutes
- EXPIRE_KEYS_TIMEOUT_SECONDS
* time allowed for a client using an old key to authenticate, before
that key gets deleted
- was at least 5 minutes
- now at least 2 minutes
- at least (EXPIRE_KEYS_TIMEOUT_SECONDS - NEW_KEY_TIMEOUT_SECONDS)
Based on a merge request by Philip Withnall.
Fixes: #2164
Thanks: Philip Withnall
Thanks: Thiago Macieira
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This doesn't trigger the cancellation assertion issue when run locally
(the task didn't return yet, so the error is simply overwritten), but
perhaps it ever does in CI. Anyhow, it's good to have a cancellation
test.
After a splice operation is finished, it attempts to 1) close input/output
streams, as per the given flags, and 2) return the operation result (maybe
an error, too).
However, if the operation gets cancelled early and the streams indirectly
closed, the splice operation will try to close both descriptors and return
on the task when both are already closed. The catch here is that getting the
streams closed under its feet is possible, so the completion callback would
find both streams closed after returning on the first close operation and
return the error, but then the second operation could be able to trigger
a second error which would be returned as well.
What happens here is up to further race conditions, if the task didn't
return yet, the returned error will be simply replaced (but the old one not
freed...), if it did already return, it'll result in:
GLib-GIO-FATAL-CRITICAL: g_task_return_error: assertion '!task->ever_returned' failed
Fix this by flagging the close_async() callbacks, and checking that both
close operations did return, instead of checking that both streams are
closed by who knows.
This error triggers a semi-frequent CI failure in tracker, see the summary at
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/tracker/-/issues/240
statx does not provide stx_atime when querying a file in a read-only
mounted file system. So call to statx should not expect it to be in
the mask. Otherwise we would fail with ERANGE for querying any file in
a read-only file system.
Fixes#2189.
The `make_pollfd()` call can’t fail because it only does so if
`cancellable == NULL`, and we’ve already checked that. Assert that’s the
case, to shut Coverity up and to catch behavioural changes in future.
Coverity CID: #1159433
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
`g_strsplit()` never returns `NULL`, although it can return an empty
strv (i.e. with its first element being `NULL`).
Drop a redundant `NULL` check.
Coverity CID: #1430976
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
If `statx()` is supported, query it for the file creation time and use
that if returned.
Incorporating some minor code rearrangement by Philip Withnall
<withnall@endlessm.com>.
Fixes: #1970
This currently just implements the same functionality as the existing
`stat()`/`fstat()`/`fstatat()`/`lstat()` calls, although where a reduced
field set is requested it may return faster.
Helps: #1970
It turns out that our async write operation implementation is broken
on non-O_NONBLOCK pipes, because the default async write
implementation calls write() after poll() said there were some
space. However, the semantics of pipes is that unless O_NONBLOCK is set
then the write *will* block if the passed in write count is larger than
the available space.
This caused a deadlock in https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/2182
due to the loop-back of the app stdout to the parent, but even without such
a deadlock it is a problem that we may block the mainloop at all.
In the particular case of g_subprocess_communicate() we have full
control of the pipes after starting the app, so it is safe to enable
O_NONBLOCK (i.e. we can ensure all the code using the fd after this can handle
non-blocking mode).
This fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/2182
This has almost the same semantics as WSAECONNRESET and for all
practical purposes is handled the same. The main difference is about
*who* reset the connection: the peer or something in the network.
For UDP sockets this happens when receiving packets and previously sent
packets returned an ICMP "Time(-to-live) expired" message. This is
similar to WSAECONNRESET, which on UDP sockets happens when receiving
packets and previously sent packets returned an ICMP "Port Unreachable"
message.
This is a step towards supporting `statx()`, which allows the set of
fields it returns to be specified by the caller. Currently, the existing
`stat()` and `fstat()` calls continue to be made, and there are no
behavioural changes — but the new wrapper functions will be extended in
future.
Helps: #1970
Don’t call `g_file_query_exists()` followed by `g_file_delete()`. Just
call `g_file_delete()` and check the error.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Make `G_URI_FLAGS_PARSE_RELAXED` available instead, for the
implementations which need to handle user-provided or incorrect URIs.
The default should nudge people towards being compliant with RFC 3986.
This required also adding a new `G_URI_PARAMS_PARSE_RELAXED` flag, as
previously parsing param strings *always* used relaxed mode and there
was no way to control it. Now it defaults to using strict mode, and the
new flag allows for relaxed mode to be enabled if needed.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #2149
Add support for x-gvfs-notrash mount option, which allows to disable
trash functionality for certain mounts. This might be especially useful
e.g. to prevent trash folder creation on enterprise shares, which are
also accessed from Windows...
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1096200
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.
_g_uri_parse_authority() can be replaced with g_uri_split_network() &
PARSE_STRICT. Keep the original error code, for compatibility reasons.
Notice that GUri uses gint for the port, and value -1 if the port value
is missing. However, GNetworkAddress::port is a guint.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
_g_uri_parse_authority() without argument is actually checking that the
URI is valid, by checking it parses successfully
We keep the existing error domain / code for compatibility reasons,
instead of raising the underlying G_URI_ERROR.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
_g_uri_from_authority() is doing the same work as g_uri_join(): taking
URI components and merging them in a legit URI string, with encoding.
It turns out g_uri_from_authority was unnecessarily complex, since no
caller used the userinfo field.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
It may be defined by the environment (we document that as being allowed)
— if so, individual files should not try to redefine it, as that causes
a preprocessor warning.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Where applicable. Where the current use of `g_file_set_contents()` seems
the most appropriate, leave that in place.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1302
Give GAppInfo a bunch of readonly properties, and
support them in GDesktopAppInfo. This makes app infos
more convenient to work with in GTK4, and in general.
g_task_set_name() was added in GLib 2.60, so only use it in the
overridden definition of g_task_set_source_tag() if the user has said
that they require GLib ≥ 2.60.
This is a follow up to commit b08bd04abe.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
There is no guarantee that this function would not be called
concurrently. Particularly since flatpak_info_read was set to TRUE
before /.flatpak-info is actually read from disk, there is a potential
race where a second thread would return default values for the various
flags set from that file.
Fixes#2159
Correct an off-by-one error in hex_unescape_string()'s computation of
the output string length.
(Turned into a git-format patch by Philip Withnall. Original patch
submitted on the Debian bug tracker, bug#962912.)
It's safe to assume an escaped string doesn't contain embedded null bytes,
but raw memory buffers (as returned by getxattr()) require more care.
If the length of the data to be escaped is known, use that knowledge instead
of invoking strlen().
(Turned into a git-format patch by Philip Withnall. One minor formatting
tweak. Original patch submitted on the Debian bug tracker, bug#962912.)
Fixes: #422
And improve them externally, where not otherwise set, by setting them
from the function name passed to `g_task_set_source_tag()`, if called by
third party code.
This should make profiling and debug output from GLib more useful.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
`complete_in_idle_cb()` shows up in a lot of sysprof traces, so it’s
quite useful to include the most specific contextual information we can
in it.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
When an app is spawned using g_desktop_app_info_launch_uris_with_spawn
it will expand the various token in the app's commandline with the
URIs of the files to open. The expand_macro() function that is used for
this advances the pointer to the URI list to show up to which entries
it used.
To not loose the pointer to the list head a duplicate of the URI list
was actually passed to expand_macro(). However, it's not necessary to
create a copy of the URI list for that as expand_macro() will only
change which element the pointer will point to.
This behaviour actually caused the duplicated list to be leaked as the
the list pointer is NULL once all URIs are used up by expand_macro()
and thus nothing was freed at the end of the function.
In ostree based systems, such as flatpak and fedora silverblue, the
time of modification of every system file is epoch 0, including
giomodule.cache, which means that every module is loaded and unloaded
every time.
The solution is to use the change time of the file as well. In a typical
system, it is equal to the mtime, and in an ostree based system, since
the directory is mounted as read-only, the user cannot add a module and
we must assume that the cache file corresponds to the modules.
* 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
This speeds up the `cancellable` test a little by stopping waiting for
the threads to start up as soon as they have started, rather than after
an arbitrary timeout.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1764
This should fix some sporadic test failures in this test, although I
can’t be sure as I was unable to reproduce the original failure.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #1764
It seems that allowing the GCancellable to be finalised in either the
main thread or the worker thread sometimes leads to crashes when running
on CI.
I cannot reproduce these crashes locally, and various analyses with
memcheck, drd and helgrind have failed to give any clues.
Fix this for this particular test case by deferring destruction of the
`GCancellable` instances until after the worker thread has joined.
That’s OK because this test is specifically checking a race between
`g_cancellable_cancel()` and disposal of a `GCancellableSource`.
The underlying bug remains unfixed, though, and I can only hope that we
eventually find a reliable way of reproducing it so it can be analysed
and fixed.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
The G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_FILESYSTEM_REMOTE is set to TRUE only for NFS
filesystem types currently. Let's add also SMB filesystem types. This
also changes g_local_file_is_nfs_home function logic to handle only
NFS filesystems.
The g_local_file_is_remote function is misleading as it works only for
NFS filesystem types and only for locations in home directorly. Let's
rename it to g_local_file_is_nfs_home to make it obvious.
statfs/statvfs is called several times when querying filesystem info.
This is because the G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_FILESYSTEM_REMOTE attribute is set
over is_remote_fs function, which calls statfs/statvfs again. Let's use
the already known fstype instead of redundant statfs/statvfs calls.
This also changes g_local_file_is_remote implementation to use
g_local_file_query_filesystem_info to obtain fstype, which allows to
remove duplicated code from is_remote_fs function.
The G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_FILESYSTEM_REMOTE currently works only for locations
in the home directory. Let's make it work also for files outside the home
directory.
There are glocalfile.h and glocalfileprivate.h header files currently.
None of those header files is public, so it doesn't make sense to have
two private headers for glocalfile.c. Let's remove glocalfileprivate.h.
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>
In glib-networking#127, it was reported that we don't properly implement
the documented behavior of these properties. However, we cannot fix it
because libsoup relies on the implemented behavior, and it's hard to
change that without cascading breakage. The practical solution is to
adjust our documentation to match reality. There should be no downsides
to this, and compat risk of changing the documentation is much smaller
than risk of changing the implementation, so I think this is the best we
can make of an unfortunate situation. See glib-networking#127 for full
discussion and glib-networking#129 for the regression when we attempted
to match the documented behavior.
Some editors automatically remove trailing blank lines, or
automatically add a trailing newline to avoid having a trailing
non-blank line that is not terminated by a newline. To avoid unrelated
whitespace changes when users of such editors contribute to GLib,
let's pre-emptively normalize all files.
Unlike more intrusive whitespace normalization like removing trailing
whitespace from each line, this seems unlikely to cause significant
issues with cherry-picking changes to stable branches.
Implemented by:
find . -name '*.[ch]' -print0 | \
xargs -0 perl -0777 -p -i -e 's/\n+\z//g; s/\z/\n/g'
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
While these assertions look right at the first glance,
they actually crash the program. That's because GObject
insists on initializing all construct-only properties
to their default values, which results in
g_win32_registry_key_set_property() being called multiple
times with NULL string, once for each unset property.
If "path" is actually set by the caller, a subsequent
call to set "path-utf16" to NULL will fail an assertion,
since absolute_path is already non-NULL.
With assertions moved the set-to-NULL calls bail out before
an assertion is made.
This ensures that we do really export the symbols for Visual
Studio-style builds, by using _GLIB_EXTERN to decorate the generated
prototypes and including config.h so that we are sure the symbols are
actually exported.
This adds three options to gdbus-codegen so that we may be able to
use a self-defined symbol decorator, such as _GLIB_EXTERN, to decorate
the generated prototypes, to be used possibly to export the symbols, if
needed.
The other two options allows including headers that are required for the
specified symbol decorator to be usable and preprocessor macros that are
required for the symbol decorator to be defined appropriately, also when
needed.
Have the generated .c code decorate the prototypes with "G_MODULE_EXPORT"
instead of "extern" when --internal is not being used, so that we also
export the symbols from the generated code on Visual Studio-style
compilers. If --internal is used, we decorate the prototypes with
"G_GNUC_INTERNAL", as we did before.
Note that since the generated .c code does not attempt to include the
generated headers (if one is also generated), the gnerated headers are
still generated as they were before.
Sometimes this test was timing out due to the file monitor notifications
taking longer than the arbitrary 2s delay before ending the test and
checking its results at the end of `iclosed_cb()`.
Avoid that timing-dependence by ending the test when the expected file
monitor notifications are seen, or after a 10s timeout (if so, the test
is failed).
This makes the test run 4× faster in the normal case, as it’s no longer
waiting for a timeout to elapse if the file monitor notifications come
in sooner.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
The test added for #1841 spawned 100000 threads. That was fine on a
desktop machine, but on a heavily loaded CI machine, it could result in
large (and unpredictable) slowdowns, resulting in the test taking over
120s in about 1 in 5 runs, and hence failing that CI pipeline due to a
timeout. When passing normally on CI, the test would take around 90s.
Here’s a histogram of time per iteration on a failing (timed out) test
run. Each iteration is one thread spawn:
Iteration duration (µs) | Frequency
------------------------+----------
≤100 | 0
100–200 | 30257
200–400 | 13696
400–800 | 1046
800–1000 | 123
1000–2000 | 583
2000–4000 | 3779
4000–8000 | 4972
8000–10000 | 1027
10000–20000 | 2610
20000–40000 | 650
40000–80000 | 86
80000–100000 | 10
100000–200000 | 2
>200000 | 0
There’s no actual need for the test to spawn 100000 threads, so rewrite
it to reuse a single thread, and pass new data to that thread.
Reverting the original commit (e4a690f5dd) reproduces the failure on
100 out of 100 test runs with this commit applied, so the test still
works.
The test now takes 3s, rather than 11s, to run on my computer, and has
passed when run with `meson test --repeat 1000 cancellable`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
An extra argument to g_win32_registry_key_get_value_w() and
g_win32_registry_key_get_value() indicates that RegLoadMUIStringW()
should be used instead of RegQueryValueExW(). It only works on
strings, and automatically resolves resource strings (the ones
that start with "@").
The extra argument is needed to find resource DLLs that are only
specified by their relative name.
It is critical to mention how the identity parameter is expected to be
handled. In particular, if identity is not passed, then the identity of
the server certificate will not be checked at all. This is in contrast
to the connection-level APIs, which are supposed to be fail-safe. The
database and certificate-level APIs are more manual.
There’s no need to call `access()` and then `stat()` on the keyring
directory to check that it exists, is a directory, and has the right
permissions. Just call `stat()`.
This eliminates one potential TOCTTOU race in this code.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1954
There was a time-of-check-to-time-of-use (TOCTTOU) race in the keyring
lock code, where it would check the existence of the lock file using
`access()`, then proceed to call `open(O_CREAT | O_EXCL)` to try and
create the lock file once `access()` showed that it didn’t exist.
The problem is that, because this is happening in a shared directory
(`~/.dbus-keyrings`), another process could quite legitimately create
the lock file in the meantime.
Instead, unconditionally call `open()` and ignore errors from it (which
will be returned if the lock file already exists) until it succeeds (or
the code times out).
This eliminates the TOCTTOU race, and simplifies the timeout behaviour
so there aren’t two loops (check for existence, try to create)
happening. It brings this code in line with what dbus.git does (see
`_dbus_keyring_lock()`).
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1954
When multiple tests were run in parallel, this would race on its access
to `~/.dbus-keyrings` to authenticate with the D-Bus server, since the
keyring directory was not appropriately sandboxed to the unit test.
Use `G_TEST_OPTION_ISOLATE_DIRS` to automatically isolate each unit
test’s directory usage.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1954
Commit 721e385 left one remaining race in the filter test, with a
comment associated with it. Unfortunately, the (seemingly unrelated)
changes in #1841 to `GCancellable` seem to have made this remaining race
a lot more likely to fail on FreeBSD than before.
What’s likely to have happened (although I was unable to reproduce the
failure, due to not having a FreeBSD system; I was only able to
reproduce the problem as a 3/1000 failure on Linux, which is still worth
fixing) is that the atomic write of the `FilterData.serial` to be
expected by the filter function sometimes happened after the filter
function had executed, so the expected message was dropped and didn’t
result in an update to the `FilterData` state.
Rework the test so that instead of setting some expectations (on
`FilterData`) in one thread and then checking them in another thread,
the worker thread just unconditionally returns messages from the filter
function to the main thread, and then the main thread checks whether the
expected one has been filtered.
With this change applied, the `gdbus-connection` test passes 5000 times
in a row for me, on Linux; and doesn’t seem to fail any more on the
FreeBSD CI machines over a few runs. (Previously it failed on 4/5 runs.)
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #2092Fixes: #1957
Mention in the documentation that (presumably for performance reasons)
the search results from `g_desktop_app_info_search()` are not filtered
by executable presence or hidden attribute.
Perhaps they should be in future, but for now we should at least
document it.
Spotted by Will Thompson.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
By default, meson builds glib with -Werror=format=2, which
implies -Werror=format-nonliteral. With these flags, clang errors
out on e.g. the g_message_win32_error function, due to "format
string is not a string literal". This function takes a format
string, and passes the va_list of the arguments onwards to
g_strdup_vprintf, which is annotated with printf attributes.
When passing a string+va_list to another function, GCC doesn't warn
with -Wformat-nonliteral. Clang however does warn, unless the
functions themselves (g_message_win32_error and set_error) are decorated
with similar printf attributes (to force the same checks upon the
caller) - see
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html#format
for reference.
Adding these attributes revealed one existing mismatched format string
(fixed in the preceding commit).
The GIO tests memory-monitor-dbus and memory-monitor-portal use a number
of third party Python modules that may not be present when running the
test case.
Instead of failing due to missing imports, catch the ImportError and
mock a test case that skips. This can't use the usual unittest.skip
logic because the test case class itself uses a 3rd party module.
Closes#2083.
There are two memory monitor tests that use Python's unittest module directly,
but GLib tests should be outputting TAP. Use the embedded TAPTestRunner to
ensure that TAP is output for these tests too.
The G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_STANDARD_CONTENT_TYPE attribute doesn't have to be
always set. See https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gvfs/-/merge_requests/68
for more details. In that case, the g_file_query_default_handler function
fails with the "No application is registered as handling this file" error.
Let's fallback to the "standard::fast-content-type" attribute instead to
fix issues when opening such files.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/nautilus/-/issues/1425
Meson 0.54.0 added a new method meson.override_dependency() that must be
used to ensure dependency consistency. This patch ensures a project that
depends on glib will never link to a mix of system and subproject
libraries. It would happen in such cases:
The system has glib 2.40 installed, and a project does:
dependency('glib-2.0', version: '>=2.60',
fallback: ['glib', 'glib_dep'])
dependency('gobject-2.0')
The first call will configure glib subproject because the system libglib
is too old, but the 2nd call will return system libgobject.
By overriding 'gobject-2.0' dependency while configuring glib subproject
during the first call, meson knows that on the 2nd call it must return
the subproject dependency instead of system dependency.
This also has the nice side effect that with Meson >0.54.0 an
application depending on glib can declare the fallback without knowing
the dependency variable name: dependency('glib-2.0', fallback: 'glib').
Slightly unexpectedly, `g_icon_serialize()` doesn’t produce a floating
`GVariant`, it produces one with full ownership and returns that. That’s
not the convention for `GVariant` return values from functions which
build variants, but there’s nothing we can do to change this now as that
would be an API break.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
D-Bus filter functions run in a worker thread. The `gdbus-connection`
test was sharing a `FilterData` struct between the main thread and the
filter function, which was occasionally (on the order of 0.01% of test
runs) causing spurious test failures due to racing on reads/writes of
`num_handled`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #480
g_assert() can be compiled out with G_DISABLE_ASSERT, which renders the
test rather useless.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #480
If a username and password are specified by the caller, `GSocks5Proxy`
tells the server that it supports anonymous *and* username/password
authentication, and the server can choose which it prefers.
Otherwise, `GSocks5Proxy` only says that it supports anonymous
authentication. If that’s not acceptable to the server, the code was
previously returning `G_IO_ERROR_PROXY_AUTH_FAILED`. That error code
doesn’t indicate to the caller that authentication might succeed were
they to provide a username and password.
Change the error handling to make that clearer. A fuller solution would
be to expose more of the method negotiation in the `GSocks5Proxy` API,
so that the caller can specify ahead of time which authentication
methods they want to use. That can follow in issue #2059 though.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1988
They were not actually asynchronous, and hence caused blocking in the
main thread. Deleting them means the default implementation of those
vfuncs is used, which runs the sync implementation in a thread — which
is what is wanted here.
Spotted by Benjamin Otte.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #2051
There’s a minor race condition between cancellation of a `GCancellable`,
and disposal/finalisation of a `GCancellableSource` in another thread.
Thread A Thread B
g_cancellable_cancel(C)
→cancellable_source_cancelled(C, S)
g_source_unref(S)
cancellable_source_dispose(S)
→→g_source_ref(S)
→→# S is invalid at this point; crash
Thankfully, the `GCancellable` sets `cancelled_running` while it’s
emitting the `cancelled` signal, so if `cancellable_source_dispose()` is
called while that’s high, we know that the thread which is doing the
cancellation has already started (or is committed to starting) calling
`cancellable_source_cancelled()`.
Fix the race by resurrecting the `GCancellableSource` in
`cancellable_source_dispose()`, and signalling this using
`GCancellableSource.resurrected_during_cancellation`. Check for that
flag in `cancellable_source_cancelled()` and ignore cancellation if it’s
set.
The modifications to `resurrected_during_cancellation` and the
cancellable source’s refcount have to be done with `cancellable_mutex`
held so that they are seen atomically by each thread. This should not
affect performance too much, as it only happens during cancellation or
disposal of a `GCancellableSource`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1841
`g_assert()` is compiled out if `G_DISABLE_ASSERT` is defined, and
`g_assert_*()` gives more detailed failure messages.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Guard against NULL type being passed to
g_content_type_get_generic_icon_name() just as we protect
g_content_type_get_description(), otherwise it will cause a crash.
See https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/2482
Distributions will likely want to update GLib before
GObject-Introspection, to avoid circular dependencies.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
It was checking for the main SOCKS5 version number, rather than the
subnegotiation version number. The username/password authentication
protocol is described in https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1929.
Spotted and diagnosed by lovetox.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1986
Clang warns about string+int not appending to the string (to try and
catch newbie mistakes). While this test didn’t expect that to happen, it
was substituting the same constant string in multiple places for no good
reason. Switch to a single static const string, which should also fix
the compiler warning.
We have to define the string length since it’s used in various
stack-allocated array lengths. This is the easiest fix without more
major refactoring of the test to be less 90s.
Also make things a bit more static.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
When running under CI, each iteration takes so long that the total test
time is around 200s. If the CI runner is highly loaded, this can tip it
over the timeout of 360s.
Reduce the iteration counts unless running the test thoroughly.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1515
Currently the test waits for 1s before deciding that a refcount has been
leaked. But slow test machines might take longer than that between
scheduling different threads to sort out the refcount, so increase the
timeout.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1515
Previously, if the `--address` option was passed to `gdbus-tool`, it
would treat the connection as peer to peer. However, almost all the
commands `gdbus-tool` supports require a message bus (introspection,
calling a method with a destination, etc.). Only the `signal` command
would ever work on a peer-to-peer connection (if no `--dest` was
specified).
So change the `--address` option to generally create message bus
connections.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #938
bindfs is part of the setup process, so if it fails (as can happen if
the `fuse` kernel module has not been loaded — not much we can do about
that) then skip the test.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Add a note to the documentation of
`g_dbus_connection_signal_unsubscribe()`, `g_bus_unwatch_name()` and
`g_bus_unown_name()` warning about the need to continue iterating the
caller’s thread-default `GMainContext` until the
unsubscribe/unwatch/unown operation is complete.
See the previous few commits and #1515 for an idea of the insidious bugs
that can be caused by not iterating the `GMainContext` until
everything’s synchronised.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
When testing that signals are delivered to the correct thread, and are
delivered the correct number of times, call `EmitSignal()` on the
`gdbus-testserver` to trigger a signal emission, and listen for that.
Previously, the code listened for `NameOwnerChanged` and connected to
the bus again to trigger emission of that. The problem with that is that
other things happening on the bus (for example, an old
`gdbus-testserver` instance disconnecting) can cause `NameOwnerChanged`
signal emissions. Sometimes, the `gdbus-threading` test was failing the
`signal_count == 1` assertion due to receiving more than one
`NameOwnerChanged` emission.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1515
This is equivalent, but makes the loop exit conditions a little clearer,
since they’re actually in a `while` statement, rather than being a
`g_main_loop_quit()` call in a callback somewhere else in the file.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1515
As with the previous commit, don’t stop iterating the `context` in
`test_delivery_in_thread_func()` until the unsubscription from a signal
is complete, and hence there’s a guarantee that no callbacks are pending
in the `thread_context`.
This commit uses the `GDestroyNotify` for
`g_dbus_connection_signal_subscribe()` as a synchronisation message from
the D-Bus worker thread to the `test_delivery_in_thread_func()` thread
to notify of signal unsubscription.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1515
Previously, the code in `ensure_gdbus_testserver_up()` created a proxy
object and watched its `name-owner` to see when the
`com.example.TestService` name appeared.
This ended up subscribing to three signals (one of them for name
ownership, and two unused for properties of the proxy), and was racy. In
particular, the `name-owner` property could be set before all D-Bus
messages had been processed — it could have been derived from getting
the owner of the name, for example.
This left unprocessed messages hanging around in the `context`, but that
context was never iterated again, which essentially leaked the
references held by those messages. That included a reference to the
`GDBusConnection`.
The first part of the fix is to simplify the code to use
`g_bus_watch_name_on_connection()`, so there’s only one signal
subscription to worry about.
The second part of the fix is to use the `GDestroyNotify` callback for
the watch data to be notified of when all D-Bus traffic has been
processed and the signal unsubscription is complete. At this point, it’s
guaranteed that there are no idle callbacks pending in the
`GMainContext`, since the `GDestroyNotify` callback is the last one
invoked on the `GMainContext`.
Essentially, this commit uses the `GDestroyNotify` callback as a
synchronisation message between the D-Bus worker thread and the thread
calling `ensure_gdbus_testserver_up()`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1515
Iterate the given `context` while waiting, rather than sleeping. This
ensures that if the errant `GDBusConnection` ref is held by some pending
callback in the given `context`, it will actually be released.
Typically `context` is going to be the global default main context.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1515
This introduces no functional changes, but makes the code a little more
explicit about which connection and main context it’s operating on.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1515
`CallDestroyNotifyData` never uses that `GMainContext`, and holding a
ref to it could cause reference count cycles if the `GMainContext` is no
longer being iterated.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1515
The fix for bgo#651133 (commit 7e0f890e38) introduced a kind of weak
ref, which had to be thread-safe due to the fact that `GDBusProxy`
operates in one thread but can emit signals in another.
Since that commit, `GWeakRef` was added, which does the same thing. Drop
the custom code in favour of it; this should be functionally equivalent,
but using an RW lock rather than a basic mutex, which should reduce
contention.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
These checks used to be a precondition on test_threaded_singleton(); but
the earlier tests could leave the refcount of the shared connection in a
bad state, and this wouldn’t be caught until later.
Factor out the check, increase the iteration count to 1000 (so the check
blocks for up to 1s rather than 100ms), and call it in more places.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1515
g_assert() can be compiled out with G_DISABLE_ASSERT, which renders the
test rather useless.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1515
mtab_file_changed_id is not currently removed when finalizing, which
could potentially lead to segfaults. Let's remove the source when
finalizing to avoid this.
mtab_file_changed_id might be set on thread default context, but it is
always cleared on the global context because of usage of g_idle_add. This
can cause the emission of redundant "mounts-change" signals. This should
not cause any issues to the client application, but let's attach the idle
source to the thread-default context instead to avoid those races for sure.
The `get_mounts_timestamp()` function uses `mount_poller_time` when
`proc_mounts_watch_source` is set, but the `mount_poller_time` is not
initialized in the same time as `proc_mounts_watch_source`. This may
cause that zero, or some outdated value is returned. Let's initialize
`mount_poller_time` to prevent invalid values to be returned.
The Nautilus test suite often crashes with "GLib-FATAL-CRITICAL:
g_source_is_destroyed: assertion 'g_atomic_int_get (&source->ref_count)
> 0' failed" if it is started with "GIO_USE_VOLUME_MONITOR=unix". This
is because GUnixMountMonitor is simultaneously used from multiple
threads over GLocalFile and GVolumeMonitor APIs. Let's add guards for
proc_mounts_watch_source and mount_poller_time variables to prevent
those crashes.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/2030
There was a slight race in name ownership: a gap between calling
`RequestName` (or receiving its reply) and subscribing to `NameLost`. In
that gap, another process could request and receive the name, and this
one wouldn’t know about it.
Fix that by subscribing to `NameAcquired` and `NameLost` before calling
`RequestName`, and then unsubscribing again if the subscriptions turn
out not to be necessary (if the process can’t own the requested name).
Spotted and diagnosed by Miika Karanki.
One of the tests needs an additional iteration of the main loop in order
to free all the signal closures before it can complete its checks.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1517
This is a fairly large refactoring. The highlights are:
- Removing in-progress connections/addresses from GSocketClientAsyncConnectData:
This caused issues where multiple ConnectionAttempt's would step over eachother
and modify shared state causing bugs like accidentally bypassing a set proxy.
Fixes#1871Fixes#1989Fixes#1902
- Cancelling address enumeration on error/completion
- Queuing successful TCP connections and doing application layer work serially:
This is more in the spirit of Happy Eyeballs but it also greatly simplifies
the flow of connection handling so fewer tasks are happening in parallel
when they don't need to be.
The behavior also should more closely match that of g_socket_client_connect().
- Better track the state of address enumeration:
Previously we were over eager to treat enumeration finishing as an error.
Fixes#1872
See also #1982
- Add more detailed documentation and logging.
Closes#1995
There were some problems about where to install `gio-launch-desktop` to
support multiarch systems without circular dependencies. Simon McVittie
suggested that, actually, given the current set of platforms supported
by `GDesktopAppInfo` (they’re all POSIX), we could just use `sh`.
That simplifies things nicely. `gio-launch-desktop` can always be
resurrected (and the multiarch debate continued and resolved) if needed
in future.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1633
Some CI platforms invoke these tests with euid != 0 but with
capabilities. Detect whether we have Linux CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE or other
OSs' equivalents, and skip tests that rely on DAC permissions being
denied if we do have that privilege.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/2027
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/2028
There were a couple of custom paths which could end up being relative,
rather than absolute, due to not properly prefixing them with
`get_option('prefix')`.
The use of `join_paths()` here correctly drops all path components
before the final absolute path in the list of arguments. So if someone
configures GLib with an absolute path for `gio_module_dir`, that will be
used unprefixed; but if someone configures with a relative path, it will
be prefixed by `get_option('prefix)`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1919
The loops should continue iterating if the timeout is non-zero and we're
still waiting for the updated value. Otherwise, if things break, we'll
be waiting until we receive a value that never arrives.
"gio info" output doesn't contain any information about mount points, but
that information can be useful when debugging issues in facilities that
depend on knowing about mount points, such as the trash API.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Co-authored-by: Ondrej Holy <oholy@redhat.com>
Documentation says that g_file_peek_path() returns exactly the same
what g_file_get_path(), but this is not true. Apart from that the code
segfaults for some uris (e.g. for "trash:///"), it returns target-uri
for trash and recent schemes. This is unexpected and can lead to various
issues among others because the target-uri paths are not automatically
translated back to GDaemonFile as it is done with gvfsd-fuse paths.
g_file_get_path() returns NULL for trash and recent schemes, because
fuse paths are not provided for those schemes. So g_file_peek_path()
should return NULL as well. It is up to the concrete application to
use target-uri when appropriate.
This change was made as a part of commit 4808a957, however, neither
the commit message, neither the corresponding bug doesn't mention this
crucial change and doesn't give any clear reasoning. So let's revert
this.
The GMemoryMonitor interface uses G_DECLARE_INTERFACE, which provides a
typedef for the interface dummy type. We declare the same type inside
the global giotypes.h header, which leads to typedef redeclaration
warnings on toolchains that do not support—intentionally or not—the C11
feature of typedef redefinition.
While we do have a toolchain requirement for C11 typedef redefinitions
listed on our wiki, we also suspended it temporarily to allow users of
non-C11 compilers to work on newer versions of GLib; so, let's keep them
working a while longer.
Python tuple comparisons actually do what we want for comparing major
and minor versions, so tidy things up by using that.
This introduces no functional changes.
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.
Since we (optionally) require nanosecond precision for this
(utimes() is used on *nix), use SetFileTime(), which nominally
has 100ns granularity (actual filesystem might be coarser), instead of
g_utime (), which only has 1-second granularity.
Expand our private statbuf structure with st_mtim, st_atim and st_ctim
fields, which are structs that contain tv_sec and tv_nsec fields,
representing a timestamp with 1-second precision (same value as st_mtime, st_atime
and st_ctime) and a fraction of a second (in nanoseconds) that adds nanosecond
precision to the timestamp.
Because FILEETIME only has 100ns precision, this won't be very precise,
but it's better than nothing.
The private _g_win32_filetime_to_unix_time() function is modified
to also return the nanoseconds-remainder along with the seconds timestamp.
The timestamp struct that we're using is named gtimespec to ensure that
it doesn't clash with any existing timespec structs (MinGW-w64 has one,
MSVC doesn't).
This avoids a crash when starting Evolution, and fixes the
network-monitor and network-monitor-race test cases on my developer
workstation. (I assume the CI is not crashing due to lack of network
access there.)
Problem is that if a network already exists in the networks table,
g_hash_table_add() "destroys" (unrefs) it before adding the new one
(which we failed to ref before adding). This means we just accidentally
lost a ref. In practice, the network gets unexpectedly destroyed here
before returning.
Fixes#2020
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
Rather than using an array, which requires a lot of iteration over it to
check whether a particular network is present. Using a hash table only
requires iteration in the can_reach() case, where we need to match a
mask in the networks array, rather than equal it.
This should improve performance for large numbers of routes.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1925
Following on from #978, it seems that #1232 is another instance of the
same problem: signals emitted across threads can’t guarantee their user
data is kept alive between committing to emitting the signal and
actually invoking the callback in the relevant thread.
Fix that by using weak refs to the `GDBusObjectManagerClient` as the
user data for its signals, rather than no refs. Strong refs would create
an unbreakable reference count cycle.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1232
It’s possible for `g_bus_unwatch_name()` to be called after a
name-appeared or name-vanished handler has been scheduled to be called
in another thread, but before that callback is actually invoked. If so,
the subscribing thread will receive a callback after it’s called
`g_bus_unwatch_name()`, which is unexpected and could cause bugs.
Double-check `client->cancelled` in the target thread before actually
invoking the callback.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #604
This fixes the following build failure on FreeBSD:
```
In file included from ../gio/tests/win32-appinfo.c:24:
/usr/include/malloc.h:3:2: error: "<malloc.h> has been replaced by <stdlib.h>"
#error "<malloc.h> has been replaced by <stdlib.h>"
```
Hopefully it doesn’t break Windows.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
As with all D-Bus signal subscriptions, it’s possible for a signal
callback to be invoked in one thread (T1) while another thread (T2) is
unsubscribing from that signal. In this case, T1 is the main thread, and
T2 is the D-Bus connection worker thread which is unsubscribing all
signals as it’s in the process of closing.
Due to this possibility, all `user_data` for signal callbacks needs to
be referenced outside the lifecycle of the code which
subscribes/unsubscribes the signal. In other words, it’s not safe to
subscribe to a signal, store the subscription ID in a struct,
unsubscribe from the signal when freeing the struct, and dereference the
struct in the signal callback. The data passed to the signal callback
has to have its own strong reference.
Instead, it’s safe to subscribe to a signal and add a strong reference
to the struct, store the subscription ID in that struct, and unsubscribe
from the signal when the last external reference to your struct is
dropped. That unsubscription should break the refcount cycle between the
signal connection and the struct, and allow the struct to be completely
freed. Only with that approach is it safe to dereference the struct in
the signal callback, if there’s any possibility that the signal might be
unsubscribed from a separate thread.
The tests need specific additional main loop cycles to completely emit
the NameLost signal callback. Ideally they need refactoring, but this
will do (1000 test cycles passed).
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #978
This just removes a now-redundant intermediate array. This means that
the `SignalSubscriber` instances are now potentially freed a little
sooner, inside the locked segment, but they are already careful to only
call their `user_data_free_func` in the right thread. So that should not
deadlock.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #978
Instead of storing a copy of the `callback` and `user_data` from a
`SignalSubscriber` in a `SignalInstance` struct (which is the closure
for signal callback data as it’s sent from the D-Bus worker thread to
the thread which originally subscribed to a signal), store a strong
reference to the `SignalSubscriber` struct itself.
This keeps the `SignalSubscriber` alive until the emission is
complete, which ensures that the `user_data` is not freed prematurely.
It also slightly reduces the allocation size of `SignalInstance` (not
that it matters).
This is threadsafe because the fields in `SignalSubscriber` are all
immutable after construction.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #978
Tie the destruction of the `user_data` to the destruction of the
`SignalSubscriber` struct. This is tidier, and ensures that the fields
in `SignalSubscriber` are all immutable after being set, so the
structure can safely be used across threads without locking.
It doesn’t matter which thread we call `call_destroy_notify()` in, since
it always defers calling `user_data_free_func` to the user-provided
`GMainContext`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #978
The `SignalSubscriber` structs contain the callback and `user_data` of each
subscriber to a signal, along with the `guint id` token held by that
subscriber to identify their subscription. There are one or more
`SignalSubscriber` structs for a given signal match rule, which is
represented as a `SignalData` struct.
Previously, the `SignalSubscriber` structs were stored in a `GArray` in
the `SignalData` struct, to reduce the number of allocations needed
when subscribing to a signal.
However, this means that a `SignalSubscriber` struct cannot have a
lifetime which exceeds the `SignalData` which contains it. In order to
fix the race in #978, one thread needs to be able to unsubscribe from a
signal (destroying the `SignalData` struct) while zero or more other
threads are in the process of calling the callbacks from a previous
emission of that signal (using the callback and `user_data` from zero or
more `SignalSubscriber` structs). Multiple threads could be calling
callbacks because callbacks are invoked in the `GMainContext` which
originally made a subscription, and GDBus supports subscribing to a
signal from multiple threads. In that case, the callbacks are dispatched
to multiple threads.
In order to allow the `SignalSubscriber` structs to outlive the
`SignalData` which contained their old match rule, store them in a
`GPtrArray` in the `SignalData` struct, and refcount them individually.
This commit in itself should make no functional changes to how GDBus
works, but will allow following commits to do so.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #978
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.
1) When parsing the executable name out of the command line,
see if the executable is rundll32.exe. If that is the case,
use the DLL name from its first argument as the "executable"
(this is used only for matching, and Windows Registry matches
these programs by their DLLs, so this is correct; for running
the application GLib would still use the command line, with
rundll32).
2) If an app runs with rundll32, ensure that rundll32 arguments
can be safely quoted. Otherwise GLib will break them with its
protective quotation.
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".
Notification id (notify_id) is generated by notification daemon and
is valid only while daemon is running. If notification backend will
resend/reuse existing notification id (replace_id) after notification
daemon has been restarted it could replace wrong notification as same
id now can be used by different notification.
Previously, the documentation indicated that it was possible to call
g_tls_connection_handshake() after an initial handshake to trigger a
rehandshake, but only if TLS 1.2 or older is in use. However, there is
no documented way to ensure TLS 1.2 gets used. Nowadays, TLS 1.3 is used
by default.
I'm removing support for rehandshaking from glib-networking, as part of
a large refactoring where keeping rehandshakes would have entailed
significant additional complexity. So let's update the documentation to
indicate this is no longer ever supported. Applications should not
notice any difference.
Also, sync some previous handshake and rehandshake changes from
GTlsConnection to GDtlsConnection that were missed by mistake. I
try to remember to always update GDtlsConnection when touching
GTlsConnection documentation, but it's easy to forget.
We used XML to markup when we should have used our own brand of markdown
instead. This fixes the example being unreadable unless we trimmed the
XML away from it.
For the check "if (error != NULL)" to work as expected, the
create_server() (and create_server_full()) functions need to make
sure to return an error for all the possible failures, but this
might not always be the case.
Catch all the failures by testing for a non-NULL return value if there
was no error.
This shouldn't make any difference, because this code should only ever
be running in the main context that was thread-default at the time the
task was created, so it should already match the task's context. But
let's make sure, just in case.
They didn’t match the prototype generated by `gdbus-codegen`, which
meant that the FD list was being iterated incorrectly. Secondly, the
document ID list returned by the method was not NULL terminated, which
could lead to reading off the end of the list.
Somehow, neither of these bugs caused problems on Linux, but they did
cause problems on FreeBSD.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1983
Sadly, I forgot to update the documentation of
g_dtls_connection_handshake() last time I touched
g_tls_connection_handshake().
Let's also drop mention of STARTTLS, since that would use normal TLS,
not DTLS.
Reduce the number of iterations of things sent over a mock session bus
from different threads, to avoid the test spending quite so long
contested over the `gsignal.c` lock.
The test now takes about 10 seconds, according to `time`, rather than
around 100 or longer.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
By removing the cached global proxy in gdocumentportal.c, we can
re-enable the checks for proper shutdown of the session bus connection
in the dbus-appinfo.c test.
We can't use session_bus_down() in the test since gdocumentportal.c
holds a reference to the session bus connection, preventing it from
being finalised.
There are some GVfs locations (i.e. google-drive://, recent://), where
G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_STANDARD_NAME is something tottaly different than
G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_STANDARD_DISPLAY_NAME. Thus it would be nice to have
an easy way to show the display names. The only way currently to show
the display names is to use --attributes option, which is a bit
cumbersome. Let's add new --show-display-names option.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gvfs/issues/402
Those tests require Python, gobject-introspection and python-dbusmock
making them unsuitable to be run within the uninstalled test suite.
There are no restrictions of dependencies when it comes to installed
tests so use those to exercise GMemoryMonitor.
With debug enabled, g_dbus_connection_call_done() will throw a
g_warning() if the call failed (on purpose or not) while trying to the
serial of a non-existant reply.
(/builds/GNOME/glib/_build/gio/tests/gdbus-connection:26921): GLib-GIO-CRITICAL **: 10:10:16.311: g_dbus_message_get_reply_serial: assertion 'G_IS_DBUS_MESSAGE (message)' failed
This is a reimplementation of commit
4aba03562b from Will Thompson, but
conditional on the caller passing `--glib-min-version 2.64` to
`gdbus-codegen` to explicitly opt-in to the new behaviour.
From the commit message for that commit:
Previously, if a method was not annotated with org.gtk.GDBus.C.UnixFD
then the generated code would never contain GUnixFDList parameters, even
if the method has 'h' (file descriptor) parameters. However, in this
case, the generated code is essentially useless: the method cannot be
called or handled except in degenerate cases where the file descriptors
are missing or ignored.
Check the argument types for 'h', and if present, generate code as if
org.gtk.GDBus.C.UnixFD annotation were specified.
Includes a unit test too.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1726
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
We got a complaint here that trashing via the
portal deletes the target of a symlink, not the
symlink itself. It turns out that following the
symlink already happens on the glib side.
https://github.com/flatpak/xdg-desktop-portal/issues/412
Skipped tests use "77" as the return value, so return 77 instead of 0
when the static-link.py test gets skipped because of a missing
environment variable.
If the fuse module is loaded but /dev/fuse doesn't exist, it's likely
that we're running in a rootless container, or a badly setup one, and we
won't be able to use fuse, so skip this test.
This happened on my local system using podman running as a normal user,
but this apparently works as expected in our CI[1].
[1]: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/merge_requests/466
gtk-doc switched from DocBook to Markdown ages ago. There is no Markdown
equivalent for `<warning>`, so just drop it. It wasn’t adding anything
particularly valuable to the documentation.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1130
gtk-doc long since switched to Markdown, so we shouldn’t be emitting
DocBook `<link>` tags.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1130
Add a Python-based test wrapper for the `gdbus-codegen` executable,
similar to the existing tests for `glib-mkenums` and friends.
Add a few basic tests to begin with, but this doesn’t approach anywhere
near full coverage.
The next step is to move the existing Meson-based `gdbus-codegen` tests
from `gio/tests/meson.build` into the Python test suite.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1612
Previously, running `gdbus-codegen` with no arguments would exit
successfully with no output. While technically correct, that seems
unhelpful.
Require at least one interface file to be specified, so the user gets an
error message if they don’t specify any.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
It’s not particularly useful to put the gdbus-codegen version or the
name of the input file into the output from `gdbus-codegen`, and it
makes the output less reproducible. Drop it.
Also clarify the licensing.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1612
If not doing this it might happen that the cancelled signal is emitted
between reaching a reference count of 0 and finalizing the GSource, at
which point part of the GSource is already freed and calling any GSource
functions is dangerous.
Instead do this from the dispose function. At this time the GSource is
not partially freed yet and calling any GSource API is safe as long as
we ensure that we have a strong reference to the GSource before calling
any GSource API.
_kqsub_free assumes the caller has called _kqsub_cancel before calling
it. It checks if both 'deps' and 'fd' have been freed and aborts when
the condition is not met. Since the only caller of _kqsub_free is
g_kqueue_file_monitor_finalize, which does call _kqsub_cancel before
calling _kqsub_free, it seems to be correct for _kqsub_free to assert
values of these two members there.
However, it is possible for _kqsub_cancel to return early without
freeing any resource _kqsub_free expects to be freed. When the kevent
call fails, _kqsub_cancel does not free anything and _kqsub_free aborts
with assertion failure. This is an unexpected behavior, and it can be
fixed by always freeing resources in _kqsub_cancel.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1935
"gio mount" doesn't print anything in case of success, however "gio mount -d"
prints "Mounted [id] at [mount_path]", which is inconsistent. It might probably
make sense for fstab volumes, but "gio mount -d" now support UUIDs which are
heavily used for daemon mounts and I think that it is not wise to print
"/run/user/$UID/gvfs" mount paths. The mount path can be still found over
"gio mount -l". Let's remove this message to make it more consistent.
"gio mount" only allows mounting volumes using device files, but not using
UUIDs. Volume monitors for various GVfs locations usually supports just UUIDs.
It would be handy to support them also for testing purposes (because
"g_file_mount_enclosing_volume()" does something else than "g_volume_mount()"
in case of shares provided by GOA volume monitor for example). Let's update
"-d" option to support also UUIDs.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gvfs/issues/251
It’s possible that one VFS operation will happen from a worker thread at
the same time as another is happening from the main thread, in which
case the static buffer which getpwnam() uses will be overwritten.
There’s a chance this will corrupt the results that one of the threads
receives.
Fix that by using the thread-safe getpwnam_r() version, via the new
g_unix_get_passwd_entry() function.
Fix the indentation of the surrounding block while we’re there.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1687
Those tests seem to regularly fail because a timeout (which we're
measuring outside the function that times out) is too long, which can
happen when the system is busy.
Don't run those tests unless "thorough" tests are requested. This
disables those tests by default.
Bail out! GLib-GIO:ERROR:../gio/tests/socket.c:1167:test_timed_wait: assertion failed (poll_duration < 112000): (114254 < 112000)
Bail out! GLib-GIO:ERROR:../gio/tests/cancellable.c:167:on_mock_operation_ready: assertion failed (error == (g-io-error-quark, 19)): error is NULL
Now we're returning the file type again, we need to mask it out to
compare with the mode. We can also check that the statbuf said the file
is a regular file.
Related: #1934
This reverts commit bfdc5fc4fc.
This changes the semantics of G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_ID_UNIX_MODE, and we've
already found one user of the previous semantics (ostree).
Closes#1934
This function has numerous undocumented limitations. In particular, it
is not possible to ensure this function actually does anything. Document
these problems.
For many years after SSL 3.0 support was removed, we used this function
to indicate that we should perform protocol version fallback to the
lowest-supported protocol version, to workaround protocol version
intolerance. Nowadays this is no longer needed, and support has been
removed from glib-networking, so update the documentation.
GTlsConnection:rehandshake-mode has been deprecated since 2.60 using
the G_PARAM_DEPRECATED flag, but I forgot to add the right annotation to
the documentation. Oops.
The associated getter/setter functions were both deprecated properly.
This is the analogue of commit 7c4e6e9fbe, but applied to the
`GDBusMessage` parser, which does its own top-level parsing of the
variant format in D-Bus messages.
Previously, this code allowed arbitrary recursion of variant containers,
which could lead to a stack overflow. Now, that recursion is limited to
64 levels, as per the D-Bus specification:
https://dbus.freedesktop.org/doc/dbus-specification.html#message-protocol-marshaling-signature
This includes a new unit test.
oss-fuzz#14870
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
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>
Otherwise we'll never test the EXTERNAL-only mode, because that relies
on testing the private macros
G_CREDENTIALS_UNIX_CREDENTIALS_MESSAGE_SUPPORTED and
G_CREDENTIALS_SOCKET_GET_CREDENTIALS_SUPPORTED.
Fixes: 9f962ebe "Add a test for GDBusServer authentication"
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This bypasses any issues we might have with containers where IPv6 is
returned by name resolution (particularly since GNOME/glib!616) but
doesn't necessarily actually work.
This comes at a minor test-coverage cost: we don't test GDBusServer's
default behaviour when told to listen on "tcp:" or "nonce-tcp:", and
on systems where IPv6 is available, we don't test it. If we want to
do those, we should perhaps do them in separate tests, and disable
those tests when binding to ::1 doesn't work.
Mitigates: GNOME/glib#1912
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Whitelist a safe set of characters for use in header guards instead of
maintaining a (growing) blacklist.
The whitelist is intentionally short since reading up on all
peculiarities of the C and C++ standard for identifiers is not my idea
of fun. :)
Fixes#1379
g_assert() is compiled out by `G_DISABLE_ASSERT` and doesn’t give such
useful messages on failure.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
No need to clear it to NULL before every time it’s used, since we assert
that it’s never set.
This introduces no functional changes.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This avoids failure to listen on the given address on non-Linux Unix
kernels, where abstract sockets do not exist and so unix:tmpdir is
equivalent to unix:dir.
To avoid bugs like this one recurring, run most of these tests using
the unix:dir address type, where Linux is equivalent to other Unix
kernels; just do one unix:tmpdir test, to check that we still
interoperate with libdbus when using abstract sockets on Linux.
Resolves: GNOME/glib#1920
Fixes: 9f962ebe "Add a test for GDBusServer authentication"
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Previously, we used unix:tmpdir, except in tests that verify that a
particular address type works (notably unix:dir). Now we use unix:dir
most of the time, and unix:tmpdir gets its own test instead.
This helps to ensure that the tests continue to work on non-Linux Unix
kernels, where abstract sockets do not exist and so unix:tmpdir is
equivalent to unix:dir, even in the common case where the developer has
only tried the test on Linux.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Otherwise, since GNOME/glib!1193, the listening socket won't be deleted,
and if we are not using abstract sockets (for example on *BSD), g_rmdir
will fail with ENOTEMPTY.
Fixes: 8e32b8e8 "gdbusserver: Delete socket and nonce file when stopping server"
Resolves: GNOME/glib#1921
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
The `on_run()` function could be executed in any worker thread from the
`GThreadedSocketListener`, but didn’t previously hold a strong reference
to the `GDBusServer`, which meant the server could be finalised in
another thread while `on_run()` was still running.
This was not ideal.
Hold a strong reference to the `GDBusServer` while the socket listener
is listening, i.e. between every paired call to `g_dbus_server_start()`
and `g_dbus_server_stop()`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1318
Rather than when finalising it. They should be automatically recreated
if the server is re-started.
This is important for ensuring that all externally visible behaviour of
the `GDBusServer` is synchronised with calls to
g_dbus_server_{start,stop}(). Finalisation of the server object could
happen an arbitrarily long time after g_dbus_server_stop() is called.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1318
So that the tests all end up using separate `.dbus-keyring` directories,
and hence not racing to create and acquire lock files, use
`G_TEST_OPTION_ISOLATE_DIRS` to ensure they all run in separate
disposable directories.
This has the added benefit of meaning they don’t touch the developer’s
actual `$HOME` directory.
This reduces the false-failure rate of `gdbus-peer` by a factor of 9 for
me on my local machine.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1912
There’s actually no need for them to be global or reused between unit
tests, so move them inside the test functions.
This is one step towards eliminating shared state between the unit
tests.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1912
If the directory is overridden, for example when running tests, the
parent directory of `.dbus-keyrings` (i.e. the fake `$HOME` directory)
might not exist. Create it automatically.
This should realistically not have an effect on non-test code.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1912
These can be hit in the tests (if multiple tests run in parallel are
racing for `~/.dbus-keyrings/org_gtk_gdbus_general.lock` for a prolonged
period) and will cause spurious test failures due to the use of
`G_DEBUG=fatal-warnings`.
Instead, allow the error messages to be inspected programmatically.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1912
In particular, if libbdus is available, we test interoperability with
a libdbus client: see GNOME/glib#1831. Because that issue describes a
race condition, we do each test repeatedly to try to hit the failing
case.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Conceptually, a D-Bus server is really trying to determine the credentials
of (the process that initiated) a connection, not the credentials that
the process had when it sent a particular message. Ideally, it does
this with a getsockopt()-style API that queries the credentials of the
connection's initiator without requiring any particular cooperation from
that process, avoiding a class of possible failures.
The leading '\0' in the D-Bus protocol is primarily a workaround
for platforms where the message-based credentials-passing API is
strictly better than the getsockopt()-style API (for example, on
FreeBSD, SCM_CREDS includes a process ID but getpeereid() does not),
or where the getsockopt()-style API does not exist at all. As a result
libdbus, the reference implementation of D-Bus, does not implement
Linux SCM_CREDENTIALS at all - it has no reason to do so, because the
SO_PEERCRED socket option is equally informative.
This change makes GDBusServer on Linux more closely match the behaviour
of libdbus.
In particular, GNOME/glib#1831 indicates that when a libdbus client
connects to a GDBus server, recvmsg() sometimes yields a SCM_CREDENTIALS
message with cmsg_data={pid=0, uid=65534, gid=65534}. I think this is
most likely a race condition in the early steps to connect:
client server
connect
accept
send '\0' <- race -> set SO_PASSCRED = 1
receive '\0'
If the server wins the race:
client server
connect
accept
set SO_PASSCRED = 1
send '\0'
receive '\0'
then everything is fine. However, if the client wins the race:
client server
connect
accept
send '\0'
set SO_PASSCRED = 1
receive '\0'
then the kernel does not record credentials for the message containing
'\0' (because SO_PASSCRED was 0 at the time). However, by the time the
server receives the message, the kernel knows that credentials are
desired. I would have expected the kernel to omit the credentials header
in this case, but it seems that instead, it synthesizes a credentials
structure with a dummy process ID 0, a dummy uid derived from
/proc/sys/kernel/overflowuid and a dummy gid derived from
/proc/sys/kernel/overflowgid.
In an unconfigured GDBusServer, hitting this race condition results in
falling back to DBUS_COOKIE_SHA1 authentication, which in practice usually
succeeds in authenticating the peer's uid. However, we encourage AF_UNIX
servers on Unix platforms to allow only EXTERNAL authentication as a
security-hardening measure, because DBUS_COOKIE_SHA1 relies on a series
of assumptions including a cryptographically strong PRNG and a shared
home directory with no write access by others, which are not necessarily
true for all operating systems and users. EXTERNAL authentication will
fail if the server cannot determine the client's credentials.
In particular, this caused a regression when CVE-2019-14822 was fixed
in ibus, which appears to be resolved by this commit. Qt clients
(which use libdbus) intermittently fail to connect to an ibus server
(which uses GDBusServer), because ibus no longer allows DBUS_COOKIE_SHA1
authentication or non-matching uids.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1831
On Linux, if getsockopt SO_PEERCRED is used on a TCP socket, one
might expect it to fail with an appropriate error like ENOTSUP or
EPROTONOSUPPORT. However, it appears that in fact it succeeds, but
yields a credentials structure with pid 0, uid -1 and gid -1. These
are not real process, user and group IDs that can be allocated to a
real process (pid 0 needs to be reserved to give kill(0) its documented
special semantics, and similarly uid and gid -1 need to be reserved for
setresuid() and setresgid()) so it is not meaningful to signal them to
high-level API users.
An API user with Linux-specific knowledge can still inspect these fields
via g_credentials_get_native() if desired.
Similarly, if SO_PASSCRED is used to receive a SCM_CREDENTIALS message
on a receiving Unix socket, but the sending socket had not enabled
SO_PASSCRED at the time that the message was sent, it is possible
for it to succeed but yield a credentials structure with pid 0, uid
/proc/sys/kernel/overflowuid and gid /proc/sys/kernel/overflowgid. Even
if we were to read those pseudo-files, we cannot distinguish between
the overflow IDs and a real process that legitimately has the same IDs
(typically they are set to 'nobody' and 'nogroup', which can be used
by a real process), so we detect this situation by noticing that
pid == 0, and to save syscalls we do not read the overflow IDs from
/proc at all.
This results in a small API change: g_credentials_is_same_user() now
returns FALSE if we compare two credentials structures that are both
invalid. This seems like reasonable, conservative behaviour: if we cannot
prove that they are the same user, we should assume they are not.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Otherwise we’ll end up using the host’s `objcopy`, which will output
object files in the wrong format.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1916
This reverts commit 4aba03562b, preserving
the new tests but adjusting them to assert that the old behaviour is
restored.
As expected, there were a few projects which broke because of this.
Unfortunately, in one case the breakage crosses a project boundary:
sysprof ships D-Bus introspection XML, which is consumed by mutter and
passed through gdbus-codegen.
Since sysprof cannot add this annotation without breaking its existing
users, a warning is also not appropriate.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/jhbuild/issues/41https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/sysprof/issues/17https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1726
Previously we were keeping a pointer to the `GFileMonitor` in a
`GFileMonitorSource` instance, but since we weren’t keeping a strong
reference, that `GFileMonitor` instance could be finalised from another
thread at any point while the source was referring to it. Not good.
Use a weak reference, and upgrade it to a strong reference whenever the
`GFileMonitorSource` is referring to the file monitor.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1903
It’s not enough to unref the monitor, since the GLib worker thread might
still hold a reference to it.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1903
`DesktopFileDir` pointers are passed around between threads: they are
initially created on the main thread, but a pointer to them is passed to
the GLib worker thread in the file monitor callback
(`desktop_file_dir_changed()`).
Accordingly, the `DesktopFileDir` objects either have to be
(1) immutable;
(2) reference counted; or
(3) synchronised between the two threads
to avoid one of them being used by one thread after being freed on
another. Option (1) changed with commit 99bc33b6 and is no longer an
option. Option (3) would mean blocking the main thread on the worker
thread, which would be hard to achieve and is against the point of
having a worker thread. So that leaves option (2), which is implemented
here.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1903
When the _g_dbus_worker_flush_sync() schedules the 'data' and releases
the worker->write_lock, it is possible for the GDBus worker thread thread
to finish the D-Bus call and acquire the worker->write_lock before
the _g_dbus_worker_flush_sync() re-acquires it in the if (data != NULL) body.
When that happens, the ostream_flush_cb() increases the worker->write_num_messages_flushed
and then releases the worker->write_lock. The write lock is reacquired by
the _g_dbus_worker_flush_sync(), which sees that the while condition is satisfied,
thus it doesn't enter the loop body and immediately clears the data members and
frees the data structure itself. The ostream_flush_cb() is still ongoing, possibly
inside flush_data_list_complete(), where it accesses the FlushData, which can be
in any stage of being freed.
Instead, add an explicit boolean flag indicating when the flush is truly finished.
Closes#1896
`-1` isn’t a valid member of the enum, so cast to `int` first. This
fixes a compiler warning on Android.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Mounts are currently completed only if the prefix looks like scheme,
however, this doesn't work well if the mounts have also path component.
Let's always include them to fix this issue. The mounts are cached by the
volume monitors, so it should not significantly affect the performance.
Currently, "gio mount google-drive<tab>" isn't completed even though
that volume exists for google-drive://oholy@redhat.com/. Let's use
"gio mount -li" output to complete also activation roots of volumes.
Currently, "gio list file:///h<tab>" doesn't complete "file:///home"
because the result of "dirname file:///h" is not "file:///" but "file:/",
which breaks the consequent logic. Let's subtract basename from the
path in order to workaround this issue.
Fixes build failure:
../gio/gunixmounts.c: In function ‘_g_get_unix_mounts’:
../gio/gunixmounts.c:742:53: error: ‘struct mnttab’ has no member named ‘mnt_opts’; did you mean ‘mnt_mntopts’?
742 | mntent.mnt_opts,
| ^~~~~~~~
| mnt_mntopts
Signed-off-by: Alan Coopersmith <alan.coopersmith@oracle.com>
g_date_time_add_seconds() and g_date_time_add_full() use floating-point
seconds, which can result in the value varying slightly from what's
actually on disk. This causes intermittent test failures in
gio/tests/g-file-info.c on Debian i386, where we set a file's mtime
to be 50µs later, then read it back and sometimes find that it is only
49µs later than the previous value.
I've only seen this happen on i386, which means it might be to do with
different floating-point rounding when a value is stored in the 80-bit
legacy floating point registers rather than in double precision.
g_date_time_add() takes a GTimeSpan, which is in microseconds;
conveniently, that's exactly what we get from the GFileInfo.
Bug-Debian: https://bugs.debian.org/941547
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
If we're cross-compiling, the installed-tests are useful even if we
can't run them on the build machine: we can copy them to the host
machine (possibly via a distro package like Debian's libglib2.0-tests)
and run them there.
While I'm changing the build-tests condition anyway, deduplicate it.
Based on a patch by Helmut Grohne.
Bug-Debian: https://bugs.debian.org/941509
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Skip it on systems which don’t support it, rather than compiling it out.
That gives us more information from test runs about which tests are
being run on which architectures.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
As with the previous commit, `st_mode` contains both the file type
(regular file, directory, symlink, special, etc.) and the file mode. For
`G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_ID_UNIX_MODE`, we only want the file mode — so mask
`st_mode` with `~S_IFMT`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
chmod() technically only accepts file modes, not the file type and mode
as returned by stat(). Filter by `S_IFMT` to avoid sending the file
type (regular file, directory, symbolic link, etc.).
In practice, chmod() ignores anything except the file mode, but we might
as well comply with the specification.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
`GFile` always checks whether these vfuncs are `NULL` before calling
them, so document that it’s safe for implementations of `GFile` to not
implement them.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
The caller assumes that an unimplemented vfunc means that copying is
unsupported (and falls back to its internal copy implementation), so
there’s no point in implementing the vfunc just to unconditionally
return `G_IO_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Rather than defining a vfunc which only ever returns
`G_IO_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED`, just don’t define the vfunc at all. The
caller in `GFile` interprets this as symlinks not being supported — so
we get the same behaviour, but without spending a vfunc call on it.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
The string is already translated in `GLocalFile`, so this doesn’t
introduce a new translatable string.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
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
If a copy operation is started with `G_FILE_COPY_TARGET_DEFAULT_PERMS`,
don’t create the destination file as private. Instead, create it with
the process’ current umask (i.e. ‘default permissions’).
This is a partial re-work of commit d8f8f4d637, with
input from Ondrej Holy.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #174
The actual parameter name in g_file_attribute_matcher_new()
attributes, so change the param reference to match. This way,
doc tools can create a proper link.
g_file_info_set_modification_time() and
g_file_info_set_modification_date_time() set the
G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_TIME_MODIFIED_USEC attribute in addition to
G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_TIME_MODIFIED, so microsecond precision is available
when provided by the caller, so mention both attributes in the docs.
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
When compiling GLib with `-Wsign-conversion`, we get various warnings
about the atomic calls. A lot of these were fixed by
3ad375a629, but some remain. Fix them by
adding appropriate casts at the call sites.
Note that `g_atomic_int_{and,or,xor}()` actually all operate on `guint`s
rather than `gint`s (which is what the rest of the `g_atomic_int_*()`
functions operate on). I can’t find any written reasoning for this, but
assume that it’s because signedness is irrelevant when you’re using an
integer as a bit field. It’s unfortunate that they’re named a
`g_atomic_int_*()` rather than `g_atomic_uint_*()` functions.
Tested by compiling GLib as:
```
CFLAGS=-Wsign-conversion jhbuild make -ac |& grep atomic
```
I’m not going to add `-Wsign-conversion` to the set of default warnings
for building GLib, because it mostly produces false positives throughout
the rest of GLib.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1565
They provide more detailed failure messages, and aren’t compiled out
when building with `G_DISABLE_ASSERT`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
When future porting deprecated code to use
g_file_info_get_modification_date_time() we risk a number of breakages
because the current implementation also requires the additional use of
G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_TIME_MODIFIED_USEC. This handles that situation gracefully
and returns a GDateTime with less precision.
Applications that want the additional precision, are already using the
additional attribute.
(Minor tweaks by Philip Withnall.)
This should make the code a bit easier to reason about, and squash some
static analysis warnings.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1767
The macros for the probes confuse the static analyser, and are often
called with arguments which the analyser things shouldn’t be used any
more (for example, the address of a block of memory which has just been
freed).
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1767
These squash various warnings from `scan-build`. None of them are
legitimate bugs, but some of them do improve code readability a bit.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1767
Previously, if a method was not annotated with org.gtk.GDBus.C.UnixFD
then the generated code would never contain GUnixFDList parameters, even
if the method has 'h' (file descriptor) parameters. However, in this
case, the generated code is essentially useless: the method cannot be
called or handled except in degenerate cases where the file descriptors
are missing or ignored.
Check the argument types for 'h', and if present, generate code as if
org.gtk.GDBus.C.UnixFD annotation were specified.
This change will break any existing code which refers to the (useless)
wrappers for such methods. The workaround for such code is to add the
org.gtk.GDBus.C.UnixFD annotation, which will cause the same generated
code to be emitted before and after this change.
If this is found to cause widespread problems, we can explore a
different approach (perhaps emitting a warning from the code generator,
or annotating the symbols as deprecated).
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1726
Instead of letting each directory to find its way to link with libdl,
it is easier to put the check in the top level, so its result can be
used by all directories.
It is a follow-up of https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/merge_requests/810.
The header file was installed when building using autotools, but was
inadvertently omitted in the meson targets.
Luckily, ABI is not impacted, since gnativesocketaddress.c was always
compiled and linked into libgio.
Fixes: #1854
The gobject introspection comments have a reference to an incorrect
class: they have, as 'self', the GSubprocess class instead of
GSubprocessLauncher.
This patch fixes this.
g_settings_backend_watch() uses a weak notify for keeping track of
the target. There's an explanation why this is supposed to be safe but
that explanation is wrong.
The following could happen before:
1. We have the target stored in the watch list
2. The last reference to the target is dropped in thread A and we end up
in g_settings_backend_watch_weak_notify() right before the mutex
3. g_settings_backend_dispatch_signal() is called from another thread B
and gets the mutex before 2.
4. g_weak_ref_init() is called on the target from thread B, which at
this point has a reference count of exactly one (see g_object_unref()
where it calls the weak notifies)
5. Thread A continues at 3. and drops the last reference and destroys
the object. Now the GWeakRef from 4. points to a destroyed object. Note
that GWeakRefs would be cleared before the weak notifies are called
6. At some later point another thread g_weak_ref_get() is called by
g_settings_backend_invoke_closure() and accesses an already destroyed
object with refcount 0 from the GWeakRef created in 4. by thread B (or
worse, already freed memory that was reused).
Solve this by actually storing a GWeakRef of the target in the watch
list and only access the target behind it via the GWeakRef API, and then
pass a strong reference to the notification dispatch code.
The weak notify is only used to remove the (potentially with empty
GWeakRef) target from the list of watches and the only place that
compares the target by pointer instead of going through the GWeakRef
API.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1870
If we fail to create a GWinhttpFile for a URI (for example, because it’s
an invalid URI or is badly encoded), don’t just return NULL. Instead,
fall back to the wrapped VFS which might be able to handle it instead.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1819
It can return NULL if the URI was badly encoded or couldn’t be handled
by Windows’ API.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1819
It cannot return a NULL value, as none of its callers have error
handlng. Add an assertion to check the values returned by the VFS
implementations.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1819
This fixes use of `GIO_USE_VOLUME_MONITOR=help`, and simplifies the
code. The reason this wasn’t used already seems to just be because it
was missed when `_g_io_module_get_default_type()` was introduced in
2013. The previous `get_default_native_class()` code in
`gunionvolumemonitor.c` was introduced in 2007.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #1881
Deletes the skip annotation from g_cancellable_source_new(). This was
originally added because GSource wasn't introspectable, but this is no
longer an issue as G_TYPE_SOURCE was added in 2.30.
Fixes: #1877
When resetting a key in the delayed settings backend,
g_settings_backend_changed() was not called to notify the backend of
the change.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1309
This fix build error for projects that use gnome.compile_resources()
when glib is built as a subproject and not installed on the build
machine.
Note that this is not working for cross compilation cases, because it
would require to compile everything twice (for host and build machines).
A better solution would be to rewrite those tools in python. See #1859.
They use the deprecated GTimeVal type, which is not year 2038 safe, so
have to be deprecated.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1438
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
The event source used to handle inactivity_timeout doesn't hold a
reference on the application. Therefore, it is possible for callback
function of the event source to run after the application has been
freed, leading to use-after-free problem. To avoid the problem, we
should remove the event source before the application is freed.
This should fix SIGBUS crash of gio/tests/gapplication on FreeBSD.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1846#note_566550
These are here to prevent linker errors, since `gcontenttype.[ch]`
aren’t compiled on Windows or macOS.
The implementations are stubs to be filled out by someone who knows each
platform, at some point in the future.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1791
We're using the `install` argument for configure_file() all over the
place.
The support for an `install` argument for configure_file() was added in
Meson 0.50, but we haven't bumped the minimum version of Meson we
require, yet; which means we're getting compatibility warnings when
using recent versions of Meson, and undefined behaviour when using older
versions.
The configure_file() object defaults to `install: false`, unless an
install directory is used. This means that all instances of an `install`
argument with an explicit `true` or `false` value can be removed,
whereas all instances of `install` with a value determined from a
configuration option must be turned into an explicit conditional.
The comment previously said ‘never %NULL’, but it wasn’t clear whether
this meant `(not nullable)` or `(not optional)`. From looking at the
code, it means `(not optional)`.
Clarify things by removing the prose. The annotations themselves should
be clear and explicit enough.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Closes: #1836
We want to use the keyfile backend in sandboxes,
but we want to avoid people losing their existing
settings that are stored in dconf. Flatpak does
a migration from dconf to keyfile, but only if
the app explictly requests it.
From an app perspective, there are two steps to
the dconf->keyfile migration:
1. Request that flatpak do the migration, by adding
the migrate-path key to the metadata
2. Stop adding the 'dconf hole' to the sandbox
To keep us from switching to the keyfile backend
prematurely, look at whether the app has stopped
requesting a 'dconf hole' in the sandbox.
The plugin modules in these tests get statically linked with a separate
copy of GLib so they end up calling vfuncs in their own copy of GLib.
Fixes#1648
v7, based on a patch by mrgard (GNOME/glib#1635)
make w32_adapter_ipv4_addr() C90-compliant
check for ERROR_BUFFER_OVERFLOW when calling GetAdaptersAddresses()
code-style fixes
indentation fixes
use g_try_(re)alloc and g_free
style suggestions by pwithnall
drop uni_count variable
cap maximum allowed interface name string length according to windows documentation
Fixes: #1635
We need to enable building the dirent and gnulib sources for clang-cl,
as we are still using the Microsoft-style headers and lib's and CRT.
We need to also do this for the following, for similar reasoning:
-Symbol export (via __declspec(dllexport))
-Dependency discovery without pkg-config files
-long long and ssize_t detection
We do, however, enable the autoptr tests for clang-cl builds. Note that
at this point real MSVC builds are still better supported than clang-cl
builds, and it will likely remain so for at least the near future,
alhtough real MSVC builds of the GTK stack are consumable and are usable
by clang-cl.
In _g_object_unref_and_wait_weak_notify() we take a weak reference and
then call g_object_unref() in an idle callback, which may look like
we're dropping a strong reference without having one. So change the
comment to make it more clear that the reference being dropped is held
by the caller.
Now that we're not calling g_object_run_dispose() indirectly in
g_test_dbus_down() (see commit "Revert "gtestdbus: Properly close server
connections""), the test gdbus-connection-loss is failing with the
message "Bail out! GLib-GIO-FATAL-WARNING: Weak notify timeout, object
ref_count=1". This is because we're holding a reference to the singleton
connection object while calling session_bus_down() in the test's main().
So then we end up waiting for 30 seconds in
_g_object_unref_and_wait_weak_notify() for the GWeakNotify to be
triggered, which never happens.
The fix is to unref the connection before calling session_bus_down().
This is consistent with how other tests work, and is safe because the
only method called on the connection has already errored out, as
asserted by the test.
This reverts commit c37cd19fee.
Now that we've reverted the commit "gtestdbus: Properly close server
connections", g_test_dbus_down() no longer returns early and we no
longer need this workaround. Since the gdbus-names test seems to
properly unref its GDBusConnection objects it's not clear to me why it
needed the sleep to succeed. However even at the time the failure wasn't
reproducible according to this comment[1] so it's probably not worth
spending more effort trying to reproduce it now.
[1] https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/787#note_214235
This reverts commit baf92d09d6.
Closes#787
According to the original commit, this change was made because otherwise
g_test_dbus_down() following a g_test_dbus_stop() hangs until it times
out. The timeout being referred to is the 30 seconds which are waited by
_g_object_unref_and_wait_weak_notify() for the GWeakNotify to be
triggered when the last strong reference to the singleton
GDBusConnection object is dropped. But the patch was not correct and the
leak should have instead been fixed by having the last strong reference
holder drop their reference on the GDBusConnection before calling
g_test_dbus_down(). Timing out after 30 seconds is the desired behavior
in the case where someone holds a reference to the singleton for that
entire period.
There are a few problems with this patch. First, as pointed out here[1],
calling g_object_run_dispose() in the idle callback means we are causing
the GWeakNotify to trigger ~immediately rather than waiting 30 seconds
to give another owner a chance to unref. Second, since someone else may
still hold a reference on the object being disposed, they may call
methods on it after it's been disposed which can seg fault as documented
here[2] and as I also saw recently in another project.
It's unclear what the original leak being fixed was, but many have been
fixed between 2013 and now. I ran all the unit tests under valgrind, and
some do fail (some consistently and some intermittently) but none of the
failures seem to only happen after this reversion commit. I also
couldn't find anywhere in the valgrind output where any GDBusConnection
objects are definitely being lost.
[1] https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/787#note_214226
[2] https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/787#note_214237
For several years now (I haven’t looked up the exact date),
`gnome-terminal` has preferred being called as `gnome-terminal
--terminal-args -- /some/other/program --its-args` rather than as
`gnome-terminal --terminal-args -x /some/other/program --its-args`.
Since 2017 it has warned about uses of `-x` (see
ad4edbd118).
So we should change our calling convention for it.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
There seems to be no reason to do so, and since the `appinfo` test was
ported to use `G_TEST_OPTION_ISOLATE_DIRS`, it has been causing
coredumps to accumulate. `gnome-terminal` was chosen as the terminal,
but it couldn’t find its GSettings schemas due to all the XDG
environment variables being cleared to `/dev/null` by
`G_TEST_OPTION_ISOLATE_DIRS`.
In order to keep using `gnome-terminal` as a subprocess in the tests,
we’d need to explicitly set up its environment so it can load the right
GSettings schemas. That’s a lot of work for not much gain.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #436
This commit changes a comment in _g_dbus_worker_do_read_cb() to be
slightly more useful. At least in my experience debugging an
intermittent unit test failure in another project, this failure
condition occurred because although g_test_dbus_down() ensures that the
session GDBusConnection has exit-on-close set to FALSE before killing
its dbus-daemon, there was still a GDBusConnection on the system bus
which hit this failed read code path, because we had
DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS set to the address of the #GTestDBus daemon, to
appease libudisks.
Also, make a few other minor improvements to the docs.
On Visual Studio, Meson builds modules as xxxx.dll, not libxxxx.dll when
xxxx is specified as the name for the shared_module() build directive.
This means that in the test programs if we expect for libxxxx for the
module name, the test will fail as there is no libxxxx.dll but there is
xxxx.dll. This makes the test program look for the module files
correctly.
This makes use of the string we now have from glib-private.h in the
last commit so that setlocale() sets the default system locale
correctly and therefore show the translated messages properly.
Fixes issue #1169.
Using the generic marshaller has drawbacks beyond performance. One such
drawback is that it breaks the stack unwinding from the Linux kernel due
to having unsufficient data to walk past ffi_call_unixt64. That means that
performance profiling by application developers looks grouped among
seemingly unrelated code paths.
While we can't fix the kernel unwinding here, we can provide proper
c_marshallers and va_marshallers for objects within Gio so that
performance profiling of applications is more reliable.
Related to GNOME/Initiatives#10
If c_marshaller is provided during g_signal_new() registration, the
automatic va_marshaller will not be set. If we leave the c_marshaller as
NULL in the simple cases, both a c_marshaller and va_marshaller will be
set for us.
This is particularly helpful when dealing with stack traces from Linux
perf, which often cannot unwind the stack beyond the ffi_call_unix64
stack-frame on x86_64.
Related to GNOME/Initiatives#10
This ensures that D-Bus connections established with unix:dir and
unix:path addresses actually work properly. Previously, we only tested
unix:tmpdir and TCP addresses.
This is not going to have much any effect currently since stop() just
disconnects a signal handler (that is going to be disconnected in
finalize anyway) and stops the socket service (that is going to be
destroyed in finalize), but it makes sense to do here for robustness.
unix:dir= addresses are exactly the same as unix:tmpdir= addresses,
already supported by GDBus, except they forbid use of abstract sockets.
This is convenient for situations where abstract sockets are
impermissible, such as when a D-Bus client inside a network namespace
needs to connect to a server running in a different network namespace.
An abstract socket cannot be shared between two processes in different
network namespaces.
Applications could use unix:path= addresses instead, so this is only a
convenience, but there's no good reason not to support unix:dir=.
Currently it is not supported simply because unix:dir= is a relatively
recent addition to the D-Bus spec.
It's somewhat unrealistic to use a GDBusServer without a
GDBusAuthObserver, because most D-Bus servers want to be like the
standard session bus (the owning user can connect) rather than being
like the standard system bus (all users can connect, the server is a
security boundary, and many bugs are security vulnerabilities).
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This is simpler and more robust than DBUS_COOKIE_SHA1, which relies
on assumptions about random numbers and a secure home directory.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Authentication is about proving who I am; authorization is about
whether, given the knowledge of who I am, I am allowed to do something.
GDBusServer and GDBusConnection carry out authentication automatically,
but rely on the library user to carry out authorization.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This is useful information for implementors of portable software to know
whether they can rely on credentials-passing.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Previously, its tests were being run in the build directory, which is
fine (it should always be writable). If multiple tests were run in
parallel, for example with Meson’s `--repeat` option, their test files
would collide.
Fix that by running each test instance in a separate subdirectory of
`/tmp`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1634
It is expected that `g_file_move()` moves symlink file itself, not its
target. Unfortunately, copy and delete fallback passes `GFileCopyFlags`
and don't explicitly use `G_FILE_COPY_NOFOLLOW_SYMLINKS`. This may cause
that symlink target is copied and symlink itself is removed. Let's
explicitly pass `G_FILE_COPY_NOFOLLOW_SYMLINKS` to the copy operation to
prevent this unexpected behavior.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/986
The `G_FILE_COPY_NOFOLLOW_SYMLINKS` flag doesn't make sense for move operation,
neither local implementation doesn't handle this flag in any way. Therefore
this paragraph should be removed from the docs (it was probably copy&pasted
from `g_file_copy()` docs by mistake).
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/986
Add a case for when the IPv6 result comes back negative and the IPv4
result is significantly delayed. This is exactly the case that causes
the bug addressed by GNOME/glib!865
The "happy eyeballs" RFC states that on receiving a negative response
for an IPv6 address lookup, we should wait for the IPv4 lookup to
complete and use any results we get from there.
The current code was not doing that: it was rather setting a timeout for
failing the resolution entirely. In scenarios where the IPv4 response
comes more than 50ms after the IPv6 response (which is easily attainable
under valgrind in certain configurations) this means that the IPv4
response will never come.
Remove the timeout and just wait.
See merge request GNOME/glib!865
It should produce a generic result, but not crash. It was previously
crashing on macOS.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1729
g_assert_*() give more helpful error messages on failure, and aren’t
compiled out by G_DISABLE_ASSERT.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This was introduced in commit 7846d6154a: g_subprocess_get_identifier()
will return NULL after the subprocess has exited, and the subprocess in
the `noop` test will exit as soon as it has started spawning. So if the
scheduler scheduled the testprog subprocess quickly, descheduled the
parent test process until the testprog exited, then the return value
from g_subprocess_get_identifier() would be NULL.
Move the g_subprocess_get_identifier() test to one which calls testprog
in `sleep-forever` mode, since that is guaranteed not to exit until
killed (which we do later in the test).
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
The most useful ones were already listed in the pkg-config file, but
some others (notably, `gio-querymodules`) were not. List them in the
pkg-config file with their installed paths so that the right binary is
used if GIO is installed in a non-default path.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1796
`NM_STATE_CONNECTED_SITE` is documented to mean that a default route is
available, but that the internet connectivity check failed. A default
route being available is compatible with the documentation for
GNetworkMonitor:network-available, which should be true if the system
has a default route for at least one of IPv4 and IPv6.
https://developer.gnome.org/NetworkManager/stable/nm-dbus-types.html
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1788
More vectors will give an error and we can simply clamp here and
consider it like a short write instead.
In case of GSocketOutputStream this is done here instead of inside
GSocket before calling sendmsg() because we we can't generically handle
short writes when sending messages on a socket, e.g. for datagram
sockets this causes only part of the datagram to be sent and an error
would be more useful in this case than sending corrupted data.
Also reduce the fallback limit to 16 in gsocket.c as that's the minimum
value required by POSIX and add a static assertion that the limit is
never bigger than G_MAXINT as that's the type recvmmsg/sendmmsg take.
These have all been documented as deprecated for a long time, but we’ve
never had a way to programmatically mark them as deprecated. Do that
now.
This is based on the list of deprecations from the reverted commit
80fcb1bc2.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #638
This code uses, or tests, deprecated functions, types or macros; so
needs to be compiled with deprecation warnings disabled.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
When defining deprecated macros, annotate them with
`GLIB_DEPRECATED_MACRO_IN_*()` and `GLIB_DEPRECATED_MACRO_IN_*_FOR()` to
conditionally emit warnings if people use them, depending on their
declared minimum and maximum GLib version requirements (see
`GLIB_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED` and `GLIB_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED`).
The old way of doing this was for users to define `G_DISABLE_DEPRECATED`
if they didn’t want to use deprecated APIs, but it reported errors via
missing symbols, and wasn’t version-dependent. It’s being phased out.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
file_copy_fallback creates new files with default permissions and
set the correct permissions after the operation is finished. This
might cause that the files can be accessible by more users during
the operation than expected. Use G_FILE_CREATE_PRIVATE for the new
files to limit access to those files.
When an application is launched using Launch Services
osx will add an extra parameter which we were not
handling and then gapplication would abort. Instead we make
an initial parsing and like this we avoid the abort if this
parameter is provided
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1784
The caller cannot assume that the lists returned by various GSettings
functions (for example, lists of keys or schemas) will be returned in
any particular order.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1781
The parent GNetworkAddress contains a shared list of resolved
addresses that is used as a cache for multiple enumerations.
This commit ensures that the cache is only set upon completion of
DNS lookups and only read once by enumerations to avoid being in a
bad state.
Fixes#1771
We miss releasing the async operation's reference on a state object in
one of the error cases.
The call to connection_attempt_remove() (although it calls unref
internally) is not sufficient because this is releasing the reference
that the list owns.
Closes#1774
Spotted in https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/586. Bad input
on GAppLaunchContext environment manipulation functions is caught by
inner code, but the warning is not seemingly related.
Add precondition checks to these functions so it's clear where does the
bad input come from.
The network-available property can be asserted by querying the NMState
describing the current overval network state, instead of the
NMConnectivityState. The advantage of the NMState is that is reflects
immediately the network state modification, while the connectivity
state is tested at a fixed frequency.
Add support for mate-terminal and xfce4-terminal with higher precedence
over xterm as it's likely people that have those want to use them.
They both use the gnome-terminal `-x` switch instead of xterm's `-e`.
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>
Since out-of-source-tree builds are now used after switching to meson,
we don't need .gitignore files in the source directories to ignore
build artifacts.
This fixes build errors when doing a meson build after an autotools
build, because generated files such as gio/xdp-dbus.c won't show up in
a `git status`, or be removed by a `git clean -f`, and so it won't be
obvious that such files need to be removed for the meson build to
succeed.
The `monitor` test was originally written to test GFileMonitor with
directories. Over time, `testfilemonitor` acquired units for testing
directories as well, which made the `monitor` test reduntant.
We are manually tracking the completion state of the connect task
so avoid just calling g_task_return_error_if_cancelled() without
checking that.
Fixes#1747
Currently, there is no way to prevent tests from building using meson.
When cross-compiling, building the tests isn't necessary.
Instead, only build the tests on the following conditions:
1) If not cross-compiling.
2) If cross-compiling, and there is an exe wrapper.
Other GCC-like implementations of ld/objcopy (like LLVM) don’t yet
support the right command line arguments, so can’t compile the test.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1709
This introduces no functional changes, but combines two duplicated lists
and makes the meson.build file a little easier to follow.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1711
After repeated local testing, I can’t reproduce failures with them:
meson test --repeat 5000 gdbus-auth
meson test --repeat 5000 gdbus-bz627724
meson test --repeat 5000 gdbus-connection
The FreeBSD failures from pthread calls mentioned in #1614 should
probably manifest as use-after-free for GMutex or pthread_mutex_t on
Linux. Failing that, I haven’t seen any relevant FreeBSD failures on CI
for at least a month, so if it’s not fixed, the chances of debugging are
very low.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1614
Add g_steal_pointer() and g_clear_object() calls in various places to
clarify the ownership transfers for GDBusMessage instances, in a bid to
understand what’s going on in this code and to try to find a
use-after-finalize problem.
This introduces no functional changes, but hopefully makes the code a
little clearer.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
If the filter function for an outgoing message fails to copy the
GDBusMessage, that failure was previously ignored, and GDBusMessage
methods could be called on a NULL instance.
Avoid that.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Rather than keeping a reference to the GThreadedSocketService as the
user_data for every thread pool job, add it to a member of the per-job
data struct (GThreadedSocketServiceData). This should make no
difference overall, as it’s just moving the refcounting around, but it
does seem to fix an occasional double-unref crash on shutdown where the
GThreadedSocketService is unreffed during finalisation.
In any case, it makes the object ownership clearer.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Check for RTLD_NEXT being present, and disable the gsocketclient-slow
test if it's absent, since the shlib dependency of that test requires
RTLD_NEXT to function.
This allows the testsuite to be built on Cygwin, which behaves
exactly like UNIX, but doesn't have RTLD_NEXT.
On OSX both backends are built. Generally we want to use the cocoa
backend by default and in case it is not supported, i.e because
the application is not using a bundle then we should fallback
to the gtk one.
ostream_flush_cb() was calling flush_data_list_complete() with a single
element list with an item that had already been freed. This was observed
on OpenBSD where memory is overwritten with 0xdf during free():
error=0x0) at ../glib-2.58.3/gio/gdbusprivate.c:1156
1156 g_mutex_lock (&f->mutex);
(gdb) p /x *f
$74 = {mutex = {p = 0xdfdfdfdfdfdfdfdf, i = {0xdfdfdfdf, 0xdfdfdfdf}},
cond = { p = 0xdfdfdfdfdfdfdfdf, i = {0xdfdfdfdf, 0xdfdfdfdf}},
number_to_wait_for = 0xdfdfdfdfdfdfdfdf, error = 0x0}
This happened because the thread freeing the element didn't properly wait
for the asynchronous flush operation to finish.
Gnome's developer docs say: "g_cond_wait() must always be used in a loop"
https://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/glib-Threads.html#g-cond-wait
It returns a string in the libc locale, which is not necessarily UTF-8.
Convert that to UTF-8 before returning it to the caller.
Spotted by Tomasz Miąsko.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1732
More mounts can have same mount path, but only the last one is
accessible. Thus we should always return the last matching mount from
g_unix_mount_at() and g_unix_mount_for(). This should also solve
problems with g_file_trash() on automounted filesystems, which are
caused by the recently added mount checks.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1727
instead of using a generic G_IO_ERROR_FAILED error code.
This is in line with what W32 part of the code is doing with WSAENOTSOCK.
This fix will break two tests in libsoup, which were written following
the implementation and thus expect G_IO_ERROR_FAILED when attempting to
do stuff with no-longer-valid socket descriptors.
This reverts commit 80fcb1bc26.
G_DISABLE_DEPRECATED should never be used by anybody, least of all by
GLib. We have deprecation annotations for the compiler, these days, and
they are much better suited than a macro that makes symbols appear and
disappear. The fact that gtk-doc doesn't understand the deprecation
annotations is a limitation of gtk-doc, and it's gtk-doc that ought to be
fixed.
Commit 80fcb1bc broke GStreamer, which disables old API that was
deprecated before the introduction of the deprecation annotations, but
still uses newly deprecated one, and relies on the deprecation
annotations to do their thing. It also broke libsoup, as it uses
GValueArray in its own API.
Just skip the test if the unix transport isn’t supported. This means we
get better compilation coverage, and more explicit TAP output saying
that the test is being skipped on unsupported platforms.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
The specification doesn’t explicitly say this, but it doesn’t say
otherwise, and it would be pretty weird to have an empty transport name
or key.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
No need for the `meaningless` label and some unreachable if-branches.
This introduces no functional changes.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
While gtk-doc can currently detect a link to a symbol which has been
pluralised by adding ‘s’, it can’t detect when ‘es’ is added. While
that’s being fixed, reword the documentation so the links are generated
correctly anyway.
gtk-doc fix here: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk-doc/merge_requests/22
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
As pointed out by gtk-doc, these are all symbols which have been marked
as deprecated, but which aren’t protected by a deprecation guard. We
can’t use G_DEPRECATED_IN_* for them, as they are all non-function
symbols. Instead, wrap them in #ifndef G_DISABLE_DEPRECATED.
In some cases, we also need to wrap one or two functions which use the
deprecated types in G_DISABLE_DEPRECATED too.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
If using the --interface-info-{body,header} options to gdbus-codegen,
and the first interface to be outputted has no methods, but does have
properties or signals, an uninitialised variable would be used for the
property/signal ‘since’ values.
In other situations, the ‘since’ value for a prior method would have
been incorrectly used for the properties/signals.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
The test performs implicit autolaunching of a bus
and checks if it is connectible.
In build the test is moved from "only non-windows with have_dbus_daemon"
to "anywhere".
This is intentional: actually it doesn't execute any external
binaries on unix (so doesn't require dbus_daemon)
and now has win32 implementation.
The test has some problems that are not problems of test itself,
but are reasoned by current win32 implementation:
- since the implementation uses global win32 kernel objects
with fixed names not depending on g_get_user_runtime_dir or other context
if preexisting bus running by some other libgio-using application
the test would silently pass.
- since the implementation uses problematic time-based synchronization,
that has a race condition between opening and reading mmaped address,
the test may randomly fail (I'd not seen this in practice).
- since the implementation autolaunched process works for 3 seconds
after last client disconnects, the executed subprocess runs for 3 seconds
after test exit, maybe locking the libgio-2.0-0.dll file for that time.
This is a bit of breaking change:
After this commit the apps relying of win32 dbus autolaunching,
need to install gdbus.exe alongside with libgio-2.0-0.dll.
A new command for gdbus tool is used for running server:
gdbus.exe _win32_run_session_bus
To implement it gdbus.exe uses the same exported function
g_win32_run_session_bus that earlier was used by rundll.
So (private) ABI was not changed.
It runs the bus syncronously, exiting after inactivity timeout -
all exactly like it was runed earlier with the help of rundll32.
While private exported function may have _some_
version compatibility issues between gdbus.exe and libgio-2.0-0.dll
compiling dbus server registration logic directly into gdbus.exe
can lead to _more hidden and more complex_ compatibility issues
since the names and behaviour of syncronization objects
used to publish server address would be required compatible between
gdbus.exe and libgio-2.0-0.dll.
So using "private" exported function to call
looks like more safe behaviour.
gdbus.exe binary was selected for this task since
it has corresponding name and at least for msys2 is shippied
in same package with libgio-2.0-0.dll
turn_off_the_starting_cursor function is also kept as is,
however it is not obvious if it is still needed
(by now I failed reproducing original issue).
Explicit g_warnings added to help with possible
problematic cases for absent or incompatible gdbus.exe
Mainloop is created after successful daemon creation
Before this change the function leaked mainloop on daemon creation fail
nm_conn_to_g_conn already handles UNKNOWN like NONE (returning
G_NETWORK_CONNECTIVITY_LOCAL in both cases). So in sync_properties
we should also set new_connectivity to G_NETWORK_CONNECTIVITY_LOCAL
for both NM_CONNECTIVITY_UNKNOWN and NM_CONNECTIVITY_NONE.
This has the added benefit that when NetworkManager returns the network
connectivity is UNKNOWN, we set network_available to FALSE as it should
be. Previously, there were cases in a laptop with no network access,
that g_network_monitor_get_network_available returned true, which was
wrong and is also fixed with this commit.
g_assert_*() give more informative failure messages, and aren’t compiled
out when building with G_DISABLE_ASSERT.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
g_assert_*() give more informative failure messages, and aren’t compiled
out when building with G_DISABLE_ASSERT.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
In order to allow GLib itself to be built with G_DISABLE_ASSERT defined,
we need to explicitly undefine it when building the tests, otherwise
g_test_init() turns into an abort.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1708
g_assert_*() give more informative error messages on failure, and can’t
be disabled by G_DISABLE_ASSERT.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This allows referencig them from more than single .c file.
Implementation moved without changes
from gdbusaddress.c to gdbusprivate.c
g_win32_run_session_bus signature also kept, so ABI unchanged.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1566
Short names were used in win32 implementation to allow launching
on installations where full path to libgio-2.0-0.dll contain spaces.
However, short names are optional on windows: so if they were disabled
that method fails - see issue linked above.
Since rundll32 doesn't support neither spaces, nor quotes in cmdline
this patch changes rundll32 argument to just .\gio-dll-name.dll
and uses the entire path directory containing gio dll as rundll32
current directory.
Added comments informing about potential subtleties discovered during
writing test for gdbusaddress on win32.
There are not known to have real-world user-visible effect,
so by now I'm only adding comments without creating issues.
Commit f975858e86 removed the NULL check in g_cancellable_cancel() by
accident which makes it crash when called with NULL.
Add the check back and add a test so this doesn't happen again.
Fixes#1710
Implement the approach suggested in
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/merge_requests/276
1. Try to open O_RDWR. On success, pass that fd
2. If EACCESS => fail the trash op, we "need" read-write to successfully trash it
3. If EISDIR => re-open the fd with O_PATH, and pass that (which will fail on snap,
but verify the dir for flatpaks)
Don’t pollute the build directory with files generated by running the
test.
Note that there are still other tests in the gsettings.c test suite
which use the build directory, but fixing them is a bit more involved
than I have time for right now. This is a step in the right direction.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
res_ninit() requires the __res_state struct passed to it to be
zero-filled on FreeBSD.
Spotted and analysed by Ashish SHUKLA.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes#1697
Synchronize access to cancelled flag of cancellable, which was
previously access without synchronization in g_cancellable_is_cancelled.
Use atomic operations instead of existing global mutex, to avoid
serializing calls to g_cancellable_is_cancelled across all threads.
Ensure that source is attached to the context before it migth be used
from another thread, since otherwise operation on source are
unsynchronized and not thread-safe.
In particular there was a data race between g_source_attach and
g_source_set_ready_time (used from g_file_monitor_source_handle_event).
This essentially reverts commit
cffed58737.
The preceding two commits have fixed the test so it’s no longer flaky.
The following command gives 5000 passes in a row for me:
meson test -C /opt/gnome/build/glib/ socket-service --repeat 5000
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1679
It’s occasionally possible for the cancellation of the service to happen
before connection_cb() gets scheduled in the other thread. The
locking/unlocking order of mutex_712570 requires:
• test_threaded_712570(): lock mutex
• test_threaded_712570(): start wait loop
• connection_cb(): lock mutex
• test_threaded_socket_service_finalize(): unlock mutex
• test_threaded_712570(): end wait loop
• test_threaded_712570(): unlock mutex
Fix that by quitting the main loop once connection_cb() has been called
(i.e. once the server thread has received the incoming connection
request), rather than just after the client thread (main thread) has
sent a connection request.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1679
On about 1 in 3 test runs, the socket-service would fail with the
ref_count assertion in connection_cb() failing (the ref_count would be 3
rather than the expected 2).
This was happening because the GTask from
g_socket_listener_accept_socket_async() now always takes at least one
main context iteration to return a result (whereas before
6f3d57d2ee it might have taken zero), but
the ref_count can drop below 3 before the process of returning a result
starts. During the process of returning a result, the ref_count
temporarily increases again, which is what was breaking the test.
Fix this by waiting for one more main context iteration. This is a bit
of a hack, but the real fix would be to expose the outstanding_accept
boolean from GSocketService as public API (which the test can
interrogate), and that seems too much like exposing internal state.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1679
Almost everything that needs gioenumtypes.h also needs
gobjectenumtypes.h. Fixes:
ccache cc @gio/win32/gio@win32@@giowin32@sta/gwin32filemonitor.c.obj.rsp
In file included from ../gio/win32/gwin32filemonitor.h:25:0,
from ../gio/win32/gwin32filemonitor.c:26:
../glib/glib-object.h:37:10: fatal error: gobject/gobjectenumtypes.h: No such file or directory
#include <gobject/gobjectenumtypes.h>
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GIO modules built with MSVC do not begin with 'lib', but they can
begin with 'gio'. Without this, you can only load GIO modules built
with MSVC that are `name.dll`, not `gioname.dll`.
Eliminate several cases of splitting sentences between multiple
translatable strings, and remove some newlines from the translatable
strings (they always need to be present, and can confuse translation, so
add them unconditionally afterwards).
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Compilers get confused when variables are initialized by a function by
taking them as reference in an out argument; this, coupled with the fact
that C does not initialize variables by default, most commonly results
in a "maybe uninitialized" compiler warning.
512e9b3b34 added a call to schedule_pending_close() in the read
callback after the reference to the worker is already gone. In case this was
the last reference to the worker this resulted in a use-after-free.
6f3d57d2ee made this more likely to happen because on connection close
the worker cancel action is now async while the reference to the worker
gets dropped right away.
Move the call to schedule_pending_close() before the unref.
Fixes#1686
When testing as root, changing the permissions of the keyfile will have
no effect on the writability since root bypasses these permissions. See
path_resolution(7). Skip the test in this case.
g_assert_*() give more informative error messages, and aren’t compiled
out when building with G_DISABLE_ASSERT.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
getsockname() returns the address that the socket was bound to.
If it was bound to INADDR_ANY, getsockname() will stubbornly return INADDR_ANY
(and someport - that one is valid).
Subsequent connection attempts to INADDR_ANY:someport will fail with winsock.
Actually, it doesn't make even sense to connect to INADDR_ANY at all
(where is the socket connecting to? To a random interface of the host?),
so this is just a straight-up change, without platform-specific ifdefing.
Use loopback instead of INADDR_ANY. To ensure that binding and creation
of INADDR_ANY is still tested, use two addresses: bind to INADDR_ANY,
but connect to loopback, with the port number that we got from the bound
address.
Use a static GQueue to form the GList of mounts by appending (which
is fast, because GQueue tracks the tail pointer of its internal GList),
then return that GList. This way we don't need to form the list
by prepending, which would have made it necessary to reverse it before
returning.
If the list is not ordered correctly, local drives in GTK places sidebar
are shown in reverse order.
The gsocketclient-slow test needs this, otherwise connect() succeeds
immeidately and the test fails, because it is checking that cancellation
works. We weren't installing it for installed tests.
It's necessary sometimes for installed tests to be able to run with a
custom environment. For example, the gsocketclient-slow test requires an
LD_PRELOADed library to provide a slow connect() (this is to be added in
a followup commit).
Introduce a variable `@env@` into the installed test template, which we
can override as necessary when generating `.test` files, to run tests
prefixed with `/usr/bin/env <LIST OF VARIABLES>`.
As the only test that requires this currently lives in `gio/tests/`, we
are only hooking this up for that directory right now. If other tests in
future require this treatment, then the support can be extended at that
point.
There's no /tmp directory on Windows.
Use g_get_tmp_dir(), and adjust the test to work with that.
The test *still* checks the basename of the new CWD, it just
doesn't need to be "tmp" anymore.
envp in spawn() functions is the *whole* environment table
for the child process. Including PATH. Thus, unless PATH is explicitly
put into that table, the process will be spawned without PATH.
Since on Windows binaries are found via PATH instead of LD_LIBRARY_PATH
or whatever, almost no program (unless installed in WINDIR, maybe)
can run without a PATH. Certainly not test programs - meson
adds bld subdirs to the PATH to make sure that test programs
use uninstalled glib at runtime.
So make sure that PATH is passed along.
Windows \r\n EOLs strike again. The test already knows about LINEEND,
so make it use LINEEND more (instead of swithcing pipes
to binary mode). This also applies to counting the bytes
read.
With winsock sending messages to NULL results in G_IO_ERROR_NOT_CONNECTED
instead of G_IO_ERROR_FAILED.
MSDN says:
WSAENOTCONN
10057
Socket is not connected.
A request to send or receive data was disallowed because the socket is not connected
and (when sending on a datagram socket using sendto) no address was supplied.
So this is a direct mapping of the implementation error.
Covering it up in the wrapper (by converting it to G_IO_ERROR_FAILED)
doesn't seem feasible or needed (no one, except for the testsuite,
really cares which unrecoverable error is returned by sendto()).
getaddrinfo() in winsock can't understand scope IDs.
There's no obvious way to fix that, short of re-implementing
that function, so disable that part of the test on Windows.
G_RESOURCE_OVERLAYS is a list of resource-path and filesystem-path pairs.
Since on Windows filesystem paths use ':', this list can't be ':'-separated
there. Fix that by making it ';'-separated on Windows. Make the parser
error clearer (we're not looking for a slash, we're looking for an absolute
path).
If a URI can't be handled by by WinHTTPVfs, it should pass that URI
along to the URI parser of the wrapped Vfs, not to its generic parser.
Theoretically, generic parser should also be able to handle URIs,
but this is subject to Vfs semantics.
In case of Windows, the wrapped Vfs is GLocalVfs, which is *local* and
treats any generic names as either file:// URIs or as filesystem
paths. It only ever treats URIs as URIs when they are passed
to its URI parser. This breaks the testsuite when g-icon GIO test passes
unhandleable sftp:// URI, and expects it to come through unmolested,
yet GLocalVfs, getting that URI as a generic parse name, treats it as
a filesystem path, and then "canonicalizes" it by prepending CWD.
Fix this by making WinHTTPVfs pass any URIs it gets to the URI parser
of the wrapped Vfs. This way unknown URIs remain URI-ish. This seems
like a reasonable things to do, since the URI parser should not be
given anything other than URIs, so there's no reason to try generic
parsing with these strings.
Closes: #875
Previously once the end of addresses was reached it would return
NULL even if it was waiting on a dns response. Now it will keep
waiting so all addresses are received.
Fixes#1680
Currently, the actual asynchronous work, represented by
asynchronous_cancellation_run_task, was over before the GCancellable
could be triggered. While that doesn't invalidate the purpose of the
test, since it's fundamentally about cancellation, it would be
nicer if the cancellation actually served some purpose instead of
being a mere formality.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1608
When calling g_socket_listener_accept_socket_async() on a
GSocketListener with multiple sockets, the accept_ready() callback is
called for the first incoming connection on each socket. It will return
success/failure for the entire accept_socket_async() GTask, and then
free the GSources for listening for incoming connections on the other
sockets in the GSocketListener. The GSources are freed when the GTask is
finalised.
However, if incoming connections arrive for multiple sockets within the
same GMainContext iteration, accept_ready() will be called multiple
times, and will call g_task_return_*() multiple times, before the GTask
is finalised. Calling g_task_return_*() multiple times is not allowed.
Propagate the first success/failure, as before, but then ignore all
subsequent incoming connections until the GTask is finalised.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Once cancelled, a GTask's callback should not only be invoked
asynchronously with respect to the creation of the task, but also with
respect to the GCancellable::cancelled handler. This is particularly
relevant in cases where the cancellation happened in the same thread
where the task is running.
Spotted by Dan Winship and Michael Catanzaro.
Closes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1608
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/1679.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
To make things consistent across the board as that is the WinSock2 error
code that is received by g_socket_send_message_with_timeout() when it
returns G_POLLABLE_RETURN_WOULD_BLOCK.
This never caused any problems because the default GSettingsBackend is
cached forever by GIOModule anyway.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
I was trying to debug some memory leaks in the gsettings test.
Eventually, it seems that actually they’re caused by the
GMemorySettingsBackend being cached by GIOModule — so this commit makes
no functional changes. It should make the code and documentation a bit
clearer though.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This mostly affects the 2.56 branch, but, given that GCC 9 is being
stricter about passing null string pointers to printf-like functions, it
might make sense to proactively fix such calls.
gdbusauth.c: In function '_g_dbus_auth_run_server':
gdbusauth.c:1302:11: error: '%s' directive argument is null
[-Werror=format-overflow=]
1302 | debug_print ("SERVER: WaitingForBegin, read '%s'",
line);
|
gdbusmessage.c: In function ‘g_dbus_message_to_blob’:
gdbusmessage.c:2730:30: error: ‘%s’ directive argument is null [-Werror=format-overflow=]
2730 | tupled_signature_str = g_strdup_printf ("(%s)", signature_str);
|
The recent changes of the g_app_info_launch_default_for_uri_async()
function ensures that the callback is not called before DBus-activated
applications start. Let's use g_app_info_launch_default_for_uri_async()
and remove the workarounds for DBus-activated applications.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1249
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
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 could've never been uninitialized in this code but the code flow is
not obvious to the compiler. Initialize it to NULL and for clarity also
add an assertion that it is not NULL anymore on usage.
In file included from ../glib/glib.h:62,
from ../gobject/gbinding.h:28,
from ../glib/glib-object.h:23,
from ../gio/gioenums.h:28,
from ../gio/giotypes.h:28,
from ../gio/giomodule.h:28,
from ../gio/giomodule.c:25:
../gio/giomodule.c: In function ‘_g_io_module_get_default’:
../glib/gmessages.h:343:25: warning: ‘extension’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
#define g_debug(...) g_log (G_LOG_DOMAIN, \
^~~~~
../gio/giomodule.c:912:17: note: ‘extension’ was declared here
GIOExtension *extension, *preferred;
^~~~~~~~~
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.
Interpret the value "help" for environment variables that
are passed to _g_io_module_get_default(), and print the
names and priorities of available extensions.
This lets users explore what is available, and can be helpful
in figuring out why a certain extension was chosen as default.
It is similar in spirit to what we already do with environment
variables like G_DEBUG.
This is useful for debugging in many situations. It’ll be printed with
G_MESSAGES_DEBUG=GLib-GIO or G_MESSAGES_DEBUG=all.
Mostly I need it for debugging the default GNetworkMonitor, but it will
work for all GIO module implementations.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
When we are in a sandboxed situation, bump the priority
of the keyfile settings backend above the dconf one,
so we use a keyfile inside the sandbox instead of requiring
holes in the sandbox for dconf.
Stacked databases and locks are dconf features that allow
management software like Fleet Commander to set system-wide
defaults and overrides centrally for applications.
This patch adds minimal support for the same to the keyfile
backend. We look for a keyfile named 'defaults' and a
lock-list named 'locks'.
Suitable files can be produced from a dconf database with
dconf dump and dconf list-locks, respectively.
The default location for these files is /etc/glib-2.0/settings/.
For test purposes, this can be overwritten with the
GSETTINGS_DEFAULTS_DIR environment variable.
Writes always go to the per-user keyfile.
Make it possible to instantiate a keyfile settings backend
without specifying parameters, by turning the arguments to
the new() function into construct-only properties. If no
filename is specified, default to
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/glib-2.0/settings/keyfile
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.
Rather than storing it as an invalid value in last_position, store it as
a separate boolean.
This introduces no functional changes, but should fix some warnings from
MSVC.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1500
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>
Like for the OpenURI portal, O_PATH file descriptors do not prove access
to the underlying file data. I've used O_RDWR file descriptors here to
mirror the requested read/write permissions.
This change relates to https://github.com/flatpak/xdg-desktop-portal/issues/167
The OpenURI portal requires the caller to pass a file descriptor as
proof of access for local files. Old versions required this file
descriptor to use the O_PATH mode. However, this does not prove access
since you can create O_PATH descriptors for files that you can't read.
Since xdg-desktop-portal 1.0.1, regular file descriptors are also
accepted with O_PATH descriptors restricted to flatpaks for the
transition.
Check for over- and underflow when manipulating positions.
This makes the sequence
g_list_model_get_item (store, 0);
g_list_model_get_item (store, -1u);
return NULL for the second call, as it should.
Closes: #1639
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.
Since commit 290bb0dd, where various members of GTask were converted to
a bitfield, some of the getters:
• g_task_get_check_cancellable()
• g_task_get_return_on_cancel()
• g_task_get_completed()
have been returning truthy ints (zero or an arbitrary non-zero integer)
as boolean values, rather than the canonical boolean ints of 1 and 0.
This broke the `yield` statement in Vala, whose generated C code
compares `g_task_get_completed (…) != TRUE`. i.e. Whether the
`completed` field has a value not equal to 1.
Fix this by explicitly converting truthy ints to canonical boolean ints
in all getters.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1636
Names are a message bus feature, so it does not make sense to connect
to NameOwnerChanged when the underlying connection is not a message
bus.
Moreover, g_dbus_connection_signal_subscribe() will also enforce that
condition. Adding this extra check here is helpful to avoid a critical
warning when using GDBusProxy with peer-to-peer connections.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1620
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
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>
This causes the desktop directory cache to be correctly reloaded between
unit tests if G_TEST_OPTION_ISOLATE_DIRS is in use.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This allows the list of directories which contain MIME data to be set,
separately from the list of directories returned by
g_get_user_data_home() and g_get_system_data_dirs().
While the latter are overridden for a unit test, we don’t have access to
the system MIME registry, which can sometimes be useful for tests which
need to know about standard MIME associations from shared-mime-info.
Allow g_content_type_set_mime_dirs() to be used from unit tests to allow
them to use the system MIME registry again, or to allow them to be
pointed to another custom registry.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
In order to make xdgmime properly relocatable so that unit tests can use
it without it reading and modifying the user’s actual xdgmime files, and
without the need to call setenv() (and get tied up with thread safety
problems), add a xdg_mime_set_dirs() method to allow the dirs to be
overridden. They will still default to the values of $XDG_DATA_HOME and
$XDG_DATA_DIRS.
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
gtk-doc is unhappy that skeleton documentation comments had been written
for these functions (for the introspection annotations) but that the
documentation content was actually missing.
Add that content. I like a happy gtk-doc.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This partially reverts commit 799f8dcd46.
This patch seems to break the writability status of the server socket: once
somebody writes to it with success, then it reports it is not writable
anymore. Also, when the client socket has the flag FD_CONNECT set once,
it is never cleared and then it reports it is always writable, also when
it is not.
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
Currently a new connection will not be attempted until the previous
one has timed out and as the current API only exposes a single
timeout value in practice it often means that it will wait 30 seconds
(or forever with 0 (the default)) on each connection.
This is unacceptable so we are now trying to follow the behavior
RFC 8305 recommends by making multiple connection attempts if
the connection takes longer than 250ms. The first connection
to make it to completion then wins.
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 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.
This means the output (including lists of filenames) does not depend on
the order of the input files, which may matter if this tool is invoked
with a glob or some other mechanism that doesn't guarantee an order.
Turns out the fix in commit 93555577c wasn't enough, when using glib as
subproject and the parent project uses only libgio_dep, and include
<gi18n.h>, it won't find libintl.h because it's in the
include_directories of libglib_dep. Fix that by declaring dependencies
explicitly, which is the right thing to do since glib and gobject are
public dependencies of gio. That reflects what we do for the pkg-config
file as well.
Previously, method and signal arguments were sorted by name, which
(assuming you don't happen to give your arguments
lexicographically-ordered names) means the generated signatures were
incorrect when there is more than 1 argument.
While sorting the methods and signals themselves (and properties, and
annotations on all these) is fine, it's easiest to not sort anything.
Since 1217b1bc4f, LICENSE_STR has taken two
parameters, not one. Without this change, running either mode fails
with a traceback like:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "../gdbus-codegen", line 55, in <module>
sys.exit(codegen_main.codegen_main())
File ".../codegen_main.py", line 294, in codegen_main
gen.generate()
File ".../codegen.py", line 896, in generate
self.generate_body_preamble()
File ".../codegen.py", line 682, in generate_body_preamble
self.outfile.write(LICENSE_STR.format(config.VERSION))
IndexError: tuple index out of range
8916874ee6, which introduced these flags,
was actually merged after that commit, but I assume it was written
beforehand.
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.
glib-compile-resources was updated to generate octal byte
representation in a string, but unfortunately this breaks the build
on Visual Studio when the generated string sequence exceeds 65535
characters, which is the imposed limit on Visual Studio compilers.
To make things work on Visual Studio builds and to not slow down things
on other compilers, generate a code path for Visual Studio an array of
octal byte representations, as well as a code path for other compilers
that use the new string representation of octal values, and let the
compiler take the appropriate code path when compiling the
generated code.
Fixes issue #1580.
While uniqueness is great, sometimes you want to restart
a newer version of the same app. These two flags make that
possible.
We also add a ::name-lost signal, that is emitted when it
happens. The default handler for this signal just calls
g_application_quit(), but applications may want to connect
and do cleanup or state-saving here.
When using glib as subproject we are forced to pass glib_dep,
gobject_dep and gio_dep to any build target. If we pass only gio_dep it
will missing include directory for glib and gobject.
Putting the raw URIs in the documentation comments would not link them,
and the ‘%20’s in the URIs were being parsed by gtk-doc as symbol
references. Fix that by using Markdown to format them correctly as
links.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Using `%` indicates that you’re linking to a symbol. In these cases we
wanted some nicely formatted literals, or a link to a specific property.
Use backticks for the literals, and link to the property fully.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Due to the line wrapping, gtk-doc was interpreting this second line as
redefining the @dbus_register documentation.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
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
If a D-Bus interface was annotated with o.fd.DBus.Deprecated, then the
corresponding GObject property, in the common GInterface implemented
by the generated GDBusObjectProxies and GDBusObjectSkeletons, to
access the generated code for the D-Bus interface was not being marked
with G_PARAM_DEPRECATED, even though the gtk-doc snippet had the
'Deprecated: ' tag.
G_PARAM_DEPRECATED is older than gdbus-codegen, 2.26 and 2.30
respectively, hence it can be used unconditionally.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/merge_requests/485
If a D-Bus interface has a property that's annotated with
o.fd.DBus.Deprecated, then the corresponding GObject property was not
being marked with G_PARAM_DEPRECATED, even though the gtk-doc snippet
had the 'Deprecated: ' tag.
G_PARAM_DEPRECATED is older than gdbus-codegen, 2.26 and 2.30
respectively, hence it can be used unconditionally.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/merge_requests/485
Allowing unsafe rehandshakes used to be required for web compatibility,
but this is no longer a concern in 2018. So there should no longer be
compatibility benefits to calling this function. All it does is make
your TLS connection insecure.
Also, rehandshaking no longer exists at all in TLS 1.3.
At some point (maybe soon!) glib-networking will begin ignoring the
rehandshake mode, so let's deprecate it now.
Let's entirely deprecate calling this function for rehandshaking. The
current documentation is OK, but guarantees defined behavior (to attempt
a rehandshake) when TLS 1.2 is in use. But there's no way to force TLS
1.2, and also no way to check which version of TLS is in use. I really
should have deprecated use of this function for rehandshaking entirely
last time I updated it.
Fortunately, there should be no compatibility risk for existing code,
because rehandshaking has no visible effects at the API level.
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.
I made a mistake when last updating the documentation in 94a99ae9. I
wrote that, with TLS 1.3, this would perform a rekey instead of a
rehandshake. In fact, that's only true for client connections. For
server connections, it's a no-op.
I was a bit nervous about how to document the behavior anyway, because
we really don't know what behavior will be reasonable with non-GnuTLS
crypto backends. This behavior is reasonable for the GnuTLS backend, but
might not necessarily make sense for OpenSSL. Ideally, we would
discourage API users from doing things which could have unexpected
effects, so instead of documenting what the GnuTLS backend does, I think
it'd be better to document that this is "undefined but not dangerous,"
since of course we want to make sure that existing code that doesn't
know about TLS 1.3 is not broken.
The docs sound like settings list is a thing, and
a ::children-changed signal exists. That is not the
case, and will never be the case at this point, so
stop pretending.
Closes: #1362
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.
The length of the stolen data from a memory output stream is given by
get_data_size() — get_size() can be larger, and hence cause unnecessary
overallocation.
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
mntent-based implementation filter out mounts with device path that was
repeated. Consequently, it is not possible to show such mounts in UI even
with x-gvfs-show, because they are not returned from g_unix_mounts_get.
libmount-based implementation currently doesn't filter out any mounts
which causes issues to our volume monitors. Let's rather mark mounts
which don't point into fs root as system_internal. This approach won't be
affected by mount order as is mntent-based implementation. It will mark
more mounts as system_internal than it is filtered out with mntend-based
implementation, but there will be always possibility to show them in UI
over x-gvfs-show, which was not possible with mntend-based. We can
probably introduce some improvements later to not mark unique mounts as
system internal even if they don't point into fs root...
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1271
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
Currently, readlink() is used only 12 times when expanding symlinks.
However, kernel uses 40 for this purpose and it is defined as MAXSYMLINKS.
Use that constant if available, or 40. See:
https://github.com/torvalds/linux/include/linux/namei.h.
find_mountpoint_for() uses current file in case of error, because
get_parent() returns NULL for error, but also if parent doesn't exist.
Return "." from get_parent() if parent doesn't exist in order to
differentiate the error state.
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
These were callers which explicitly specified the string length to
g_utf8_validate(), when it couldn’t be negative, and hence should be
able to unconditionally benefit from the increased string handling
length.
At least one call site would have previously silently changed behaviour
if called with strings longer than G_MAXSSIZE in length.
Another call site was passing strlen(string) to g_utf8_validate(), which
seems pointless: just pass -1 instead, and let g_utf8_validate()
calculate the string length. Its behaviour on embedded nul bytes
wouldn’t change, as strlen() stops at the first one.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
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>
G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_ACCESS_CAN_TRASH can be set to a wrong value if
its parent dir is a symlink. This is because the find_mountpoint_for()
function tries to find mountpoint for a filepath and expands symlinks
only in parent dirs. But in this case the path is already parent dir
and needs to be expanded first...
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1522
Fedora is using https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/Annobin
to try to ensure that all objects are built with hardening flags.
Pass down `CFLAGS` to ensure the SystemTap objects use them.
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>
Instead of sometimes returning a non-NULL buffer, always return NULL.
However, keep the documentation as explicitly returning undefined values
on failure, so that we can change the behaviour in future if needed.
The return values weren’t defined for failure before, so were
implicitly returning undefined values.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Put the core readlink() code into a separate
_g_win32_readlink_handle_raw() function that takes a file handle,
can optionally ensure NUL-terminatedness of its output
(for cases where we need a NUL-terminator and do *not* need
to get the exact contents of the symlink as it is stored in FS)
and can either fill a caller-provided buffer *or* allocate
its own buffer, and can also read the reparse tag.
Put the rest of readlink() code into separate
functions that do UTF-16<->UTF-8, strip inconvenient prefix
and open/close the symlink file handle as needed.
Split _g_win32_stat_utf16_no_trailing_slashes() into
two functions - the one that takes a filename and the one
that takes a file descriptor. The part of these functions
that would have been duplicate is now split into the
_g_win32_fill_privatestat() funcion.
Add more comments explaining what each function does.
Only g_win32_readlink_utf8(), which is callable from outside
via private function interface, gets a real doc-comment,
the rest get normal, non-doc comments.
Change all callers to use the new version of the private
g_win32_readlink_utf8() function, which can now NUL-terminate
and allocate on demand - no need to call it in a loop.
Also, the new code should correctly get reparse tag when the
caller does fstat() on a symlink. Do note that this requires
the caller to get a FD for the symlink, not the target. Figuring
out how to do that is up to the caller.
Since symlink info (target path and reparse tag) are now always
read directly, via DeviceIoControl(), we don't need to use
FindFirstFileW() anymore.
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.
The st_nlink field of the stat structure has meaning and should
be put into GFileInfo.
The st_mode field is far less meaningful, but could still be used
for some purposes, adjust the comment to clarify that.
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.
There are a lot of gbooleans in the private GTask struct, which seems a
bit wasteful. Use a bitfield to compress the struct a bit.
This reduces the size of the struct from 216 bytes to 168 bytes on my
64-bit machine.
One of the fields needs to remain separate, since it’s used from a
TRACE() macro which calls typeof() on it.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
These functions already check to see if a successful result has already
been returned; expand them to also check to see if an error has been
returned.
We can’t just check GTask.result_set, as that’s actually an indicator
for whether the GTask.result member is filled — when
g_task_propagate_*() is called, it’s cleared again. We need a new state
bit.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1525
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 avoids the convenience library being treated as though it was
an installed static library (objects not included in the dependent
static library, and convenience library being listed in the pkg-config
metadata), both of which would make static linking impossible.
This is a workaround for meson not having
https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/3939 merged yet.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1536
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
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.
Currently this function calls `g_warning()` explicitly. It would be
nicer to properly propagate these failure up to the caller that tried to
initialise us.
`read_netlink_messages()` is the callback attached to the netlink socket
(G_IO_IN). It calls `g_socket_receive_message()`. There is a race
condition that if the socket is closed while there is a pending call, we
will try to receive on a closed socket, which fails.
To avoid this, we switch the order of the operations around: first
destroy the source and then close the socket.
This is not a correct way to check if `g_socket_new_from_fd()` failed.
Instead just see if it returned `NULL` itself.
This was preventing the netlink monitor from being initialised.
Closes#1518
All the other initialisation failure paths set a GError, but this one
didn’t. Set a GError to avoid breaking the invariant that returning
FALSE should always have a GError set.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1523
This is a speculative fix for epiphany#533, which we think might be
caused by xdg-desktop-portal not ever being started. This service is
started on-demand, not automatically.
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)
G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DOS_IS_MOUNTPOINT allows mountpoints
(NTFS reparse points with IO_REPARSE_TAG_MOUNT_POINT tag) to
be told apart from symlinks (NTFS reparse points with
IO_REPARSE_TAG_SYMLINK tag), even though both are reported
by glib as "symlinks".
G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DOS_REPARSE_POINT_TAG allows the exact
reparse tag value to be obtained by the user. This way
even more exotic reparse points can be identified and
handled by the user (glib itself currently has no code
to work with any reparse points that are not symlinks
or mountpoints).
The existing code was generating code with undefined results that modern compilers warn about:
accounts-generated.c:204:23: warning: dereferencing type-punned pointer will break strict-aliasing rules [-Wstrict-aliasing]
(GDBusArgInfo **) &_accounts_accounts_method_info_list_cached_users_OUT_ARG_pointers,
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>
When setting the GListStore:item-type property we need to check the
GType is a GObject (or subclass). There was some explicit code for this,
but when actually testing it and looking at the code coverage, it turns
out that the GObject property type check coming from
g_param_spec_gtype() does everything we want, and the custom
g_critical() can never be hit. So turn it into an assertion.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This is also faster, though I doubt anyone's able to measure it.
The previous code was a more complicted way to do the same thing and it
was likely written the more complicated way because it fell out commit
758d7073a9 when fixing
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=795307
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 ::network-changed signal is documented to indicate any change in
network configuration, which doesn't necessarily imply a property
change - additional services becoming available after connecting to
a VPN comes to mind for instance.
In order to match the "native" network monitor's behavior, always
emit the signal when it's in response to the 'changed' D-Bus signal.
Also emit the signal unconditionally when loading the initial property
values, to allow clients to differentiate between "offline" meaning
"offline" and "offline" meaning "uninitialized".
With 0d685b4946, we now encode resource
data as a string. Strings have trailing nul terminators. A C compiler
will happily ignore the fact that the nul terminator exceeds the stated
array length, and will drop it — but a C++ compiler won’t, and will
raise:
error: initializer-string for array of chars is too long [-fpermissive]
Fix that by increasing the array length by 1, and subtracting it again
in the GStaticResource struct.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This reverts commit 3c1902fcf9.
This was accidentally re-added from an old version of the branch before
!265 was merged. It should not have been re-added.
Rearrange the code so we try version 3 first,
falling back to version 2 and then version 1.
We still do a construct-time check to ensure
that we work with unsupported versions.
Note that this also takes care of setting the
initial property values in the version 1 case.
Version 3 of the network monitor portal interface adds
a CanReach method. Use it to implement can_reach.
The docs state that can_reach will either return TRUE
or set an error. So, set an error of G_IO_ERROR_HOST_UNREACHABLE
when the portal returns FALSE for CanReach.
GSettings XML schema files are installed in a well known directory
under Glib's installation directory: `glib-2.0/schemas`. However,
the Glib installation directory might vary, so the exact location of
the schema files might be unknown.
The information regarding this directory has been added to GIO's
pkg-config file, so it can be checked, and also overrided, by using
the command line utility.
The source callback for a GCancellable should have the cancellable itself
as first argument.
This was not the case, and when this code was hit, we were instead trying
to treat the pointer as a CommunicateState reference and thus wrongly
deferencing it, causing a memory error and a crash.
Some Testing revealed encoding resource data with string
escape codes to compile significantly quicker compared
to the same data encoded as an array with hexadecimal numbers.
See #1489
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>
In file gio/gtestdbus.c, function watch_parent, there is a loop which
waits for commands sent from the parent process and kills all processes
recorded in 'pids_to_kill' array on parent process exit. The detection
of parent process exit is done by calling g_poll and checking whether
the returned event is G_IO_HUP. However, 'revents' is a bit mask, and
we should use a bitwise-AND check instead of the equality check here.
It seems to work fine on Linux, but it fails on FreeBSD because the
g_poll returns both G_IO_IN and G_IO_HUP on pipe close. This means the
watcher process continues waiting for commands after the parent process
exit, and g_io_channel_read_line returns G_IO_STATUS_EOF with 'command'
set to NULL. Then the watcher process crashes with segfault when calling
sscanf because 'command' is NULL. Since the test result is already
reported by the parent process as 'OK', this kind of crash is likely to
be unnoticed unless someone checks dmesg messages after the test:
pid 57611 (defaultvalue), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 57935 (actions), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 57945 (gdbus-bz627724), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 57952 (gdbus-connection), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 57970 (gdbus-connection-lo), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 57976 (gdbus-connection-sl), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58039 (gdbus-exit-on-close), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58043 (gdbus-exit-on-close), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58047 (gdbus-exit-on-close), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58051 (gdbus-exit-on-close), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58055 (gdbus-export), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58059 (gdbus-introspection), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58065 (gdbus-names), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58071 (gdbus-proxy), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58079 (gdbus-proxy-threads), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58083 (gdbus-proxy-well-kn), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58091 (gdbus-test-codegen), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58095 (gdbus-threading), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58104 (gmenumodel), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58108 (gnotification), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58112 (gdbus-test-codegen-), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58116 (gapplication), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
pid 58132 (dbus-appinfo), uid 1001: exited on signal 11
If the watcher process crashes before killing the dbus-daemon process
spawned by the parent process, the dbus-daemon process will keep running
after all tests complete. Due to the implementation of 'communicate'
function in Python subprocess, it causes meson to crash. 'communicate'
assumes the stdout and stderr pipes are closed when the child process
exits, but it is not true if processes forked by the child process
doesn't exit. It causes Python subprocess 'communicate' function to
block on the call to poll until the timeout expires even if the test
finishes in a few seconds. Meson assumes the timeout exception always
means the test is still running. It calls 'communicate' again and
crashes because pipes no longer exist.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/Infrastructure/GitLab/issues/286https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/3967https://bugs.python.org/issue30154
Previously, glocalfile.c would not set file system metadata for
the free/used key for file systems which reported 0 free space. This is
because some file systems don’t set that metadata when you call
statfs(), so we can’t reliably report it. However, some do, and they
can legitimately set f_bavail and f_bfree to 0 if the file system is
full.
In order to avoid that, always set the file system metadata unless the
file system is FUSE or ncpfs.
This is a partial revert of commit 0b9f24c1e1: instead of the changes
made in that commit, I think we should maintain a blacklist of file
systems which are known to not correctly report free space.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/328
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
While mountpoints are *not* symlinks, strictly speaking,
they works in a similar enough way, so consider them to be
symlinks for the purpose of querying local file info.
On Windows st_ctime field is the file creation time.
POSIX mandates that field to be the file state change time.
Naturally, glib code interpreted st_ctime as POSIX suggested,
and the result was bad.
Fix this by introducing special W32-only logic for setting
attributes from st_ctime field.
Fixes issue #1452.
We now send the fallback SCSV, meaning use of this function will cause
modern servers to immediately terminate the connection, so let's warn
API users to expect that behavior and be crystal clear that this
function should only be used as a fallback when a normal connection
attempt has already failed.
Also, the documentation is mostly duplicated between the property and
the function, so let's just reference the function documentation from
the property.
7efd76dd67 added these configure time tests to work around a bug
with older Android. Since the test didn't take Windows into account it
wrongfully applied the workaround on Windows too, breaking the build.
With meson this wasn't an issue since the check is skipped on Windows there
and our CI didn't catch this issue.
Change the test to run on Android only for meson and autotools.
This also makes it clear that the test+code can be dropped again if we stop
supporting older Android versions at some point.
GLib currently tries to use FAM volume monitor for monitoring files
within home on NFS. If FAM support is not available, it fallbacks by
default to GInotifyFileMonitor. I think we should fallback to
GPollFileMonitor instead, because inotify is not reliable on NFS,
which may cause issues for dconf. With this patch, it should be safe to
not build libgiofam and still be sure that dconf works properly if home
is mounted on NFS. I think this might be a first step to remove FAM
support from GLib completely, because gamin is buggy and dead for
several years already. Gamin just polls files on NFS anyway. This
change applies on files only, because GPollFileMonitor seems doesn't
support dirs, however it should be enough for dconf. The other
drawback is that one can't set poll timeout currently. Just a note
that this can still be overwritten by GIO_USE_FILE_MONITOR.
Releasing GVolumeMonitor before g_volume_mount finish cause that
g_volume_get_mount returns NULL, because the mount is not correctly
propagated to the volume.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1458
The gresource code uses libelf if available but that also depends on mmap but isn't
guarded with HAVE_MMAP. This can make the build fail under MSYS2 where a mingw version
of libelf exists but there is no mmap.
Instead of guarting the libelf code with HAVE_LIBELF add a new macro named USE_LIBELF
which is only defined if libelf and mmap support are available.
Also install the mingw libelf version for CI so we catch similar errors in the future.
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>
The documentation claims that g_volume_get_mount should succeed after
g_volume_mount. Let's update mounts before releasing g_volume_mount to
be sure that the mount is added to the corresponding volume. The same
is done in GVfsUDisks2VolumeMonitor.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1458
The network monitor portal interface is changing.
Version 2 is no longer using properties, but getters
instead (this lets the portal apply access control
and avoid sending information to non-networked
sandboxes).
To support both version 1 and 2 of the interface,
we stop using generated code and instead deal with
the api differences in our own code, which is not
too difficult.
Support version 1 as well
The new python module, added with 0.46, works with Python 2 and 3 and
allows to pass a path for the interpreter to use, if the need arises.
Previously the meson build set PYTHON, used in the shebang line of
the scripts installed by glib, to the full path of the interpreter.
The new meson module doesn't expose that atm, but we should set it to
a executable name anyway, and not a full path.
Several of our tools are installed and are used by other projects to
generate code. However, there is no 'install' when projects use glib
as a subproject.
We need some way for glib to 'provide' these tools so that when some
project uses glib as a subproject, find_program('glib-mkenums') will
transparently return the glib-mkenums we just built.
Starting from Meson 0.46, this can be done with the
`meson.override_find_program()` function.
As a bonus, the Meson GNOME module will also use these
'overriden'/'provided' programs instead of looking for them in PATH.
PEP8 says that:
"Comparisons to singletons like None should always be done with is or
is not, never the equality operators."
glib uses a mix of "== None" and "is None". This patch changes all
cases to the latter.
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
Apparently this is needed for building PE libraries. It makes no
difference on Linux, where linking of the GLib symbols in the inotify
file monitor code is done lazily.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1201
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>
The flush data structures were not zero-initialised, which meant the
branch in flush_buffer_thread() was based on an uninitialised condition.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
For the purposes of debugging, it is quite useful for every GSource to
have a name set. Ensure that any GSource we construct inside GLib has a
name set. For GSources which are then returned to the caller, this name
can then be overridden with something even more useful by the caller.
Since this data is only used for debugging, avoid doing any allocations
for it; just use static strings.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1175
This reverts commit 03c324c64a and fixes
the original problem with e004d5f397 that
caused the revert.
We use $(builddir) instead of $(abs_builddir) so that Automake's
dependency generation works correctly.
See !127.
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
Add a new syntax to override files: if the group name has a ':' in it,
it indicates that we want to override the default values of keys for
only one desktop. For example:
[org.gnome.desktop.interface:Unity]
font-name='Ubuntu 12'
Will override the settings, only if "Unity" is found in
XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP. Multiple per-desktop overrides can be specified
for a given key: the one which comes first in XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP will
be used.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746592
Recognise a new 'd' option in schema keys which gives a dictionary of
per-desktop default values. This dictionary is searched for the items
found in XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP, in the order. If nothing matches (or if
the option is missing) then the default value is used as before.
This feature was requested by Alberts Muktupāvels and this patch is
based on an approach devised by them.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746592
There are a couple of different ways (and soon one more) to access the
default value of a key. Clean up the various places that access this to
avoid duplication.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746592
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