It's unnecessary, and only adds visual noise; we have been fairly
inconsistent in the past, but the semi-colon-less version clearly
dominates in the code base.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=669355
If we have an input parameter (or return value) we need to use (nullable).
However, if it is an (inout) or (out) parameter, (optional) is sufficient.
It looks like (nullable) could be used for everything according to the
Annotation documentation, but (optional) is more specific.
This can happen if the hash table lookup for ‘noncefile’ fails, and
hence the first ‘goto out’ is hit, at which point resolver is still
NULL.
Found with scan-build.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=113075
G_OS #ifdefs are only available once glibconfig.h has been
evaluated ; that is, after including glib headers.
Move this block down so it gets correctly evaluated.
In Windows development environments that have it, <unistd.h> is mostly
just a wrapper around several other native headers (in particular,
<io.h>, which contains read(), close(), etc, and <process.h>, which
contains getpid()). But given that some Windows dev environments don't
have <unistd.h>, everything that uses those functions on Windows
already needed to include the correct Windows header as well, and so
there is never any point to including <unistd.h> on Windows.
Also, remove some <unistd.h> includes (and a few others) that were
unnecessary even on unix.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=710519
Back in the far-off twentieth century, it was normal on unix
workstations for U+0060 GRAVE ACCENT to be drawn as "‛" and for U+0027
APOSTROPHE to be drawn as "’". This led to the convention of using
them as poor-man's ‛smart quotes’ in ASCII-only text.
However, "'" is now universally drawn as a vertical line, and "`" at a
45-degree angle, making them an `odd couple' when used together.
Unfortunately, there are lots of very old strings in glib, and also
lots of new strings in which people have kept up the old tradition,
perhaps entirely unaware that it used to not look stupid.
Fix this by just using 'dumb quotes' everywhere.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=700746
There are two benefits to this:
1) We can centralize any operating system specific knowledge of
close-vs-EINTR handling. For example, while on Linux we should never
retry, if someone cared enough later about HP-UX, they could come by
and change this one spot.
2) For places that do care about the return value and want to provide
the caller with a GError, this function makes it convenient to do so.
Note that gspawn.c had an incorrect EINTR loop-retry around close().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682819
Add g_main_context_ref_thread_default(), which always returns a
reffed GMainContext, rather than sometimes returning a (non-reffed)
GMainContext, and sometimes returning NULL. This simplifies the
bookkeeping in any code that needs to keep a reference to the
thread-default context for a while.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=660994
To help cross compilation, don't use glib-genmarshal in our
build. This is easy now that we have g_cclosure_marshal_generic().
In gobject/, add gmarshal.[ch] to git (making the existing entry
points stubs).
In gio/, simply switch to using g_cclosure_marshal_generic().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=652168
Otherwise things probably won't work in a garbage-collected world
(consider the trivial GC that never collects garbage).
This commit breaks GDBusServer ABI. No known released software is
using this code.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
==6793== 19 (8 direct, 11 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 640 of 1,423
==6793== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==6793== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==6793== by 0x40573DB: g_malloc_n (gmem.c:281)
==6793== by 0x4073D1B: g_strsplit (gstrfuncs.c:2436)
==6793== by 0x4224A89: initable_init (gdbusserver.c:1040)
==6793== by 0x41A73F9: g_initable_init (ginitable.c:105)
==6793== by 0x41A759B: g_initable_new_valist (ginitable.c:218)
==6793== by 0x41A743E: g_initable_new (ginitable.c:138)
==6793== by 0x42238F5: g_dbus_server_new_sync (gdbusserver.c:484)
Bug #628328.
Without this fix, we'd sometimes run code after stop() and finalize()
to handle incoming requests. This was observed in the gdbus-peer test
case occasionally crashing:
$ ./gdbus-peer
/gdbus/peer-to-peer: OK
/gdbus/delayed-message-processing: OK
/gdbus/nonce-tcp:
GLib-GObject-WARNING **: invalid uninstantiatable type `(null)' in cast to `GDBusServer'
aborting...
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
E.g. move these C structures out of public header files and into their
respective C files. Also nuke padding since this is no longer needed.
This leaves only GDBusProxy as an extendable type.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Without this guarantee, peer-to-peer connections are not very
useful. However, with this guarantee it's possible to export objects
in a handler for the GDBusServer::new-connection signal.
There are two caveats with this patch
- it won't work on message bus connections
- we don't queue up messages to be written
that can be addresses later if needed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=623142
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
- Fix various #include issues
- Change #error to #warning for the EXTERNAL authentication mechanism.
It is not clear if this should work on Win32 at all.
- Call close() before unlink() for the SHA1 keyring
- Change #error to #warning so we don't forget to do
permission checking of the .dbus-keyrings directory
- Use Win32 SID for the SHA1 auth mech
- Apparently we can't use word 'interface' as an identifier
- Implement a _g_dbus_win32_get_user_sid() function. For now it's
private. Don't know if it should be public somewhere. Maybe in
a future GCredentials support for Win32? I don't know.
- GFileDescriptorBased is not available on Win32. So avoid using
it in GLocalFile stuff. Now, Win32 still uses GLocalFile + friends
(which works with file descriptors) so expose a private function
to get the fd for an OutputStream so things still work.
- Fixup gio.symbols
- Fixup tests/gdbus-peer.c so it builds
With this, at least things compile and the gdbus-peer.exe test case
passes. Which is a great start. I've tested this by cross-compiling on
a x86_64 Fedora 13 host using mingw32 and running the code on a 32-bit
Windows 7 box.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=619142
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Things compile and the test-suite passes. Still need to hook up
gio.symbols and docs. There are still a bunch of TODOs left in the
sources that needs to be addressed.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>