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>