Little did I know when making commit
c257757cf6 that a lot of the output of
glib-compile-schemas is string matched in some of the unit tests. Fix
them to match the updated strings.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695573
Some platforms use different extensions for compile-time linkable
libraries vs runtime-loadable modules. Need to use special libtool
flag in the latter case for consistency with what gmodule expects.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731703
• Fix capitalisation to be consistent
• Use Unicode quotation marks where appropriate
• Move trailing \n characters out of the translable strings and append
them unconditionally
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695573
Mention that it really is a good idea to save errno before doing
literally anything else after calling a function which could set it.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=785577
Prevent the situation where errno is set by function A, then function B
is called (which is typically _(), but could be anything else) and it
overwrites errno, then errno is checked by the caller.
errno is a horrific API, and we need to be careful to save its value as
soon as a function call (which might set it) returns. i.e. Follow the
pattern:
int errsv, ret;
ret = some_call_which_might_set_errno ();
errsv = errno;
if (ret < 0)
puts (strerror (errsv));
This patch implements that pattern throughout GLib. There might be a few
places in the test code which still use errno directly. They should be
ported as necessary. It doesn’t modify all the call sites like this:
if (some_call_which_might_set_errno () && errno == ESOMETHING)
since the refactoring involved is probably more harmful than beneficial
there. It does, however, refactor other call sites regardless of whether
they were originally buggy.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=785577
The /etc/mtab file is still used by some distributions (e.g. Slackware),
so it has to be monitored instead of /proc/self/mountinfo in order to
avoid races between g_unix_mounts_get and "mounts-changed" signal. The
util-linux is built with --enable-libmount-support-mtab in that case and
mnt_has_regular_mtab is used for checks. Let's use mnt_has_regular_mtab
also to determine which file to monitor.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=779607
Unlike g_application_register, there is no public API to unregister the
GApplication from D-Bus. Therefore, if the GApplication is set up
manually without using g_application_run, then neither can the
GApplicationImpl be destroyed nor can dbus_unregister be called before
destruction.
This is fine as long as no sub-class has implemented dbus_unregister.
If they have, their method method will be called after destruction, and
they should be prepared to deal with the consequences.
As long as there is no public API for unregistering, let's demote the
assertion to a WARNING. Bravehearts who don't use g_application_run
can continue to implement dbus_unregister, but they would have been
adequately notified.
This reverts commit c1ae1170fa.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725950
Invoking the dbus_unregister virtual method during destruction is
problematic. It would happen after a sub-class has dropped its
references to its instance objects, and it is surprising to be asked to
unexport exported D-Bus objects after that.
This problem was masked as a side-effect of commit 21b1c390a3.
Let's ensure that it doesn't regress by asserting that dbus_unregister
has happened before destruction.
Based on a patch by Giovanni Campagna.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725950
When using the Freedesktop backend for GNotification, it seems like a
better idea to map G_NOTIFICATION_PRIORITY_HIGH to NOTIFY_URGENCY_NORMAL
(instead of NOTIFY_URGENCY_CRITICAL) provided that the difference
between GNotification's NORMAL and HIGH priorities is minor.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Perez de Castro <aperez@igalia.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784815
When building glib as a subproject, #include's for xdp-dbus.h from xdp-dbus.c
and for gdbus-daemon-generated.h from gdbus-daemon-generated.c were generated as
being prefixed with the subproject prefix, eg
#include "subproject/glib/gio/gdbus-daemon-generated.h".
That failed since the root of the build directory is obviously not part of the
include path when building a subproject.
Passing --output-directory @OUTDIR@ to gdbus-codegen and removing @OUTDIR@ from
--generate-c-code fixes the issue.
meson.source_root() returns the toplevel source directory
of the toplevel project, thus the paths were wrong when using
it. Simply using files() gets us the right path
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784133
With meson from git dependencies of dependencies are no
longer added automatically and recursively to the linker
lines. Meaning dependencies that are used have to be
passed directly and explicitly or we'll get linker errors.
Need to fix up some of the tests a little, because the
test binary will not necessarily be run from the current
build sub-directory, and the build directory structure
might not always be a mirror of the source directory
structure, so pass location of glib-mkenums and
glib-compile-scheme and such directly.
This reduces the build-time dependencies of glib to only Python 3,
Meson, and git. Git is also optional if you provide a tarball in
which the subproject directories already exist.
The Python port was done by Jussi Pakkanen on bugzilla:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=779332
This version contains some fixes from that and also changes all
instances of `@` to `\u0040` because Meson does not yet provide a
configure_file() mode that ignores unknown @MACRO@ values.
This is a stub-only library that can be used while building against
MSVC and contains no i18n machinery at all.
The dependencies added indirectly use the libintl.h header, and when
built as a subproject, the header won't be in a path known the
pre-processor.
Don't use it project-wide for building everything. Otherwise
symbols for shared modules won't be exposed, e.g. in the
resourceplugin used by the gio resource unit test.
giomodule test needed symbol visibility pragmas added. This is needed on
Windows anyway, so it's better to do it this way rather than disabling
-fvisibility=hidden for the test modules.
Disable gio tests on Windows, fix .gitignore to not ignore
config.h.meson, and add more things to it.
Rename the library file naming and versioning to match what Autotools
outputs, e.g., libglib-2.0.so.0.5000.2 on Linux, libglib-2.0-0.dll and
glib-2.0-0.dll on Windows with MSVC.
Several more tiny fixes, more executables built and installed, install
pkg-config and m4 files, fix building of gobject tests.
Changes to gdbus-codegen to support out-of-tree builds without
environment variables set (which you can't in Meson). We now add the
build directory to the Python module search path.
g_build_filename() returns a gchar*, but it was stored in a const gchar*
and then g_free()d, which is wrong and led to a warning about the const
qualifier being cast away.