Commit Graph

4331 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthias Clasen
aecac6e1cb glib-compile-schemas: Show error positions
GMarkup provides this information, pass it on.
2015-05-15 22:41:29 -04:00
Iain Lane
fe1a2dc196 gdbus tests: wait up to 60s for gdbus-testserver to take its bus name
Previously, we waited up to 0.5s, but that can fail on slow
architectures like ARM; now we wait up to 60s in 0.1s increments.

Patch originally by Simon McVittie <simon.mcvittie@collabora.co.uk>,
modified by Iain Lane to be called earlier, to catch all testcases in a
particular test.

Bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724113
Reviewed-by: Simon McVittie <simon.mcvittie@collabora.co.uk>
Acked-by: Matthias Clasen <mclasen@redhat.com>
2015-05-14 12:11:57 +01:00
Simon McVittie
3beb67f9f3 gdbus-connection: wait up to 10s to actually send a message
We previously waited 0.25s, which should be enough even on slow machines,
but you never know; but we also now wait in 0.1s increments, so this test
should actually be faster now.

Bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724113
Acked-by: Matthias Clasen <mclasen@redhat.com>
2015-05-14 12:11:20 +01:00
Philip Withnall
31496767c7 gresource: Document generated C file function naming
Mention the relationship to the --c-name argument, plus the need to call
some_prefix_get_resource() to get the GResource object.
2015-05-14 08:31:22 +01:00
Philip Withnall
a8c157f92b gresource: Minor capitalisation fixes in documentation 2015-05-14 08:15:46 +01:00
Simon McVittie
45dae4b506 tests: replace most g_print() with g_printerr()
I searched all files that mention g_test_run, and replaced most
g_print() calls. This avoids interfering with TAP. Exceptions:

* gio/tests/network-monitor: a manual mode that is run by
  "./network-monitor --watch" is unaffected
* glib/gtester.c: not a test
* glib/gtestutils.c: not a test
* glib/tests/logging.c: specifically exercising g_print()
* glib/tests/markup-parse.c: a manual mode that is run by
  "./markup-parse --cdata-as-text" is unaffected
* glib/tests/testing.c: specifically exercising capture of stdout
  in subprocesses
* glib/tests/utils.c: captures a subprocess's stdout
* glib/tests/testglib.c: exercises an assertion failure in g_print()

Bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725981
Reviewed-by: Colin Walters <walters@verbum.org>
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <simon.mcvittie@collabora.co.uk>
2015-05-11 20:24:56 +01:00
Simon McVittie
064183a633 GFileMonitor test: use g_test_skip() instead of g_print()
This stops it from interfering with structured stdout such as TAP.

Bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725981
Reviewed-by: Colin Walters <walters@verbum.org>
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <simon.mcvittie@collabora.co.uk>
2015-05-11 20:24:52 +01:00
Simon McVittie
4865538ce3 GTestDBus: use g_printerr() for status message
This avoids any possibility of interfering with test syntax (such as
TAP) on stdout. TAP specifically does not parse stderr.

Bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725981
Reviewed-by: Colin Walters <walters@verbum.org>
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <simon.mcvittie@collabora.co.uk>
2015-05-11 20:24:30 +01:00
Evan Nemerson
e18e7956bf gnetworkaddress: add return type annotation to parse methods
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749180
2015-05-11 09:40:26 -07:00
Simon McVittie
bced30cfbb GDBus tests: change progress noise from "if not quiet" to "if verbose"
It seems that even after Bug #711796, these can still interfere
with TAP testing:

PASS: gdbus-proxy-threads 1 /gdbus/proxy/vs-threads
tap-driver.sh: internal error getting exit status
tap-driver.sh: fatal: I/O or internal error

Let's shut them up unless --verbose is used (which would be appropriate
when running them interactively).

Similar symptoms have been seen in Debian:
https://buildd.debian.org/status/fetch.php?pkg=glib2.0&arch=mipsel&ver=2.39.91-1&stamp=1394394568
and in Guix:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-guix/2014-12/msg00002.html

Bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725981
Reviewed-by: Philip Withnall <philip.withnall@collabora.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <simon.mcvittie@collabora.co.uk>
2015-05-11 16:16:50 +01:00
Simon McVittie
6f859fe21a gdbus-peer test: let GDBusServer start before notifying main thread
When running the nonce-tcp and tcp-anonymous tests in one run
of gdbus-peer, or running one of them twice via command-line options
"-p /gdbus/tcp-anonymous -p /gdbus/tcp-anonymous", the one run second
would sometimes fail to connect with ECONNRESET.

Adding more debug messages revealed that in the successful case,
g_main_loop_run() was executed in the server thread first:

 # tcp-anonymous: server thread: listening on tcp:host=localhost,port=53517
 # tcp-anonymous: server thread: starting server...
 # tcp-anonymous: server thread: creating main loop...
 # tcp-anonymous: server thread: running main loop...
 # tcp-anonymous: main thread: trying tcp:host=localhost,port=53517...
 # tcp-anonymous: main thread: waiting for server thread...

but in the failing case, the main thread attempted to connect
before the call to g_main_loop_run() in the server thread:

 # tcp-anonymous: server thread: listening on tcp:host=localhost,port=40659
 # tcp-anonymous: server thread: starting server...
 # tcp-anonymous: server thread: creating main loop...
 # tcp-anonymous: main thread: trying tcp:host=localhost,port=40659...
 # tcp-anonymous: server thread: running main loop...

(The log message "creating main loop" was immediately before
create_service_loop(), and "running main loop" was immediately
before g_main_loop_run().)

To ensure that the GDBusServer has a chance to start accepting
connections before the main thread tries to connect to it, do not
tell the main thread about the service_loop immediately, but instead
defer it to an idle.

Bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749079
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <simon.mcvittie@collabora.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Philip Withnall <philip.withnall@collabora.co.uk>
2015-05-11 14:17:55 +01:00
Simon McVittie
f42d2c1b54 gdbus-serialization: use check_serialization() instead of dbus-daemon
This test originally did not connect to the bus, which meant it was
omitted from commits like 415a8d81 that made sure none of GLib tests
rely on the presence of an existing session bus. (In particular,
Debian autobuilders don't have a session bus.)

When test_double_array() was added, environments like the Debian
autobuilders didn't catch the fact that this test relied on having a
session bus, because it is often skipped in minimal environments
due to its libdbus-1 dependency.

We don't actually need to connect to a dbus-daemon here: it's enough
to convert the message from GVariant to D-Bus serialization, and
back into an in-memory representation through libdbus. That's what
check_serialization() does, and I've verified that when I re-introduce
bug #732754 by reverting commits 627b49b and 2268628 locally, this
test still fails.

Bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744895
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <simon.mcvittie@collabora.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Colin Walters <walters@verbum.org>
2015-05-08 16:03:57 +01:00
Philip Withnall
23a5352cd8 glocalfilemonitor: Emit notification on rate limit change
The changed variable was previously uninitialised in the path where the
rate limit was actually changed. This could result in the
GObject::notify signal not getting emitted.

Spotted by Coverity.

CID: #1296516

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748834
2015-05-04 13:56:42 +01:00
Ting-Wei Lan
517ce45f8e gsocketlistener: Don't double unref address
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748614
2015-05-01 23:07:45 +08:00
Chun-wei Fan
10b5a8befc Fix the thumbnail-verification Test
The third parameter of the thumnail_verify() function had been updated to
const GLocalFileStat, so update the thumbnail-verification test likewise
so that the test works properly on all supported platforms.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711547
2015-04-22 18:56:50 +08:00
Ryan Lortie
2bb898c60f app info: tweak default application algorithm
Always run the full algorithm for a given mime type before considering
fallback types.

This includes considering installed applications capable of handling a
particular mimetype, even if such an app is not explicitly marked as
default, and there is a default app for a less-specific type.

Specifically, this often helps with cases of installing apps that can
handle a particular subtype of text/plain.  We want to take those apps
in preference to a generic text editor, even if that editor is listed as
the default for text/plain and there is no default listed for the more
specific type.

Because of the more holistic approach taken by the algorithm, it is now
more complicated, but it also means that we can do more work while
holding the lock.  In turn, that lets us avoid duplicating some strings,
which is nice.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744282
2015-04-22 10:52:10 +01:00
Philip Withnall
bc01109618 gdbusmessage: Fix a minor memory leak on an error path
If g_dbus_message_to_blob() fails at all, it will leak its mbuf. Spotted
by running the gdbus-serialization test under Valgrind — so there is a
justification for leak-free tests after all!
2015-04-22 00:02:06 +01:00
Philip Withnall
c62f7a7d68 tests: Fix various minor memory leaks in gdbus-serialization 2015-04-21 23:55:49 +01:00
Marc-André Lureau
41acf970ac gdbus: fix out-of-bound array access
In path_rule_matches(), the given paths may be of 0-length. Do not
access memory before the array in those case. This is for example
triggered by:

test_match_rule (con, G_DBUS_SIGNAL_FLAGS_MATCH_ARG0_PATH, "/", "", FALSE);

in test_connection_signal_match_rules().

This bug was found thanks to GCC AddressSanitizer.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745745
2015-04-21 22:54:34 +02:00
Arun Raghavan
812ce28d5c gsocketconnection: Fix copy-pasto in documentation
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748019
2015-04-20 09:41:28 -04:00
Simon McVittie
92331eb10a Distribute summary-xmllang-and-attrs.gschema.xml in tarballs
This is needed for "make distcheck".

Reviewed-by: Matthias Clasen <mclasen@redhat.com>
Bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748177
2015-04-20 14:19:52 +01:00
Руслан Ижбулатов
6a2543444c W32: use 64-bit stat for localfile size calculation
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728669
2015-04-16 19:58:05 +00:00
Matthias Clasen
21107959ab gdbus: Validate the --dest argument
Passing an nonsense string for the --dest argument can lead
to a segfault of gdbus. Thats not nice, so use our existing
validation function for bus names here.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747541
2015-04-09 17:27:17 -04:00
Ryan Lortie
3fa0a051a4 gsettings: add test for repeated <summary> errors
Make sure error handling on repeated <summary> and <description> is
being done properly, not resulting in glib-compile-schemas throwing a
critical.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747542
2015-04-08 22:35:35 -04:00
Ryan Lortie
7f4fdb59aa gsettings: fix schema compiler error handling
Fix a couple of issues in error handling in glib-compile-schemas.

The first problem is that, in case of repeated <summary> or
<description> tags we were still allocating a GString which was never
being freed (due to the throwing of the error resulting in immediate
termination of the parse).

The second problem is that if the repeated <summary> tag also had
attributes, we would attempt to set the GError twice.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747542
2015-04-08 22:35:35 -04:00
Ryan Lortie
2b8f131599 gsettings: stay compatible with installed schemas
Bug 747209 introduced an error when multiple <summary> or <description>
tags are found for a single key in a GSettings schema.  This check
should have been present from the start, but it was left out because the
schema compiler doesn't include these items in the cache file.  Even
still -- part of the schema compiler's job is validation, and it should
be enforcing proper syntax here.

Repeated <summary> and <description> tags are a semi-common problem when
intltool has been misconfigured in the build system of a package, but
it's possible to imagine mistakes being made by hand as well.

The idea is that these problems would be caught during the build of a
package and maintainers would be forced to fix their build systems.

An unintended side-effect of this change, however, is that the schema
compiler started ignoring already-installed schemas that contained these
problems, when rebuilding the cache.  This means that the installation
of _any_ application would cause the regeneration of the entire cache,
with these already-installed applications being excluded.  Without the
schema in the cache, the application would crash on next startup.

The validation check in the gsettings m4 macro passes --strict to the
compiler, which is not used when rebuilding the cache after
installation.  Pass this flag down into the parser and only throw the
error in case --strict was given.  This will result in the (desired)
build failure without also causing already-installed apps to stop
functioning.

This means that we will not get even a warning about the invalid schema
file in the already-installed case, but that's fine.  There is no sense
spamming the user with these messages when they are already quite fatal
for the developer at build time.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747472
2015-04-08 22:35:35 -04:00
Ross Lagerwall
495d864e43 docs: Fix documentation for 95d300eac5 2015-04-07 18:23:39 +01:00
Chun-wei Fan
7b8f517503 gio/gdbusproxy.c: Include gasyncresult.h
Commit f10b655 removed the inclusion of gasyncresult.h from gdbusproxy.c,
but gdbusproxy.c uses g_async_result_get_source_object(), which caused a
build warning/error.  Fix that.
2015-04-07 15:02:22 +08:00
Dan Winship
7e8d4145af gdbus: fix deadlock on message cancel/timeout
The gdbus GTask port introduced a deadlock because some code had been
using g_simple_async_result_complete_in_idle() to ensure that the
callback didn't run until after a mutex was unlocked, but in the gtask
version, the callback was being run immediately. Fix it to drop the
mutex before calling g_task_return*(). Also, tweak
tests/gdbus-connection to test this.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747349
2015-04-06 12:22:07 -04:00
Ross Lagerwall
95d300eac5 tls: Add support for copying session data
Add support for copying session data between client connections.
This is needed for implementing FTP over SSL. Most servers use a separate
session for each control connection and enforce sharing of each control
connection's session between the related data connection.

Copying session data between two connections is needed for two reasons:
1) The data connection runs on a separate port and so has a different
server_identity which means it would not normally share the session with
the control connection using the session caching currently implemented.
2) It is typical to have multiple control connections, each of which
uses a different session with the same server_identity, so only one of
these sessions gets stored in the cache. If a data connection is opened,
(ignoring the port issue) it may try and reuse the wrong control
connection's session, and fail.

This operation is conceptually the same as OpenSSL's SSL_copy_session_id
operation.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745255
2015-04-06 14:54:12 +01:00
Paolo Borelli
b64e2956f6 Add an event signal to GSocketListener
This allows the caller to know when a socket has been bound so that
it can for instance set the SO_SENDBUF and SO_RECVBUF socket options
before listen is called

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738207
2015-04-04 21:26:15 +02:00
Dan Winship
ec9c248d7d gio: deprecate GSimpleAsyncResult
GTask has been around for a long time now, everything in GLib is using
it, and the run-in-thread deadlock problems should be fixed now.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=661767
2015-04-04 10:16:52 -04:00
Dan Winship
f10b6550ff gio: (belatedly) port gdbus from GSimpleAsyncResult to GTask
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=661767
2015-04-04 10:16:45 -04:00
Dan Winship
e2655cd455 tests: clean up / ignore some more generated files 2015-04-04 10:00:39 -04:00
Dan Winship
86866a2a6d gtask: remove hardcoded GTask thread-pool size
GTask used a 10-thread thread pool for g_task_run_in_thread() /
g_task_run_in_thread_sync(), but this ran into problems when task
threads blocked waiting for another g_task_run_in_thread_sync()
operation to complete. Previously there was a workaround for this, by
bumping up the thread limit when that case was detected, but deadlocks
could still happen if there were non-GTask threads involved. (Eg, task
A sends a message to thread X and waits for a response, but thread X
needs to complete task B in a thread before returning the response to
task A.)

So, allow GTask's thread pool to be expanded dynamically, by watching
it from the glib worker thread, and growing it (at an
exponentially-decreasing rate) if too much time passes without any
tasks completing. This should solve the deadlocking problems without
causing sudden breakage in apps that assume they can queue huge
numbers of tasks at once without consequences.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=687223
2015-04-04 09:27:50 -04:00
Matthias Clasen
b2734d762f glib-compile-schema: Don't accept duplicate docs
This schema compiler was completely ignoring <summary> and
<description> tags. Unfortunately, there are modules out there
who merge translations for these back in, with xml:lang. And
this is giving dconf-editor a hard time. Since this is not
how translations of schemas are meant to be done, just
reject such schema files.

Also add tests exercising the new error handling.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747209
2015-04-01 18:55:54 -04:00
alex94puchades
1f1fa69375 Make glib-compile-resources a little smarter
glib-compile-resources was guessing a filename ending
in .c when generating sources, but did not do the same
for headers. Fix it so it generates a .h file when
guessing the filename for headers.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746753
2015-03-29 15:26:19 -04:00
Matthias Clasen
61a105b883 Clarify a confusing string
Relative was repeated twice here, when clearly what was meant is
relative or absolute. Pointed out in
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726447
2015-03-29 11:43:52 -04:00
Ryan Lortie
fd40b5942d inotify: fix move event matching accounting
The hash table stores the list of unmatched IN_MOVE_FROM events, but we
were removing entries from it when popping IN_MOVE_TO events.

Fix that up to correct a crash in nautilus due to the assertion failure
below.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746749
2015-03-26 14:56:25 -04:00
Ryan Lortie
706c4d32ad file monitors: fix a typo
Due to a typo, a rename reported via a pair of delete/create events (due
to the watcher not giving the flag for moves to be paired) was
accidentally reported as being created with the old name instead of the
new name.

Fix that.
2015-03-25 23:08:38 -04:00
Ryan Lortie
4a292721bc GListModel: roll back use of type redefinition
We declare the typedefs for GListModel and GListStore in giotypes.h, as
a matter of convention.  This is not actually required, since the
typedef is emitted as part of the G_DECLARE_* macros.

The giotypes.h approach is only used to avoid cyclic dependencies
between headers, which is not a problem in this case.

Type redefinition is a C11 feature, and although it was around in some
compilers before then, gcc 4.2.1 (from 2007) is apparently still in wide
use, being the default compiler for OpenBSD.

Eventually, we will probably hit a case where we actually need to
redefine a type, but since we're not there yet, let's back off a bit.
2015-03-25 09:37:01 -04:00
Philip Withnall
1b22df7822 gsocket: Document FD ownership with g_socket_new_from_fd()
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730188
2015-03-21 13:37:17 -04:00
Chun-wei Fan
671292bbb2 Win32: Port Directory Monitoring to New GLocalFileMonitor
This WIP patch moves the Windows Directory Monitoring code to the new
GLocalFileMonitor mechanism, and adds file monitoring in the process.

Progress from previous patch:
-File renames are now properly supported, but G_FILE_MONITOR_EVENT_MOVED_IN
 and G_FILE_MONITOR_EVENT_MOVED_OUT needs to be investigated, as
 ReadDirectoryChangesW() seems to send FILE_ACTION_REMOVED when a file is
 moved out of a directory.
-Events are handled for both the long and short (8.3) variants of the
 filenames, and files monitored will report changes when it is changed
 via its short or long filenames.

Things to be done:
-Perhaps find out about attribute changes in files in a monitored
 directory; if a file is monitored, attribute changes are correctly
 handled.
-Investigate on G_FILE_MONITOR_EVENT_MOVED_OUT,
 G_FILE_MONITOR_EVENT_MOVED_IN, G_FILE_MONITOR_EVENT_PRE_UNMOUNT,
 G_FILE_MONITOR_EVENT_UNMOUNTED.
-Investigate on the "boredom" algoritm, and see how we can do it on
 Windows.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730116
2015-03-20 12:01:35 -04:00
Ryan Lortie
d682df186e file monitors: rewrite FAM file monitor
Completely rewrite the FAM file monitor.  Major changes:

 - now runs in the worker thread

 - dispatches events in a threadsafe way via GFileMonitorSource

 - uses unix fd source instead of a GIOChannel

 - is now simple enough to fit into one short file
2015-03-20 12:01:35 -04:00
Ryan Lortie
21ab660cf8 fen: remove Solaris file monitor support
This code is unmaintained and we have no way to port it to the new file
monitoring API.
2015-03-20 12:01:35 -04:00
Ryan Lortie
641b98ce6b kqueue backend: port to new GLocalFileMonitor API
This is the bare minimal effort.  This seems not to crash immediately,
but it definitely needs some better testing.

The backend is not in good shape.  It could use some serious work.
2015-03-20 12:01:35 -04:00
Ryan Lortie
19522424b1 GPollFileMonitor: use thread default main context
Attach the GPollFileMonitor to the thread default main context instead
of the global default.

This matches the behaviour of the other file monitors.
2015-03-20 12:01:35 -04:00
Ryan Lortie
c5d5e2916b inotify: implement "boredom" algorithm
Use the "interesting" value from g_file_monitor_source_handle_event() to
decide if we're currently being flooded by a stream of boring events.

The main case here is when one or more files is being written to and the
change events are all being rate-limited in the GFileMonitor frontends.

In that case, we become "bored" with the event stream and add a backoff
timeout.  In the case that it is exactly one large file being written
(which is the common case) then leaving the event in the queue also lets
the kernel perform merging on it, so when we wake up, we will only see
the one event.  Even in the case that the kernel is unable to perform
merging, the context switch overhead will be vastly reduced.

In testing, this cuts down on the number of wake ups during a large file
copy, by a couple orders of magnitude (ie: less than 1% of the number of
wake ups).
2015-03-20 12:01:35 -04:00
Ryan Lortie
9adf948a2b GFileMonitorSource: return "interesting" value
Return an "interesting" boolean from the event handler function on
GFileMonitorSource.

An event was "interesting" if it will result in a signal actually being
dispatched to the user.  It is "uninteresting" if it only hit an
already-dirty rate limiter.

We will use this information to do some backing off in the backends when
faced with a flood of uninteresting events.
2015-03-20 12:01:34 -04:00
Ryan Lortie
3d2d4b8efe inotify: send CHANGES_DONE when new files 'appear'
We generally assume that an IN_CREATE event is the start of a series of
events in which another process is doing this:

  fd = creat (...)         -> IN_CREATE
  write (fd, ..)           -> IN_MODIFY
  write (fd, ..)           -> IN_MODIFY
  close (fd)               -> IN_CLOSE_WRITE

and as such, we use the CHANGES_DONE_HINT event after CREATED in order
to show when this sequence of events has completed (ie: when we receive
IN_CLOSE_WRITE when the user closes the file).

Renaming a file into place is handled by IN_MOVED_FROM so we don't have
to worry about that.

There are many other cases, however, where a new file 'appears' in a
directory in its completed form already, and the kernel reports
IN_CREATE.  Examples include mkdir, mknod, and the creation of
hardlinks.  In these cases, there is no corresponding IN_CLOSE_WRITE
event and the CHANGES_DONE_HINT will have to be emitted by an arbitrary
timeout.

Try to detect some of these cases and report CHANGES_DONE_HINT
immediately.

This is not perfect.  There are some cases that will not be reliably
detected.  An example is if the user makes a hardlink and then
immediately deletes the original (before we can stat the new file).
Another example is if the user creates a file with O_TMPFILE.  In both
of these cases, CHANGES_DONE_HINT will still eventually be delivered via
the timeout.
2015-03-20 12:01:34 -04:00