Most _list_schemas() uses were to check for the availability
of a particular schema. g_settings_schema_source_lookup() is
a better way to do this.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=712315
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
Assume unix platforms support the original POSIX.1 standard.
Specifically, assume that if G_OS_UNIX, then we have chown(),
getcwd(), getgrgid(), getpwuid(), link(), <grp.h>, <pwd.h>,
<sys/types.h>, <sys/uio.h>, <sys/wait.h>, and <unistd.h>.
Additionally, since all versions of Windows that we care about also
have <sys/types.h>, we can remove HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H checks everywhere.
Also remove one include of <sys/times.h>, and the corresponding
configure check, since the include is not currently needed (and may
always have just been a typo for <sys/time.h>).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=710519
Assume all supported platforms implement C90, and therefore they
(correctly) implement atexit(), memmove(), setlocale(), strerror(),
and vprintf(), and have <float.h> and <limits.h>.
(Also remove the configure check testing that "do ... while (0)" works
correctly; the non-do/while-based version of G_STMT_START and
G_STMT_END was removed years ago, but the check remained. Also, remove
some checks that configure.ac claimed were needed for libcharset, but
aren't actually used.)
Note that removing the g_memmove() function is not an ABI break even
on systems where g_memmove() was previously not a macro, because it
was never marked GLIB_AVAILABLE_IN_ALL or listed in glib.symbols, so
it would have been glib-internal since 2004.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=710519
My application (hotssh) would like to get the resolved address from DNS,
before we start the connect().
We could add a new event, but it's easy enough to just cache it on the
GSocketConnection; this avoids any new API.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=712547
It makes sense to match on GenericName in case an application does
not provide any keywords, but the Keywords field has been added
to explicitly support the search case, while GenericName was used
to be displayed in menus, so it makes more sense to consider
Keywords more (or equally) relevant for search.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711640
Just copy the schemas to the builddir and compile them in place instead
of trying to mess around with creating the compiled file in a different
dir. This solves issues in the summary/description testcase when
GSettings expects the usual situation of having the .xml files present
in the same directory.
We need to check for the correct line endings on Windows (\r\n) for the
echo tests and currently need to skip the test_echo_eof test there, as
it depends on the cat utility that is not normally found on Windows, and
using an external installation of cat via MSYS or Cygwin would render the
test program to hang as cat waits for user input.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711047
Various tests were depending on local_error being set by a callback
when it could never have been the case. Simplify async error detection
logic in those cases, and fix leak of GError.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711802
We had a GApplication testcase that handled both open and commandline.
This only way that this worked was by implementing the commandline
handler without actually setting the HANDLES_COMMAND_LINE flag.
This behaviour is now invalid, so just rip out the offending part of the
test.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711099
The first time this function is called we load all of the keyfiles in
the directory, ignoring the 'Hidden' ones and build an index out of the
interesting fields using g_str_tokenize_and_fold().
We do prefix matching on the tokens to find relevent desktop files.
Right now this is implemented as a hashtable that we iterate over,
checking prefixes on each token. This could possibly be sped up by
creating an array, but it's already pretty fast...
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711557
...so that the generated code will build on all platforms, as compilers
like Visual C++ does not like #ifdef checks during a definition/use of
a macro.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711049