Gschema-compile uses glob which is available on Unix only. Thus can't
run the gschema-compile test except on Unix either.
To avoid an Automake error, comment out the SOURCES and LDADD of
unix-streams which for some reason has been commented out from
TEST_PROGS.
Can't use a Makefile.am target called foo_PROGRAMS for random files
that aren't actually programs, as Automake assumes EXEEXT should be
appended to the file names.
Correspond to GUnixInputStream and GUnixOutputStream. No true async
support though. But that is how the Win32 API is, for files not
explicitly opened for so-called overlapped IO.
The API to create these streams takes Win32 HANDLEs. Not file
descriptors, because file descriptors are specific to the C library
used. The user code and GLib might be using different C libraries.
Also add a test program for the new classes, and a gio-windows-2.0.pc
file.
It turns out that the way this worked did not work out for the current
main usecase (gedit) due to issues with how this is best integrated
with GtkTextView. So, in order to not have to support an unused non-ideal
API forever we remove this before its been in a stable release.
The basic feature seems to have some utility though, so we hope for it
to eventually return in a better form.
Some buildd environments have an unwritable $HOME, which makes the
test that looks for an unexisting file there fail. Use $TMP instead,
which should be more reliable.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=610860
root can access and write to a directory when it doesn't have
exec and write permissions respectively. So expect the tests that
check that to succeed rather than to fail when running as root.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=552912
GFile allows for the possibility that external implementations may not
support thread-default contexts yet, via
g_file_supports_thread_contexts(). GVolumeMonitor is not yet
thread-default-context aware.
Add a test program to verify that basic gio async ops work correctly
in non-default contexts.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=579984
Currently, to implement cancellability correctly, all synchronous
calls to GSocket must be preceded by a g_socket_condition_wait() call,
(even though GSocket does this internally as well) and all
asynchronous calls must do occasional manual
g_cancellable_is_cancelled() checks. Since it's trivial to do these
checks inside GSocket instead, and we don't particularly want to
encourage people to use the APIs non-cancellably, move the
cancellation support into GSocket and simplify the existing callers.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=586797
In particular, targets with weight 0 should be very UNlikely to be
selected, not very likely, as they were before. However, even ignoring
that bug in the logic, there was an additional bug (swapping list
items would cause the 0-weight items to get re-ordered incorrectly
anyway), and the code contained several fencepost errors.
This patch also adds gio/tests/srvtarget.c, which confirms that for a
sample list of targets, we now generate all possible correct random
sortings and no incorrect sortings, and the correct sortings occur in
roughly the expected proportions (though if the current code is
still wrong, those proportions may be wrong as well).
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=583398