While uniqueness is great, sometimes you want to restart
a newer version of the same app. These two flags make that
possible.
We also add a ::name-lost signal, that is emitted when it
happens. The default handler for this signal just calls
g_application_quit(), but applications may want to connect
and do cleanup or state-saving here.
When using glib as subproject we are forced to pass glib_dep,
gobject_dep and gio_dep to any build target. If we pass only gio_dep it
will missing include directory for glib and gobject.
Putting the raw URIs in the documentation comments would not link them,
and the ‘%20’s in the URIs were being parsed by gtk-doc as symbol
references. Fix that by using Markdown to format them correctly as
links.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Using `%` indicates that you’re linking to a symbol. In these cases we
wanted some nicely formatted literals, or a link to a specific property.
Use backticks for the literals, and link to the property fully.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Due to the line wrapping, gtk-doc was interpreting this second line as
redefining the @dbus_register documentation.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Otherwise they fill your real ~/.config/mimeapps.list with rubbish and
race for access to it. This is arguably not good.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1514
If a D-Bus interface was annotated with o.fd.DBus.Deprecated, then the
corresponding GObject property, in the common GInterface implemented
by the generated GDBusObjectProxies and GDBusObjectSkeletons, to
access the generated code for the D-Bus interface was not being marked
with G_PARAM_DEPRECATED, even though the gtk-doc snippet had the
'Deprecated: ' tag.
G_PARAM_DEPRECATED is older than gdbus-codegen, 2.26 and 2.30
respectively, hence it can be used unconditionally.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/merge_requests/485
If a D-Bus interface has a property that's annotated with
o.fd.DBus.Deprecated, then the corresponding GObject property was not
being marked with G_PARAM_DEPRECATED, even though the gtk-doc snippet
had the 'Deprecated: ' tag.
G_PARAM_DEPRECATED is older than gdbus-codegen, 2.26 and 2.30
respectively, hence it can be used unconditionally.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/merge_requests/485
Allowing unsafe rehandshakes used to be required for web compatibility,
but this is no longer a concern in 2018. So there should no longer be
compatibility benefits to calling this function. All it does is make
your TLS connection insecure.
Also, rehandshaking no longer exists at all in TLS 1.3.
At some point (maybe soon!) glib-networking will begin ignoring the
rehandshake mode, so let's deprecate it now.
Let's entirely deprecate calling this function for rehandshaking. The
current documentation is OK, but guarantees defined behavior (to attempt
a rehandshake) when TLS 1.2 is in use. But there's no way to force TLS
1.2, and also no way to check which version of TLS is in use. I really
should have deprecated use of this function for rehandshaking entirely
last time I updated it.
Fortunately, there should be no compatibility risk for existing code,
because rehandshaking has no visible effects at the API level.
With the changes to limit GVariant type nesting (commit 7c4e6e9fbe),
it’s now possible to have a valid type signature which is not a valid
GVariant type when enclosed in parentheses (to make it a tuple).
Check for that when parsing the signature field in a D-Bus message.
Includes a unit test.
oss-fuzz#11120
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
This test is intended to verify the fix for
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=787731, which was that
g_file_query_filesystem_info() would return stale information for the
mount. After replacing a read-only mount with a read-write mount, this
test used to only fail if G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_FILESYSTEM_READONLY was TRUE
and yet the file could be opened for writing. In particular, if (due to
a test bug) the file really was still on a read-only filesystem, the
test would pass.
Now that we have fixed that bug in the test, we can make a stronger
assertion.
fusermount -z behaves like umount --lazy, which is documented thus:
> Detach the filesystem from the file hierarchy now, and clean up all
> references to this filesystem as soon as it is not busy anymore.
Without this, the call to `fusermount -u` often fails with:
/usr/bin/fusermount: failed to unmount /home/wjt/src/gnome/glib/_build/dir_bindfs_mountpoint: Device or resource busy
which causes the subsequent call to bindfs to fail:
fuse: mountpoint is not empty
fuse: if you are sure this is safe, use the 'nonempty' mount option
It's not clear what is causing the mount to be busy. Inserting a
g_usleep (100 * 1000) before the calls to `fusermount -u` also works to
make the problem go away, but for the purposes of this test the
important point is that the mount is detached from the directory, for
which a lazy unmount is fine.
Fixes#1590.
In practice, fusermount -u often fails:
/usr/bin/fusermount: failed to unmount /home/wjt/src/gnome/glib/_build/dir_bindfs_mountpoint: Device or resource busy
which causes the subsequent calls to bindfs to fail:
fuse: mountpoint is not empty
fuse: if you are sure this is safe, use the 'nonempty' mount option
This may or may not cause the current test run to fail, but it reliably
causes a repeat run of the test to fail. This change causes the current
run to fail instead.
I made a mistake when last updating the documentation in 94a99ae9. I
wrote that, with TLS 1.3, this would perform a rekey instead of a
rehandshake. In fact, that's only true for client connections. For
server connections, it's a no-op.
I was a bit nervous about how to document the behavior anyway, because
we really don't know what behavior will be reasonable with non-GnuTLS
crypto backends. This behavior is reasonable for the GnuTLS backend, but
might not necessarily make sense for OpenSSL. Ideally, we would
discourage API users from doing things which could have unexpected
effects, so instead of documenting what the GnuTLS backend does, I think
it'd be better to document that this is "undefined but not dangerous,"
since of course we want to make sure that existing code that doesn't
know about TLS 1.3 is not broken.
The docs sound like settings list is a thing, and
a ::children-changed signal exists. That is not the
case, and will never be the case at this point, so
stop pretending.
Closes: #1362
Currently, GDBusProxy:g-name-owner only notifies changes to the unique
name owner of the remote object in case the proxy was constructed for a
well-known name.
That sounds like an artificial restriction, and it's convenient to
connect to notify::g-name-owner if a proxy instance has already been
created for an unique name, instead of additionally using
g_bus_watch_name() to track the owner.
To fix this, always connect to NameOwnerChanged after the proxy is
initialized, instead of only doing so when the proxy was constructed for
a well-known name.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=791316https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/1310
test_c_args is defined in the root meson.build with unfiltered list of
compiler flags, then redefined in gio/tests/meson.build after the
subdir() call. Move it before.
The length of the stolen data from a memory output stream is given by
get_data_size() — get_size() can be larger, and hence cause unnecessary
overallocation.
This is the most degenerate possible test but it does exercise this code
path.
(Tweaked by Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com> to also add the flag
to the autotools build.)
The executable depends only on the generated header file at compile
time, and on the library at link time. So meson can decide to compile
gdbus-peer.c before compiling the library and thus won't have generated
the header yet, causing the build error.
So declare_dependency() should only have the header file in its sources,
to force generating files before compiling gdbus-peer.c without
including objectmanager-gen.c into gdbus-peer's sources.
We use libgdbus_example_objectmanager_dep as dependency for various
tests, but this implies only a link dependency while it doesn't ensure
that the sources are generated.
Make this explicit