Add support for passing the full contents of the environment to the
primary instance (by storing it in the platform_data) when
G_APPLICATION_SEND_ENVIRONMENT is in the flags.
RFC 2782 says that if there is no SRV record for
_SERVICE._PROTOCOL.DOMAIN, you should fall back to trying just DOMAIN,
with the default port for SERVICE. Do that.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=629274
Otherwise, attempting to create a GSocketConnection from the socket
will likely return the wrong type, since the protocol won't match any
of the registered subtypes.
Also add the start of a GSocket test program (from davidz).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=627171
Makes explicit the fact that you are interacting with the individual
action rather than the group and removes potential namespace conflicts
with classes implementing the interface (like g_application_activate()
vs g_application_activate_action()).
Create the gobject property for it.
Tweak the logic of having a pending timeout at the time that the
application starts -- run the mainloop with a use count of zero if there
is a timeout active.
Provides access to the g_settings_get_range() functionality, converting
its return value to something that's reasonable for printing at the
console and potentially parseable. The format may change.
Bug #631264.
Prevent assertion messages from spewing forth and also ensure that we
exit with an error status in the event that the value was out of range.
Bug #631264.
Don't store the "none" value for flags into the compiled schema file.
"none" should never appear as a value -- no flags set is indicated by an
empty array.
Ensure that the strinfo is output in little-endian byte order on big
endian machines.
GSettings is now passing all of its tests on PowerPC.
Bug #630968 is closed.
GSettings relies on parts of the schema infromation remaining
unbyteswapped (the strinfo database, for example) while requiring other
parts to be in native order (the default value, constraints, etc.).
Lift the byteswapping into a place where we can do it selectively.
The test case was passing a guint16 to g_object_get() for a guint
property. That's invalid on all systems, although it works (more or
less) on little endian ones. On big endian it's a total no-go.
For GSettings.
Use the functionality introduced in the last commit to simplify our
notify dispatching and increase the safety of doing so (by ensuring that
the context is acquired in the current thread for the duration of the
dispatch).
This closes bugs #623400 and #629849.
Rewrite the GSettings tool.
Improvements/changes:
- simplify the code by performing common actions (like creating a
schema) in only one place instead of one per-command
- new features (list schemas, list keys, monitor multiple, etc)
- factor-out bash completion and implement in shellscript
- input validation: should never abort due to invalid inputs
Still to do:
- proper error checking for ranges/choices
- support for querying range/choice information
- bash completion support for enums
Closes bug #629289, possibly among others.
In its previous form, g_settings_list_schemas() was not useful as a tool
to prevent aborts due to using g_settings_new() with an invalid schema
name. This is because g_settings_list_scheams() also listed relocatable
schemas, and calling g_settings_new() for those would abort just the
same as if you called it for a non-existent schema.
Modify g_settings_list_schemas() so that it only returns schemas for
which it is safe to call g_settings_new(). Add another call for sake of
completeness: g_settings_list_relocatable_schemas().
Implement the second feature requested in the bug: silently ignore
override files that attempt to override schemas that are not currently
installed.
Also, support 'strictness' being optional for other errors when parsing
override files (ie: inability to open the file, unknown key name, parse
errors, out of range). We don't completely back out the file in this
case — as that is difficult with the current implementation — but just
ignore the override for the single key.
Implement the first of two features requested in the bug: when
encountering a broken .xml schema file, back out the changes in that
file and continue to parse other files.
This prevents a single broken .xml file from messing up GSettings for
everyone else.
Add a --strict option to get the old behaviour. Use this from the test
cases.
Move all the annotations over from gobject-introspection.
They will not be used directly by the introspection scanner for now,
instead they will be extracted by a script and updated manually
until introspection is properly integrated into the glib build
It doesn't really work right now because of a dbus-daemon(1) bug - see
the comment added in the TODO section of gdbusconnection.c. So revert
to old behavior. The downside is a lot of files in /tmp but right now
that's better than not being able to run tests in a loop.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Without this fix, the ./gdbus-connection test case occasionally fails, see
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=629945#c5
like this
/gdbus/connection/basic: OK
/gdbus/connection/life-cycle: **
ERROR:gdbus-connection.c:223:test_connection_life_cycle: assertion failed:
(!quit_mainloop_fired)
cleaning up bus with pid 21794
Aborted (core dumped)
because the callback didn't happen on the same thread as where we are
running the loop.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Since we make message buses come and go, we need to ensure that the
singleton connection instance goes away before attempting to call
g_bus_get_sync() or similar.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
When under load, a one second timeout is just not enough. This can be
observed by e.g. restarting a CPU- and IO-intensive application like a
web browser with many tabs while running the test cases. Therefore,
bump the timeouts to 30 seconds.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Turns out that GDBusWorker will issue callbacks (in its own thread)
even after g_dbus_worker_stop() has been called. This would rarely
happen (and unreffing a connection is even rarer) so only saw this bug
occasionally when running the gdbus-connection test case in a loop.
Fix up this issue by maintaining a set of GDBusConnection objects that
are currently "alive" and do nothing in the callbacks if the passed
user_data pointer is not in this set.
Also attempted to fix up a race condition with
_g_object_wait_for_single_ref_do() and its use of GObject toggle
references - for now, just resort to busy waiting, thereby
sidestepping the toggle reference mess altogether.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
It looks like the deserialisation function in GSocketControlMessage can
potentially leak a reference to the class structure of a
GSocketControlMessage subclass (although the particular code path is
probably never hit).
Clean up the code a bit.
Also, make sure that the GUnixCredentialsMessage type is registered
before attempting deserialisation.
Closes bug #629687.
==7269== 144 bytes in 6 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1,282 of 1,325
==7269== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==7269== by 0x4056B74: g_malloc (gmem.c:164)
==7269== by 0x406EDB6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:842)
==7269== by 0x406EDFB: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:854)
==7269== by 0x413C627: g_type_create_instance (gtype.c:1867)
==7269== by 0x412276A: g_object_constructor (gobject.c:1480)
==7269== by 0x4121E5D: g_object_newv (gobject.c:1264)
==7269== by 0x4121BD3: g_object_new (gobject.c:1176)
==7269== by 0x417CFB9: g_credentials_new (gcredentials.c:156)
==7269== by 0x41D9DBC: g_unix_credentials_message_deserialize (gunixcredentialsmessage.c:149)
==7269== by 0x41C422C: g_socket_control_message_deserialize (gsocketcontrolmessage.c:198)
==7269== by 0x41BFCE3: g_socket_receive_message (gsocket.c:3289)
==7269== by 0x41D99CE: g_unix_connection_receive_credentials (gunixconnection.c:476)
==7269== by 0x41FA829: _g_dbus_auth_run_server (gdbusauth.c:987)
==7269== by 0x4205DDB: initable_init (gdbusconnection.c:2196)
Bug #629689.
These functions are meant to replace the read_until() flavour, with the
following improvements:
- consistency between the synchronous and asynchronous versions as to
if the separator character is read (it never is).
- support for using a nul byte as a separator character by way of
addition of a length parameter which allows stop_chars to be treated
as a byte array rather than a nul-terminated string.
The read_until() functions are not yet formally deprecated, but a note
has been added to the documentation warning not to use them as they will
be in the future.
This is bug #584284.
GSettings internally assumed that a change in key writability implied a
change in value. That may be true for some backends. Let those
backends deal with the situation for themselves.
The root problem is with GObject - for now, just work around it in
GDBus. Also include a test-case. See
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=627724
for more information.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
- can not extend schemas that already have paths
- can not form list of schemas that already have paths
- the path of a list schema, if given, must end with ':/'
Ryan pointed out that it's safe to do this because we have the
G_DBUS_SEND_MESSAGE_FLAGS_PRESERVE_SERIAL flag and that it simplifies
how filter functions work.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Since the previous commit, the g_unix_connection_send_credentials() /
g_unix_connection_receive_credentials() functions now also works on
FreeBSD since GUnixCredentialsMessage now works there.
The main idea is that the g_unix_connection_send_credentials() /
g_unix_connection_receive_credentials() functions are the "main" API
for getting credentials (one way or the other). So it's better to
avoid advertising where it is currently implemented.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Otherwise things probably won't work in a garbage-collected world
(consider the trivial GC that never collects garbage).
This commit breaks GDBusServer ABI. No known released software is
using this code.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Rework filter functions as per
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=624546#c8
This commit breaks ABI. However, this ABI break affects only
applications using filter functions. The only known user of is dconf.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Don't actually use this yet as that will require a couple of
modifications to the filter function signature. This is part of the
bug-fix for
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=624546#c8
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
==23341== 65 bytes in 3 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 927 of 1,020
==23341== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==23341== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==23341== by 0x40573DB: g_malloc_n (gmem.c:281)
==23341== by 0x40717FC: g_strdup (gstrfuncs.c:101)
==23341== by 0x4147F56: value_lcopy_string (gvaluetypes.c:313)
==23341== by 0x4123F0B: g_object_get_valist (gobject.c:1643)
==23341== by 0x41240FF: g_object_get (gobject.c:1731)
==23341== by 0x804C39E: test_basic (gdbus-proxy.c:522)
Bug #628331.
==23341== 85 (24 direct, 61 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 900 of 971
==23341== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==23341== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==23341== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==23341== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==23341== by 0x403A751: g_error_new_valist (gerror.c:54)
==23341== by 0x403AAD4: g_set_error (gerror.c:240)
==23341== by 0x420B807: decode_method_reply (gdbusconnection.c:4774)
==23341== by 0x420C2BA: g_dbus_connection_call_sync (gdbusconnection.c:5188)
==23341== by 0x421B7C9: g_dbus_proxy_call_sync (gdbusproxy.c:2477)
==23341== by 0x804BD89: test_bogus_method_return (gdbus-proxy.c:430)
Bug #628331.
==29535== 56 (24 direct, 32 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1,112 of 1,264
==29535== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==29535== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==29535== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==29535== by 0x406F364: g_slice_copy (gslice.c:858)
==29535== by 0x403A9B2: g_error_copy (gerror.c:160)
==29535== by 0x42066D3: initable_init (gdbusconnection.c:2314)
==29535== by 0x41A73E5: g_initable_init (ginitable.c:105)
==29535== by 0x41A7587: g_initable_new_valist (ginitable.c:218)
==29535== by 0x41A742A: g_initable_new (ginitable.c:138)
==29535== by 0x4206DCC: g_dbus_connection_new_for_address_sync (gdbusconnection.c:2585)
==29535== by 0x804D63A: test_nonce_tcp (gdbus-peer.c:1229)
==29535== 107 (24 direct, 83 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1,188 of 1,264
==29535== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==29535== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==29535== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==29535== by 0x406F364: g_slice_copy (gslice.c:858)
==29535== by 0x403A9B2: g_error_copy (gerror.c:160)
==29535== by 0x42066D3: initable_init (gdbusconnection.c:2314)
==29535== by 0x41A73E5: g_initable_init (ginitable.c:105)
==29535== by 0x41A7587: g_initable_new_valist (ginitable.c:218)
==29535== by 0x41A742A: g_initable_new (ginitable.c:138)
==29535== by 0x4206DCC: g_dbus_connection_new_for_address_sync (gdbusconnection.c:2585)
==29535== by 0x804D8E8: test_nonce_tcp (gdbus-peer.c:1259)
==29535== 112 (24 direct, 88 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1,193 of 1,264
==29535== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==29535== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==29535== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==29535== by 0x406F364: g_slice_copy (gslice.c:858)
==29535== by 0x403A9B2: g_error_copy (gerror.c:160)
==29535== by 0x42066D3: initable_init (gdbusconnection.c:2314)
==29535== by 0x41A73E5: g_initable_init (ginitable.c:105)
==29535== by 0x41A7587: g_initable_new_valist (ginitable.c:218)
==29535== by 0x41A742A: g_initable_new (ginitable.c:138)
==29535== by 0x4206DCC: g_dbus_connection_new_for_address_sync (gdbusconnection.c:2585)
==29535== by 0x804D79A: test_nonce_tcp (gdbus-peer.c:1248)
==29535== 73 (24 direct, 49 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1,152 of 1,264
==29535== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==29535== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==29535== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==29535== by 0x406F364: g_slice_copy (gslice.c:858)
==29535== by 0x403A9B2: g_error_copy (gerror.c:160)
==29535== by 0x42066D3: initable_init (gdbusconnection.c:2314)
==29535== by 0x41A73E5: g_initable_init (ginitable.c:105)
==29535== by 0x41A7587: g_initable_new_valist (ginitable.c:218)
==29535== by 0x41A742A: g_initable_new (ginitable.c:138)
==29535== by 0x4206DCC: g_dbus_connection_new_for_address_sync (gdbusconnection.c:2585)
==29535== by 0x804C6CE: test_peer (gdbus-peer.c:803)
Bug #628331.
==6793== 32 (24 direct, 8 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 779 of 1,423
==6793== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==6793== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==6793== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==6793== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==6793== by 0x413D5BB: g_type_create_instance (gtype.c:1867)
==6793== by 0x412372A: g_object_constructor (gobject.c:1482)
==6793== by 0x4122E1D: g_object_newv (gobject.c:1266)
==6793== by 0x4122B93: g_object_new (gobject.c:1178)
==6793== by 0x41DB4F9: g_unix_fd_list_new (gunixfdlist.c:159)
==6793== by 0x804AADD: test_interface_method_call (gdbus-peer.c:172)
Bug #628331.
==4616== 46 (32 direct, 14 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 193 of 305
==4616== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==4616== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==4616== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==4616== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==4616== by 0x413D5BB: g_type_create_instance (gtype.c:1867)
==4616== by 0x412372A: g_object_constructor (gobject.c:1482)
==4616== by 0x4123147: g_object_newv (gobject.c:1347)
==4616== by 0x41236BB: g_object_new_valist (gobject.c:1463)
==4616== by 0x4122BB4: g_object_new (gobject.c:1181)
==4616== by 0x41B2D0F: g_network_address_new (gnetworkaddress.c:262)
==4616== by 0x8048A70: test_basic (network-address.c:10)
Bug #628331.
==14059== 96 bytes in 2 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 520 of 543
==14059== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==14059== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==14059== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==14059== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==14059== by 0x41385BB: g_type_create_instance (gtype.c:1867)
==14059== by 0x411E72A: g_object_constructor (gobject.c:1482)
==14059== by 0x411DE1D: g_object_newv (gobject.c:1266)
==14059== by 0x411DB93: g_object_new (gobject.c:1178)
==14059== by 0x42296AF: _g_local_file_input_stream_new (glocalfileinputstream.c:152)
==14059== by 0x422281F: g_local_file_read (glocalfile.c:1322)
==14059== by 0x418A8A9: open_read_async_thread (gfile.c:5050)
==14059== by 0x41B71BB: run_in_thread (gsimpleasyncresult.c:853)
==14059== by 0x41A5FBC: io_job_thread (gioscheduler.c:181)
==14059== by 0x407DCDE: g_thread_pool_thread_proxy (gthreadpool.c:314)
==14059== by 0x407C6B0: g_thread_create_proxy (gthread.c:1897)
==14059== by 0x57D918: start_thread (pthread_create.c:301)
==14059== by 0x4C6CBD: clone (clone.S:133)
Bug #628331.
==2464== 80 (16 direct, 64 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 515 of 547
==2464== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2464== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2464== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==2464== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==2464== by 0x41385BB: g_type_create_instance (gtype.c:1867)
==2464== by 0x411E72A: g_object_constructor (gobject.c:1482)
==2464== by 0x411DE1D: g_object_newv (gobject.c:1266)
==2464== by 0x411DB93: g_object_new (gobject.c:1178)
==2464== by 0x4220D74: _g_local_file_new (glocalfile.c:310)
==2464== by 0x422C897: g_local_vfs_get_file_for_path (glocalvfs.c:84)
==2464== by 0x41CA91C: g_vfs_get_file_for_path (gvfs.c:94)
==2464== by 0x418C1B6: g_file_new_for_path (gfile.c:5898)
==2464== by 0x8049509: test1_thread (contexts.c:110)
==2464== 80 (16 direct, 64 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 516 of 547
==2464== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2464== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2464== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==2464== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==2464== by 0x41385BB: g_type_create_instance (gtype.c:1867)
==2464== by 0x411E72A: g_object_constructor (gobject.c:1482)
==2464== by 0x411DE1D: g_object_newv (gobject.c:1266)
==2464== by 0x411DB93: g_object_new (gobject.c:1178)
==2464== by 0x4220D74: _g_local_file_new (glocalfile.c:310)
==2464== by 0x422C897: g_local_vfs_get_file_for_path (glocalvfs.c:84)
==2464== by 0x41CA91C: g_vfs_get_file_for_path (gvfs.c:94)
==2464== by 0x418C1B6: g_file_new_for_path (gfile.c:5898)
==2464== by 0x804964D: test_context_independence (contexts.c:144)
Bug #628331.
==2429== 49 (24 direct, 25 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 276 of 355
==2429== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2429== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2429== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==2429== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==2429== by 0x403A8A6: g_error_new_literal (gerror.c:117)
==2429== by 0x403AC31: g_set_error_literal (gerror.c:314)
==2429== by 0x4175525: g_buffered_input_stream_read_byte (gbufferedinputstream.c:880)
==2429== by 0x804A21A: test_read_byte (buffered-input-stream.c:153)
Bug #628331.
==2428== 256 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 591 of 604
==2428== at 0x4005CD2: realloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:476)
==2428== by 0x40571A5: g_realloc (gmem.c:181)
==2428== by 0x4075287: g_string_maybe_expand (gstring.c:395)
==2428== by 0x40760D8: g_string_insert_c (gstring.c:1049)
==2428== by 0x4074D41: g_string_append_c_inline (gstring.h:153)
==2428== by 0x4075B3C: g_string_append_uri_escaped (gstring.c:822)
==2428== by 0x41A46AC: g_icon_to_string_tokenized (gicon.c:164)
==2428== by 0x41A498F: g_icon_to_string (gicon.c:252)
==2428== by 0x8049E1A: test_g_icon_serialize (g-icon.c:222)
Bug #628331.
==12763== 16,777,215 bytes in 1 blocks are possibly lost in loss record 357 of 357
==12763== at 0x4004F1B: calloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:418)
==12763== by 0x405711D: g_malloc0 (gmem.c:157)
==12763== by 0x8048ED6: test_basic (data-output-stream.c:40)
Bug #628331.
==2426== 45,034 bytes in 4,094 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 358 of 361
==2426== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2426== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2426== by 0x40573DB: g_malloc_n (gmem.c:281)
==2426== by 0x4071ABD: g_strconcat (gstrfuncs.c:315)
==2426== by 0x804916A: test_read_lines (data-output-stream.c:83)
Bug #628331.
==12351== 45,045 bytes in 4,095 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 377 of 380
==12351== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==12351== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==12351== by 0x40573DB: g_malloc_n (gmem.c:281)
==12351== by 0x4071ABD: g_strconcat (gstrfuncs.c:315)
==12351== by 0x8049811: test_read_lines (data-input-stream.c:99)
Bug #628331.
==2415== 45,045 bytes in 4,095 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 393 of 399
==2415== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2415== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2415== by 0x417FC29: g_data_input_stream_read_line (gdatainputstream.c:797)
==2415== by 0x8049874: test_read_lines (data-input-stream.c:111)
==12088== 360 bytes in 40 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 368 of 381
==12088== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==12088== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==12088== by 0x417FF4C: g_data_input_stream_read_until (gdatainputstream.c:914)
==12088== by 0x8049B6F: test_read_until (data-input-stream.c:182)
Bug #628331.
==2415== 165 (72 direct, 93 indirect) bytes in 3 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 373 of 399
==2415== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2415== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2415== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==2415== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==2415== by 0x403A8A6: g_error_new_literal (gerror.c:117)
==2415== by 0x403AC31: g_set_error_literal (gerror.c:314)
==2415== by 0x417ED29: read_data (gdatainputstream.c:309)
==2415== by 0x417EE9D: g_data_input_stream_read_byte (gdatainputstream.c:344)
==2415== by 0x8049DEC: test_data_array (data-input-stream.c:263)
Bug #628331.
==10395== 80 (24 direct, 56 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 529 of 561
==10395== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==10395== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==10395== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==10395== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==10395== by 0x403A751: g_error_new_valist (gerror.c:54)
==10395== by 0x403AAD4: g_set_error (gerror.c:240)
==10395== by 0x4230328: _g_local_file_output_stream_create (glocalfileoutputstream.c:628)
==10395== by 0x4227A04: g_local_file_create_readwrite (glocalfile.c:1388)
==10395== by 0x418974C: g_file_create_readwrite (gfile.c:1784)
==10395== by 0x8049FCD: test_g_file_create_readwrite (readwrite.c:187)
Bug #628331.
==8564== 24,000,000 bytes in 6 blocks are possibly lost in loss record 592 of 594
==8564== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==8564== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==8564== by 0x804AA37: test_corruption (converter-stream.c:589)
==8564== by 0x804B05B: test_roundtrip (converter-stream.c:652)
==9459== 25,165,824 bytes in 6 blocks are possibly lost in loss record 593 of 594
==9459== at 0x4005CD2: realloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:476)
==9459== by 0x40571A5: g_realloc (gmem.c:181)
==9459== by 0x41B08A3: array_resize (gmemoryoutputstream.c:501)
==9459== by 0x41B0A5D: g_memory_output_stream_write (gmemoryoutputstream.c:578)
==9459== by 0x41B57EF: g_output_stream_write (goutputstream.c:216)
==9459== by 0x41B591B: g_output_stream_write_all (goutputstream.c:268)
==9459== by 0x417D617: flush_buffer (gconverteroutputstream.c:359)
==9459== by 0x417D958: g_converter_output_stream_write (gconverteroutputstream.c:502)
==9459== by 0x41B5D7F: g_output_stream_real_splice (goutputstream.c:428)
==9459== by 0x41B5C6C: g_output_stream_splice (goutputstream.c:380)
==9459== by 0x804AB10: test_corruption (converter-stream.c:600)
==9785== 25,165,824 bytes in 6 blocks are possibly lost in loss record 592 of 592
==9785== at 0x4005CD2: realloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:476)
==9785== by 0x40571A5: g_realloc (gmem.c:181)
==9785== by 0x41B08A3: array_resize (gmemoryoutputstream.c:501)
==9785== by 0x41B0A5D: g_memory_output_stream_write (gmemoryoutputstream.c:578)
==9785== by 0x41B5D7F: g_output_stream_real_splice (goutputstream.c:428)
==9785== by 0x41B5C6C: g_output_stream_splice (goutputstream.c:380)
==9785== by 0x804ADF1: test_corruption (converter-stream.c:622)
==9785== by 0x804B06C: test_roundtrip (converter-stream.c:652)
Bug #628331.
==7540== 487 (64 direct, 423 indirect) bytes in 2 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 597 of 615
==7540== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==7540== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==7540== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==7540== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==7540== by 0x413D5BB: g_type_create_instance (gtype.c:1867)
==7540== by 0x412372A: g_object_constructor (gobject.c:1482)
==7540== by 0x4123147: g_object_newv (gobject.c:1347)
==7540== by 0x41236BB: g_object_new_valist (gobject.c:1463)
==7540== by 0x41A756E: g_initable_new_valist (ginitable.c:214)
==7540== by 0x41A743E: g_initable_new (ginitable.c:138)
==7540== by 0x417B67A: g_charset_converter_new (gcharsetconverter.c:215)
==7540== by 0x804B043: test_charset (converter-stream.c:675)
Bug #628331.
==2396== 168 (92 direct, 76 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 598 of 625
==2396== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2396== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2396== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==2396== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==2396== by 0x413D5BB: g_type_create_instance (gtype.c:1867)
==2396== by 0x412372A: g_object_constructor (gobject.c:1482)
==2396== by 0x4123147: g_object_newv (gobject.c:1347)
==2396== by 0x41236BB: g_object_new_valist (gobject.c:1463)
==2396== by 0x4122BB4: g_object_new (gobject.c:1181)
==2396== by 0x417C54D: g_converter_input_stream_new (gconverterinputstream.c:204)
==2396== by 0x804A53E: test_compressor (converter-stream.c:484)
Bug #628331.
==2396== 66 (24 direct, 42 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 565 of 625
==2396== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2396== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2396== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==2396== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==2396== by 0x403A8A6: g_error_new_literal (gerror.c:117)
==2396== by 0x403AC31: g_set_error_literal (gerror.c:314)
==2396== by 0x417BA38: g_charset_converter_convert (gcharsetconverter.c:344)
==2396== by 0x417BF67: g_converter_convert (gconverter.c:174)
==2396== by 0x417C9EB: g_converter_input_stream_read (gconverterinputstream.c:403)
==2396== by 0x41A7A17: g_input_stream_read (ginputstream.c:204)
==2396== by 0x41A7B43: g_input_stream_read_all (ginputstream.c:256)
==2396== by 0x804B0E4: test_charset (converter-stream.c:682)
Bug #628331.
==2396== 39 (24 direct, 15 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 398 of 625
==2396== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2396== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2396== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==2396== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==2396== by 0x403A8A6: g_error_new_literal (gerror.c:117)
==2396== by 0x403AC31: g_set_error_literal (gerror.c:314)
==2396== by 0x80498F7: g_compressor_converter_convert (converter-stream.c:244)
==2396== by 0x417BF67: g_converter_convert (gconverter.c:174)
==2396== by 0x417CBDE: g_converter_input_stream_read (gconverterinputstream.c:460)
==2396== by 0x41A7A17: g_input_stream_read (ginputstream.c:204)
==2396== by 0x804A832: test_compressor (converter-stream.c:545)
Bug #628331.
==2395== 64 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 381 of 407
==2395== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2395== by 0x4005C66: realloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:476)
==2395== by 0x40571A5: g_realloc (gmem.c:181)
==2395== by 0x401D670: g_ptr_array_maybe_expand (garray.c:968)
==2395== by 0x401DD0B: g_ptr_array_add (garray.c:1225)
==2395== by 0x4199AA9: g_file_info_list_attributes (gfileinfo.c:646)
==2395== by 0x80491CE: test_g_file_info (g-file-info.c:76)
==2395== 132 (64 direct, 68 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 396 of 407
==2395== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2395== by 0x4005C66: realloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:476)
==2395== by 0x40571A5: g_realloc (gmem.c:181)
==2395== by 0x401D670: g_ptr_array_maybe_expand (garray.c:968)
==2395== by 0x401DD0B: g_ptr_array_add (garray.c:1225)
==2395== by 0x4199A82: g_file_info_list_attributes (gfileinfo.c:642)
==2395== by 0x80492B7: test_g_file_info (g-file-info.c:86)
Bug #628331.
And use g_assert_[no_]error().
==2392== 49 (24 direct, 25 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 451 of 573
==2392== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2392== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2392== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==2392== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==2392== by 0x403A8A6: g_error_new_literal (gerror.c:117)
==2392== by 0x403AC31: g_set_error_literal (gerror.c:314)
==2392== by 0x41B7619: g_output_stream_set_pending (goutputstream.c:1198)
==2392== by 0x41B5799: g_output_stream_write (goutputstream.c:210)
==2392== by 0x41B590B: g_output_stream_write_all (goutputstream.c:268)
==2392== by 0x8049B54: verify_iostream (readwrite.c:110)
Bug #628331.
==2392== 38 (16 direct, 22 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 369 of 573
==2392== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2392== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2392== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==2392== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==2392== by 0x413D5BB: g_type_create_instance (gtype.c:1867)
==2392== by 0x412372A: g_object_constructor (gobject.c:1482)
==2392== by 0x4122E1D: g_object_newv (gobject.c:1266)
==2392== by 0x4122B93: g_object_new (gobject.c:1178)
==2392== by 0x4225D74: _g_local_file_new (glocalfile.c:310)
==2392== by 0x4231897: g_local_vfs_get_file_for_path (glocalvfs.c:84)
==2392== by 0x41CF91C: g_vfs_get_file_for_path (gvfs.c:94)
==2392== by 0x41911B6: g_file_new_for_path (gfile.c:5898)
==2392== by 0x804A2B9: test_g_file_replace_readwrite (readwrite.c:235)
Bug #628331.
==2392== 38 (16 direct, 22 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 368 of 573
==2392== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2392== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2392== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==2392== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==2392== by 0x413D5BB: g_type_create_instance (gtype.c:1867)
==2392== by 0x412372A: g_object_constructor (gobject.c:1482)
==2392== by 0x4122E1D: g_object_newv (gobject.c:1266)
==2392== by 0x4122B93: g_object_new (gobject.c:1178)
==2392== by 0x4225D74: _g_local_file_new (glocalfile.c:310)
==2392== by 0x4231897: g_local_vfs_get_file_for_path (glocalvfs.c:84)
==2392== by 0x41CF91C: g_vfs_get_file_for_path (gvfs.c:94)
==2392== by 0x41911B6: g_file_new_for_path (gfile.c:5898)
==2392== by 0x8049F23: test_g_file_create_readwrite (readwrite.c:183)
Bug #628331.
==2392== 38 (16 direct, 22 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 367 of 573
==2392== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2392== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2392== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==2392== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==2392== by 0x413D5BB: g_type_create_instance (gtype.c:1867)
==2392== by 0x412372A: g_object_constructor (gobject.c:1482)
==2392== by 0x4122E1D: g_object_newv (gobject.c:1266)
==2392== by 0x4122B93: g_object_new (gobject.c:1178)
==2392== by 0x4225D74: _g_local_file_new (glocalfile.c:310)
==2392== by 0x4231897: g_local_vfs_get_file_for_path (glocalvfs.c:84)
==2392== by 0x41CF91C: g_vfs_get_file_for_path (gvfs.c:94)
==2392== by 0x41911B6: g_file_new_for_path (gfile.c:5898)
==2392== by 0x8049E30: test_g_file_open_readwrite (readwrite.c:153)
Bug #628331.
==2389== 84 (44 direct, 40 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 299 of 315
==2389== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2389== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2389== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==2389== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==2389== by 0x413D5BB: g_type_create_instance (gtype.c:1867)
==2389== by 0x412372A: g_object_constructor (gobject.c:1482)
==2389== by 0x4122E1D: g_object_newv (gobject.c:1266)
==2389== by 0x4122B93: g_object_new (gobject.c:1178)
==2389== by 0x41AF54C: g_memory_input_stream_new (gmemoryinputstream.c:199)
==2389== by 0x8048BD1: test_read_chunks (memory-input-stream.c:40)
Bug #628331.
==2389== 59 (24 direct, 35 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 290 of 315
==2389== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2389== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2389== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==2389== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==2389== by 0x403A8A6: g_error_new_literal (gerror.c:117)
==2389== by 0x403AC31: g_set_error_literal (gerror.c:314)
==2389== by 0x41AFD15: g_memory_input_stream_truncate (gmemoryinputstream.c:517)
==2389== by 0x41BAC0F: g_seekable_truncate (gseekable.c:174)
==2389== by 0x8049595: test_truncate (memory-input-stream.c:123)
Bug #628331.
==2530== 13 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 373 of 681
==2530== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==2530== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==2530== by 0x40573DB: g_malloc_n (gmem.c:281)
==2530== by 0x40717FC: g_strdup (gstrfuncs.c:101)
==2530== by 0x4147F56: value_lcopy_string (gvaluetypes.c:313)
==2530== by 0x4123F0B: g_object_get_valist (gobject.c:1643)
==2530== by 0x41240FF: g_object_get (gobject.c:1731)
==2530== by 0x804A4BA: test_basic (gsettings.c:28)
Bug #628331.
Don't leak the ptr arrays in the map_sender_unique_name_to_signal_data_array
hash table.
==23440== 84 (20 direct, 64 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 920 of 993
==23440== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==23440== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==23440== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==23440== by 0x401D2D0: g_ptr_array_sized_new (garray.c:799)
==23440== by 0x401D2AC: g_ptr_array_new (garray.c:783)
==23440== by 0x420834A: g_dbus_connection_signal_subscribe (gdbusconnection.c:3084)
Bug #628436.
==31063== 98 (24 direct, 74 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 946 of 1,136
==31063== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==31063== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==31063== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==31063== by 0x4092383: g_variant_get_child_value (gvariant-core.c:847)
==31063== by 0x408BE9E: g_variant_get_variant (gvariant.c:709)
==31063== by 0x40903F5: g_variant_valist_get_nnp (gvariant.c:3767)
==31063== by 0x40907A9: g_variant_valist_get_leaf (gvariant.c:3884)
==31063== by 0x4090D10: g_variant_valist_get (gvariant.c:4065)
==31063== by 0x4090E59: g_variant_valist_get (gvariant.c:4100)
==31063== by 0x40911B6: g_variant_get_va (gvariant.c:4296)
==31063== by 0x40910BC: g_variant_get (gvariant.c:4248)
==31063== by 0x4208DAF: invoke_set_property_in_idle_cb (gdbusconnection.c:3676)
Bug #628346.
... and use g_error_matches().
==29535== 1,360 (408 direct, 952 indirect) bytes in 17 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1,252 of 1,264
==29535== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==29535== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==29535== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==29535== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==29535== by 0x403A751: g_error_new_valist (gerror.c:54)
==29535== by 0x403AAD4: g_set_error (gerror.c:240)
==29535== by 0x41C06C8: g_socket_send_message (gsocket.c:2967)
==29535== by 0x421CB64: write_message_continue_writing (gdbusprivate.c:958)
==29535== by 0x421CE2A: write_message_async (gdbusprivate.c:1049)
==29535== by 0x421D4DD: maybe_write_next_message (gdbusprivate.c:1291)
==29535== by 0x421D26B: message_written (gdbusprivate.c:1187)
==29535== by 0x421D322: write_message_cb (gdbusprivate.c:1216)
Bug #628345.
Don't call LoadLibrary() on shell32.dll or kernel32.dll. kernel32.dll
is always loaded. Shell32.dll is also already loaded as glib links to
functions in it. So just call GetModuleHandle() on them.
For mlang.dll in win_iconv.c and winhttp.dll in gwinhttpvfs.c, always
try loading them from a complete path, from the Windows system
directory.
Use the "tool help" API to enumerate modules in gmodule-win32.c. It is
present in all Windows versions since Windows 2000, which is all we
support anyway. Thus no need to look that API up dynamically. Just
link to it normally. We can bin the fallback code that attempts to use
the psapi API.
Looks like we forgot to ref the returned GVariant in
g_dbus_proxy_call_finish().
It's a good question why code using g_dbus_proxy_call() and
g_dbus_proxy_call_finish() worked in the first place - probably the
answer is that no-one really used these APIs.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
==6793== 32 (24 direct, 8 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 780 of 1,423
==6793== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==6793== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==6793== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==6793== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==6793== by 0x413D5BB: g_type_create_instance (gtype.c:1867)
==6793== by 0x412372A: g_object_constructor (gobject.c:1482)
==6793== by 0x4122E1D: g_object_newv (gobject.c:1266)
==6793== by 0x4122B93: g_object_new (gobject.c:1178)
==6793== by 0x41DB582: g_unix_fd_list_new_from_array (gunixfdlist.c:191)
==6793== by 0x421BFD6: _g_dbus_worker_do_read_cb (gdbusprivate.c:590)
Bug #628329.
==8221== 1,047 (672 direct, 375 indirect) bytes in 28 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 589 of 603
==8221== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==8221== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==8221== by 0x406F2D6: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==8221== by 0x406F31B: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==8221== by 0x403A8A6: g_error_new_literal (gerror.c:117)
==8221== by 0x403AC31: g_set_error_literal (gerror.c:314)
==8221== by 0x80499DC: g_compressor_converter_convert (converter-stream.c:267)
==8221== by 0x417BF67: g_converter_convert (gconverter.c:174)
==8221== by 0x417D7F0: g_converter_output_stream_write (gconverteroutputstream.c:428)
==8221== by 0x41B57DF: g_output_stream_write (goutputstream.c:216)
==8221== by 0x804A367: test_compressor (converter-stream.c:456)
Bug #628309.
==6793== 19 (8 direct, 11 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 640 of 1,423
==6793== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==6793== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==6793== by 0x40573DB: g_malloc_n (gmem.c:281)
==6793== by 0x4073D1B: g_strsplit (gstrfuncs.c:2436)
==6793== by 0x4224A89: initable_init (gdbusserver.c:1040)
==6793== by 0x41A73F9: g_initable_init (ginitable.c:105)
==6793== by 0x41A759B: g_initable_new_valist (ginitable.c:218)
==6793== by 0x41A743E: g_initable_new (ginitable.c:138)
==6793== by 0x42238F5: g_dbus_server_new_sync (gdbusserver.c:484)
Bug #628328.
==6793== 16 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 632 of 1,423
==6793== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==6793== by 0x4057094: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==6793== by 0x417FC29: g_data_input_stream_read_line (gdatainputstream.c:797)
==6793== by 0x41F99C1: _my_g_data_input_stream_read_line (gdbusauth.c:279)
==6793== by 0x41FA728: _g_dbus_auth_run_client (gdbusauth.c:759)
Bug #628327.
Turns out we are leaking non-floating GVariant instances returned by
get_property() functions.
Also avoid imprecise language such as "newly-allocated GVariant" as
this doesn't specify whether the variant can be floating or not.
Also see https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=627974 as it is
very related to this change.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
... that is, make it private. This makes sense because users are never
expected to create such objects themselves - only the GDBus core will
need this.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Allow modifying a GDBusMessage in a filter function and also add tests
for this. This breaks API but leaves ABI (almost) intact - at least
dconf's GSettings backend (the only big user I know of) will keep
working.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=624546
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
This allow application to take control over certain proxy protocol
handling. When a proxy protocol must be used and is found in the
application proxies, GSocketClient will simply TCP connect to the proxy
server and return the connection.
Reviewed-by: Dan Winship <danw@gnome.org>
Using this rather than g_socket_client_connect() or
g_socket_client_connect_to_host() allows #GSocketClient to
determine when to use application-specific proxy protocols.
Reviewed-by: Dan Winship <danw@gnome.org>
This functionnallity can be disabled using property enable-proxy. It
enumerates addresses using GSocketConnectable::proxy_enumerate() instead of
enumerate(). When the returned address is of type GProxyAddress (a type
based on GInetSocketAddress), it gets the proxy protocol handler using
g_proxy_get_default_for_protocol() and call connect() on it.
Reviewed-by: Dan Winship <danw@gnome.org>
This class inherit from GTcpConnection by refing the socket of
an existing GTcpConnection and wraps a custom GIOStream into itself. This
is to allow implementing proxies that alters data stream, like when using
GSSAPI privacy inside SOCKS5.
This way, if g_socket_connect() is called with a GProxyAddress,
g_socket_get_remote_address() will later return that same address.
Reviewed-by: Nicolas Dufresne <nicolas.dufresne@collabora.co.uk>
This patch implements method proxy_enumerate from GSocketConnectable for
all connectables (GNetworkAddress, GNetworkService, GInetSocketAddress
and GUnixSocketAddress).
Reviewed-by: Dan Winship <danw@gnome.org>
An implementation of GSocketAddressEnumerator that handles proxy
enumeration. This class is mainly usefull for Connectables implementation
such as NetworkService, NetworkAddress and SocketAddress to handle proxies.
Reviewed-by: Dan Winship <danw@gnome.org>
Implement an extension point for proxy protocol implementation. This
is mainly useful for socket-based proxy where it is possible to use the
proxied socket the same way it would for other stream based socket.
Reviewed-by: Dan Winship <danw@gnome.org>
This method allow creating a network address from a URI. If no port is
found in the URI, the default_port parameter will be used. Note that new
property scheme is there for future TLS implementation.
Reviewed-by: Dan Winship <danw@gnome.org>
A GSocketInetAddress representing the proxy server address with additional
properties proxy type, destination address and port, username and password.
Reviewed-by: Dan Winship <danw@gnome.org>
This extension point allow extending GLib with library like LibProxy that
interprets system proxy settings and finds the appropriate configuration
based on the type of connection being made.
Reviewed-by: Dan Winship <danw@gnome.org>
This is really what (API) users expect from GDBusProxy - in
particular, mclasen and I ran into this problem while debugging a
upower issue, see
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=624125
In a nutshell, the problem is that polkitd crashes while upower holds
a PolkitAuthority object (which in turns contains a GDBusProxy for the
well-known name org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1). This means that
subsequent calls on the PolkitAuthority (which is translated into
calls into the GDBusProxy) fails since :g-name-owner is NULL.
With this fix, we'll be requesting the bus daemon to launch polkitd
since we will start calling into org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1 as soon as
we notice that there is no owner for this name.
Unfortunately our test suite doesn't cover service activation so there
is no way to reliably test this. I will file a bug about this.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Free the read buffer.
==26538== 4,096 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 781 of 781
==26538== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==26538== by 0x4005C66: realloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:476)
==26538== by 0x405244D: g_realloc (gmem.c:181)
==26538== by 0x420E066: _g_dbus_worker_do_read_unlocked (gdbusprivate.c:780)
==26538== by 0x420E1D1: _g_dbus_worker_do_read (gdbusprivate.c:812)
==26538== by 0x420F14A: _g_dbus_worker_thread_begin_func (gdbusprivate.c:1318)
==26538== by 0x420D2ED: invoke_caller (gdbusprivate.c:266)
==26538== by 0x404DA7C: g_idle_dispatch (gmain.c:4224)
==26538== by 0x4049FCD: g_main_dispatch (gmain.c:2119)
==26538== by 0x404B2C1: g_main_context_dispatch (gmain.c:2672)
==26538== by 0x404B716: g_main_context_iterate (gmain.c:2750)
==26538== by 0x404BE7F: g_main_loop_run (gmain.c:2958)
==26538== by 0x420D2B5: shared_thread_func (gdbusprivate.c:248)
==26538== by 0x4077958: g_thread_create_proxy (gthread.c:1897)
==26538== by 0x57D918: start_thread (pthread_create.c:301)
==26538== by 0x4C6CBD: clone (clone.S:133)
Bug #627187.
==26538== 145 (24 direct, 121 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 765 of 790
==26538== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==26538== by 0x405233C: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==26538== by 0x406A57E: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==26538== by 0x406A60C: g_slice_copy (gslice.c:858)
==26538== by 0x4035C5A: g_error_copy (gerror.c:160)
==26538== by 0x41B6387: g_simple_async_result_set_from_error (gsimpleasyncresult.c:638)
==26538== by 0x41FCDEB: g_dbus_connection_call_done (gdbusconnection.c:4808)
==26538== by 0x41B682E: g_simple_async_result_complete (gsimpleasyncresult.c:762)
==26538== by 0x41B686A: complete_in_idle_cb (gsimpleasyncresult.c:772)
==26538== by 0x404DA7C: g_idle_dispatch (gmain.c:4224)
==26538== by 0x4049FCD: g_main_dispatch (gmain.c:2119)
==26538== by 0x404B2C1: g_main_context_dispatch (gmain.c:2672)
==26538== by 0x404B716: g_main_context_iterate (gmain.c:2750)
==26538== by 0x404BE7F: g_main_loop_run (gmain.c:2958)
==26538== by 0x804B5CC: test_connection_send (gdbus-connection.c:407)
==26538== by 0x4073D04: test_case_run (gtestutils.c:1174)
Bug #627187.
==25403== 49 (24 direct, 25 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 603 of 787
==25403== at 0x4005BDC: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==25403== by 0x405233C: g_malloc (gmem.c:134)
==25403== by 0x406A57E: g_slice_alloc (gslice.c:836)
==25403== by 0x406A5C3: g_slice_alloc0 (gslice.c:848)
==25403== by 0x4035B4E: g_error_new_literal (gerror.c:117)
==25403== by 0x4035ED9: g_set_error_literal (gerror.c:314)
==25403== by 0x41F6434: g_dbus_connection_close_sync (gdbusconnection.c:1284)
==25403== by 0x804A861: test_connection_life_cycle (gdbus-connection.c:158)
==25403== by 0x4073D04: test_case_run (gtestutils.c:1174)
==25403== by 0x4073FC2: g_test_run_suite_internal (gtestutils.c:1223)
==25403== by 0x4074077: g_test_run_suite_internal (gtestutils.c:1233)
==25403== by 0x4074077: g_test_run_suite_internal (gtestutils.c:1233)
==25403== by 0x40741FB: g_test_run_suite (gtestutils.c:1274)
==25403== by 0x40733E5: g_test_run (gtestutils.c:877)
==25403== by 0x804DC92: main (gdbus-connection.c:1024)
Bug #627187.
Add GZlibCompressor:file-info property. If it contains a non-NULL
GFileInfo, and the compressor is in GZIP mode, the filename and
modification time from the file info are written to the GZIP header
in the output data.
Add GZlibDeompressor:file-info property. If the decompressor is in GZIP
mode, and the GZIP data contains a GZIP header, the filename and
modification time are read from it, stored in a GFileInfo, and the
file-info property is notified.
Bug #617691.
This patch guarantees that g_output_stream_write() can never fail with
G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK. Without such a guarantee, we would need some
kind of GIOPollable interface or some way to get an event when the
stream is writable again. Which is mostly useless considering that
this method is asynchronous anyway.
Note: this patch just codifies existing behavior - GUnixOutputStream,
GSocketOutputStream and other implementations already work this way.
See also bug 626748 comment 5 for how the GDBus code relies on this
guarantee.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=627071
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
If sending a lot of data and/or the other peer is not reading it, then
socket buffers can overflow. This is communicated from the kernel by
returning EAGAIN. In GIO, it is modelled by g_output_stream_write()
and g_socket_send_message() returning G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK.
It is also problematic that that we're using synchronous IO in the
shared GDBus IO thread. It means that one GDBusConnection can lock up
others.
It turns out that by porting from g_output_stream_write() to
g_output_stream_write_async() we fix the EAGAIN issue. For GSocket, we
still need to handle things manually (by creating a GSource) as
g_socket_send_message() is used.
We check the new behavior in Michael's producer/consumer test case (at
/gdbus/overflow in gdbus-peer.c) added in the last commit.
Also add a test case that sends and receives a 20 MiB message.
Also add a new `transport' G_DBUS_DEBUG option so it is easy to
inspect partial writes:
$ G_DBUS_DEBUG=transport ./gdbus-connection -p /gdbus/connection/large_message
[...]
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Transport:
>>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and
size 20971669 from offset 0 on a GSocketOutputStream
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Transport:
>>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and
size 20971669 from offset 128000 on a GSocketOutputStream
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Transport:
>>>> WROTE 128000 bytes of message with serial 4 and
size 20971669 from offset 256000 on a GSocketOutputStream
[...]
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Transport:
>>>> WROTE 43669 bytes of message with serial 4 and
size 20971669 from offset 20928000 on a GSocketOutputStream
[...]
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Transport:
<<<< READ 16 bytes of message with serial 3 and
size 20971620 to offset 0 from a GSocketInputStream
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Transport:
<<<< READ 15984 bytes of message with serial 3 and
size 20971620 to offset 16 from a GSocketInputStream
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Transport:
<<<< READ 16000 bytes of message with serial 3 and
size 20971620 to offset 16000 from a GSocketInputStream
[...]
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Transport:
<<<< READ 144000 bytes of message with serial 3 and
size 20971620 to offset 20720000 from a GSocketInputStream
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Transport:
<<<< READ 107620 bytes of message with serial 3 and
size 20971620 to offset 20864000 from a GSocketInputStream
OK
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626748
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
This patch fixes this problem
Syscall param socketcall.sendmsg(msg.msg_control) points to uninitialised byte(s)
at 0x3D5B00EA60: __sendmsg_nocancel (syscall-template.S:82)
by 0x53F9790: g_socket_send_message (gsocket.c:2918)
by 0x540FDD0: g_unix_connection_send_credentials (gunixconnection.c:351)
by 0x542B93F: _g_dbus_auth_run_client (gdbusauth.c:618)
by 0x5438001: initable_init (gdbusconnection.c:2191)
by 0x53E09CC: g_initable_init (ginitable.c:105)
by 0x543F6E9: g_bus_get_sync (gdbusconnection.c:6091)
by 0x402C7E: test_connection_life_cycle (gdbus-connection.c:126)
by 0x4C7CABB: test_case_run (gtestutils.c:1174)
by 0x4C7CD84: g_test_run_suite_internal (gtestutils.c:1223)
by 0x4C7CE49: g_test_run_suite_internal (gtestutils.c:1233)
by 0x4C7CE49: g_test_run_suite_internal (gtestutils.c:1233)
Address 0x7fefff9fc is on thread 1's stack
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Previously if a GSocketConnection had a blocking GSocket, it would
sometimes block during asynchonous I/O, and if it had a non-blocking
socket, it would sometimes return G_IO_ERROR_WOULD_BLOCK from
synchronous I/O. This fixes the connection to not depend on the socket
state.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=616458
g_socket_client_connect_async() was always leaking its GCancellable,
and would also leak any GSocket that eventually failed to connect
after returning G_IO_ERROR_PENDING.
GSocket has a timeout flag now, but when using GSocketClient there was
no way to set the timeout until after connecting (or failing). Fix
that by adding a timeout property to GSocketClient.
Because g_simple_async_report_[g]error_in_idle() don't take a source tag
parameter, code that uses them can't currently use
g_simple_async_result_is_valid() (at least, not for the error case).
Bug 602417
The GClosure API is a bit funky (and badly documented), and requires
you to set a marshaller on the closure, and the marshaller has an
implicit 'this' argument, and the caller is reponsible for unsetting
the values after invoking the closure.
I've added some calls of the _with_closures variants to the
gdbus-names test now.
This prints all GDBusMethodInvocation API usage and is normally used
with the `incoming' option. Example:
# G_DBUS_DEBUG=incoming,return ./polkitd --replace
Entering main event loop
Connected to the system bus
Registering null backend at priority -10
[...]
Acquired the name org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1
[...]
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Incoming:
<<<< METHOD INVOCATION org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Authority.RegisterAuthenticationAgent()
on object /org/freedesktop/PolicyKit1/Authority
invoked by name :1.26
serial 299
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Return:
>>>> METHOD ERROR org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Error.Failed
message `Cannot determine session the caller is in'
in response to org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Authority.RegisterAuthenticationAgent()
on object /org/freedesktop/PolicyKit1/Authority
to name :1.26
reply-serial 299
[...]
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Incoming:
<<<< METHOD INVOCATION org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Authority.RegisterAuthenticationAgent()
on object /org/freedesktop/PolicyKit1/Authority
invoked by name :1.2402
serial 25
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Return:
>>>> METHOD RETURN
in response to org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Authority.RegisterAuthenticationAgent()
on object /org/freedesktop/PolicyKit1/Authority
to name :1.2402
reply-serial 25
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
The D-Bus spec mentions exactly what header fields are required for
various message types. Add tests for this as well.
Also disallow empty interfaces for signals since the D-Bus spec says
this is Verboten already.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Also use this in the test cases to check that serialization to and
from both big and little endian works.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
We use g_assert() instead of setting the GError because it is a
programming error if the GVariant contains invalid data - see commit
5e6f762d61 for where the last hole in
GVariant was closed.
So if we can trust GVariant to only contain valid data (ignoring the
case where unsafe API such as g_variant_new_from_data() is used), why
g_assert() at all with costly g_utf8_validate() checks? Because a) it
is relatively inexpensive; and b) it helps find bugs such as the one
fixed in commit 5e6f762d61.
If performance is a concern we can play games like introducing
environment variables or other machinery to avoid such "costly"
checks. I doubt it will ever be an issue.
Also replace two "Hmm" TODO item with a static assert - the code that
serializes a gdouble into the D-Bus wire format by treating it as a
guint64 is indeed correct - endianess needs to be taken into account
(see the D-Bus reference implementation for similar code). But we want
to make sure that we're indeed using an architecture/compiler where a
gdouble takes up 8 bytes - hence the assertion.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Spell out "RECEIVED SIGNAL" instead of "SIGNAL" to emphasize this is
about receiving a signal, not emitting one (which is "SIGNAL
EMISSION"). Also make the "arrows" point in the "right" direction
("<<<<" vs ">>>>") - like this:
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Signal:
<<<< RECEIVED SIGNAL org.freedesktop.DBus.NameOwnerChanged
on object /org/freedesktop/DBus
sent by name org.freedesktop.DBus
and
========================================================================
GDBus-debug:Incoming:
<<<< METHOD INVOCATION org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1.Authority.EnumerateTemporaryAuthorizations()
on object /org/freedesktop/PolicyKit1/Authority
invoked by name :1.2176
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Commit 5e6f762d61 (introducing UTF-8
validity checks for GVariant instances containing strsings) actually
uncovered a bug in glib-compile-schemas - a GString was passed when a
C string was expected.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
This should make things easier to debug:
g_dbus_connection_real_closed: Remote peer vanished with error:
Underlying GIOStream returned 0 bytes on an async read
(g-io-error-quark, 0). Exiting.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
the FdSource was calling g_cancellable_disconnect while holding the
main context lock, which is bad news if the ::cancelled handler is
trying to get that lock to wake up the mainloop...
Bug 586432
When binding a boolean setting to a boolean property, invert the values.
This avoids the requirement for writing a pair of mapping functions for
this extremely common case.
Add a test.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=625833
Don't do too much work in the finalizer - in particular, there's no
need to send RemoveMatch() messages to the bus daemon since we're
going to sever the connection and the bus will garbage collect
anyway. In this case it crashed the process.
Also add a test case that checks that the appropriate GDestroyNotify
callbacks are called when unreffing a connection with either 1)
exported objects; 2) signal subscriptions or 3) filter functions
.. yes, ideally apps would unregister such callbacks before giving up
their ref but that's not how things work :-)
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Otherwise e.g. setuid root processes can't connect to the system
bus. This was discovered when porting PolicyKit's pkexec(1) command to
a PolicyKit library using GDBus.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
You can drop a key-file in the schema directory that looks like:
[org.gtk.Example]
key='value'
to override the default value of 'key' in schema 'org.gtk.Example'.
- Make GCredentials instance and class structures private so it can't
be subclassed and we don't have to worry about ABI compat
issues. This also allows us to get rid of the GCredentialsPrivate
struct.
- Add a GCredentialsType enumeration that is used whenever exchanging
pointers with the user. This allows us to support OSes with
multiple native credential types. In particular, it allows
supporting OSes where the native credential evolves or even changes
over time.
- Add g_socket_get_credentials() method.
- Add tests for g_socket_get_credentials(). Right now this is in the
GDBus peer-to-peer test case but we can change that later.
- Move GTcpConnection into a separate gtk-doc page as was already
half-done with GUnixConnection. Also finish the GUnixConnection
move and ensure send_credentials() and receive_credentials()
methods are in the docs. Also nuke comment about GTcpConnection
being empty compared to its superclass.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Without this fix, we'd sometimes run code after stop() and finalize()
to handle incoming requests. This was observed in the gdbus-peer test
case occasionally crashing:
$ ./gdbus-peer
/gdbus/peer-to-peer: OK
/gdbus/delayed-message-processing: OK
/gdbus/nonce-tcp:
GLib-GObject-WARNING **: invalid uninstantiatable type `(null)' in cast to `GDBusServer'
aborting...
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
This allows sending and receiving D-Bus messages with instances of the
'h' D-Bus type. Unlike libdbus-1's dbus_message_iter_get_basic()
method, g_variant_get_handle() does not return a duplicated unix file
descriptor (that must be closed with close(2)) - instead, it returns
an index that can be used to get/dup the file descriptor from a
GUnixFDList object that can be obtained from the GDBusMessage object.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Until after we include the glib stuff, so that we have G_OS_UNIX
defined.
For some reason <stdlib.h> pulls in <sys/wait.h> on Fedora so this
wasn't a problem, but many others have reported the issue.
This is preferable to the current magical solution whereby the serial
is only rewritten if non-zero. In particular, it makes it easier to
send the same message on multiple connections without having to reset
the serial number.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
This is currently unused but might be useful in the future. For
example, it might be nice with a way to bypass the current queue of
outgoing messages - having a flag enumeration allows us to add a
G_DBUS_SEND_MESSAGE_FLAGS_BYPASS_QUEUE etc. etc.
This commit breaks ABI and API. Users of the (rarely used) API to send
messages will have to port to this new API.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
This is currently unused but will probably be useful in the
future. For example, we could have a _ARG0_IS_PATH to specify that
arg0 should be used for arg0path.
This commit breaks API and ABI. Users of
g_dbus_connection_signal_subscribe() will need to port to this new
version.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
If the subtree introspection function indicates that an interface exists
but then the dispatch function returns a NULL vtable for that interface,
issue a g_warning pointing programmers in the right direction.
Just because SOCK_CLOEXEC was defined at build time doesn't mean the
kernel we're running on supports it. So if socket() fails with EINVAL,
try again without the flag.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=624463
Clarify a couple of things in the docs:
1) you must return flat names (no slashes)
2) g_strfreev() will be called on the result
3) a benefit of using the DISPATCH_TO_UNENUMERATED flag
Return a NULL terminated C array instead of a GPtrArray
Also, document that %NULL is a permitted return value and clarify its
meaning.
Finally, avoid calling the enumeration function during dispatch when the
G_DBUS_SUBTREE_FLAGS_DISPATCH_TO_UNENUMERATED_NODES flag was given.
... so it is async, cancelable and returns an error. Also provide a
synchronous version.
This is an API/ABI break but it is expected that only very few
applications use this API.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Callers who are using g_application_unregistered_try_new are
likely wanting to continue doing something else if _register()
fails. Change the semantics so that passing register=FALSE
unsets default-quit as well. This means that a later _register()
call will send Activate but continue the process.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=622005
Following the behaviour of ls here, we should return at least the
file name, if we can't get any other information about a file. To
do this, handle EACCESS on stat() calls.
Patch by Tomas Bzatek, see bug 623692
- add G_VARIANT_TYPE_BYTESTRING, _BYTESTRING_ARRAY, _STRING_ARRAY
- remove g_variant_{new,get}_byte_array functions
- add g_variant_{new,get,dup}_bytestring{,_array} functions
- remove undocumented support for deserialising arrays of objectpaths
or signature strngs using g_variant_get_strv()
- add and document new format strings '^ay', '^&ay', '^aay' and '^a&ay'
- update GApplication to use the new API
- update GSettings binding code to use the new API
- add tests
E.g. move these C structures out of public header files and into their
respective C files. Also nuke padding since this is no longer needed.
This leaves only GDBusProxy as an extendable type.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
While this a dangerous thing to allow (collissions, reply_serial not
matching up etc.), the added flexibility makes this a good trade-off -
for example, with this feature, it's now a lot easier to build message
routers.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Also emit GDBusProxy::g-properties-changed when dropping (when the
name owner vanishes) or populating (when loading properties) the
property cache.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=623538
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Also add a 'address' G_DBUS_DEBUG option that will print out useful
debug information such as
GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session'
GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set
GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set
GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set
GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching)
GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output:
0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t
0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR
0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3
0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c
0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@
0050: 05 00 00 00 00 .....
GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output:
14542: Autolaunch enabled (using X11).
14542: --exit-with-session automatically enabled
14542: Connected to X11 display ':0.0'
14542: === Parent dbus-launch continues
14542: Waiting for babysitter's intermediate parent
14542: Reading address from bus
14542: Reading PID from daemon
14542: Saving x11 address
14542: Created window 88080385
14542: session file: /root/.dbus/session-bus/05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7-0
14542: dbus-launch exiting
GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session'
and
GDBus-debug:Address: In g_dbus_address_get_for_bus_sync() for bus type `session'
GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is not set
GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS is not set
GDBus-debug:Address: env var DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is not set
GDBus-debug:Address: Running `dbus-launch --autolaunch=05e508961149264c9b750a4c494aa6f7 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' to get bus address (possibly autolaunching)
GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch output:
0000: 75 6e 69 78 3a 61 62 73 74 72 61 63 74 3d 2f 74 unix:abstract=/t
0010: 6d 70 2f 64 62 75 73 2d 77 42 41 6f 4b 59 49 52 mp/dbus-wBAoKYIR
0020: 7a 75 2c 67 75 69 64 3d 30 34 30 64 31 33 66 33 zu,guid=040d13f3
0030: 30 61 30 62 35 32 63 32 30 66 36 32 63 34 31 63 0a0b52c20f62c41c
0040: 30 30 30 30 35 30 38 64 00 d2 38 00 00 01 00 40 0000508d..8....@
0050: 05 00 00 00 00 .....
GDBus-debug:Address: dbus-launch stderr output:
14549: Autolaunch enabled (using X11).
14549: --exit-with-session automatically enabled
14549: Connected to X11 display ':0.0'
14549: dbus-daemon is already running. Returning existing parameters.
14549: dbus-launch exiting
GDBus-debug:Address: Returning address `unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-wBAoKYIRzu,guid=040d13f30a0b52c20f62c41c0000508d' for bus type `session'
Note that things work exactly like libdbus, e.g. from the
dbus-launch(1) man page:
Whenever an autolaunch occurs, the application that had to start a
new bus will be in its own little world; it can effectively end up
starting a whole new session if it tries to use a lot of bus
services. This can be suboptimal or even totally broken, depending
on the app and what it tries to do.
[...]
You can always avoid autolaunch by manually setting
DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS. Autolaunch happens because the default
address if none is set is "autolaunch:", so if any other address is
set there will be no autolaunch. You can however include autolaunch
in an explicit session bus address as a fallback, for example
DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS="something:,autolaunch:" - in that case if
the first address doesn't work, processes will autolaunch. (The bus
address variable contains a comma-separated list of addresses to
try.)
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>