Only objects and interfaces should go in here. If enums are in here
then gtk-doc responds by outputting two anchors for the same name (which
results in many warnings being printed).
Commit ab0e9dbfa7 introduced some changes
to the documentation Makefiles designed to clean-up the process of
deciding which headers get scanned for the docs.
Unfortunately, the gtk-doc Makefile doesn't use HFILE_GLOB for actually
generating the docs -- only for knowing when it needs to redo the
generation. Because of this, we need to use IGNORE_HFILES or otherwise
we get hundreds of symbols in the *-unused.txt files.
Revert the changes that that commit made to the docs Makefiles (but
leave the generation of the *-public-headers.txt files in place).
* Load modules from paths listed in GIO_EXTRA_MODULES environment
variable first.
* Ignore duplicate modules based on module basename.
* Add the concept of GIOModuleScope which allows other callers to
skip duplicate loaded modules, or block specific modules based on
basename.
* Document behavior.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=656914
Rework property getters to use a vfunc so we can take the fast path
and avoid allocating memory for both the skeleton and the proxy
cases. This requires some special case because of how GVariant expects
you to free memory in some cases, see #657100. Add test cases for
this.
Document the _get_ functions as not being thread-safe and also
generate _dup_ C getters (which are thread-safe).
Mark all the generated _get_, _dup_ and _set_ as (skip) as non-C
languages should just use GObject properties and not the (socalled)
"C binding".
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
The main rationale for adding it was to avoid having gnome-shell
mmap'ing /etc/localtime once a second. However, we can just as easily
run inotify there, and given no one else was clamoring for a way to
detect when the time zone changes, I don't see a need for public API
here - at least not yet.
In the bigger picture, I just don't believe that the vast majority of
applications are going to go out of their way to instantiate and keep
around a random GTimeZoneMonitor class. And if they do, it's has the
side effect that for other bits of code in the process, local GDateTime
instances may start varying again!
So, if code can't rely on local GDateTime instances being in a
consistent state anyways, let's just do that always. The
documentation now says that this is the case. Applications have
always been able to work in a consistent local time zone by
instantiating a zone and then using it for GDateTime constructors.
We fix the "gnome-shell stats /etc/localtime once a second" issue by
using timerfd (in glib) and inotify (in gnome-shell).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=655129
The database is an abstract object implemented by the various TLS
backends, which is used by GTlsConnection to lookup certificates
and keys, as well as verify certificate chains.
Also add GTlsInteraction, which can be used to prompt the user
for a password or PIN (used with the database).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=636572
Also add convenience _with_unix_fd_list variants to GDBusConnection,
GDBusProxy and GDBusMethodInvocation types to easily support this.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
This is possible now that we have better support for object path
arrays, see
http://git.gnome.org/browse/glib/commit/?id=19878998bc386db78614f1c92ff8524a81479c7b
Note that this breaks the ABI of generated code but since
gdbus-codegen(1) has never yet been in a stable GLib release, this is
fine.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
This commit represents an API break to GAction in the following ways:
- the 'set_state' entry in the GActionInterface vtable has been
renamed to 'change_state'. The number and order of vtable items has
not otherwise changed.
- g_action_set_state() has been renamed to g_action_change_state() to
match the updated vtable entry.
- the "state" property of the GAction interface has been changed to
read-only to reflect the fact that g_action_set_state() no longer
exists.
- GSimpleActionClass has been hidden. GSimpleAction can no longer be
subclassed.
>> Rationale
g_action_set_state() has never been a true setter in the sense that
calling it will update the value of the "state" property. It has always
been closer to "request 'state' to be changed to this value" with
semantics defined by the implementor of the interface. This is why the
equivalent method in GActionGroup had its name changed from 'set' to
'change'. This change makes the two interfaces more consistent and
removes any implication about the effect that calling set_state() should
have on the 'state' property.
>> Impact
This incompatible API break was undertaken only because I strongly
suspect that it will go entirely unnoticed. If the break actually
affects anybody, then we will accommodate them (possibly going as far as
to revert this commit entirely).
The virtual table change only impacts implementors of GAction. I
strongly suspect that this is nobody (except for GSimpleAction).
The hiding of GSimpleActionClass only impacts impacts subclasses of
GSimpleAction. I strongly suspect that none of these exist.
The changing of the property to be read-only only affects people who
were trying to change the state by using GObject properties. I strongly
suspect that this is nobody at all.
The removal of the g_action_set_state() call is the most dangerous, but
I still suspect that it will impact nobody outside of GLib. If anybody
is impacted by this change then, at their request, I will reintroduce
the API as a deprecated alias for g_action_change_state().
Rather than having the gtk-doc build machinery have a list of header
files to exclude, change the GLib build to dump a list of public
header files generated from the maintained Makefile.am files for
each of glib/, gobject/, gio/.
Also, for glib, always install glib-unix.h, even on non-Unix
platforms, for the same reason we install gwin32.h even on Unix.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=651745
See https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37890#c6 where it was
discovered that dbus-send(1) actually doesn't work (either libdbus-1's
flush implementation or dbus-send(1)'s usage of it is broken) so it's
useful to have here.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
This avoids the generated types (e.g. ExampleAnimal, ExampleCat,
ExampleObject and ExampleObjectManagerClient) being referenced in the
core gio docs. This was requested by Matthias.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
For example, if setting a property on a skeleton from another thread
than where it was constructed, the idle handler responsible for
emitting the PropertiesChanged() signal could run immediately and
clear skeleton->priv->changed_properties_idle_source causing
g_source_unref() to be called with a NULL pointer. This race was
easily be fixed by adding a lock to the skeleton object.
In addition to fixing this race, also move the code for setting up the
idle handler to a class handler for the GObject::notify signal. This
change allows use of g_object_freeze_notify() and g_object_thaw_notify()
to perform atomic property changes from another thread than the one
that the skeleton was created in.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
.. and add a C setter to do this. Also make the C getter return a
reference since the property may be set from another thread. Also
change the constructor to _not_ take a GDBusConnection since this is
something you almost always want to do _after_ creating it. The
API/ABI break is fine as there has never been a GLib release with this
type.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=648959
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
And use this for a) documentation purposes; and b) to preserve C ABI
when an interface is extended. See
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=647577#c5
for more details. Also add test cases for this.
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Without getting into a debate about the reasons why you may or may not
want to use unsigned integers, it's sufficient to note that people have
been using them and requesting this functionality.
Bug #641755.
Make the schema argument to gsettings list-recursively optional.
This allows to search for not exactly known keys by going
gsettings list-recursively | grep 'font'
The existing docs are a bit inconsistent in that they say to follow
the dbus convention, but then give an example that doesn't.
This commit changes things to be how Ryan says they should be.
This commit also changes (maintaining compatibility) the way
user-specified default applications are stored (as in, those for which
g_app_info_set_as_default_for_type() has been called.
We now store the default application for a content type in a new group
in the mimeapps.list keyfile, and "Added Associations" tracks only the
applications that have been added by the user, following a
most-recently-used first order.
This is useful in GtkAppChooser-like widgets to pre-select the last used
application when constructing a widget.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=636311
The necessary review and integration work has not happened, and
we don't want to enshrine it in this unproven state.
It will be back when the world is ready for it.
Make the certificate and peer-certificate properties virtual, and add
peer-certificate-errors as well. Change the documentation on
peer-certificate to say that it's not set until after the handshake
succeeds (which means notify::peer-certificate can be used to tell
when a handshake has completed).
Trying to do this as a signal won't work well with either
GTlsCertificateDB (in which case looking up a certificate in the db is
a blocking/asynchronous act) or session resumption support (in which
case the certificate or lack thereof is part of the session definition
and so needs to be known immediately). Make the caller use
g_tls_connection_set_certificate() ahead of time (or when retrying)
instead.
Add a method to verify a certificate against a CA; this can be used
for apps that need to test against non-default CAs.
Also make the GTlsCertificate::issuer property virtual
This adds an extension point for TLS connections to gio, with a
gnutls-based implementation in glib-networking.
Full TLS support is still a work in progress; the current API is
missing some features, and parts of it may still be changed before
2.28.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=588189
GProxyConnection is a class that was added for proxy support;
g_socket_client_connect() returns a GSocketConnection, but in some
cases (eg, encrypted SOCKS), GProxy might return a GIOStream that is
not a GSocketConnection. In that case, GSocketClient would wrap the
stream up in a GProxyConnection, which is a subclass of
GSocketConnection but uses the input/output streams of the wrapped
connection.
GTlsConnection is not a GSocketConnection, so it has the same problem,
so it will need the same treatment. Rename the class to
GTcpWrapperStream, and make it public, so people can extract the base
stream from it when necessary.
(This is not ideal and GSocketClient will need to be revisited as an
API at some point...)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=588189
When interfacing with APIs that expect unix-style async I/O, it is
useful to be able to tell in advance whether a read/write is going to
block. This adds new interfaces GPollableInputStream and
GPollableOutputStream that can be implemented by a GInputStream or
GOutputStream to add _is_readable/_is_writable, _create_source, and
_read_nonblocking/_write_nonblocking methods.
Also, implement for GUnixInput/OutputStream and
GSocketInput/OutputStream
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=634241
g_cancellable_create_source() returns a GSource that triggers when its
corresponding GCancellable is cancelled. This can be used with
g_source_add_child_source() to add cancellability to a source.
Port gasynchelper's FDSource to use this rather than doing its own
cancellable handling, and also fix up its callback argument order to
be more normal.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=634239
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.
Add some words and example code to the documentation about why you might
want to manually invoke gsettings-data-convert and how you should go
about doing that.
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.
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>
... 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 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>
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.
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>
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
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>
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>
- 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>
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>
... 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>
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>
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>
Add a <flags> tag to the schema file format and a flags='' attribute to
go along with. Add some extra test cases for those.
Add new g_settings_{get,set}_flags() calls and support binding to
GParamSpecFlags properties. Add test cases.
This commit adds the following G_DBUS_DEBUG flags
- emission
- incoming
- call
- signal
- payload
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=620913
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Without this guarantee, peer-to-peer connections are not very
useful. However, with this guarantee it's possible to export objects
in a handler for the GDBusServer::new-connection signal.
There are two caveats with this patch
- it won't work on message bus connections
- we don't queue up messages to be written
that can be addresses later if needed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=623142
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
Having this tool in GLib is a bad idea for a number of reasons:
- experience has shown that the simple file format was a bad idea
- the tool is currently implemented with a hack that would require a
dependency inversion to solve (the tool needs to depend on Python
GVariant bindings)
- the tool itself is unmaintained
It will be moved to the GConf git repository so people can continue to
use it for the purpose of converting GConf schemas.
Allow constructing a GDBusProxy for well-known names as discussed here
http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gtk-devel-list/2009-October/msg00075.html
including test cases.
Make it possible to create a GDBusProxy for a GBusType instead of a
GDBusConnection. This requires G_BUS_TYPE_NONE so add that too.
Nuke g_bus_watch_proxy() since one can now more or less use GDBusProxy
for this.
Port gdbus-example-watch-proxy to this new API and include this
example in the GDBusProxy doc page.
Also nuke the GType parameter from the GDBusProxy constructors as
requested here: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=621229
Also update the porting guide and other API docs for this change.
Also fix a bug in the signal dispatching code so each subscriber only
get notified once, not N times, for the same signal. Also add a test
case for this.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=621213
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <davidz@redhat.com>
accept more than one callback.
g_bus_own_name_with_closures
g_bus_own_name_on_connection_with_closures
g_bus_watch_name_with_closures
g_bus_watch_name_on_connection_with_closures
g_bus_watch_proxy_with_closures
g_bus_watch_proxy_on_connection_with_closures
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=621092
This adds a GApplication object to GIO, which is the core of
an application support class, supporting
- uniqueness
- exporting actions (simple scripting)
- standard actions (quit, activate)
The implementation for Linux uses D-Bus, takes a name on the
session bus, and exports a org.gtk.Application interface.
Implementations for Win32 and OS X are still missing.
add GSimplePermission, a trivial const implementation of GPermission
can-request and can-release are always false for this implementation and
the value of 'allowed' is decided at construction.
Fixup for commit 133f66538d which
duplicated the contents of most of the migration documentation by
splitting it out into separate files but keeping the original file
intact (with a rename).
This removes the duplicated content from the renamed file.
This uncovered a bug in name watching if the name wasn't activatable.
Also provoked the need for on_connection variants of g_bus_watch_name
(added g_bus_watch_proxy's variant as well).
This makes it possible to use the cached properties mechanism even if
constructing the proxy with the DO_NOT_LOAD_PROPERTIES flag.
This is useful for cases where you obtain the and track object
properties out-of-band. For example, in udisks, the plan is to have
something like this
Manager.GetObjects (out ao paths, out aa{sa{sv}} all_properties);
Manager.ObjectAdded (o path, a{sa{sv}} all_properties);
Manager.ObjectChanged (o path, a{sa{sv}} all_properties);
Manager.ObjectRemoved (o path, a{sa{sv}} all_properties);
E.g. the first GetObjects() call will return *all* data about *all*
exported objects. Further, this way a client will only need to listen
these three signals (three AddMatch) on the Manager object and it will
never need to do GetAll() etc (e.g. can use DO_NOT_LOAD_PROPERTIES).
(Of course this only works if the client is interested in all
objects... while this is true for udisks it is generally not true for
other D-Bus services).
Also use expected_interface to check for programming errors.
Lots of people been suggesting this. We still use MethodInvocation /
method_invocation for handling incoming method calls so use call()
instead of invoke_method() helps to separate the client and server
facilities. Which is a good thing(tm).
There are apparently two incompatible ways of naming abstract sockets:
pad the sockaddr with 0s and use the entire thing as the name, or else
don't, and just pass a shorter length value to the relevant functions.
We previously only supported the former method. Add support for the
latter.
Also correctly handle "anonymous" unix sockaddrs (eg, the client side
of a connection, or a socketpair() socket), and add unix domain socket
support to the socket-client and socket-server test programs to make
sure this all works.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=615960