It sometimes fails under valgrind, and is pointless: if the test is
wedged, it’s better to catch that with the timeout at the level of
`meson test`, which can be tailored (using `-t`) to the test environment
and wrapper.
See https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/merge_requests/2961#note_1600072
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Instead, iterate the `GMainContext` directly. This allows tests on
asynchronously returned values to be done in the actual test function,
rather than a callback, which should make the tests a little clearer.
This introduces no functional changes.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Do not use can_run_host_binaries() as it returns true even though
custom_target() does not currently correctly wrap target-built
tool binaries with exe_wrapper so they can be run on the host.
See https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/11029
This typically indicates a bug in the program, where a GTask has been
created, but a bug in the control flow has caused it to not return a
value.
There is one situation where it might be legitimate to finalise a GTask
without returning: if an error happens in your *_async() start function
after you’ve created a GTask, but before the async operation returns to
the main loop; and you report the error using g_task_report_*error()
rather than reporting it using the newly constructed GTask.
Another situation is where you are just using GTask as a convenient way
to move some work to another thread, without the complexity of creating
and running your own thread pool. GDBus does this with
g_dbus_interface_method_dispatch_helper(), for example.
In most other cases, it’s a bug. Emit a debug message about it, but not
a full-blown warning, as that would create noise in the legitimate
cases.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
the gio dbus codegen test has 10 test cases in it.
Each test case is given 100 seconds to complete.
That is far longer than they should need.
Furthermore, the entire test is only given 60s
to complete.
This commit makes the internal timeout more consistent
with the external timeout, by giving each of the 10
test cases 6 seconds instead of 100s.
That’s what xdgmime uses for zero-sized files (see `XDG_MIME_TYPE_EMPTY`).
Historically, GLib explicitly used `text/plain` for empty files, to
ensure they would open in a text editor. But `text/plain` is not really
correct for an empty file: the content isn’t text because there is no
content. The file could eventually become something else when written
to.
Text editors which want to be opened for new, empty files should add
`application/x-zerosize` to their list of supported content types.
Users who want to set a handler for `application/x-zerosize` on their
desktop should use
```sh
gio mime application/x-zerosize # to see the current handler
gio mime application/x-zerosize org.gnome.gedit.desktop # to set it
```
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #2777
`HAVE_COCOA` should be used only in the places where we’re actually
depending on the Cocoa toolkit. It should not be used as a general way
of detecting building on a Darwin-based OS such as macOS.
Conversely, there are a few places in the code where we do want to
specifically detect the Cocoa toolkit (and others where we specifically
want to detect Carbon), so keep `HAVE_COCOA` and `HAVE_CARBON` around.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #2802
This reverts commit 476e33c3f3.
We’ve decided to remove `G_OS_DARWIN` in favour of recommending people
use `__APPLE__` instead. As per the discussion on #2802 and linked
issues,
* Adding a new define shifts the complexity from “which of these
platform-provided defines do I use” to “which platform-provided
defines does G_OS_DARWIN use”
* There should ideally be no cases where a user of GLib has to use
their own platform-specific code, since GLib should be providing
appropriate abstractions
* Providing a single `G_OS_DARWIN` to cover all Apple products (macOS
and iOS) hides the complexity of what the user is actually testing:
are they testing for the Mach kernel, the Carbon and/or Cocoa user
space toolkits, macOS vs iOS vs tvOS, etc
Helps: #2802
Some of GLib's unit tests are under an apparently GLib-specific
permissive license, vaguely similar to the BSD/MIT family but with the
GPL's lack-of-warranty wording. This is not on SPDX's list of
well-known licenses, so we need to use a custom license name prefixed
with LicenseRef if we want to represent this in SPDX/REUSE syntax.
Most of the newer tests seem to be licensed under LGPL-2.1-or-later
instead.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
In g_proxy_resolver_lookup_async() we have some error validation that
detects invalid URIs and directly returns an error, bypassing the
interface's lookup_async() function. This is great, but when the
interface's lookup_finish() function gets called later, it may assert
that the source tag of the GTask matches the interface's lookup_async()
function, which will not be the case.
As suggested by Philip, we need to check for this situation in
g_proxy_resolver_lookup_finish() and avoid calling into the interface
here if we did the same in g_proxy_resolver_lookup_async(). This can be
done by checking the source tag.
I added a few new tests to check the invalid URI "asdf" used in the
issue report. The final case, using async GProxyResolver directly,
checks for this bug.
Fixes#2799
We need to make sure that such binaries are built and available at test time
or we may fail some tests requiring them (directly or through desktop file).
As per this, and because now generated desktop files are available both
at build and install time, don't skip some tests we were used to, but
actually enforce they are running.
We have some test programs on which some tests depend on, for example
appinfo-test is a tool that is used by the desktop-app-info tests.
So test can now have an 'extra_programs' key where the extra program
names can be included.
This could have been handled manually via 'depends', but this allows
to avoid repeating code and be sure that all is defined when extra
programs targets are checked.
`g_app_info_launch_default_for_uri_async()` has already returned by this
point, so waiting a long time is not really going to help.
Wait for 3× as long as the successful case took, which should allow for
long enough to catch true negatives, with a bit of variance.
On my system, this means waiting for about 14ms, rather than the 100ms
which this previous slept for. This speeds the test up by about 5%.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
We were generating .desktop files with different content when installed
tests were enabled, and thus making impossible to test some cases
because there was no built file until installed.
To avoid this, always generate both versions of desktop files while
install only the one containing the install path prefix if needed.
Given that it can be computed using an error-prone strings comparisons it
is better to provide a variable everywhere, so that we don't have the
risk of comparing values that are always false.
We have tests that are failing in some environments, but it's
difficult to handle them because:
- for some environments we just allow all the tests to fail: DANGEROUS
- when we don't allow failures we have flacky tests: A CI pain
So, to avoid this and ensure that:
- New failing tests are tracked in all platforms
- gitlab integration on tests reports is working
- coverage is reported also for failing tests
Add support for `can_fail` keyword on tests that would mark the test as
part of the `failing` test suite.
Not adding the suite directly when defining the tests as this is
definitely simpler and allows to define conditions more clearly (see next
commits).
Now, add a default test setup that does not run the failing and flaky tests
by default (not to bother distributors with testing well-known issues) and
eventually run all the tests in CI:
- Non-flaky tests cannot fail in all platforms
- Failing and Flaky tests can fail
In both cases we save the test reports so that gitlab integration is
preserved.
G_MODULE_SUFFIX is deprecated now because you will get the wrong
results using it most of the time:
1. The suffix on macOS is usually 'dylib', but it's 'so' when using
Autotools, so there's no way to get the suffix correct using
a pre-processor macro.
2. Prefixes also vary in a platform-specific way. You may or may not have
a 'lib' prefix for the name on Windows and on Cygwin the prefix is
'cyg'.
3. The library name itself can vary per platform. For instance, you may
want to load foo-1.dll on Windows and libfoo.1.dylib on macOS. This
is for libraries, not modules, but that is still a use-case that
people use the GModule API for.
g_module_build_path() does take care of (2) on Cygwin, but it
fundamentally cannot handle the possibility of multiple options for
the module name, since it does not do any I/O. Hence, it is also
deprecated.
Instead, g_module_open() has been improved so that it takes care of
all this by searching the filesystem for combinations of possible
suffixes and prefixes on each platform. Along the way, the
documentation for it was also improved to make it clearer what it
does.
Closes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/520
Closes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/1413
In principle we could script this so that each max-version.c is compiled
26 times, once per possible MAX_VERSION, but I haven't implemented
that here: just pinning to the oldest possible version is sufficient to
reproduce #2796.
These aren't included in the installed-tests, since they don't really
do anything at runtime (the important thing is that they compile
without warnings).
Reproduces: #2796
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Previously it was marked as failing on macOS, but commit
ed3998b390 seems to have fixed that. yay!
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #1392
The access and creation time tests create a file, gets the time in
seconds, then gets the time in microseconds and assumes that the
difference between the two has to be above 0.
As rare as this may be, it can happen:
$ stat g-file-info-test-50A450 -c %y
2021-07-06 18:24:56.000000767 +0100
Change the test to simply assert that the difference not negative to
handle this case.
This is the same fix as 289f8b, but that was just modification time.
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@arm.com>
Freebsd doesn't always have /proc mounted, so relying on
/proc for the tests isn't ideal.
This commit changes the desktop-app-info tests to use
mkfifo instead of /proc/../fd/.. to relay terminal
arguments.
Might help with this error message I'm seeing in CI:
/tmp/bin-path-H1UQT1/gnome-terminal: cannot create /proc/38961/fd/6: No such file or directory
In case the XDG database is not initialized yet we may try to sniff a
0-length data, making our content-type routines to mark non-empty files
as `application/x-zerosize`.
This is wrong, so in case the sniff size is not set, let's just
try to read the default value. To avoid false-application/x-zerosize
results (that are not something we want as per legacy assumptions).
See: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=755795
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/2742
It’s often (but not always) failing on the CI machines with a timeout
which looks like the FD sharing via `/proc` isn’t reliably working.
Disable this test (but not the whole `desktop-app-info` test suite) on
FreeBSD until someone who has access to a FreeBSD machine can debug it.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #2781
The implementation of `g_desktop_app_info_launch_uris()` will spawn the
exec file once for each URI unless the desktop file has a placeholder in
its Exec line which supports multiple URIs at once.
The fake terminal doesn’t have such a placeholder, so the fake terminal
script is spawned twice in quick succession, once for each URI. Since it
was making two separate printf calls (one to print the output to the
pipe, and one to terminate it with a newline), it’s possible that two
invocations of the script could interleave their printf calls, resulting
in pipe input along the lines of `URI1 URI2 newline newline` rather than
`URI1 newline URI2 newline`.
This would cause the test to fail.
Fix that by making the script atomic by moving the newline into the
first printf call.
See: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/jobs/2339109:
```
\# Fake 'nxterm' terminal created as: /tmp/bin-path-R6GWT1/nxterm
\# 'nxterm' called with arguments: '-e true nxterm-argument /tmp/bin-path-R6GWT1-e true nxterm-argument /tmp/test_desktop-app-info_CO92T1/desktop-app-info/launch-uris-with-terminal/nxterm/.dirs/data'
Bail out! GLib-GIO:ERROR:../gio/tests/desktop-app-info.c:1294:test_launch_uris_with_terminal: assertion failed (g_strv_length (output_args) == 4): (7 == 4)
```
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
The cancellable may be cancelled just after the operation succeeds in a
different thread. So instead of checking whether the cancellable is
cancelled, check whether the operation returned a `CANCELLED` error, and
*then* assert that the cancellable is cancelled.
This should fix
https://pwithnall.pages.gitlab.gnome.org/-/glib/-/jobs/2338552/artifacts/_build/meson-logs/testlog.txt:
```
ok 1 /unix-streams/basic
Bail out! GLib-GIO:ERROR:../gio/tests/unix-streams.c:149:main_thread_skipped: assertion failed (err == (g-io-error-quark, 19)): err is NULL
stderr:
```
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
The g_content_type_get_icon() function for win32 can lookup the
DefaultIcon associated with .txt and return a different result.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
On Win32, we get paths with mixed \\ and /, use GFile to resolve and
normalize the paths before comparing.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
Otherwise, the build will fail when the toolchain is static-only, even
with -Ddefault_library=static. I talked to a Meson developer in their
IRC channel, who told me that the correct fix was to ensure that
shared_library is only used if default_library != static.
Simulate launching applications using terminals by creating scripts on
the fly that are named as the terminals that we support, ensuring that
these are called with the arguments that we expect.
Related to: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/merge_requests/2839
Check if thumbnails are created in the path we expect and that we can
retrieve their information, but also that we try to get the biggest size
available when multiple are available.
We've various macros definitions that are depending using C++ features
that may not work in all the standard versions, so recompile the cxx
tests that we have in all the ones we want to support.
desktop-app-info test may fail when repeated with multiple concurrent
processes because the actions test relies on checking the existence of
in the shared build directory, so by doing something like:
meson test -C _build desktop-app-info -t 0.3 --repeat 80
We may end up in timeout errors, because we are waiting for files that
have been already deleted by other processes.
To avoid this, let's rely on writing the files on `$G_TEST_TMPDIR` env
variable, that is always set and unique, given that we're using the
G_TEST_OPTION_ISOLATE_DIRS test option.
We were testing the case in which we were opening an actual file, and so
potentially using a fd-list, however we were missing the case in which a file
was not existent.
And in such case we are incidentally hitting a leak now.
All of these warnings indicate programmer error, so critical is most
appropriate here.
Exceptions: deprecation warnings are just warnings. Also, warnings that
are worded with uncertainty can remain warnings rather than criticals.
Enumeration members should either have the name of the type as their
prefix, or they should all have the same prefix.
The "default flags" enumeration member for GApplicationFlags is
unfortunately named G_APPLICATION_FLAGS_NONE, while every other member
of the same type has a G_APPLICATION prefix. The result is that the nick
name of the enumeration member is "flags-none", and that language
bindings will have to use something like
Gio.ApplicationFlags.FLAGS_NONE.
To fix this API wart, we can deprecate the FLAGS_NONE member, and add a
new DEFAULT_FLAGS.
A shell one-liner was enough to set GIO_LAUNCHED_DESKTOP_FILE_PID,
but ideally we also want to do the equivalent of sd_journal_stream_fd()
to set up its standard output and standard error streams.
Ideally we would call sd_journal_stream_fd() in a process that will
exec the real program, otherwise it will report the wrong process ID
in the Journal, but we can't easily do that in a forked child when
using posix_spawn() for subprocesses.
This reverts commit 2b533ca99a.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
The dominant implementations of the well-known session and system
message buses are the reference implementation from the dbus project
(dbus-daemon) and the sd-bus-based reimplementation dbus-broker, both
of which have correct implementations for EXTERNAL authentication with
an unspecified authorization identity.
This makes it reasonably safe to assume that the well-known message
buses can cope with the unspecified authorization identity, even if we
cannot make the same assumption for custom servers such as the ones
used in ibus and gvfs (which might have been started with an older
GLib version before upgrading GLib in-place).
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Instead of using a GDBusConnection, this does the handshake at a lower
level using specific strings in the SASL handshake, to verify that we
will interoperate with various clients including sd-bus, libdbus and
older versions of GDBus.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
We don't need a cpp toolchain for building glib so lets just
automatically disable tests requiring one when not available.
Signed-off-by: James Hilliard <james.hilliard1@gmail.com>
The test was flacky because we were only relying on the presence of a
file, while the callback could have not been called yet, while ensure
for both assumptions to be true before stop iterating the loop.
These headers have all been written manually, by looking through the git
log for each file and noting the copyright of each significant
contribution.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #1415
It doesn't make sense for a proxy resolver to return NULL without an
error on the first call. Whereas a DNS resolver would do this to
indicate that a query completed successfully but found no results, a
proxy resolver should return "direct://" instead. Therefore, if we are
going to return NULL, we ought to have an error as well. Let's make sure
this actually happens by adding some fallback errors just in case
GProxyResolver feeds us weird results.
Additionally, we should not return any errors except
G_IO_ERROR_CANCELLED after the very first iteration. This is an API
contract of GSocketAddressEnumerator. Let's add some checks to ensure
this.
Note that we have inadequate test coverage for GProxyAddressEnumerator.
It's tested here only via GSocketClient. We could do a bit better by
testing it directly as well. For example, I've added tests to see what
happens when GProxyResolver returns both a valid and an invalid URI, but
it's not so interesting here because GSocketClient always uses the valid
result and ignores the error from GProxyAddressEnumerator.
Fixes#2597
This has no practical impact, since it's only a test, and none of the
test code would have hit this bug, but the GTestProxyResolver's check to
see if the URI scheme is simple:// currently only compares the first
four bytes of the string, so it's actually only checking for the "simp"
and would match anything else after that, e.g. "simpleton://". This is
surely not intended.
This was causing intermittent failures on macOS, depending on whether
the tmpdir ended with a `/` or `/some-dir`. `g_strrstr()` is not the
right function to use to extract a basename from a path, for this
reason.
When it failed, the macOS test was failing with:
```
ok 16 /gsubprocess/env
Bail out! GLib-GIO:ERROR:../gio/tests/gsubprocess.c:1507:test_cwd: assertion failed (basename == tmp_lineend_basename): ("/T\n" == "/\n")
```
The test now passes reliably, which means that it can be removed from
the list of expected failures on macOS.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #1392
On macOS the comparison was failing as one of the paths had a trailing
slash while the other didn’t.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Despite the name, we still used blocking calls to get the default app
for URI, now that we have an async implementation of the API to get the
default implementation for URI scheme, we can remove the blocking calls.
We did not check whether this function worked before, so add a simple
test case for it, providing some test functions to make it possible to
reply the same behavior
While it's possible to create a directory synchronously via
g_dir_make_tmp(), there's no such API that performs it asynchronously.
So implement it using GFile, using a thread to perform such task.
It seems this script has potentially never worked properly under Python
3. It’s supposed to list all the `_get_type()` functions it can find in
the GIO headers, but since the regex string passed to `re.search()` was
not a Python regex, nothing was matching.
Fix that, and do another few small cleanups to the script.
This makes the `defaultvalue` test not skip all the types.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
When running under a strict TAP parser this was previously producing
problematic non-conforming output.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
The interface was ready for this API but it was not provided.
So implement this, using a thread that calls the sync API for now.
Add tests.
Helps with: GNOME/glib#157
Dynamically, these will only ever be used after they’ve been initialised
due to correct checking of `use_udp` throughout the test. However,
that’s a global variable and the static analyser is assuming it might
change value. So help it out by NULL-initialising the variables so they
can never be used uninitialised.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
This is a fallback timeout to abort the test if the expected number of
messages aren’t seen in time. However, when running the test under
valgrind it will take longer and sometimes spuriously trigger the
timeout.
There’s no point in having an abort timeout inside the test: the test
runner (Meson) already provides one for us, which we can adjust with a
multiplier when running under valgrind.
So removes the timeout from within the test. This should fix the
gnotification test under valgrind.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
These have all been added manually, as I’ve finished all the files which
I can automatically detect.
All the license headers in this commit are for LGPL-2.1-or-later, and
all have been double-checked against the license paragraph in the file
header.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #1415
This may have been causing an intermittent failure of the pollable test
on BSD, where updating the readable status of a socket takes a bit
longer than on Linux.
```
GLib-GIO-DEBUG: 16:06:41.235: GSocketClient: Starting application layer connection
GLib-GIO-DEBUG: 16:06:41.235: GSocketClient: Connection successful!
Bail out! GLib-GIO:ERROR:../gio/tests/pollable.c:73:check_source_readability_callback: assertion failed (readable == expected): (0 == 1)
```
I have not debugged the test on BSD, though, so this is only a guess.
See https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/jobs/2022087
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
This should make each unit test a bit more self-contained and easier to
verify that they’re independent.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
This test is opportunistic in that it’s not possible to detect whether
the race condition has been hit (other than by hitting a deadlock).
So the only approach we can take for testing is to loop over the code
which has previously been known to cause a deadlock a number of times.
The number of repetitions is chosen from running the test with the
deadlock fix reverted.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #1941
Add SPDX license (but not copyright) headers to all files which follow a
certain pattern in their existing non-machine-readable header comment.
This commit was entirely generated using the command:
```
git ls-files gio/tests/*.c | xargs perl -0777 -pi -e 's/\n \*\n \* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and\/or\n \* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public/\n \*\n \* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later\n \*\n \* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and\/or\n \* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public/igs'
```
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #1415
The raw value is escaped according to D-Bus rules. This is probablematic
for Windows backslashed paths. We can use URI unescaping, it seems
that's what gdbusaddress.c is doing too.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
The "/unix-fd/scm" test is quite Unix-specific, the next patch is going
to add a portable test.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
Use a prefix matching the binary, rename the test "scm", as it involves
SocketControlMessage.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
It is not only shorter than `not meson.is_cross_build() or
meson.has_exe_wrapper()` but also handle the case of cross compiling to
a compatible arch such as building for i386 on an amd64.
This fixes a scan-build warning:
```
../../../../source/glib/gio/tests/gdbus-tests.c:146:3: warning: Value stored to 'watch_id' is never read [deadcode.DeadStores]
watch_id = 0;
^
```
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Helps: #1767
When I enabled unix socketpair test on win32, I left the existing
g_close(fds[1]), but _g_win32_socketpair() returns native sockets
descriptors that must be closed with closesocket() on win32.
Let GSocket handle the socket pair cleanup.
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
When checking that the connection has the expected number of refs, the
test would block on a `GMainContext` iteration for up to 3s before
waking up and failing (if the refcount was still not as expected).
This check was written in the expectation that changing the refcount of
the connection would only happen due to dispatching a source on
`GMainContext` — hence the `GMainContext` would wake up as the refcount
changed.
That’s probably not actually true though. It might be the case that the
connection’s refcount is changed on from the GDBus worker thread, which
would not cause any wakeups on the main thread’s `GMainContext`.
In this case, the `GMainContext` iteration in
`assert_connection_has_one_ref()` would block for the full 3s, and then
wake up and notice the refcount is correct (then the test would
proceed).
That’s fine, apart from the fact that `test_threaded_singleton()` does
this 1000 times. If the slow case is hit on a significant number of
those test runs, the test will take around 3000s to complete, which is
significantly more than meson’s test timeout of 360s. So the test fails
with something like:
```
220/266 glib:gio+slow / gdbus-threading TIMEOUT 360.07 s
--- command ---
G_TEST_SRCDIR='/builds/GNOME/glib/gio/tests' GIO_MODULE_DIR='' G_TEST_BUILDDIR='/builds/GNOME/glib/_build/gio/tests' /builds/GNOME/glib/_build/gio/tests/gdbus-threading
--- stdout ---
\# random seed: R02S83fe8de22db4d4f376e6d179e2bdd601
1..3
\# Start of gdbus tests
ok 1 /gdbus/delivery-in-thread
ok 2 /gdbus/method-calls-in-thread
\# GLib-GIO-DEBUG: refcount of 0x5602de913660 is not right (3 rather than 1) in test_threaded_singleton(), sleeping
\# GLib-GIO-DEBUG: refcount of 0x5602de913660 is not right (3 rather than 1) in test_threaded_singleton(), sleeping
\# GLib-GIO-DEBUG: refcount of 0x5602de913c60 is not right (3 rather than 1) in test_threaded_singleton(), sleeping
\# GLib-GIO-DEBUG: refcount of 0x5602de913c60 is not right (3 rather than 1) in test_threaded_singleton(), sleeping
\# GLib-GIO-DEBUG: refcount of 0x5602de913260 is not right (3 rather than 1) in test_threaded_singleton(), sleeping
\# GLib-GIO-DEBUG: refcount of 0x5602de913260 is not right (3 rather than 1) in test_threaded_singleton(), sleeping
```
From this log, it can be seen that the sleep is happening on a different
`GMainContext` every other time, so the test *is* making progress.
Assuming this is a correct diagnosis (it’s a lot of guessing), this
commit tries to fix the test by adding a wakeup timeout to the
`GMainContext` in `assert_connection_has_one_ref()`, which will wake it
up every 50ms to re-check the exit condition.
This polling approach has been taken because it doesn’t seem feasible to
make sure that every `g_object_ref()`/`g_object_unref()` call on a
`GDBusConnection` causes the main context to wake up.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
This might fix a recent test failure:
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/jobs/1929015. Unfortunately
there’s not much debug information in the logs to go on, and I can’t
reproduce it locally. All I have is:
```
192/272 glib:gio / gdbus-peer-object-manager FAIL 0.43 s (killed by signal 11 SIGSEGV)
--- command ---
GIO_MODULE_DIR='' G_TEST_BUILDDIR='/builds/GNOME/glib/_build/gio/tests' G_TEST_SRCDIR='/builds/GNOME/glib/gio/tests' /builds/GNOME/glib/_build/gio/tests/gdbus-peer-object-manager
--- stdout ---
\# random seed: R02Seee9b7325ecd7c19249a3412397aed9b
1..2
\# Start of gdbus tests
\# Start of peer-object-manager tests
```
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>