This test is inspired by its namesake in GTK+. We instantiate
all types, and check the default values of their properties,
with some exceptions for types that are known not to work.
I recently had to track down why these tests failed. Turned
out that some rogue package on my system had installed mime
types that declared all files with 3 letter names to be
'chemical/x-turbomole-vibrational'.
This change will make it more obvious what is going on by
mentioning the mime types in the assertion message.
GDBusConnection cleanup is inherently racy due to its use of worker
threads. Put tests that expect a NULL G_BUS_TYPE_SESSION singleton
as the first tests to work around cleanup races.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719837
The desktop-files directory contains a mimeapps.cache file
that was not installed as data for installed tests, causing
the file measure test to fail only in when installed.
Make the testcase compare the byte size to what is reported
by du. Also add a test for the async api, and mak eit test
the progress reporting callback.
The test reveals that there's something fishy with this monitor.
One has to call g_app_info_get_all() for it to start working,
and then it only works once.
The static analyser (correctly) considers a type check to fail if the
variable is NULL. In this case, the address must be non-NULL as no error
was thrown by g_socket_connection_get_remote_address(), but the static
analyser doesn’t know this.
Add a non-NULL assertion anyway, both to shut the analyser up, and
because it’s good extra testing.
Found by scan-build.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=113075
These prevent some false positives from the static analyser which are
caused by it not inspecting the invariants of
g_subprocess_communicate[_utf8]_finish() (i.e. that stdout and
stdout_str will always be set unless an error was returned).
They’re also good testing anyway.
Found by scan-build.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=113075
Be a little bit more careful in regards to initializing a primitive type
variable before passing it by reference, as it could have random stuff
in the variable's address depending on the CRT, such as MSVCR110.DLL,
causing random, invalid stuff being written in that address.
This will fix this test when built with Visual Studio 2012.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711047
Make it possible to skip the terminal-launching test simply
by setting DISPLAY= . Previously, you had to unset DISPLAY,
which is a little more cumbersome.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711178
One testcase was launching appinfo-test from a GAppInfo that
does not have a filename. In this case, the G_LAUNCHED_DESKTOP_FILE
envvar is not exported. Make appinfo-test deal with that, without
spewing warnings.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711178
The actions test tests the GSimpleActionGroup API. Maybe this
should be moved to use GActionMap, but for now, just disable
the deprecations.
There was also one test that wasn't actually hooked up, so
do that as well.
Just copy the schemas to the builddir and compile them in place instead
of trying to mess around with creating the compiled file in a different
dir. This solves issues in the summary/description testcase when
GSettings expects the usual situation of having the .xml files present
in the same directory.
We need to check for the correct line endings on Windows (\r\n) for the
echo tests and currently need to skip the test_echo_eof test there, as
it depends on the cat utility that is not normally found on Windows, and
using an external installation of cat via MSYS or Cygwin would render the
test program to hang as cat waits for user input.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711047
Various tests were depending on local_error being set by a callback
when it could never have been the case. Simplify async error detection
logic in those cases, and fix leak of GError.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711802
We had a GApplication testcase that handled both open and commandline.
This only way that this worked was by implementing the commandline
handler without actually setting the HANDLES_COMMAND_LINE flag.
This behaviour is now invalid, so just rip out the offending part of the
test.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711099
Include unistd.h only on *NIX and define items as necessary on Windows,
also replace instances of ssize_t with the GLib-equivilant gssize so to fix
the build on platforms that do not have ssize_t, such as Visual C++.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711047
We need to use g_content_type_get_mime_type() to look up the mime type of
the file from the registry on the content type that was acquired on
Windows, as g_file_info_get_content_type() does not acquire the
file mime type (unlike on *NIX).
g_content_type_get_mime_type() on *NIX is more or less an no-op as it
simply returns the g_strdup()-ed version of the passed-in content type.
This will enable the resources test to pass on Windows.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711047
The overridden implementation of the skip method for
GLocalFileInputStream allows skipping past the end of the file which is
inconsistent with the documentation. Prevent this by first seeking to
the end of the file and then seeking backwards from there as much as
is necessary.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711048
If the goal is to make sure we don't have a dbus connection, it has
to call g_test_dbus_unset() instead which is much more complete.
In this case, g_test_dbus_unset() is called already, so it should be
fine.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697348
This is to avoid having again the subtil bug in dbus-appinfo.c:
session_bus_down() was called before g_test_run() so the test was
running on the user's dbus session.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697348
The G_ADD_PRIVATE() macro, and the auto-generated get_instance_private()
internal function, should be used conditionally depending on the maximum
allowed version of GLib, as defined by the GLIB_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED
pre-processor symbol.
This allows generating code that can be compiled in projects that wish
to use an older API version of GLib through the use of the
GLIB_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED symbol.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=710133
This code was added for use by the G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_THUMBNAIL_IS_VALID
file attribute, but may end up being used elsewhere (e.g. in GVfs) as well.
As it’s dealing with untrusted external files, and the non-trivial PNG file
format, this commit adds several test cases to cover valid and invalid PNG
files.
The security model for the thumbnail verification code is that the user’s
cache directory is untrusted, and potentially any PNG file which is passed
to the verifier has been manipulated arbitrarily by an attacker.
This is a follow-up to commit fe7069749f.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=709898
It is our intention that memory output streams should operate in two
distinct modes, depending on if a realloc function was provided or not.
In the case that we have a realloc function (resizable mode), we want
the stream to behave as if it were a file that started out empty. In
the case that we don't have a realloc function (fixed-sized mode), we
want the stream to behave as a block device would.
To this end, we introduce two changes in functionality:
- seeking to SEEK_END on a resizable stream will now seek to the end of
the valid data region, not to the end of the allocated memory (which
is really just an implementation detail)
- seeks past the end of the allocated memory size are now permitted,
but only on resizable streams. The next write will grow the buffer
(inserting zeros between).
Some tweaks to testcases were required in order not to break the build,
which indicates that this is an API break, but it seems unlikely that
anyone will be effected by these changes 'in the real world'.
Updates to documentation and further testcases are in following commits.
Based on a patch from Maciej Piechotka <uzytkownik2@gmail.com>.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=684842
Over many years of writing code interacting with subprocesses, a pattern
that comes up a lot is to run a child and get its output as UTF-8, to
put inside a JSON document or render in a GtkTextBuffer, etc.
It's very important to validate at the boundaries, and not say deep
inside Pango.
We could do this a bit more efficiently if done in a streaming fashion,
but realistically this should be OK for now.
We weren't closing the streams after we were done reading or writing,
which is kind of essential. The easy way to fix this is to just use
g_output_stream_splice() to a GMemoryOutputStream rather than
hand-rolling it. This results in a substantial reduction of code
complexity.
A second serious issue is that we were marking the task as complete when
the process exits, but that's racy - there could still be data to read
from stdout. Fix this by just refcounting outstanding operations.
This code, not surprisingly, looks a lot like the "multi" test.
Next, because processes output binary data, I'd be forced to annotate
the char*/length pairs as (array) (element-type uint8). But rather than
doing that, it's *far* simpler to just use GBytes.
We need a version of this that actually validates as UTF-8, that will be
in the next patch.
There are a number of nice things this class brings:
0) Has a race-free termination API on all platforms (on UNIX, calls to
kill() and waitpid() are coordinated as not to cause problems).
1) Operates in terms of G{Input,Output}Stream, not file descriptors
2) Standard GIO-style async API for wait() with cancellation
3) Makes some simple cases easy, like synchronously spawning a
process with an argument list
4) Makes hard cases possible, like asynchronously running a process
with stdout/stderr merged, output directly to a file path
Much rewriting and code review from Ryan Lortie <desrt@desrt.ca>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=672102
Rather than having lots of obscure platform-based #ifdefs all over
gio, define some macros in gcredentialsprivate.h, and use those to
simplify the rest of the code.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701482
Previously, no testcases tested the close flags of
g_output_stream_splice_async. This patch adds tests for that and
also tests various combinations of threaded and non-threaded
GInputStream async reads and GOutputStream async writes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=691581
Make use of __wgetmainargs() on Windows so that we can get wide char
versions of the argv's that are passed in when this test program is being
invoked. This is necessary as one might enter non-ASCII, such as
CJK characters filenames and/or directories to run the test program
against, so that we can process the name(s) and pass the proper
UTF-8-encoded name(s) of the files/directories that is being tested.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707787
Virtaal installs a mime package for various .po-like file formats, one
of which has the extension .txt. This causes GLib to report ".txt"
files still as "text/plain" but no longer with complete certainty.
The result is that asserting !uncertain during the testsuite causes the
test to fail if Virtaal happens to be installed.
Remove this assertion.
GNetworkAddress was allowing IPv6 scope ids in g_network_address_new()
/ g_network_address_parse(), but not in g_network_address_parse_uri().
Fix that.
Part of https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=669724
Convert {glib,gobject,gio}/tests to use the automake TAP driver
and test harness instead of gtester. To do so, we add a glib-tap.mk
that provides the same interface as glib.mk, except for the
reporting and coverage testing functionality. Eventually, we may
want to replace glib.mk with it. I've not yet converted the
toplevel tests/ directory, since it mixes gtestutils tests with
other binaries.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=692125
With UDP sockets, g_socket_bind() with allow_reuse=TRUE on Linux
behaved in a way that the documentation didn't suggest, and that
didn't match other OSes. (Specifically, it allowed binding multiple
multicast sockets to the same address.)
Since this behavior is useful, and since allow_reuse didn't have any
other meaning with UDP sockets, update the docs to reflect the Linux
behavior, and make it do the same thing on non-Linux.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=689245
When running a task in a thread, GTask may still be internally holding
a ref on the task in that thread even after the callback is called in
the original thread (depending on thread scheduling). Fix the test to
handle that by using a weak notify that signals a GCond, and wait for
that GCond from the main thread. (And add a corresponding check to
test_return_on_cancel().)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705152
Add a missing Name entry, and add a terminal ; to the Actions
entry in org.gtk.test.dbusappinfo.desktop. desktop-file-validate
still contains about the DBusActivatable entry and about the
missing Exec entries. The former will go away when desktop-file-validate
gets updated for the latest spec revision.
Add a fairly realistic testcase that ensures that GDesktopAppInfo with
DBusActivatable=true can successfully talk to GApplication for a variety
of purposes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=699259
For some time, the desktop file specification has supported "additional
application actions". This is intended to allow for additional methods
of starting an app, such as a mail client having a "Compose New Message"
action that brings up the compose window instead of the folder list.
This patch adds support for this with a relatively minimal API.
In the case that the application is a GApplication and DBusActivatable,
desktop actions are translated into GActions that have been added to the
application with g_action_map_add_action(). This more or less closes
the loop on being able to activate an application with an action
invocation (instead of 'activate').
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=664444
Add a new type of GAction that represents the value of a property on an
object. As an example, this might be used on the "visible-child-name"
property of a GtkStack.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703270
It's possible to get a org.freedesktop.Properties.GetAll call even if we
have no readable properties in the introspection, in which case we
should return the empty list in the usual way.
We should certainly _not_ be dispatching to the method call handler of
an interface which has no properties (since it will not be expecting
this).
Add a check to make sure that there is at least one readable property
before assuming that a NULL get_property handler implies that we want to
handle properties asynchronously.
Add a testcase that was failing before the change and works after it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703437
The existing advice in the documentation to "simply" register the
"org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties" interface if you want to handle
properties asynchronously is pretty unreasonable. If you want to handle
this interface you have to deal with all properties for all interfaces
on the path, and you have to do all of the checking for yourself. You
also have to provide your own introspection data.
Introduce a new convention for dealing with properties asynchronously.
If the user provides NULL for their get_property() or set_property()
functions in the vtable and has properties registered then the
properties are sent to the method_call() handler. We get lucky here
that this function takes an "interface_name" parameter that we can set
to "org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties".
We also do the user the favour of setting the GDBusPropertyInfo on the
GDBusMethodInvocation for their convenience (for much the same reasons
as they might want the already-available GDBusMethodInfo).
Add a testcase as well as a bunch of documentation about this new
feature.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=698375
OS X's getaddrinfo() only supports IPv6 scope IDs that are interface
names, not numbers. So use if_indextoname() to get the name of an
interface and construct an address using that.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=700123
In the case that HAVE_DBUS_DAEMON was undefined (as in ostree where glib
is built before D-Bus) this test was failing. Move it inside the
HAVE_DBUS_DAEMON block.
Remove the complications that were introduced in an attempt to make the
gsettings and gschema-compile tests function as installed tests. These
tests are designed (in large part for gsettings and entirely for
gschema-compile) to test the in-tree tools and should not be testing the
system versions.
In the future we may want to move the use of the in-tree tools from the
gsettings testcase into the Makefile and install the resulting files,
allowing this testcase to run against those files, installed.
Perform a substantial cleanup of the build system with respect to
building and installing testcases.
First, Makefile.decl has been renamed glib.mk and substantially
expanded. We intend to add more stuff here in the future, like canned
rules for mkenums, marshallers, resources, etc.
By default, tests are no longer compiled as part of 'make'. They will
be built when 'make check' is run. The old behaviour can be obtained
with --enable-always-build-tests.
--disable-modular-tests is gone (because tests are no longer built by
default). There is no longer any way to cause 'make check' to be a
no-op, but that's not very useful anyway.
A new glibtests.m4 file is introduced. Along with glib.mk, this
provides for consistent handling of --enable-installed-tests and
--enable-always-build-tests (mentioned above).
Port our various test-installing Makefiles to the new framework.
This patch substantially improves the situation in the toplevel tests/
directory. Things are now somewhat under control there. There were
some tests being built that weren't even being run and we run those now.
The long-running GObject performance tests in this directory have been
removed from 'make check' because they take too long.
As an experiment, 'make check' now runs the testcases on win32 builds,
by default. We can't run them under gtester (since it uses a pipe to
communicate with the subprocess) so just toss them in TESTS. Most of
them are passing on win32.
Things are not quite done here, but this patch is already a substantial
improvement. More to come.
This should be the last users that need to be ported.
For some of the oldschool non-gtester-ified tests, we call g_test_init()
from main() because it is necessary in order to use
g_test_build_filename().
Since this feature is so utterly automake-centric, we may as well be
using the same terminology as automake itself (ie: although it's
BUILT_SOURCES, it's DIST_EXTRA, not DISTED).
Also add some comments to the enum explaining that these terms are
really corresponding directly to the automake terms.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=549783