Tests currently fail under macOS because the tool claims not to work
on apple devices. Since I cannot disprove this myself, I'm disabling the
tests on Darwin.
This introduces an integration test that executes gio launch from a
variety of working directories, and checks that %k is expanded to a
location that makes sense in the context of the executed program, i.e.
an absolute path.
`g_file_enumerator_finalize` should not call `g_file_enumerator_close`
because object parts (i.e. subclass variable and/or resources) might
already be freed, causing memory safety issues.
A better place to call `g_file_enumerator_close` is
`g_file_enumerator_dispose` because it is safe to access the object
memory here.
Fixes#3713
Signed-off-by: fbrouille <150549-fbrouille@users.noreply.gitlab.gnome.org>
This works around a Meson bug
(https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/4668).
If we have a Python test which spawns a built native binary, that binary is
listed in the `depends` argument of the `test()`. On Linux, this results in
the directories containing the built libraries which the binary depends on
being added to the `LD_LIBRARY_PATH` of the test invocation. On Windows,
however, Meson currently doesn’t add those directories to `PATH` (which is
the equivalent of `LD_LIBRARY_PATH`), so we have to do it manually.
This takes the same approach as Christoph Reiter did in
gobject-introspection
(13e8c7ff80/tests/meson.build (L2)).
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
Unlike the previous commit, there is no `g_fdopen()` wrapper where we
can add cross-platform support for this.
I’m not adding that now just for `O_CLOEXEC` support for these two
calls, so pass the flag locally for now.
If someone wanted to add a `g_fdopen()` wrapper in future, the
`GLIB_FD_CLOEXEC` here could be refactored easily.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
This adds cross-platform support for it: on glibc, musl and BSD’s libc,
the flag is natively supported. On Windows, convert it to the `N` flag,
which similarly indicates that an open file shouldn’t be inherited by
child processes.
This allows us to unconditionally pass `e` to `g_fopen()` so `O_CLOEXEC`
can easily be set on its FDs.
Also do the same for `g_freopen()`, since it shares the same underlying
mode handling code.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
Some apps names or keywords contain multiple words. For example 'LibreOffice
Calc' contains the word 'Calc'. This is rightfully detected as a prefix match,
however generally it is expected that searching for 'calc' would consistantly
return 'Calculator' in first position, instead of ranking them equally.
We now prioritise tokens that would otherwise rank equal based on where they
occur in the string, giving earlier occurences precedence.
The use case for exposing this field is GTK wanting reproducible
encoding output across different OSes.
I decided to expose the OS as an integer because zlib uses an int
in its header and does not make its OS codes available as a custom
type in its API.
I also decided to limit it to values between 0 and 255 because zlib
encodes the OS as a single byte.
Test included.
Fixes: #3663
We had code to avoid that we could call a toggle "up" notification
callback in locked state, but this was not covering the case in which
the cancellable second to last reference was removed in its cancellation
callback.
In fact, in such case we end up going from 2 -> 1 references during the
signal callback call and this leads to calling the toggle notify
callback in locked state.
To prevent this, add an even further reference before calling the
callback (in locked state, but there's no risk that a toggle-up
notification happens now), and drop it once unlocked again.
If when calling g_cancellable_connect() the cancellable was already
cancelled we could have ended up in calling the data cleanup
function while the cancellable lock was held.
This is likely not an issue, but it's still better not to do it,
so protect the code against it
When a non-cancelled cancellable ::cancelled signal callback is called
the cancellable has enough references so that it can be unreferenced on
the callback itself. However this doesn't happen if the cancellable has
been already cancelled at the moment we connect to it.
To prevent this, add a temporary reference before calling the signal
callback.
Note that we do this also if the callback has not been already cancelled
to prevent that we may end up calling a toggle-notify callback while we
are locked.
Add tests
Closes: #3643
Ensure we don't do an user-after-free access, as reported by ASAN:
==3704==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: stack-use-after-return on address
0x70a58f8631c0 at pc 0x000000405144 bp 0x7fffff62c7a0 sp 0x7fffff62c798
READ of size 4 at 0x70a58f8631c0 thread T0
#0 0x405143 in on_object_unregistered ../../GNOME/glib/gio/tests/gdbus-export.c:597
#1 0x70a592e858d8 in call_destroy_notify_data_in_idle ../../GNOME/glib/gio/gdbusconnection.c:244
#2 0x70a5940016a4 in g_idle_dispatch ../../GNOME/glib/glib/gmain.c:6221
#3 0x70a59401095b in g_main_dispatch ../../GNOME/glib/glib/gmain.c:3348
#4 0x70a59401095b in g_main_context_dispatch_unlocked ../../GNOME/glib/glib/gmain.c:4197
#5 0x70a59401ba17 in g_main_context_iterate_unlocked ../../GNOME/glib/glib/gmain.c:4262
#6 0x70a59401cc73 in g_main_context_iteration ../../GNOME/glib/glib/gmain.c:4327
#7 0x405658 in test_threaded_unregistration_iteration ../../GNOME/glib/gio/tests/gdbus-export.c:1878
#8 0x405658 in test_threaded_unregistration ../../GNOME/glib/gio/tests/gdbus-export.c:1952
#9 0x70a5940dfb04 in test_case_run ../../GNOME/glib/glib/gtestutils.c:2988
#10 0x70a5940dfb04 in g_test_run_suite_internal ../../GNOME/glib/glib/gtestutils.c:3090
#11 0x70a5940df893 in g_test_run_suite_internal ../../GNOME/glib/glib/gtestutils.c:3109
#12 0x70a5940df893 in g_test_run_suite_internal ../../GNOME/glib/glib/gtestutils.c:3109
#13 0x70a5940e0bc9 in g_test_run_suite ../../GNOME/glib/glib/gtestutils.c:3189
#14 0x70a5940e0d1f in g_test_run ../../GNOME/glib/glib/gtestutils.c:2275
#15 0x40eb72 in session_bus_run ../../GNOME/glib/gio/tests/gdbus-sessionbus.c:69
#16 0x403a2c in main ../../GNOME/glib/gio/tests/gdbus-export.c:1990
#17 0x70a591d9f149 in __libc_start_call_main (/lib64/libc.so.6+0x28149) (BuildId: 0d710e9d9dc10c500b8119c85da75004183618e2)
#18 0x70a591d9f20a in __libc_start_main_impl (/lib64/libc.so.6+0x2820a) (BuildId: 0d710e9d9dc10c500b8119c85da75004183618e2)
#19 0x403b44 in _start (/tmp/_build/gio/tests/gdbus-export+0x403b44) (BuildId: f6312e919c3d94e4c49270b0dfc5c870e1ba550b)
Address 0x70a58f8631c0 is located in stack of thread T0 at offset 192 in frame
#0 0x40525f in test_threaded_unregistration ../../GNOME/glib/gio/tests/gdbus-export.c:1936
This frame has 7 object(s):
[32, 40) 'local_error' (line 1835)
[64, 72) 'unregister_thread' (line 1836)
[96, 104) 'value' (line 1838)
[128, 136) 'value_str' (line 1839)
[160, 168) 'call_result' (line 1840)
[192, 204) 'object_registration_data' (line 1834) <== Memory access at offset 192 is inside this variable
[224, 240) 'data' (line 1833)
Rather than creating files in the current directory. This is a bit
neater, and avoids races between parallel invocations of the unit tests
if the file names aren’t guaranteed to be unique (e.g. by using
`g_mkstemp()`).
Add `G_TEST_OPTION_ISOLATE_DIRS` too, to make sure we use a unique
subdirectory of `g_get_tmp_dir()`. This means that paths like
`g_get_tmp_dir() / some-file` are guaranteed to be race-free even if the
filename is not unique, because the test tmp dir now is.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
In the `g-file-info-filesystem-readonly` test.
This doesn’t introduce any functional changes, but makes the code a
little easier to read (because the parts of the path are now in
hierarchical order) and makes it a bit clearer that we’re building a
path rather than an arbitrary string.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
It’s not entirely clear from the documentation, but `g_mkstemp()` (and
`g_mkdtemp()`) operate in the current directory, rather than the system
temporary directory.
This meant these tests were all writing files to the build directory.
This is messy, though thankfully not a correctness issue or a race
because `g_mkstemp()` guarantees to return a unique file for each
caller.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
Its symbol interposition works differently to that of Linux, so our
approach using `dlsym(RTLD_NEXT)` to inject syscalls (and still allow
chaining up to the version from libc) doesn’t work on macOS.
See https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/jobs/4861349 for an example
failure.
It would be lovely to have these tests working on macOS, but I am not a
macOS developer, and have spent enough time fixing this leak (#1250)
already. It can wait for follow-up work.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
Helps: #1250
The algorithm that `g_socket_listener_add_any_inet_port()` and
`g_socket_listener_add_inet_port()` use to try to connect to IPv4 and/or
IPv6 ports are a bit complex (especially when port allocation has to
happen in the former method). So far they’ve not really been unit
tested, which is unfortunate, and has left latent bugs.
Add some unit tests for both methods, by providing mock `socket()` (and
friends) functions to override those from libc, and using those to cause
specific syscalls to fail according to the test’s needs.
These tests demonstrate the fix for #1250 works, as the tests can be run
under memcheck and show no memory leaks. They’ve revealed a follow-up
issue, though — `g_socket_listener_add_any_inet_port()` doesn’t try a
fallback IPv4-only socket if it tries an IPv6 socket and that socket
accepts IPv4 but then fails to `listen()`. I’ve filed issue #3604 for
that.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
Helps: #1250
The array was declared one byte too short to contain the trailing nul
byte for the string literal. Spotted by gcc 15.
Fix it by allowing the compiler to work out the array length.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
GUnixFDList actually comes *after* the GDBusMethodInvocation, but this
was mistakenly putting it first.
Signed-off-by: Ryan Gonzalez <ryan.gonzalez@collabora.com>
Three of the four GApplicationCommandLine examples contained this line:
g_application_set_inactivity_timeout (app, 10000);
It is not explained (which could be confusing for readers trying to
understand the examplese), or necessary. Worse, it causes two of the
examples to pause for ten seconds if they are invoked with no command-line
arguments, which makes them seem broken (and would presumably be reported
as a bug in any real application).
So, remove these calls.
Fixes#3615
During "as-installed" testing, we should search the GIR_DIR for GIR XML,
instead of hard-coding that it is `${prefix}/share/gir-1.0`. This is
not the case on at least Debian, in order to make it possible to
install more than one architecture's flavour of `GLib-2.0.gir`,
which contains some architecture-specific `#define`s.
Also search GOBJECT_INTROSPECTION_DATADIR/GIR_SUFFIX (in practice
something like `/usr/share/gir-1.0` in all cases) to accommodate
distributions like Debian that move the architecture-independent
majority of GIR XML into /usr/share to avoid duplication, leaving
only the architecture-specific minority of files like `GLib-2.0.gir`
in the GIR_DIR.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
The documentation for g_spawn_async_with_pipes_and_fds() states:
> If an error occurs, child_pid, stdin_pipe_out, stdout_pipe_out, and
> stderr_pipe_out will not be filled with valid values.
Before 2dc3a6f0c8, the `child_pid`
argument was `self->pid`, and GObject zero-initializes structs. So
the pid field was properly initialized to zero.
After 2dc3a6f0c8, however, the out
variable is now declared inside initable_init(), and it's unitialized.
So if g_spawn_async_with_pipes_and_fds() errors out, `pid` will have
trash value in it, and the following assertion will fail:
```
g_assert (success == (pid != 0));
```
Fix that by initializing the `pid` variable to zero. Add a test to
exercise the fail code path, and prevent errors like this in the
future.
The cancelled state may be set and read by different threads, so ensure
that it's stored and managed in an atomic way.
We could in fact end up check for `g_file_monitor_is_cancelled()` in a
thread and `g_file_monitor_cancel()` or `g_file_monitor_emit_event` in
in another one.
We were reusing the same logic everywhere, while we can just reuse an
unique class to base our tests on that avoids having to copy-and-paste
code for no good reason
Add some basic support for having glib-tests-only python libraries that
can be shared across the various projects, so that we don't have to
maintain multiple copies of them.
This replaces `g_dbus_connection_register_object_with_closures()`, and
becomes the new binding-friendly version of
`g_dbus_connection_register_object()`.
The problem with `g_dbus_connection_register_object_with_closures()` is
that the `method_call_closure` kept the reference counting semantics of
`GDBusInterfaceMethodCallFunc`, in that the `invocation` argument was
`(transfer full)`, even though it was wrapped in a `GClosure`. This
couldn’t be described in introspection annotations, so the
`GDBusMethodInvocation` was being leaked by bindings. Some bindings
added workarounds to fix the leak at our direction (see
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/2600#note_1385050), which
meant we could no longer change the reference counting behaviour without
breaking those bindings (see #3559).
So let’s start afresh with
`g_dbus_connection_register_object_with_closures2()`, with correctly
defined reference counting semantics (the `GDBusMethodInvocation` is
`(transfer none)`) from the start.
Unfortunately we can’t add a `(rename-to)` annotation to the new API, as
that would effectively be an API break for existing binding code which
uses the old API via that rename.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
Fixes: #3560
This reverts commit 092fedd5f0.
This was not the right change to make, and I shouldn’t have accepted the
MR. The situation is laid out in this comment:
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/2600#note_1385050
tl;dr: The reference on the `GDBusMethodInvocation` which is transferred
in to the `GDBusInterfaceMethodCallFunc` is balanced by a reference
transferred to `g_dbus_method_invocation_return_*()`. This is how the
refcounting has always worked for these functions, and even if we’d
probably arrange things differently if the code was written now, we
can’t change those semantics without breaking API.
In particular, bindings have various bits of custom code to account for
these reference tranfers (since they can’t be represented using
gobject-introspection annotations), so changing the semantics will break
bindings.
Fixes: #3559
Parts of the `dbus-appinfo` test need support for converting an FD to a
path, and Hurd doesn’t currently allow that (see
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/merge_requests/4396#note_2279923).
Since there’s no fix for that visible in the medium term (new kernel
APIs will need to be added), skip parts of the `dbus-appinfo` test which
require that functionality for now.
This prevents the whole test from failing, and means we can usefully get
results from the parts of it which don’t depend on converting FDs to
paths.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
Helps: #3538
This could potentially eventually become a public GLib API, but there
doesn’t seem to be a huge need for it right now (e.g. this file contains
the only use of `/proc/self/fd/%d` in GLib), so let’s keep it private
for now and avoid committing to API stability just yet.
This gives time for other platforms to add their platform-specific
implementations for it too, if they need. I’ve added a couple of
pointers to what I *think* the right APIs might be, from my research,
but I have not prototyped those implementations.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>