check_expected_events is heavily modified in this commit to tolerate
event loss and allow renaming to be reported as creation and deletion.
This fixes test failure on FreeBSD.
Previously, kqueue file monitor only add event sources for directories
regardless of the type of the file being monitored. Doing so may be
possible on inotify, but it is not sufficient on kqueue. Watching a
directory on kqueue doesn't report changes made to files under it, and
we must watch files themselves to get notified. This problem is fixed
by adding a second watch for non-directory file monitors, and the result
is that we are now able to receive 'CHANGED' and 'ATTRIBUTE_CHANGED'
events for non-directory files.
Since having two watches on one file monitor requires many code changes
to work properly, this commit also changes the following things:
- NOTE_ALL macro is now replaced by note_all inline function. Since the
kqueue backend is shared by all BSD operating systems, there are a
few difference between these systems. It is easier to do '#ifdef'
check in a function than in a macro.
- Both g_kqueue_file_monitor_callback and g_kqueue_file_monitor_cancel
now holds a lock before accessing kqueue_sub structs. This fixes a
crash when these two functions are called from different threads,
causing g_kqueue_file_monitor_callback to access freed memory.
- 'mask' variable in g_kqueue_file_monitor_callback is now removed.
The usage of 'mask' was wrong because of the 'mask > 0' check.
'CHANGED' event has value 0 so the 'mask > 0' check made it
impossible to emit 'CHANGED' events.
- kqueue-missing scans can now be triggered from the kqueue event
callback instead of always waiting for 4 seconds.
- Don't remove a file from kqueue on unlink unless its hard link count
has dropped to zero.
- Don't use 'else if' in the check of 'fflags'. It is possible for a
kevent to have multiple flags set.
- Don't use g_file_monitor_emit_event directly. Always use
g_file_monitor_source_handle_event to report events.
Events submitted to g_file_monitor_emit_event are delivered
immediately, but events sent to g_file_monitor_source_handle_event
are scheduled by GLocalFileMonitor. If we mix the two, the order of
events will be wrong and tests will fail.
- Report 'CHANGES_DONE_HINT' immediately after 'CREATED' if the file
created is not a regular file. This is copied from ih_event_callback.
Change G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_ACCESS_CAN_TRASH logic to be consistent
with recent g_local_file_trash changes, i.e. set this to FALSE for
locations on system-internal mounts.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/251
New bugs appears periodically in nautilus/gvfs/glib components that not
all trashed files are shown in trash:///. It used to be problem mostly
for "bind mounts" and btrfs subvolumes only. Currently, it is also
problem for nfs, cifs and other filesystems, which have been recently
added by commmit 0d69462f on the list of system internal filesystems.
This happens because the trash backend doesn't monitor files on system
internal mounts. Such behavior is not against the trash-spec, however,
we should be consistent within GNOME.
This behavior has the nice side-effect that it solves issues with hangs
on network filesystems: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/605,
because those are currently on the system internal filesystem list.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/issues/251
This test assumes the subprocess does not print anything else on stdout
other than the dbus address, otherwise g_test_trap_assert_stdout()
fails to match. But if the env running tests has G_MESSAGES_DEBUG=all
then it will also print "PATH=%s".
It's a synonym of G_VOLUME_IDENTIFIER_KIND_UNIX_DEVICE.
It doesn't change anything except not feeling dirty from using a wrongly
prefixed constant for the object type.
See: #182
Help is usually printed from tools if no arguments are given and there
is not default action. However "gio mount" and "gio trash" just silently
return. Let's print "No locations given" error and show help consistently.
"gio help COMMAND" shows some arguments with "..." and some with "…",
which looks weird, e.g.:
$ gio help mount
gio mount [OPTION…] [LOCATION...]
Let's use "…" consitently.
- Compiler checks were failing because it were using C compiler to build
objc code.
- xdgmime is needed on osx too.
- -DGIO_COMPILATION must be passed to objc compiler too.
- gapplication doesn't build on osx, it is excluded in autotools too.
We have to be careful when we use add_project_link_arguments(): All
targets are built using link arguments for the C language, except for
libgio on osx which use the objc language, because it contains some ".m"
source files. See https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/3585.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=796214
Those files got renamed to .c to work around an automake issue, but
Meson needs them to have .m extension. Better rename them at build time
in Makefile.am since that's where the workaround is needed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=672777
Fixes this build error on macOS when inside an ssh terminal:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "[...]/gio/tests/gengiotypefuncs.py", line 23, in <module>
for line in f:
File "[...]/lib/python3.6/encodings/ascii.py", line 26, in decode
return codecs.ascii_decode(input, self.errors)[0]
UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xe2 in position 2625: ordinal not in range(128)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=796328
GVfsUDisks2VolumeMonitor handles x-gvfs-hide/x-gvfs-show mount options
used to overwrite our heuristics whether the mount should be shown, or
hidden. Unfortunately, it works currently only for mounts with
corresponding fstab entries, because the options are read over
g_unix_mount_point_get_options. Let's introduce g_unix_mount_get_options
to allow reading of the options for all sort of mounts (e.g. created
over pam_mount, or manually mounted).
(Minor fixes to the documentation by Philip Withnall
<withnall@endlessm.com>.)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=668132
On non-glibc platforms gettext is provided by extra libintl dependency.
We wrongly thought libintl is an internal dependency and applications
needs to explicitly link on it, but turns out that breaks many
applications and with autotools the .pc generated actually has -lintl in
public "Libs:".
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=796085
-z nodelete breaks the libresourceplugin module usage in the resources.c
test, which expects to be able to unload it.
Make the Meson build match what the autotools build does: only pass
glib_link_flags to the headline libraries (glib-2.0, gio-2.0,
gobject-2.0, gthread-2.0, gmodule-2.0) and omit it from all other build
targets.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788771
gioenumtypes needs to be generated:
In file included from ../../../../external/glib/gio/kqueue/gkqueuefilemonitor.c:37:
In file included from ../../../../external/./glib/gio/glocalfilemonitor.h:25:
In file included from ../../../../external/./glib/gio/gunixmounts.h:24:
../../../../external/./glib/gio/gio.h:86:10: fatal error: 'gio/gioenumtypes.h' file not found
#include <gio/gioenumtypes.h>
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=794325
It inserted the new items one position after the given one and inserted all new items
at the same position resulting in the items being in the reverse order of the
input array.
It was decided to make these behavioural changes because this function has according to
https://codesearch.debian.net/search?q=g_list_store_splice only one real user (nautilus)
and it didn't do what one would expect from reading the documentation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=795307
All those logging functions already add a newline to any message they
print, so there’s no need to add a trailing newline in the message
passed to them.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Reviewed-by: nobody