Since we are no longer using sgml mode, using /* */ to
escape block comments inside examples does not work anymore.
Switch to using line comments with //
va_vopy() is not universally available in all compilers, so make use of
the existing G_VA_COPY macro which either calls va_copy() if it is
available, or emulates it if otherwise.
This means we're not abusing the notifiers for meta_marshallres,
and we're able to later cleanly add other fields to GClosure.
We still have to leave the ABI intact for the GClosure->meta_marshal
bit, as old G_CLOSURE_N_NOTIFIERS macro instances still accesses it.
However, we always set it to zero to keep those macros working.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=661140
enums are stored in v_long but need to be marshalled as signed
integers. On platforms where int is 32 bits, taking the
address of v_long resulted in the wrong 32 bits being marshalled.
So we need to stuff the enum's int-sized value to a temporary
int-sized variable and marshall that instead.
Second, on return, libffi actually returns a pointer to a value
that's sized according to platform conventions, not according to
what the caller requested. ie if ffi_type_sint was requested, the
value can still be a 64-bit sign-extended long on a 64-bit
architecture like PPC64, thus the caller cannot simply cast
the return value as a pointer to the desired type, but must cast
as a pointer to an integral type and then cast to the desired
type to remove any sign extension complications.
For more information on how to correctly handle libffi return
values, see the following bug, specifically comment 35:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=736489
"For 64-bit ABIs that extend integral returns types to 64-bits, libffi always
returns full 64-bit values that you can truncate in the calling code. It's
just the way it is has always been. Please don't change libffi. I'll document
this clearly for the next version (perhaps there is a mention of this, I
haven't looked yet).
The same is true for returning 8-bit values, for instance, on 32-bit systems.
All ABIs extend those results to the full 32-bits so you need to provide a
properly aligned buffer that's big enough to hold the result."
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=659881
The documentation for G_TYPE_CHAR says:
"The type designated by G_TYPE_CHAR is unconditionally an 8-bit signed
integer."
However the return value for g_value_get_char() was just "char" which
in C has an unspecified signedness; on e.g. x86 it's signed (which
matches the GType), but on e.g. PowerPC or ARM, it's not.
We can't break the old API, so we need to suck it up and add new API.
Port most internal users, but keep some tests of the old API too.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=659870
The g_object_bind_property_with_closures() function should set a
marshaller if the two GClosures don't have one already. This simplifies
the caller code and avoids duplication.
We need to add a new marshaller to the gmarshal.list matching the
signature of the GBindingTransformFunc function.
2008-06-22 Michael Natterer <mitch@imendio.com>
* *.c: remove trailing whitespace from newly added gtk-doc
comments and reformatted some where they contained overly long or
ill-formatted lines.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=7090
2008-06-22 Michael Natterer <mitch@imendio.com>
* *.c: moved includes back to the top of the files (before gtk-doc
SECTION comments). Add "config.h" in all files and move system
included before glib includes. Remove trailing whitespace from
SECTION comments and did some reformatting where lines were overly
long, no documentation content was changed.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=7089
* gobject/gboxed.c:
* gobject/gclosure.c:
* gobject/genums.c:
* gobject/gvalue.c:
Use file-names from the section file for SECTION: comments.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=7072
2005-09-08 Kjartan Maraas <kmaraas@gnome.org>
* gclosure.c: (g_closure_set_meta_marshal): Remove some unused
code.
* gsignal.c: (g_signal_emitv): Same here
* gtype.c: (g_type_register_fundamental): And here
* testgobject.c: Mark some functions static.
2005-08-02 Matthias Clasen <mclasen@redhat.com>
* gclosure.c (union ClosureInt): Mark the vint member as
volatile, which seems to be necessary to make atomic operations
work on s390.
Mon Aug 1 23:00:42 2005 Tim Janik <timj@imendio.com>
* gclosure.c: turned all modifications to the first 32 integer bits in a
closure into atomic accesses. wrapped write accesses into special macros
to keep the atomic modification logic in a single place. comment cleanups.
* gclosure.h: made all atomicly accessed closure fields volatile.
* gobject.h: made ref_count field volatile.
Sat Jul 30 21:10:26 2005 Tim Janik <timj@gtk.org>
* gobject.c: reverted notify_mutex introduction, since this prevents
parallelized setting of object properties on different objects, and
serves no apparent purpose (to me at least).
g_object_real_dispose(): removed non-atomic reference count
modifications.
g_object_unref(): make sure the closures array is destroyed when
destroying signal handlers.
* gparam.c: cosmetic changes.
* gsignal.c: comment fixup. allow 16bit blocking count.
* gsignal.c: reverted GClosure related changes.
* gclosure.c: reverted premature commit of atomic reference
counting attempt.
2005-07-15 Matthias Clasen <mclasen@redhat.com>
Make refcounting threadsafe by using atomic
operations. (#166020, Wim Taymans)
* gobject.c: Use a recursive lock to protect the
notify queue.
(g_object_unref): Get rid of g_object_last_unref and
do the last unref handling in g_object_unref.
(g_object_ref, g_object_unref): Use atomic operations.
* gsignal.c (struct _HandlerMatch): Use a full integer
for the ref_count field.
(handler_ref, handler_unref_R): Use atomic operations.
* gparam.c (g_param_spec_ref, g_param_spec_unref):
Use atomic operations instead of a lock to make the
refcounting threadsafe.
* gclosure.c (g_closure_ref, g_closure_unref): Use atomic
operations. This is more complicated here, since the
refcount is stored in a bitfield, so we also have
to access all other bitfield members atomically.
* gsignal.c (handlers_find): Read the meta_marshal flag
of the closure atomically.
* tests/Makefile.am (SUBDIRS): Add tests/refcount
* configure.in: Add tests/refcount
* tests/refcount/properties.c: Test property changes
from multiple threads.
* tests/refcount/signals.c: Test signal emission from
multiple threads.
* tests/refcount/objects.c: Test refcounting from
multiple threads.
* tests/refcount/objects2.c:
* tests/refcount/properties2.c: Tests to measure the
overhead of threadsafe refcounting.
* glib/giochannel.c (g_io_channel_ref, g_io_channel_unref):
Use atomic operations to make refcounting
threadsafe. (#166020, Wim Taymans)
2005-03-14 Matthias Clasen <mclasen@redhat.com>
* abicheck.sh: Make work again.
* gsourceclosure.c: Fix a typo.
Make PLT-reduction work with gcc4, and don't include
everything in gobjectalias.h:
* gobject.symbols: Group symbols by header and source
file.
* makegobjectalias.pl: Protect definitions by the same
preprocessor symbols used to guard the headers. Move
the alias declarations to a separate file which is
produced when calling makegalias.pl -def
* Makefile.am (gobjectaliasdef.c): Add a rule to
build this file.
* *.c: Include gobjectalias.h after the other i
GLib headers, include gobjectaliasdef.c at the bottom.