g_utf8_strup() tries to call setlocale() before starting to compute
the length of its first argument. Calling setlocale() can return NULL
(as specified in the man page), and obviously that happens on android.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680704
The old (length) annotation actually wasn't being read. Changing
it to an array was telling g-i that it was an array of utf8, which
is clearly not true.
We *could* add (element-type guint8), but that would change it to a
byte array, as opposed to the original utf8 version.
Just removing the annotation should bring us back to where we
were, which was fine.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680310
gcontenttype.c was split into gcontenttype.c and gcontenttype-win32.c
in commit 32192ee9 ("Split gcontenttype.c"), so we don't want to include
gcontenttype.c in the Visual C++ build as it is no longer a source file
meant for Windows.
Thanks to Thomas H.P. Anderson for pointing this out.
Bug 680074 shows that we may end up in situations where only
some of the xlocale functions we need are available. Rather than
trying to find the minimal set of required functions for each
use, define a global USE_XLOCALE and only use any xlocale functions
if we have a full set.
Child sources are supposed to be blocked when their parents are, so
when adding a source to a blocked source, block the child too. Fixes a
warning when unblocking the parent.
Add a test that the decompressor input streams handle truncated data
correctly. (They do; I wrote the test thinking there was a bug there,
but there isn't.)
Also, rename the "corruption" tests to "roundtrip", since "corruption"
makes it sound like we're testing how the converters deal with
corrupted data, as opposed to merely testing that they don't corrupt
data themselves. And fix the bug reference.
Rather than implementing GCancellableSource by polling on its fd,
implement it by just waking its GMainContext up from the "cancelled"
signal handler, thereby helping to reduce file descriptor usage.
Suggested by Ryan Lortie.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680121
* GCancellable can be "cancelled" more than once if
g_cancellable_reset() is called.
* Don't assume that because the "cancelled" signal fired
it won't fire again.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680111
g_async_initable_real_init_finish() was previously handling all
GSimpleAsyncResults, even if they weren't created by
g_async_initable_real_init_async(), and libnm-glib accidentally relied
on that behavior. So remove the g_simple_async_result_is_valid()
check.
On Windows, GetEnvironmentVariable() returns 0 for empty variables.
Checking GetLastError() == ERROR_ENVVAR_NOT_FOUND helps make a
difference between a variable that does not exist or an empty one
which should return "".
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679617
The current code create the strv array incorrectly, it is too big and
leaves invalid holes. This may result in crashes when freeing the
returned value.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679617
Many (if not "almost all") programs that spawn other programs via
g_spawn_sync() or the like simply want to check whether or not the
child exited successfully, but doing so requires use of
platform-specific functionality and there's actually a fair amount of
boilerplate involved.
This new API will help drain a *lot* of mostly duplicated code in
GNOME, from gnome-session to gdm. And we can see that some bits even
inside GLib were doing it wrong; for example checking the exit status
on Unix, but ignoring it on Windows.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679691
Rather than doing a two step first-check-the-GAsyncResult-subtype-then-
check-the-tag, add a GAsyncResult-level method so that you can do them
both at once, simplifying the code for "short-circuit" async return
values where the vmethod never gets called.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=661767
Finish deprecating the "handle GSimpleAsyncResult errors in the
wrapper function" idiom (and protect against future GSimpleAsyncResult
deprecation warnings) by adding a "legacy" GAsyncResult method
to do it in those classes/methods where it had been traditionally
done.
(This applies only to wrapper methods; in cases where an _async
vmethod explicitly uses GSimpleAsyncResult, its corresponding _finish
vmethod still uses g_simple_async_result_propagate_error.)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=667375https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=661767
Originally, the standard idiom with GSimpleAsyncResult was to handle
all errors in the _finish wrapper function, so that vmethods only had
to deal with successful results. But this means that chaining up to a
parent _finish vmethod won't work correctly. Fix this by also checking
for errors in all the relevant vmethods. (We have to redundantly check
in both the vmethod and the wrapper to preserve compatibility.)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=667375https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=661767
The "mainloop_barrier" in copy_async_thread() is unnecessary, since
the g_simple_async_result_complete_in_idle() will be queued after all
of the g_io_scheduler_job_send_to_mainloop_async()s, and sources with
the same priority will run in the order in which they were queued.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=661767
String validation was done by checking if the string was valid utf8 and
ensuring that the first non-utf8 character was the last character (ie:
the nul terminator).
No check was actually done to make sure that this byte actually
contained a nul, however, so it was possible that you could have a
string like "hello\xff" with length 6 that would correctly validate.
Fix that, and test it.
* Document how to override interfaces already implemented
in a base class, and also call those base class implementations
from a derived reimplementation.
* Don't recomend people use base_init() style functions to
initialize interface signals and properties, use default_init()
aka class_init() instead (as G_DEFINE_INTERFACE() uses).
* The above solves the interface init called multiple times
problem, so remove some needless naysaying about that.
* Document default_init() in the interface initialization discussion
* Linkify more stuff.
* Remove some crud and typos
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=675504