Since we're dynamically loading objects, after the g_type_init()
change, we now need to ensure people building with --as-needed don't
lose the DT_NEEDED on libgobject.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=691077
Some OS (e.g. OpenBSD) do not implement IP v4-mapped addresses. When
this is the case, then we get a "Connection refused", so force the test
to pass to that further tests can run.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=686058
The attached patch adds support for the btrfs "clone" ioctl which
makes Copy-on-Write reflinks, resulting in cheap O(1) copies when
source/destination are on the same filesystem. The ioctl itself is
quite straightforward, and GNU coreutils has had support since 7.5
(--reflink=auto --sparse=auto).
The ioctl only operates on regular files and symlinks, and always
follows symlinks; checks have been added accordingly.
This patch would be very useful for everyone who uses btrfs
filesystems (Meego folks for instance). On systems that don't have
btrfs, or if the the source is not on a btrfs filesystem, the ioctl
returns EINVAL, and the fallback code is triggered. Hence this will
cause no problems for non-btrfs users.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626497
a5876e5f made GMemoryInputStream subclassable, but accidentally broke
read_async() and skip_async() in the process. The immediately
following e7983495 fixed read_async() (and added a test for it), but
skip_async() accidentally got... skipped.
Fix it now and add a test for it.
Also, GMemoryInputStream's skip_async() was assuming that skip() could
never fail, which is true of its own implementation, but might not be
true of a subclass's, so do proper GError handling too.
Add a check to prevent adding an interface to a class that has already
had its class_init done.
This is an incompatible change but it is suspected that there are not
many users of this functionality. Two known exceptions are pygobject
(fixed in bug 686149) and our own testsuite (affected tests have been
temporarily disabled by this patch).
Once we confirm that nobody else is using this functionality we can
remove a rather large amount of code for dealing with this case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=687659
This will let us drop the dbus-python dependency.
The C version does not 100% reproduce all the hash table
and array manipulation of the python version, but the tests
do not rely on it anyway.
This greatly simplifies the test since everything is now in a single
process and possible bugs / quirks in libdbus-1 will not interfere
with the tests. On the other hand, we no longer test interoperability
with libdbus-1. This is somewhat moot, however, since other tests that
involve a message bus (e.g. GTestDBus users which include most of the
GDBus test suite itself) will test this.
Also ensure that we don't pollute existing D-Bus keyrings for the
DBUS_COOKIE_SHA1 authentication method (e.g. files in the
~/.dbus-keyrings directory) by setting the environment variables
G_DBUS_COOKIE_SHA1_KEYRING_DIR and
G_DBUS_COOKIE_SHA1_KEYRING_DIR_IGNORE_PERMISSION.
All in all, this change avoids some thorny issues where the GDBus and
libdbus-1 implementations disagree on whether an item in the D-Bus
keyring is still valid (items have an age etc.). In reality, since the
DBUS_COOKIE_SHA1 authentication method is never used in production,
this is never hit in production. This bug was, however, frequently hit
if you just ran the test suite repeatedly for 15 minutes or so.
Also add TODO items to mention that we currently don't test corner
cases involving
- DBUS_COOKIE_SHA1 timeouts
- libdbus-1 interoperability
Signed-off-by: David Zeuthen <zeuthen@gmail.com>
GValueArray as a whole is deprecated in favor of GArray (with GValue
elements); warnings like "'g_value_array_get_nth' is deprecated: Use
'g_array_index' instead" are confusing because they suggest that the
GArray functions can be used with GValueArrays. Make them say "Use
'GArray' instead" instead.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=690970
This DTD wasn't syntactically correct, and didn't actually
describe keys correctly. This change makes it a bit too lax,
but at least it can be used now.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=690538
This returns a GInputStream corresponding to the stdin on the
commandline that caused this invocation.
The local case works on both UNIX (GUnixInputStream on stdin) and
Windows (GWin32InputStream on GetStdHandle(STD_INPUT_HANDLE)). The
remote case works only on UNIX (by fd passing over D-Bus).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=668210