Modify all the similar Python test wrappers to set
`G_DEBUG=fatal-warnings` in the environment of the program being tested,
so we can catch unexpected warnings/criticals.
Adding this because I noticed it was missing, not because I noticed a
warning/critical was being ignored.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <philip@tecnocode.co.uk>
This patch is based upon Garrett Regier's work from 2015 to provide
some reliability and predictability to how disposal handles weak
reference state.
A primary problem is that GWeakRef and GWeakNotify state is shared and
therefore you cannot rely on GWeakRef status due to a GWeakNotify
calling into second-degree code.
It's important to ensure that both weak pointer locations and GWeakRef
will do the proper thing before user callbacks are executed during
disposal. Otherwise, user callbacks cannot rely on the status of their
weak pointers. That would be mostly okay but becomes an issue when
second degree objects are then disposed before any notification of
dependent object disposal.
Consider objects A and B.
`A` contains a reference to `B` and `B` contains a `GWeakRef` to `A`.
When `A` is disposed, `B` may be disposed as a consequence but has not
yet been notified that `A` has been disposed. It's `GWeakRef` may also
cause liveness issues if `GWeakNotify` on `A` result in tertiary code
running which wants to interact with `B`.
This example is analagous to how `GtkTextView` and `GtkTextBuffer` work
in text editing applications.
To provide application and libraries the ability to handle this using
already existing API, `GWeakRef` is separated into it's own GData quark
so that weak locations and `GWeakRef` are cleared before user code is
executed as a consequence of `GData` cleanup.
# Conflicts:
# gobject/tests/signals.c
There’s no reason that anyone can think of that this should be
disallowed. It’s useful for language runtimes like GJS to be able to
find out the allocation size of dynamic GObjects.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Fixes: #623
UAC will terminate this test program from running in 32-bit x86 builds as
it believes that it will alter Windows. In order to make this run, we
create a manifest file for 32-bit Windows builds in order to tell UAC
that this program should not need admin privileges.
This will allow the entire test suite for GLib to run on 32-bit Windows
builds.
For now, the function parse_trigraph() defined in gobject/glib-mkenums
script was not taking double-quotes characters into account:
>>> parse_trigraph('name="eek, a comma"')
{'name': '"eek', 'a': None}
This patch take double-quotes characters into account:
>>> parse_trigraph('name="eek, a comma"')
{'name': 'eek, a comma'}
Closes issue #65
We used to call this function as unlocked, with a node value that
could be invalid at the point of the call, so let's ensure that when
we call such function it's defined, and then reduce the access to the
signal node members when we're unlocked or after a lock/unlock operation
that may have changed it.
As per this, add more tests handling multiple signal hooks cases that we
did not cover before.
While x86_64 has enough precision in long double to do a round trip
from guint64 to long double and back, this is platform-specific, and
is a disservice to users trying to debug failing unit tests on other
architectures where it loses precision for g_assert_cmp{int,uint,hex}.
See also https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788385 which
mentions having to add casts to specifically silence the compiler on
platforms where the precision loss occurs.
Meanwhile, g_assert_cmpuint() does an unsigned comparison, but outputs
signed values if the comparison fails, which is confusing.
Fix both issues by introducing a new g_assertion_message_cmpint()
function with a new 'u' numtype. For backwards compatibility, the
macros still call into the older g_assertion_message_cmpnum() when not
targetting 2.78, and that function still works when passed 'i' and 'x'
types even though code compiled for 2.78 and later will never invoke
it with numtype anything other than 'f'. Note that g_assert_cmpmem
can also take advantage of the new code, even though in practice,
comparison between two size_t values representing array lengths that
can actually be compiled is unlikely to have ever hit the precision
loss. The macros in signals.c test code does not have to worry about
versioning, since it is not part of the glib library proper.
Closes#2997
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Calling g_signal_handlers_block/unblock/disconnect_matched with only G_SIGNAL_MATCH_ID
do not match any handlers and return 0.
Fixes: #2980
Signed-off-by: Przemyslaw Gorszkowski <pgorszkowski@igalia.com>
The use of ‘OR’ in the existing documentation suggests that the matching
is disjunctive, but it’s actually conjunctive. Clarify that in the
documentation and add a test.
Spotted while reviewing
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/merge_requests/3376.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
They just listed built files. Since the move to Meson, these are all
kept in a separate build directory, not the source tree, so don’t need
to be ignored.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
They take too long and time out, and are not particularly useful to run
under valgrind because they aren’t designed to test code coverage.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
In all these cases we don't really care about running the test file,
while building and basic execution it is relevant.
Also they don't support TAP at all.
Meson supports tap protocol results parsing, allowing us to track better
the tests that are running (and the ones that are actually skipped) without
manually parsing the test output.
However this also implies that using the verbose mode for a test doesn't
show its output by default (unless there are failures).
This can cause a `NULL` dereference on the next line if there is no
`TypeNode` for `iface_type`, for example if `iface_type ==
G_TYPE_INVALID`.
Unlikely, but possible since this API is public.
Spotted by Coverity.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Coverity CID: #1501602
We can get a "-Wcast-align", if the target type that we cast to ("ct") has a
larger alignment than GTypeInstance.
That can happen on i686 architecture, if the GObject type has larger
alignment than the parent struct (or GObject). Since on i686, embeding
a "long long" or a "long double" in a struct still does not increase
the alignment beyond 4 bytes, this usually only happens when using the
__attribute__() to increase the alignment (or to have a field that has
the alignment increased).
It can happen on x86_64 when having a "long double" field.
The compiler warning is hard to avoid but not very useful, because it purely
operates on the pointer types at compile time. G_TYPE_CHECK_INSTANCE_CAST()
instead asserts (in non-optimized mode) that the pointer really points
to the expected GTypeInstance (and if that's the case, then the alignment
should be suitable already).
This is like in commit ed553e8e30 ('gtype: Eliminate -Wcast-align warnings
with G_TYPE_CHECK_INSTANCE_CAST'). But also fix the optimized code path.
With the unpatched G_TYPE_CHECK_INSTANCE_CAST() macro, the unit test would
now show the problem (with gcc-9.3.1-2.fc30.i686 or
gcc-12.2.1-4.fc37.x86_64):
$ export G_DISABLE_CAST_CHECKS=1
$ export CFLAGS='-Wcast-align=strict'
$ meson build
$ ninja -C build
...
In file included from ../gobject/gobject.h:26,
from ../gobject/gbinding.h:31,
from ../glib/glib-object.h:24,
from ../gobject/tests/objects-refcount1.c:2:
../gobject/tests/objects-refcount1.c: In function ‘my_test_dispose’:
../gobject/gtype.h:2523:42: warning: cast increases required alignment of target type [-Wcast-align]
2523 | # define _G_TYPE_CIC(ip, gt, ct) ((ct*) ip)
| ^
../gobject/gtype.h:517:66: note: in expansion of macro ‘_G_TYPE_CIC’
517 | #define G_TYPE_CHECK_INSTANCE_CAST(instance, g_type, c_type) (_G_TYPE_CIC ((instance), (g_type), c_type))
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
../gobject/tests/objects-refcount1.c:9:37: note: in expansion of macro ‘G_TYPE_CHECK_INSTANCE_CAST’
9 | #define MY_TEST(test) (G_TYPE_CHECK_INSTANCE_CAST ((test), G_TYPE_TEST, GTest))
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
../gobject/tests/objects-refcount1.c:96:10: note: in expansion of macro ‘MY_TEST’
96 | test = MY_TEST (object);
| ^~~~~~~
When an object is revitalized and a notify callbacks increased the reference
counter of the object, we are calling the toggle notifier twice, while it
should only happen if also the actual reference count value is 1 (after
having been decremented from 2).
If an object gets revitalized during the dispose vfunc, we need to call
toggle refs notifiers only if we had 2 references and if the object has
the toggle references enabled.
This may change in case an object notifier handler changes this status,
so do this check only after we've called the notifiers so that in case
toggle notifications are enabled afterwards we still call the handlers.
Otherwise this test will succeed at build-time, but will fail when run
as an as-installed test via ginsttest-runner.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This can be used to mark entire types as deprecated,
and trigger a warning when they are instantiated
and `G_ENABLE_DIAGNOSTIC=1` is set in the environment.
There's currently no convenient macros for defining
types with the new flag, but you can do:
```c
_G_DEFINE_TYPE_EXTENDED_BEGIN (GtkAppChooserWidget,
gtk_app_chooser_widget,
GTK_TYPE_WIDGET,
G_TYPE_FLAG_DEPRECATED)
...
_G_DEFINE_TYPE_EXTENDED_END ()
```
Includes a unit test by Philip Withnall.
The SPDX-License-Identifier said LGPL-2.1-or-later, but the license
grant was a permissive license, which we now identify as
LicenseRef-old-glib-tests.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Some of GLib's unit tests are under an apparently GLib-specific
permissive license, vaguely similar to the BSD/MIT family but with the
GPL's lack-of-warranty wording. This is not on SPDX's list of
well-known licenses, so we need to use a custom license name prefixed
with LicenseRef if we want to represent this in SPDX/REUSE syntax.
Most of the newer tests seem to be licensed under LGPL-2.1-or-later
instead.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This allows them to be referenced in other symbols value computation.
In addition, this fixes the automatically assigned value of a public
symbol that is preceded by a private one:
typedef enum {
/*< private >*/
ENUM_VALUE_PRIVATE,
/*< public >*/
ENUM_VALUE_PUBLIC, <--- value is 1, not 0.
} SomeExampleEnum;
We have tests that are failing in some environments, but it's
difficult to handle them because:
- for some environments we just allow all the tests to fail: DANGEROUS
- when we don't allow failures we have flacky tests: A CI pain
So, to avoid this and ensure that:
- New failing tests are tracked in all platforms
- gitlab integration on tests reports is working
- coverage is reported also for failing tests
Add support for `can_fail` keyword on tests that would mark the test as
part of the `failing` test suite.
Not adding the suite directly when defining the tests as this is
definitely simpler and allows to define conditions more clearly (see next
commits).
Now, add a default test setup that does not run the failing and flaky tests
by default (not to bother distributors with testing well-known issues) and
eventually run all the tests in CI:
- Non-flaky tests cannot fail in all platforms
- Failing and Flaky tests can fail
In both cases we save the test reports so that gitlab integration is
preserved.
In principle we could script this so that each max-version.c is compiled
26 times, once per possible MAX_VERSION, but I haven't implemented
that here: just pinning to the oldest possible version is sufficient to
reproduce #2796.
These aren't included in the installed-tests, since they don't really
do anything at runtime (the important thing is that they compile
without warnings).
Reproduces: #2796
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>