The glib-mkenums program allows generating code to handle enums/flags
with very different purposes. One of its purposes could be generating
per-enum/flag methods to be exposed in a library API, and while doing
that, it would be nice to have a way to specify in which API version
the enum/flag was introduced, so that the same version could be shown
in the generated API methods.
E.g. From the following code:
/**
* QmiWmsMessageProtocol:
* @QMI_WMS_MESSAGE_PROTOCOL_CDMA: CDMA.
* @QMI_WMS_MESSAGE_PROTOCOL_WCDMA: WCDMA.
*
* Type of message protocol.
*
* Since: 1.0
*/
typedef enum { /*< since=1.0 >*/
QMI_WMS_MESSAGE_PROTOCOL_CDMA = 0x00,
QMI_WMS_MESSAGE_PROTOCOL_WCDMA = 0x01
} QmiWmsMessageProtocol;
The template would allow us to generate a method documented like this,
including the Since tag with the value given in the mkenums 'since' tag.
/**
* qmi_wms_message_protocol_get_string:
* @val: a QmiWmsMessageProtocol.
*
* Gets the nickname string for the #QmiWmsMessageProtocol specified at @val.
*
* Returns: (transfer none): a string with the nickname, or %NULL if not found. Do not free the returned value.
* Since: 1.0
*/
const gchar *qmi_wms_message_protocol_get_string (QmiWmsMessageProtocol val);
Signed-off-by: Aleksander Morgado <aleksander@aleksander.es>
The public functions exposed as static inlines currently don't have
annotations to describe when they were introduced. This means that
compiling this file:
#include <glib.h>
void foo (void)
{
g_rec_mutex_locker_new (NULL);
}
with:
gcc -c test.c \
-I/tmp/glib/include/glib-2.0 \
-I/tmp/glib/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/glib-2.0/include \
-Werror \
-DGLIB_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED=GLIB_VERSION_2_28 \
-DGLIB_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED=GLIB_VERSION_2_28
will not produce any error message, despite using
`g_rec_mutex_locker_new`, a function that was introduced after 2.28.
This patch adds some annotations to all the publicly exposed static
inline functions I could find.
I could not use the existing G_AVAILABLE* macros, because they may
expand to `extern`. This would then clash with the `static` keyword and
produce:
../glib/gthread.h:397:1: error: multiple storage classes in declaration specifiers
397 | static inline GRecMutexLocker *
| ^~~~~~
So I opted for adding a new set of macros,
GLIB_AVAILABLE_STATIC_INLINE_IN_2_XY.
With this patch applied, the example from above produces the expected
warning:
test.c: In function ‘foo’:
test.c:5:3: error: ‘g_rec_mutex_locker_new’ is deprecated: Not available before 2.60 [-Werror=deprecated-declarations]
5 | g_rec_mutex_locker_new (NULL);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In file included from /tmp/glib/include/glib-2.0/glib/gasyncqueue.h:32,
from /tmp/glib/include/glib-2.0/glib.h:32,
from test.c:1:
/tmp/glib/include/glib-2.0/glib/gthread.h:398:1: note: declared here
398 | g_rec_mutex_locker_new (GRecMutex *rec_mutex)
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This seems to have existed since the code was written and I can’t see
a need for it.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #2106
It is critical to mention how the identity parameter is expected to be
handled. In particular, if identity is not passed, then the identity of
the server certificate will not be checked at all. This is in contrast
to the connection-level APIs, which are supposed to be fail-safe. The
database and certificate-level APIs are more manual.
g_ptr_array_extend_and_steal() leaves the GPtrArray in an invalid state,
so if you would try to append another pointer, it leads to a crash.
Also adjust the test case so that it would result in the crash (without
the fix).
Fixes: 0675703af0 ('Adding g_ptr_array_extend_and_steal() function to glib/garray.c')
pip in MSYS2 seems to install scripts into $USERPROFILE instead of $HOME
which means the MSYS2 meson, which is newer, wins. Make sure $USERPROFILE
is in PATH as well.
There’s no need to call `access()` and then `stat()` on the keyring
directory to check that it exists, is a directory, and has the right
permissions. Just call `stat()`.
This eliminates one potential TOCTTOU race in this code.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Helps: #1954
There was a time-of-check-to-time-of-use (TOCTTOU) race in the keyring
lock code, where it would check the existence of the lock file using
`access()`, then proceed to call `open(O_CREAT | O_EXCL)` to try and
create the lock file once `access()` showed that it didn’t exist.
The problem is that, because this is happening in a shared directory
(`~/.dbus-keyrings`), another process could quite legitimately create
the lock file in the meantime.
Instead, unconditionally call `open()` and ignore errors from it (which
will be returned if the lock file already exists) until it succeeds (or
the code times out).
This eliminates the TOCTTOU race, and simplifies the timeout behaviour
so there aren’t two loops (check for existence, try to create)
happening. It brings this code in line with what dbus.git does (see
`_dbus_keyring_lock()`).
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1954
When multiple tests were run in parallel, this would race on its access
to `~/.dbus-keyrings` to authenticate with the D-Bus server, since the
keyring directory was not appropriately sandboxed to the unit test.
Use `G_TEST_OPTION_ISOLATE_DIRS` to automatically isolate each unit
test’s directory usage.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #1954
Commit 721e385 left one remaining race in the filter test, with a
comment associated with it. Unfortunately, the (seemingly unrelated)
changes in #1841 to `GCancellable` seem to have made this remaining race
a lot more likely to fail on FreeBSD than before.
What’s likely to have happened (although I was unable to reproduce the
failure, due to not having a FreeBSD system; I was only able to
reproduce the problem as a 3/1000 failure on Linux, which is still worth
fixing) is that the atomic write of the `FilterData.serial` to be
expected by the filter function sometimes happened after the filter
function had executed, so the expected message was dropped and didn’t
result in an update to the `FilterData` state.
Rework the test so that instead of setting some expectations (on
`FilterData`) in one thread and then checking them in another thread,
the worker thread just unconditionally returns messages from the filter
function to the main thread, and then the main thread checks whether the
expected one has been filtered.
With this change applied, the `gdbus-connection` test passes 5000 times
in a row for me, on Linux; and doesn’t seem to fail any more on the
FreeBSD CI machines over a few runs. (Previously it failed on 4/5 runs.)
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
Fixes: #2092Fixes: #1957
Mention in the documentation that (presumably for performance reasons)
the search results from `g_desktop_app_info_search()` are not filtered
by executable presence or hidden attribute.
Perhaps they should be in future, but for now we should at least
document it.
Spotted by Will Thompson.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>