A few applications such as gnome-music load the GIRepository typelib and use it to adjust their search paths. GLib 2.79.x now provides libgirepository-2.0.so.0 (GIRepository-3.0), but each OS distribution is likely to have a transitional period during which GLib's libgirepository-2.0.so.0 has become available, but bindings like PyGI and gjs are still linked to gobject-introspection's libgirepository-1.0.so.1 (GIRepository-2.0). During this transitional period, interpreted languages that load the GIRepository namespace could get the "wrong" version, which will result in adjusting a search path that will not actually affect the language binding's typelib lookup, and could also lead to symbol and type-system conflicts. We can avoid this collision by making GLib's GIRepository library refuse to load versions of the GIRepository typelib that are not 3.0, and similarly making gobject-introspection's GIRepository library refuse to load typelib versions that are not 2.0. A relatively neat way to achieve that is to make each version behave as if the other one doesn't exist. Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
GLib
GLib is the low-level core library that forms the basis for projects such as GTK and GNOME. It provides data structure handling for C, portability wrappers, and interfaces for such runtime functionality as an event loop, threads, dynamic loading, and an object system.
The official download locations are: https://download.gnome.org/sources/glib
The official web site is: https://www.gtk.org/
Installation
See the file ‘INSTALL.md’. There is separate and more in-depth documentation for building GLib on Windows.
Supported versions
Upstream GLib only supports the most recent stable release series, the previous stable release series, and the current development release series. All older versions are not supported upstream and may contain bugs, some of which may be exploitable security vulnerabilities.
See SECURITY.md for more details.
Documentation
API documentation is available online for GLib for the:
Discussion
If you have a question about how to use GLib, seek help on GNOME’s Discourse
instance. Alternatively, ask a question
on StackOverflow and tag it glib
.
Reporting bugs
Bugs should be reported to the GNOME issue tracking system. You will need to create an account for yourself. You may also submit bugs by e-mail (without an account) by e-mailing incoming+gnome-glib-658-issue-@gitlab.gnome.org, but this will give you a degraded experience.
Bugs are for reporting problems in GLib itself, not for asking questions about how to use it. To ask questions, use one of our discussion forums.
In bug reports please include:
- Information about your system. For instance:
- What operating system and version
- For Linux, what version of the C library
- And anything else you think is relevant.
- How to reproduce the bug.
- If you can reproduce it with one of the test programs that are built
in the
tests/
subdirectory, that will be most convenient. Otherwise, please include a short test program that exhibits the behavior. As a last resort, you can also provide a pointer to a larger piece of software that can be downloaded.
- If you can reproduce it with one of the test programs that are built
in the
- If the bug was a crash, the exact text that was printed out when the crash occurred.
- Further information such as stack traces may be useful, but is not necessary.
Contributing to GLib
Please follow the contribution guide to know how to start contributing to GLib.
Patches should be submitted as merge requests to gitlab.gnome.org. If the patch fixes an existing issue, please refer to the issue in your commit message with the following notation (for issue 123):
Closes: #123
Otherwise, create a new merge request that introduces the change. Filing a separate issue is not required.