The http* family of functions was deprecated after CUPS 1.7. We can
conditionally use it when built against a newer version of CUPS. The
additional parameters are taken directly from the fallback values
inside CUPS itself.
Additional code improvements and fixes:
- Use g_regex_match_simple() instead of sscanf()
- Added spaces between function names and left parantheses
- Set always correct custom page size
- Added page_setup field to CupsOptionsData data structure
- Replaced tab indentions by spaces
- Moved #define out of add_cups_options() function, removed line breaks from regular expressions
We need to override _GLIB_EXTERN to export the required symbols for the
GIO module on Visual Studio, so that the media modules can be
successfully loaded.
We were leaking the GBytes for the image memory, which is a
noticeable memleak to anyone who's casually running a memory monitor.
Go KDE users!
Closes#1200
to retreive paper size specific hard margins and use this
to set the hard margins in the print context.
(modified by Marek Kasik <mkasik@redhat.com>)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=686109
When using strncpy() with a buffer we need to account for the
terminating NUL character. GCC 8 started warning when using PPD_MAX_NAME
as the buffer length for strncpy() because the buffer we're copying into
has the same length — which means that the terminating NUL may be
skipped if the source string has a length of PPD_MAX_NAME.
The appropriate way to handle the case where we're copying a source with
a length bigger than of PPD_MAX_NAME is, as reported in the strncpy()
documentation, to copy `PPD_MAX_NAME - 1` bytes, and explicitly NUL
terminate the destination buffer. This has the additional benefit of
avoiding the compiler warning.
The main buildscript expects 'print_backends' list to be defined.
Since printbackends is os_unix-only, we need to define this list
ourselves for other OSes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773299
This way, we can support external libraries providing implementations of
GtkMediaFile.
We also add a media backend called 'nomedia' that can be enabled to not
compile any support for GtkMediaFile. This is useful when people want to
statically compile GTK into an application that does not use media.
For now, this option is the default.
We also support a new environment variable GTK_MEDIA that allows
selecting the implementation to use.
GTK_MEDIA=help can be used to get info about the available
implementations.
Add an extension point called gtk-im-module, which requires
the type GtkIMContext. Simplify the loading by using GIO
infrastructure. Drop the locale filtering for now, I don't
think it is really necessary nowadays.
Convert existing platform modules to gio modules.
Sill to do: Drop the conditional build machinery.
Either always include them, or never.
Instead of having separate options for each print backend, we can use
the same approach as the input method modules: a single option, with a
comma-separated list of print backends.
We can call it 'included-immodules', and simplify its logic by always
attempting to split the value, to avoid turning an array into a string
and then back into an array again.
GDK has a lock to mark critical sections inside the backends.
Additionally, code that would re-enter into the GTK main loop was
supposed to hold the lock.
Back in the Good Old Days™ this was guaranteed to kind of work only on
the X11 backend, and would cause a neat explosion on any other GDK
backend.
During GTK+ 3.x we deprecated the API to enter and leave the critical
sections, and now we can remove all the internal uses of the lock, since
external API that uses GTK+ 4.x won't be able to hold the GDK lock.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=793124
The main GDK thread lock is not portable and deprecated.
The only reason why gdk_threads_add_timeout() and
gdk_threads_add_timeout_full() exist is to allow invoking a callback
with the GDK lock held, in case 3rd party libraries still use the
deprecated gdk_threads_enter()/gdk_threads_leave() API.
Since we're removing the GDK lock, and we're releasing a new major API,
such code cannot exist any more; this means we can use the GLib API for
installing timeout callbacks.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=793124
The state argument was removed in commit 1518fe0 (API: stylecontext:
Remove state argument from getters), but we missed updating this file
until commit 5b94fe6 (stylecontext: Make first property name explicit),
as the compiler did not issue any warnings on the (now-defunct) usage.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773299