[ChangeLog][QtCore][QLocale] Fixed the conversion of QTime to string
form and parsing from string form to always treat the value as the
decimal fraction of the seconds component. That is, the string format
".z" produces/parses ".2" for 200 milliseconds and ".002" for 2
milliseconds. Use of "z" or "zzz" is discouraged outside decimal
fractions to avoid surprises.
Task-number: QTBUG-53565
Change-Id: Ia19de85ad35e4eb7bb95fffd14792caf9b4a5156
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
Since the result is an actual zero, this section of code looking for
underflows kicks in. But we forgot to take the capital letter into
account when parsing the number.
Task-number: QTBUG-61350
Change-Id: Ia53158e207a94bf49489fffd14c6abbd21f0bac0
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart (Woboq GmbH) <ogoffart@woboq.com>
tst_QLocale::macDefaultLocale() was determining local-time's current
offset from UTC and using it when working out what to expect the
offset at 1:2:3 today to be. When a transition happens after 1:2:3 on
its day (which is usual for DST changes in Europe), this lead to using
the new offset to test a time before the transition; the test was thus
wrong and failed.
Use the time to be tested (and current date) to compute the offset to
use, instead of using the current date-time.
Change-Id: I1c02a5579bca859e1d1aeb4f45b24871a08287af
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
tst_qvariant.cpp(80): warning C4309: 'initializing': truncation of constant value
tst_qvariant.cpp(4635): warning C4309: 'initializing': truncation of constant value
tst_qbytearray.cpp(1438): warning C4267: 'argument': conversion from 'size_t' to 'uint', possible loss of data
tst_qbytearray.cpp(1440): warning C4267: 'argument': conversion from 'size_t' to 'uint', possible loss of data
http2srv.cpp(64): warning C4018: '<=': signed/unsigned mismatch
tst_qinputdialog.cpp(352): warning C4804: '<=': unsafe use of type 'bool' in operation
Change-Id: Id012d88b7b20c5c9f128f2ef53753cc1d479f358
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
When punctuation is ignored then the kUCCollatePunctionSignificantMask
should not be set. This was originally thought to not be working due to
a bug on the Apple platforms, but this is not the case.
[ChangeLog][Platform Specific Changes][macOS][iOS] QCollator now
respects the ignorePunctuation property on Apple based platforms
correctly.
Task-number: QTBUG-41978
Change-Id: I62044076387d6e4479f4aaef3c2f48f49dbd160e
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
QTimeZone("UTC") should be valid, as "UTC" appears in the list of
availableTimeZoneIds(), and tst_QTimeZone::dataStreamTest() constructs
timezones like this, which are considered valid.
The internal representation of a QTimeZone("UTC") as created by
QTimeZone::QTimeZone(const QByteArray &ianaId) is a QUtcTimeZonePrivate
which isValid(), so the containing QTimeZone isValid() too.
When QTimeZone is serialized into a QDataStream, it calls
tz.d->serialize(ds) which is QUtcTimeZonePrivate::serialize. This
writes QStringLiteral("OffsetFromUtc") followed by the IANA ID and
the offset (etc.) to the datastream.
When QTimeZone is deserialized it looks for this marker string, and if
present, it passed all of the parameters to the QTimeZone constructor
(not just the name). However, that constructor does not support standard
IANA timezones (only custom ones), and when it detects that the supplied
IANA ID is actually listed in availableTimeZoneIds(), it leaves the
pointer to the QTimeZonePrivate uninitialized (NULL), which leaves
the QTimeZone invalid (isValid() returns false).
Thus, a valid timezone which was serialized and then deserialized has
become invalid. This also affects serialization of QDateTimes with
timezones.
Fixed by calling the name-only constructor first, which works (only) for
IANA standard timezones and leaves the QTimeZone invalid (isValid()
returns false) otherwise. In which case, we can call the many-argument
contructor to create a custom timezone with the same offset as the one
which was originally serialized.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QTimeZone] Fixed sending IANA standard UTC-offset
QTimeZones through QDataStream, which previously came out invalid after
deserialization.
Task-number: QTBUG-60595
Change-Id: Id9c47e8bda701faae4d800e012afb6db545b2fe9
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
tst_QSharedPointer can't create a pipe as the OS has too many files
open. Systems like macOS have a lower limit to these simultaneous files
open.
Task-number: QTBUG-60410
Change-Id: I21e89f992ada2a7d09b706522a05b5952f00ec33
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
The existing QHash::operator== does not work when the same
keys appear in different order between the two hashes being compared.
However, relying on iteration order on a QHash is (as usual) a bad
idea and one should never do it.
Task-number: QTBUG-60395
Change-Id: Ifb39a6779230e26bbd6fdba82ccc0247b9cdc6ed
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Since commit bf2160e72c, we can rely on
charNN_t support in all compilers except MSVC 2013, and since that
commit, we use (in 5.10, not 5.9, yet)
!defined(Q_OS_WIN) || defined(Q_COMPILER_UNICODE_STRINGS)
when we only need charNN_t, the type, as opposed to its library
support (u16string, char_traits<char16_t>, ...).
This patch splits the Q_C_UNICODE_STRINGS macro into two, adding
Q_STDLIB_UNICODE_STRINGS for when we need std::uNNstring, leaving
Q_C_UNICODE_STRINGS for when we need just charNN_t support.
In QDebug, when constructing a QChar out of a char16_t, cast to ushort
first, since QChar(char16_t) was only officially introduced in Qt 5.10.
[ChangeLog][Potentially Source-Incompatible Changes] The internal
Q_COMPILER_UNICODE_STRINGS macro is now defined if the compiler
supports charNN_t, even if the standard library does not. To check for
availability of std::uNNstring, use the new Q_STDLIB_UNICODE_STRINGS
macro.
Change-Id: I8f210fd7f1799fe21faf54506475a759b1f76a59
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Initialize a deleter for a new object, created by
QSharedPointer::create(), only after the object is actually
constructed.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QSharedPointer] Fixed undefined behavior when
creating an object with QSharedPointer::create() and its conscructor
throws an exception.
Task-number: QTBUG-49824
Change-Id: I07f77a78ff468d9b45b8ef133278e8cdd96a0647
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart (Woboq GmbH) <ogoffart@woboq.com>
- Alignment test was not compiling or passing on GCC / arm
- Using C++11 alignas() enforces maximum limit for the alignment, which
at least on GCC / arm is __BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT__ multiplied by 8
- On GCC 6.2.0 / x86_84, maximum alignment accepted by alignas is 128
- On GCC 5.3.0 / arm, maximum alignment accepted by alignas is 64
- This change calculates biggest tested alignment on ARM targets
and compilers supporting alignas() to the value calculated
from __BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT__
Task-number: QTBUG-55492
Change-Id: If2b70000ff9cdc5ae8c5a00e39f79efcc6ba1221
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
The SHA3 family is a modified version of Keccak. We were
incorrectly calculating Keccak (and even *testing* Keccak!),
but claiming it was SHA3.
To actually calculate SHA3, we need invoke Keccak on the original
message followed by the two bits sequence 0b01, cf. §6.1 [1].
[1] http://dx.doi.org/10.6028/NIST.FIPS.202
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QCryptographicHash] QCryptographicHash now
properly calculates SHA3 message digests. Before, when asked
to calculate a SHA3 digest, it calculated a Keccak digest instead.
Task-number: QTBUG-59770
Change-Id: Iae694d1a1668aa676922e3e00a292cddc30d3e0d
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Commit e0ea0f6178 optimized QChar <->
QString(Ref) comparisons by adding more overloads to avoid creating
QStrings from QChars just to compare them.
But these new overloads made existing comparisons to QChar ambiguous.
This was known at the time for QChar/int comparisons.
It has since turned out that also comparing to '\0' is ambiguous,
ie. not comparing to int or char per se is ambiguous, but comparing to
nullptr constants is, because QString(const char*) is just as good a
candidate as QChar(char)/QChar(int).
Since we allow QString/QChar comparisons, it seems logical to solve
the problem by adding QChar<->nullptr overloads.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QChar] Disambiguated comparisons with nullptr
constants such as '\0', which 5.8.0 broke. As a consequence,
QChar<->int comparisons are no longer deprecated, as this was a failed
attempt at fixing the ambiguity.
Change-Id: I680dd509c2286e96894e13078899dbe3b2dd83bc
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
It's a Qt 3 compatibility vehicle, and as such inherits the now-alien
property to distinguish empty and null strings. Particularly worrisome
is the following asymmetry:
QString("") == QString::null // false
QString("") == QString(QString::null) // true
Instead of fixing this behavior, recognize that people might use it as
a weird way to call isNull(), albeit one that once was idiomatic, and
simply deprecate everything that deals with QString::null.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QString] QString::null is now deprecated. When
used to construct a QString, use QString() instead. When used to
compare to a QString, replace with QString::isNull().
Change-Id: I9f7e84a92522c75666da15f49324c500ae93af42
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Anton Kudryavtsev <antkudr@mail.ru>
For the windows file system engine, we add an extra macro to use
library loading if configured to do so, but avoid it on WinRT, as
none of the symbols would be found.
We also QT_REQUIRE_CONFIG(library) in the library headers and
exclude the sources from the build if library loading is disabled.
This, in turn, makes it necessary to clean up some header inclusions.
Change-Id: I2b152cb5b47a2658996b6f4702b038536a5704ec
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@qt.io>
Parameters passed by value, like local function variables, are subject
to NRVO/return-by-move already, so adding std::move, even disguised as
qMove(), makes Clang warn about a pessimizing move.
Change-Id: I7d59bfee4cf7ecddee0874ee489367044c702643
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart (Woboq GmbH) <ogoffart@woboq.com>
QLocale::matchingLocales() simply created each locale using the basic
data, without (unless the matching conditions stipulated Language C)
applying number-options hacks that it applies everywhere else, when
creating the C locale. Thus the C locale in its returned list (if it
wasn't the only entry) ended up with the default number options,
without omiting separators in numbers. Thus QLocale::c() didn't
actually appear as an entry in the list. Discovered while
investigating QTBUG-58947.
Added a dumb autotest that checks various ways of getting the C locale
do actually give us equal locale objects. Fixed matchingLocales() to
apply the same hack as is used elsewhere for the C locale.
Change-Id: I263f31da623052b63171f5b5a83c65802383df21
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Replace all QT_NO_PROCESS with QT_CONFIG(process), define it in
qconfig-bootstrapped.h, add QT_REQUIRE_CONFIG(process) to the qprocess
headers, exclude the sources from compilation when switched off, guard
header inclusions in places where compilation without QProcess seems
supported, drop some unused includes, and fix some tests that were
apparently designed to work with QT_NO_PROCESS but failed to.
Change-Id: Ieceea2504dea6fdf43b81c7c6b65c547b01b9714
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@qt.io>
Unlike setTimeSpec, this forgot to clear the bit when detaching. So it's
possible that some further use of the flags could incorrectly conclude
that the data was short and then proceed to corrupt the pointer.
The example from QTBUG-59061 caused this because toUTC() -> toTimeSpec()
calls setMSecsSinceEpoch which left the bit set; then addDays() calls
setDateTime(), which calls checkValidDateTime() and that corrupted the
pointer. This problem was more visible on 32-bit systems because no
QDateTime was short (except for default constructed ones), but it
can happen on 64-bit with sufficiently large dates.
Task-number: QTBUG-59061
Change-Id: Ibc5c715fda334a75bd2efffd14a562a375a4e69b
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
It's only used in the autotests, and it private API, so
downgrade from Q_CORE_EXPORT to Q_AUTOTEST_EXPORT.
Fix a use of QTimeZonePrivate functions unprotected by
QT_BUILD_INTERNAL in tst_qtimezone.cpp.
Change-Id: I70eaea06f8fcf2983aeafb6894c3a5d2a4b272a7
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Some format and parse tests for time and date-time depended on locale
but had test data for the C locale (so fail if the test-environment
has, e.g., LANG=de_DE@utf8). So impose the C locale (until Qt 6).
The date-time test did *some* attempts at fixing for locale, but
failed to handle am/pm; and we do have "### Qt 6" comments in
Q(Date|Time)+::fromString indicating that we intend to switch these
methods to use the C locale by default (which shall fix this once and
for all). So rip out the incomplete localization now and test we work
properly at least when the locale used *is* C. Add a comment to the
matching QDate test to rip out its (presently adequate) matching code
once we do get to Qt 6 and make fromString() use the C locale.
QDateTimeParser uses systemLocale(), which is initialized the first
time it gets accessed; so we need to frob the locale *early*; doing so
in the test-class constructor is about as early as we conveniently
can; and seems to work (while doing it in individual tests does not).
(There is no point rolling back at the end; the QSystemLocale global
has been set up by then, so the roll-back would merely leave the
global out of sync with setlocale() and the environment.)
Task-number: QTBUG-58728
Change-Id: Ifa6778a80276050a099387a6dab15a1096be7561
Reviewed-by: Marc Mutz <marc.mutz@kdab.com>
Like the lvalue QVector::append() overload, when we reallocate,
we need to take a copy of the function's argument because the
reference will get stale upon reallocation.
Add a test.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QVarLengthArray] Fixed a bug involving
appending an item already in the container to the container
again.
Change-Id: I06eeed6cb383dd5924e47a302bb3d1666d04c8e8
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Systematic testing in tst_QStringApiSymmetry revealed a bug in
QStringRef::toLatin1(): a null input did not result in a null output,
but an empty one. This is fixed, for consistency with
QString::toLatin1(), and QString(Ref)::toUtf8(), which behaved
correctly already.
The same bug was found in QString(Ref)::toLocal8Bit(), which is
particularly hideous, as it's documented to fall back to toLatin1(),
which preserves null inputs. Fixed, too.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QString] toLocal8Bit() now preserves nullness of
the input QString (outputs null QByteArray).
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QStringRef] toLocal8Bit() and toLatin1() now
preserve nullness of the input QStringRef (output null QByteArrays).
Change-Id: I7026211922c287e03d07e89edbad2987aa646e51
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
tst_QDateTime::operator_insert_extract() was setting the time-zone and
taking care to restore it at the end of the test; however, if the test
were to fail, the restore would be skipped. Package the zone-setting
and restore in a class instance, so that premature return can't bypass
the restore.
Change-Id: I3df63260da17e481ef4d0d107d9f0fdea3e147e7
Reviewed-by: Marc Mutz <marc.mutz@kdab.com>
currencySymbol == "$" does not mean negative currency values will be formatted
as "($value)". With all locales I have on my mac machines (10.11/10.12) the
result is different from what this test expects. Also, the results are very
different for different locales. Apparently, we never saw this problem before
since in our CI "macs" we never have US Dollar/en_US selected in System Preferences.
Task-number: QTBUG-58784
Change-Id: Ic2c3a3172bf1e715e99092ddee8f461b216d995a
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
This reverts commit b0c1e07d64.
The unit tests it introduced trigger errors with the macOS and
Win32 implementations, which means the there's something seriously
wrong with either the API, our implementation or the tests.
Revert for now until this gets fixed. Blacklisting was also the
wrong tool to use. The tests should have used QEXPECT_FAIL.
Change-Id: Ida20c6bbe0c019835a22464535029585e8e1e367
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
There weren't any, at all.
Testing on the CI showed that the implementation is broken on
macOS, and, to a lesser extent, on Windows, so blacklist the
failing tests until the implementation can be fixed. No need
to hold back testing the other implementations.
Task-number: QTBUG-58737
Change-Id: I9ae16ab778dbe2e95a6ca5e0bae00df4bad65cb2
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
When a non-QString-backed mode (via the (QChar*, int) ctor) was added
for Qt 4.5, the author forgot to adjust the setCaseSensitivity()
function. It still uses q_pattern instead of (p.uc, p.len) as the
pattern for which to create the skip-table. Since there is no
setPattern() overload for this mode, the correctness of the matcher is
not harmed by this, but its performance degrades to that of a linear
scan: the skip-table, being filled from an empty pattern, will be
all-zeros, sending bm_find() into the 'possible match' case at every
character.
Since matching is still correct, but slow, it's not possible to write
a test for this. I did, however, leave my attempts in the auto-test,
for when we add QStringView overloads of setPattern() which will then
be able to expose the bug.
Change-Id: I7b803e8624b0352a0a974900affbbfc0c260d93b
Reviewed-by: Giuseppe D'Angelo <giuseppe.dangelo@kdab.com>
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
The first one was already suppressed for GCC, so also do that for clang:
/Users/erik/dev/qt5-dev/qtbase/tests/auto/corelib/tools/qstring/tst_qstring.cpp:1076:16: warning: format string is not a string literal (potentially insecure)
[-Wformat-security]
a.sprintf( zero );
^~~~
/Users/erik/dev/qt5-dev/qtbase/tests/auto/corelib/tools/qstring/tst_qstring.cpp:1076:16: note: treat the string as an argument to avoid this
a.sprintf( zero );
^
"%s",
The second one could also occur with other compilers, so fix it in a
generic way.
/Users/erik/dev/qt5-dev/qtbase/tests/auto/corelib/tools/qstring/tst_qstring.cpp:6382:5: warning: ignoring return value of function declared with
warn_unused_result attribute [-Wunused-result]
string.repeated(3);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~
2 warnings generated.
Change-Id: Id999179e795580a37b5be673ee54d6fa1a006dd7
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
There was an off-by-one error in the while loop for aarch64: we start
counting at 0 for the first position, so the last valid input position
is "a+7", not 8.
This wasn't covered by the tests, nor was the SSE2 version, so now there
are also tests for both versions.
Change-Id: I7eb8c5708e6179f45ea56885b0e66e1a37969c1d
Reviewed-by: Allan Sandfeld Jensen <allan.jensen@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Do not wait up to the timeout ms after already having waited several
times. At the same time upgrade to using the QDeadlineTimer which
is designed for this purpose.
Change-Id: Iaf5e4f4655605d5143ce91040c6eb6706752e504
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
This is a version of QByteArrayMatcher that calculates the
Boyer-Moore skip table at compile-time instead of at run-time,
making this class more generally applicable than QByteArray-
Matcher itself, at least for statically-known strings.
The compile-time part requires C++14 constexpr support, but
the class should compile and work even in C++98 mode, just
with runtime initialization of the skip-table.
While touching tst_qbytearraymatcher, clean up the static
global QByteArrayMatchers there and add tests with needles
longer than 255 characters for QByteArrayMatcher, too.
[ChangeLog][QtCore] Added QStaticByteArrayMatcher.
Change-Id: I0662f262ab19b79ae4096f3ab384d5b3ada72347
Reviewed-by: David Faure <david.faure@kdab.com>
... along with the two matching unused methods of QDateTime's test.
Change-Id: Id11a4b1b0132587f0df451d49c0043e9425d87ad
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>