This already worked, but let's have a test so we can be sure it doesn't
regress.
Change-Id: I358b436d216e3ec4310f05ccf4f70f9e7aad3281
Reviewed-by: Stephen Kelly <stephen.kelly@kdab.com>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
* The Line Breaking Algorithm implementation conformance tests has been added;
* The Grapheme, Word, and Sentence Breaking Algorithm implementation
conformance tests has been updated.
Change-Id: Ia1a6eef6272d580964cb23788ddf30dfd5f4a5a3
Note: the Line Break test data contains some extended cases we don't currently support;
just skip them for now.
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Update NormalizationTest.txt data file with one from UCD 6.1;
Add few more QChar::unicodeVersion() testcases;
Add some line break class mapping testcases;
Add some exceptional case mapping testcases;
Add script class mapping test;
Change-Id: I164394984abb2b893c8db62fb77e7bd87aa0850b
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
According to ISO 8601 (section 4.2.2.3), seconds can be omitted
from a string representing time.
Task-number: QTBUG-2813
Change-Id: I2578f290845e46a8f49be489f1d7427984ae7f08
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
SoftHyphen enum value was added to specify such a boundary reason
Change-Id: I4248909eed6ab8cbca419de4dcf9fe917620a158
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Because QSystemLocale::fallbackLocale() is about UI languages,
it makes sense to check LANGUAGE as well if appropriate.
Adapt tst_qlocale.cpp accordingly.
Suggested by Oswald Buddenhagen.
Change-Id: Ib2c9674081809e3251be4e34456b05210eebc010
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
postDelayedEvent() and cancelDelayedEvent() are marked as thread-safe
in the documentation. Unfortunately, they didn't actually work when
called from another thread; they just produced some warnings:
QObject::startTimer: timers cannot be started from another thread
QObject::killTimer: timers cannot be stopped from another thread
As the warnings indicate, the issue was that postDelayedEvent()
(cancelDelayedEvent()) unconditionally called QObject::startTimer()
(stopTimer()), i.e. without considering which thread the function
was called from.
If the function is called from a different thread, the actual
starting/stopping of the associated timer is now done from the
correct thread, by asynchronously calling a private slot on the
state machine.
This also means that the raw timer id can no longer be used as the
id of the delayed event, since a valid event id must be returned
before the timer has started. The state machine now manages those
ids itself (using a QFreeList, just like startTimer() and
killTimer() do), and also keeps a mapping from timer id to event
id once the timer has been started. This is inherently more complex
than before, but at least the API should work as advertised/intended
now.
Task-number: QTBUG-17975
Change-Id: I3a866d01dca23174c8841112af50b87141df0943
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@nokia.com>
The function returns mutable iterator on the object that can later be passed to
e.g. erase(), hence it should detach() to be consistent with
QJsonObject::begin() which also detaches.
Change-Id: Id79e8e012fd5469e06b68fbc9eecb7c6848ce9c1
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Denis Dzyubenko <denis.dzyubenko@nokia.com>
The use of QWeakPointer for tracking QObject pointers is to be
deprecated.
Change-Id: If460ca7f515db77af24030152f4bd56e1a5fae7c
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
If a QTemporaryFile is constructed using a template file path,
the path is generated in QTemporaryFileEngine::open() and then
filePathIsTemplate is set to false. If remove() and then open()
are called on the same QTemporaryFile, the path is not regenerated.
This change ensures that if the file path was generated, it will be
generated again in the scenario above.
Task-number: QTBUG-2557
Change-Id: I718ceb89daa9a9d46fdbe811fecc3d57d6dc08c2
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Currently, QString::toFloat() returns 0 (and sets ok to false) if you
try to convert "inf". This is because inf is greater than QT_MAX_FLOAT
and there is currently no check to handle inf.
Task-number: QTBUG-8629
Change-Id: I498daf4a7a6f880f928461fca628fcaf7d1d6d08
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Giuseppe D'Angelo <giuseppe.dangelo@kdab.com>
The existing tests has been retained, the new ones has been added.
Change-Id: I12ae1b4e63dde46f3b14a7c1423c13d5881d4507
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
ISO 8601 section 4.2.3 states that "The end of one calendar day [24:00]
coincides with [00:00] at the start of the next calendar day", so
fromString() was updated to account for this.
Task-number: QTBUG-25387
Change-Id: I391db0da755dbc822ba0820c302a2c10391e1f3b
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
The documentation says that started() "is emitted when the state
machine has entered its initial state", but the implementation
didn't adhere to that.
The consequence is that if you e.g. emitted a signal from a slot
connected to started(), and that signal was used by a transition
from the initial state, the signal would effectively get ignored and
the state machine would remain in the initial state.
Task-number: QTBUG-24307
Change-Id: Ibbeb627d517eaff821d88e256a949eacf6aae350
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@nokia.com>
A QObject can't be a child of itself, so the comparison always
returned false. In practice, this was causing the entry/exit order
of parallel states to be random.
QObject::children() is documented to contain the children in the
order in which they were added, so this fix actually achieves
deterministic behavior.
Task-number: QTBUG-25959
Change-Id: Id3f12d6bfbc249f1d4fed0bafb7d0217093e458e
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@nokia.com>
tryRun() already implies tryLink() and tryCompile(), so there is no
point in executing the stages separately ...
Change-Id: Id7321efaca474e8c5db2bc246ac26323d8a99e58
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Internally, QObject and QMetaObject already leave out non-signal
methods when working with signals. This is possible because the
signals always come before other types of meta-method in the
meta-object data. Ignoring irrelevant methods is faster and can
save memory.
QMetaObject provides internal indexed-based connect() and
disconnect() functions. However, these functions currently take an
absolute method index as the signal specifier, instead of an
absolute _signal_ index. Hence, QMetaObject and friends must convert
from the method index range to the signal index range.
By providing an API that only considers signal indices, clients of
the index-based QMetaObject::connect()/disconnect() can provide the
proper signal index directly. Similarly, for the qtdeclarative
integration (QDeclarativeData hooks) the signal index can be passed
directly. This will eliminate most of the conversions back and forth
between signal index and method index, and some other redundant work
done by qtdeclarative's custom connection implementation.
There are some places where the behavior can't be changed; for
example, QObject::senderSignalIndex() will still need to return an
index in the method range, since that function is public API.
Changing QMetaObject::connect()/disconnect() to take an index in
the signal range will be done in a separate commit; this commit is
only an enabler for porting existing usage of those functions to
the new behavior.
Change-Id: Icb475b6bbdccc74b4e7ee5bf72b944b47159cebd
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart <ogoffart@woboq.com>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Chars that have a case conversion that converts
them into several characters can't be handled
by QChar::toUpper() etc and should get ignored. The code
didn't do that correctly.
Change-Id: I281d122e90bf49187b6449088d2fccef2ef75e86
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Ritt <ritt.ks@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Initialiser lists were not tested before in the QVector rewrite, so
the older malloc call was left behind.
Also, std::initializer_list has const iterators returning const data
and broke the build in a few places where const qualifiers were
missing.
Change-Id: I3c04e58361989aa7438621cda63c7df457d7dad8
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@nokia.com>
This autotest appears to be parallel-safe.
Change-Id: I12f9202633941e9339de0709353efb2b41df4fa1
Reviewed-by: Kalle Lehtonen <kalle.ju.lehtonen@nokia.com>
Previously, the append functions in QConcatenable in the QStringBuilder
dereferenced the data() pointer of the argument QLatin1String without
performing null check.
Change-Id: I629f19fbce3113f1f80f4272fa7ae34e1dbc6bee
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart <ogoffart@woboq.com>
tst_QStateMachine::postEventFromOtherThread() assumed that 10,000
iterations of the event loop in a separate thread could always be
completed successfully within the default QTRY_COMPARE timeout.
This may be false if the CPU load is already high - such as when running
other tests concurrently.
Decrease the iteration count.
Change-Id: I780523f73c0c16fa0b2ab3201b2b0affdebc198d
Reviewed-by: Toby Tomkins <toby.tomkins@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Kalle Lehtonen <kalle.ju.lehtonen@nokia.com>
Write to a QTemporaryDir instead of the test's build directory.
Change-Id: Ib65a0d58fbdf8caf8f2cb7002aeed1ce34742183
Reviewed-by: Toby Tomkins <toby.tomkins@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Kalle Lehtonen <kalle.ju.lehtonen@nokia.com>
This test failed a parallel stress test, but seemingly only because it
writes to its own build directory. This should not interfere with other
running autotests.
Change-Id: I27a2f31e32a5b8157ef1082cf0e939bcc0c61c70
Reviewed-by: Toby Tomkins <toby.tomkins@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Kalle Lehtonen <kalle.ju.lehtonen@nokia.com>
This test failed a parallel stress test, but seemingly only because it
writes to its own build directory. This should not interfere with other
running autotests.
Change-Id: I80e548fdb0e915ebe86dcd2205537cb6fee09cff
Reviewed-by: Toby Tomkins <toby.tomkins@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Kalle Lehtonen <kalle.ju.lehtonen@nokia.com>
This autotest appears to be parallel-safe. It fails our parallel stress
test, but only because it writes to its own build directory. This
should not interfere with other autotests.
Change-Id: Ie99dde24edc0fda0c8ec4352a6e44abb7cbc54f8
Reviewed-by: Toby Tomkins <toby.tomkins@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Kalle Lehtonen <kalle.ju.lehtonen@nokia.com>
This autotest seems to be parallel-safe. It was not marked as such due
to an issue which rarely causes the test to hang on exit on Windows, but
that appears unrelated to whether or not the test is run in parallel.
Change-Id: I30bac75be3ddc14139594605481eb6af3f6795e7
Reviewed-by: Toby Tomkins <toby.tomkins@nokia.com>
These tests have passed a parallel stress test on all three of Linux,
Mac, Windows. Mark them with CONFIG+=parallel_test to allow CI to run
them in parallel, saving time.
Change-Id: I19fd333c3c645a67374ca998f6c8530dd236b0f8
Reviewed-by: Toby Tomkins <toby.tomkins@nokia.com>
tst_qprocess::lockupsInStartDetached sometimes locks up on mac.
Mark this as a known issue.
Task-number: QTBUG-25895
Change-Id: I08b1bcf39f2bf373e74509a06415d9ba514b8993
Reviewed-by: Kalle Lehtonen <kalle.ju.lehtonen@nokia.com>
MSVC2010 32-bit (with and without service pack 1) takes about 1 hour to
compile this file in some builds, since
1c7421ad14.
Avoid the relevant portion of the code just for these compilers.
Change-Id: Icbb4fa12a6d563a7cdc882c30cdb5705675bedb0
Reviewed-by: Toby Tomkins <toby.tomkins@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Stephen Kelly <stephen.kelly@kdab.com>
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@nokia.com>
When given an invalid url, the output shouldn't be a valid url.
KDE's kurltest detected this regression compared to Qt4, where
all invalid urls were empty in toString() -- but we don't want that,
to give as much feedback as possible to the user.
Change-Id: Ie53e6e1c0a1d4bb9e12b820220dfb7e2f7753959
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
These tests have failed a parallel stress test and may contribute to
instability in test runs.
Change-Id: Ibbbe01f7d9550b953fc9fbd6ed52fc99fdb5f5d7
Reviewed-by: Toby Tomkins <toby.tomkins@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Kalle Lehtonen <kalle.ju.lehtonen@nokia.com>
QChar is actually a ushort and passing it via const-ref is suboptimal
Change-Id: Ib806b90397de6a816142ed130a22c0fe10a85d79
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@nokia.com>
This allows the QUrl component getters to return fully decoded data,
like they did in Qt 4. This is necessary for some use-cases where the
component like the user name, password or path are used outside the
context of a URL. In those contexts, the percent-encoded data makes no
sense, and the loss of data of what could be represented in a URL is
acceptable.
Also take the opportunity to expand the documentation of those getter
methods, explaining what the options argument does.
Discussed-on: http://lists.qt-project.org/pipermail/development/2012-May/003811.html
Change-Id: I89f743cde78c02f169c88314bff0768714341419
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: David Faure <faure@kde.org>
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
This allows one to instruct QUrl to ignore the percent-encodings and
interpret the data exactly as provided. This is useful in certain
use-cases where the data comes from a non-URL context.
The strict-mode checking of the components is not implemented
yet. Currently, the behaviour is equal to that of TolerantMode.
Discussed-on: http://lists.qt-project.org/pipermail/development/2012-May/003811.html
Change-Id: Ia5abe045a8ce7f9b50cbce3b5a7e3735e068d03a
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
Since we're about to introduce QUrl::FullyDecoded, this
QUrl::MostDecoded value would be confusing. Replace its uses with what
was intended at the point in question.
Change-Id: Iefd87bc33d37bace507c5cb0f206fa902e08e2df
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: David Faure <faure@kde.org>
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
This was trying all the possibilities by brute force, but it turns out
that some combinations are not valid so they should not be
tested. What's more, it was using old values of the flags, so this was
actually testing nothing.
Change-Id: I6c2f5230d240fc23418df2d3a1ca905dbc47dd10
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: David Faure <faure@kde.org>
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
These tests have failed a parallel stress test and may contribute to
instability in test runs.
Change-Id: I2c4456ad7d3846c2262a0ba714ab8f0c9a05c597
Reviewed-by: Toby Tomkins <toby.tomkins@nokia.com>
A (probable) typo was causing the code dealing with anchors
to use uninitialized values. This used to work by chance, but was
indeed detected by Valgrind f.i. when running tst_qregexp --
the indexIn test on anc11 data reported:
==3015== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
==3015== at 0x514B4EA: PeppeQt::QRegExpMatchState::testAnchor(int, int, int const*) (qregexp.cpp:1813)
[...]
==3015== Uninitialised value was created by a stack allocation
==3015== at 0x514B3EB: PeppeQt::QRegExpMatchState::testAnchor(int, int, int const*) (qregexp.cpp:1803)
Fixing the code also makes the aforementioned test to succeed.
Change-Id: If7b3e518c1bbfcf12573d2637c33ef2eca27c4d5
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@nokia.com>
QIcon has been moved back from QWidget to QtGui, so the QIcon QVariant
and QMetaType handler can now be moved back to QtGui.
Also we can give back QIcon its old number, allowing to get rid of some
compatibility hack when unstreaming QVariant
Change-Id: I439d5c2987c06ecd619f394407850f678164afb8
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@nokia.com>
The CI system is now using the parallel_test flag to run tests in
parallel. This test has become flaky, or at least more flaky than it
was previously. Mark it to no longer run in parallel.
Change-Id: I47bca3be620a8f648a0eb9c9b9f26d2d925efc01
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
The parser is recursive and too deeply nested json would
cause it to exhaust the available stack space leading to
crashes.
We now abort parsing with a DeepNesting parse error if the
document is too deeply nested. The current nesting limit
is set to 1024, which should be more then enough for any
real JSON data set.
Change-Id: I4adea3fd727149f7342536d73cf4530361a0a3a1
Reviewed-by: Jamey Hicks <jamey.hicks@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Denis Dzyubenko <denis.dzyubenko@nokia.com>
+ QChar::LastValidCodePoint enum value that supercede the UNICODE_LAST_CODEPOINT macro
replace uses of hardcoded values with the new API; remove leftovers
Change-Id: I1395c9840b85fcb6b08e241b131794a98773c952
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
inline all non-static members to a static ones (declared with QT_FASTCALL),
ushort converts automatically to uint and the conversion cost is minimal.
Task-Number: QTBUG-13052
Change-Id: I189a6f205736766adcd3de2d61cee71f30cc64f3
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
When qt_ntfs_permission_lookup is used, QFile::permissions failed
for files with long filenames.
Also created a test case for this API, which revealed another bug.
Task-number: QTBUG-25629
Change-Id: I73b7676a9d059c0e782b3f701b2e6bbc92f671ed
Reviewed-by: Prasanth Ullattil <prasanth.ullattil@nokia.com>
When a file is specified on a path that includes a drive letter
followed by a colon but no slash then it didn't always account
for the fact that this refers to the current path on that drive.
This fixes the problems in completeBaseName(), baseName() and
path(). Tests are also added for these three cases and some
others too.
Task-number: QTBUG-25353
Change-Id: I47a197c6af066f532442ad269be57597ec61303a
Reviewed-by: Irfan Omair <irfan.omair@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
On some systems prior to this change the code
would not build with the following error reported
by gcc:
error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
Change-Id: I778bce9a72ccf3a41cdf17883d734082ed3fb4b3
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Name is about mimetype names, while FileName is about, well, file names.
Task-number: QTBUG-25748
Change-Id: I34a9ac1a5fc06dc3e3855365e19c4dc7a1aa2671
Reviewed-by: Wolf-Michael Bolle <wolf-michael.bolle@nokia.com>
This completes the transition from connectNotify(const char *) and
disconnectNotify(const char *) to the new QMetaMethod-based
functions.
Removed the old connectNotify autotests and renamed the
connectNotifyMethodXXX autotests to connectNotify, since there is
no longer any ambiguity about which overload is being tested.
Change-Id: Icf108a80177155f21bb73c165fb8ab5d4e997bc2
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart <ogoffart@woboq.com>
Reviewed-by: Bradley T. Hughes <bradley.hughes@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
MinGW installations on case-sensitive filesystems expect
lowercase names of include-libraries and (usually) include
files.
When crosscompiling on Debian 6 (targeting MS Windows) linking
fails because mingw is looking for non-existent include-libraries.
Using lowercase names solves this.
Change-Id: Id3454f4ed8ba42b6ea93d65d9c0ce567db6712df
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@nokia.com>
QUrl::fromLocalFile("/foo") doesn't set Host, but QUrl("file:///foo")
does (to remember that it saw a Host section, even if empty, which is
useful for urls like "remote://"). So ignore the Host flag in operator==.
Change-Id: I4322b4a75420c4e42766c0d65c1b121f28028a76
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Fix operator== and operator< so that a URL with an empty fragment
or query, is not treated as equal to a URL without any fragment or query.
This restores the Qt4 behavior on this particular issue.
Change-Id: Ie989f37353fb13c791b1d558d638d2e8a5b5d1b8
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Null bytearray means no query, and QString::fromLatin1(QByteArray())
doesn't give a null string, but an empty string.
Same for setEncodedFragment(QByteArray()).
Change-Id: I992e9253e35941d66886456872ea06aa2ae92450
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
A leading byte order mark is valid in utf-8 and we should
parse documents starting with those correctly.
Change-Id: Id85398ff6e05b93ceefbaf4a6de5571d5e61ca13
Reviewed-by: Denis Dzyubenko <denis.dzyubenko@nokia.com>
there are several reasons to do this:
* text breaking is not a shaper's job;
* since the text breaking rules are bound to a specific Unicode version,
updating Qt's internal unicode data would require updating the data in HB as well;
* makes porting to HurfBuzz-NG some easier
Change-Id: I0bbf8e8a343bc074696f4ddf2ae4e7fa32a61629
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
This was crashing because the ':' was found past the end of the
username, causing the recoder to run from position 22 to 11, via the
long way around the memory.
Change-Id: Ic1ae596f34f7db857fb4210294974fb5a6adf691
Reviewed-by: Alexis Menard <alexis.menard@openbossa.org>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
If the url we pass as parameter already have percentage encoded data,
we don't want to decode it and call fromPercentEncoding. The test
coverage is not complete for qdataurl.cpp file but it is better than
previously and it will also protect us from future regressions.
Change-Id: I79f709f44bed1b7f274a3de639c7e291fa91a193
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
19d160b72b broke it temporarily, and this wasn't detected by
tst_headersclean, because it sets QT_NO_CAST_FROM_ASCII too,
which disabled the faulty code.
So this adds a new unittest for QT_NO_CAST_FROM_BYTEARRAY alone.
Change-Id: Iaf7a36a1378e77188bcc636e5dc9a1f9b84f70a7
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Stephen Kelly <stephen.kelly@kdab.com>
C++ distinguish between "char", "signed char" and
"unsigned char", they are three independent types.
Fix QVariant behavior on ARM. On ARM "char" may mean
"unsigned char", but we depends on the sign during
a numerical conversions.
Change-Id: I610ce3fb88ed5964b67f3ae442d264fe16b2d261
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
The implicit cast to QJsonValue was being ignored probably because the
compiler was generating a default QJsonValueRef assignment operator
Change-Id: I3a041595497308868dd7e4aab71027ce21bf8f0b
Reviewed-by: Denis Dzyubenko <denis.dzyubenko@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
This also tests by consequence that the behaviour of QByteArrays
containing NULs is consistent. Right now, that means the QByteArray
processing stops at the NUL, which is the same behaviour as if a
pointer to the byte array's data were used. (it's what happens if
there's no QByteArray overload and the const char* one is called)
Change-Id: If56a822f95866e8cb5b153d07b48198bb83fb386
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
This commit completes the previous commit so that both QString and
QStringBuilder now operate on UTF-8 input.
A small fix was required in QStringBuilder: an if clause isn't enough
to separate the two append versions. Since there are no QString
functions that append to char*, if we're converting to a QByteArray,
we need to go through a QString first in a separate function.
Change-Id: Ic503340c5d0c32d420c90c91cc2e0fc1ae9230f3
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
> http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode5.2.0/
D. Character Additions:
There are three new characters in the newly-encoded Kaithi script that will
require changes in implementations which make hard-coded assumptions about
composition during normalization. Most new characters added to the standard
with decompositions cannot be generated by the operations toNFC() or toNFKC),
but these three can. Implementers should check their code carefully
to ensure that it handles these three characters correctly.
U+1109A KAITHI LETTER DDDHA
U+1109C KAITHI LETTER RHA
U+110AB KAITHI LETTER VA
UCD 6.1 adds two more of them:
U+1112E CHAKMA VOWEL SIGN O
U+1112F CHAKMA VOWEL SIGN AU
Change-Id: I781a26848078d8b83a182b0fd4e681be2a6d9a27
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Show that nothing is changed either way, regardless of the encoding
flags used.
Change-Id: I31fba5f87eae777d4b708ab789b32169004bcbcc
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
It should only strip one slash (as the name indicates), and not if the
path is just "/".
Change-Id: I133a81977241de77a49d1d1559143d30e0bd52f8
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
This operation should be a no-op anyway, since at this point in time,
the fromAscii and toAscii functions simply call their fromLatin1 and
toLatin1 counterparts.
Task-number: QTBUG-21872
Change-Id: I38f97ad379deafebef02c75d611343ca15640c8a
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@nokia.com>
This way, QWinEventNotifier will work on all Windows systems, not just
with the default event dispatcher. Other dispatchers (other than
QWin32EventDispatcher) are permitted, so the class should not abort just
because of that.
If a dispatcher really doesn't want to implement this, they need to
implement the virtuals to do nothing, possibly print a warning.
Change-Id: I2c132bcde95b9d5941c8906a0fcd2ad964087772
Reviewed-by: Bradley T. Hughes <bradley.hughes@nokia.com>
This is much more performant than calling QObject::receivers(const char*)
Can be used instead of connectNotify in some cases.
Change-Id: I19e0933f678f171f515d9a0f69f0ad4fb7d894b4
Reviewed-by: Kent Hansen <kent.hansen@nokia.com>
qVariantValue and qVariantCanConvert are Compatibility members, while in
Qt4.8 they are marked as Qt 3 Support Members.
qVariantFromValue and qVariantSetValue are Obsolete members.
Change-Id: Ie8505cad1e0950e40c6f6710fde9f6fb2ac670fd
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@nokia.com>
Reimplementations of connectNotify() and disconnectNotify() can
assume that the signal argument is in normalized form, but after the
introduction of the Qt5 meta-object format, it could happen that it's
not.
The problem is that the internal QArgumentType class, which attempts
to resolve a typename to a type id, was calling QMetaType::type().
QMetaType::type() falls back to trying the normalized form of the
typename if the original argument can't be resolved as a type (this
behavior isn't documented, but that's how it works). This means that
e.g. QMetaType::type("const QString &") returns QMetaType::QString.
Since QMetaObjectPrivate::indexOfMethodRelative() (more specifically,
the methodMatch() helper function) prefers to compare type ids
over typenames (since the type ids are stored directly in the meta-
object data for built-in types), the method lookup would *succeed*
for signatures with non-normalized built-in typenames as parameters.
QObject::connect() would then think that it did not have to
normalize the signature (see "// check for normalized signatures").
The consequence was that the original, non-normalized form got
passed to connectNotify().
This commit introduces an internal typename-to-type function that
is the same as QMetaType::type(), except it doesn't try to normalize
the name. This way, the only place where normalization can occur in
the signature-to-meta-method processing is through the calls to
QMetaObject::normalizedSignature() in QObject::connect() itself.
The implication is that there are now cases where the method
signature will be decoded and processed twice, where processing it
once was sufficient before. On the other hand, it is consistent with
the pre-Qt5-meta-object behavior, where we predict that the
signature is already normalized, and only perform (comparatively
costly) normalization if the initial lookup fails.
Change-Id: Ie6b60f60b0f9a57ebd378d980329dac62d57bbd9
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@nokia.com>
static_metacall was never set on the metaobject written by
QMetaObjectBuilder::fromRelocatableData, sometimes causing a crash. It
should be initialized to 0.
Change-Id: I79373d895e131f0cc2ff1af6d2177a0c1a282be7
Reviewed-by: Toby Tomkins <toby.tomkins@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart <ogoffart@woboq.com>
This API will fully replace the const char *-based connectNotify()
and disconnectNotify() in Qt5; the old functions will be REMOVED
before Qt 5.0 final.
The new implementation fixes the long-standing issue of
connectNotify() not being called when using the (internal)
index-based QMetaObject::connect() (e.g., from QML).
As with the old API, there are still two "unintuitive" behaviors
concerning disconnectNotify():
- disconnectNotify() is not called when the signal is disconnected
using the QObject::disconnect(QMetaObject::Connection) overload.
- disconnectNotify() is not called when a receiver is destroyed
(i.e., when a connection is implicitly removed).
The old versions of connectNotify() and disconnectNotify() are kept
for now, and they are still called. They will be removed once known
existing reimplementations (e.g., QtNetwork, QtDBus) have been
ported to the new API.
Change-Id: I8b4f007f3c6d89199c1ba04a3e23c8ca314e0896
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart <ogoffart@woboq.com>
Reviewed-by: Bradley T. Hughes <bradley.hughes@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@nokia.com>
Turns out that we've had some old unit tests commented out that did not
compile. QString does not have a std::string constructor nor overloads
to many other methods. And std::string does not cast to char* on its
own. So these tests need to be removed.
Change-Id: I22df66fc3ccc68bc2840f2d83747234418e480f5
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Remove all non-UTF-8 sequences from source code in Qt.
Change-Id: I46d9cb23ef2199894896f171d553b3144822f36c
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Given a member function that's a signal, returns the corresponding
QMetaMethod. Inspired by the implementation of the template-based
QObject::connect().
The primary use case for this function is to have an effective and
exact (not subject to shadowing) way of checking whether a known
signal was connected to in reimplementations of
QObject::connectNotify(QMetaMethod), avoiding string comparisons.
Example:
void MyObject::connectNotify(const QMetaMethod &signal)
{
if (signal == QMetaMethod::fromSignal(&MyObject::mySignal)) {
// Someone connected to mySignal ...
}
}
Change-Id: I5e4de434275fe543c004d569dcaa9ceda3442f03
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart <ogoffart@woboq.com>
Reviewed-by: Bradley T. Hughes <bradley.hughes@nokia.com>
Known failures in this test are now handled by QEXPECT_FAIL.
Task-number: QTBUG-24796
Change-Id: I12ba57370cf3df1a85a108fbbcdc9db2222491c1
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
Unlike path(), toLocalFile() isn't reporting a URL component, so it
should decode the percent-encoded characters fully. This extra
decoding pass is meant to catch %00 to %1F, %7F and %25 (the percent
sign itself).
It also catches %80 to %FF, which aren't decoded because they don't
form UTF-8 sequences. That means QUrl::toLocalFile() has undefined
behaviour if the path contained non-UTF8 sequences.
Task-number: QTBUG-25459
Change-Id: Iab5a0ba6afcfc4510e297984f2ffc208cedd752b
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
QMetaObjectExtraData was added when support for QMetaObject::newInstance
was added. One needed a place to put the pointer to static_metacall in
the QMetaObject.
But as we break binary compatibility, one can change the size of
QMetaObject, and put everything back inside QMetaObject's own structure.
Meaning it is not required anymore to have one QMetaObjectExtraData
instance per QMetaObject anymore.
Change-Id: If0b8f586cbaf633eed10045adee3ba3366826c86
Reviewed-by: Bradley T. Hughes <bradley.hughes@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Kent Hansen <kent.hansen@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@nokia.com>
This is done in preparation of introducing the
QObject::connectNotify(QMetaMethod) function. Together with the
forthcoming QMetaMethod::fromSignal() function, which returns the
QMetaMethod corresponding to a Qt/C++ signal (member function), the
comparison operators provide an effective way of checking which
signal was connected to.
Change-Id: I2de48628c4884a7174fb8574895f272cb3fe5634
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart <ogoffart@woboq.com>
Reviewed-by: Bradley T. Hughes <bradley.hughes@nokia.com>
Instead of trying to return whether the URL is relative to something
undefined, let's instead follow what the documentation was saying all
along and what the RFC says about "Relative References".
Change-Id: I32722321a6b36c6e3480669ad769390e4c6f7d1c
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Previously, the CI system has not been testing on Windows with the
-developer-build configure flag. Mark known failures for this
configuration so that tests can be run in enforcing mode.
Change-Id: I5fbbbe09a7b400d626107c66dcbd5c5469a45b20
Reviewed-by: Sergio Ahumada <sergio.ahumada@nokia.com>
QLatin1Literal is just a typedef of QLatin1String.
Change-Id: If20ca225e57a7fb45a7775f0fc81aedb6da88c96
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart <ogoffart@woboq.com>
QUrl::path() already decodes almost everything, but let's pass the
formatting flag to be sure.
Note: decoding of control characters from U+0001 to U+001F is not
implemented. Non-UTF8 sequences are also not representable.
Change-Id: I9a0ae2282ec3d48cc0e70e5b2d3824fb120709ed
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
It's perfectly valid to have a path of /c:/a.txt on Unix, so don't
strip the leading slash unless we're on Windows.
Task-number: QTBUG-20322
Change-Id: I721bd0a65b41048bc735d4eaa0d536174164fe64
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
Since this test began to run again on Mac, it has been passing
consistently.
Task-number: QTBUG-22748
Change-Id: Ia81cf60b11d45fb331b5eca5d13df00556c18e07
Reviewed-by: Bradley T. Hughes <bradley.hughes@nokia.com>
Add qSetMessagePattern() to configure the default
message pattern. This one can still be overwritten by setting the
QT_MESSAGE_PATTERN environment variable.
Without this method, there's actually no way to change the
default output programatically. Since QT_MESSAGE_PATTERN is
evaluated when the first message arrives, setting it via e.g. qputenv
might have no effect/be too late.
Change-Id: I115e0c30606f128fdbf5c169a951ffa2a6a48517
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Up until now, the macros would return an internal type that contained
the pointer to the data. This breaks code that tried to use the macros
with operators, like QStringBuilder but also when writing:
QStringList() << QStringLiteral("a") << QStringLiteral("b");
This change seems to work fine now and I can also verify that this
works:
const auto str = QStringLiteral("Hello");
Even though it creates a QString, which is non-POD and non-constexpr.
Change-Id: Iaf82af9bea4245513a1128ea54f9d2d3d785fb09
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart <ogoffart@woboq.com>
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@nokia.com>
These tests were disabled when trying to get CI working on Mac OS
because they asserted or crashed. Now that CI is working well on Mac
OS, start running these tests again, initially as insignificant tests.
CI results will then be used to determine whether the tests can be made
significant.
Change-Id: Ife411e6b8c84ade45c865ef35f3ae0071d6f8d2b
Reviewed-by: Sergio Ahumada <sergio.ahumada@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Bradley T. Hughes <bradley.hughes@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
These warnings are expected and correct, so ignore them.
Change-Id: I43931950e46bd3c931db869902574ee7219efa1d
Reviewed-by: Jason McDonald <jason.mcdonald@nokia.com>
Adjust the test because we don't read past the end anymore.
Task-number: QTBUG-25108
Change-Id: I8243f1d5ae79d1256aab2cb1132598a716a7eeeb
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@nokia.com>
Introduce a new QtMessageHandler that takes QString instead of
char *: This avoids converting to local8bit , only to convert it back
to utf16 for Windows.
The old QMessageHandler is kept for a transition period, but will
be removed before Qt 5.0.
Also fix qEmergencyOut (that is called in OOM situations) to not rely
on the default message handler.
Change-Id: Iee0ce5838f97175c98788b847964273dd22d4a37
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
The constructor is wrong, it creates instance of QVariant encapsulating
a QColor instance. QVariant should not implicitly convert data, never.
Change-Id: Idc794ecdecb42d8b53fee3f993bf51ddd43f595d
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
This test hangs ~2.6% of the time in CI.
The previous commit which attempted to mark this test as insignificant
did not work due to this .pro file doing a load(testcase) prior to the
line which set CONFIG += insignificant_test. testcase.prf must be
loaded _after_ insignificant_test is set.
Task-number: QTBUG-25342
Change-Id: I20470337fda8235e2fd0b6e8d5f564c8c57d167e
Reviewed-by: Kalle Lehtonen <kalle.ju.lehtonen@nokia.com>
That change also fix moduleForType() which was wrongly recognizing
negative ids as belonging to Core.
New tests were added.
Change-Id: I40a5819effb32489a45937011980457387c9f8be
Reviewed-by: Kent Hansen <kent.hansen@nokia.com>
results are now equals to results of ICU's u_isprint() for the entire set
of the Unicode code points
Change-Id: I763f4b37cccd285eb01543d486f25bd7ea011241
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Archived build logs on http://testresults.qt-project.org/ci/ show that
the QPluginLoader test has failed in CI only once in the last 1000
builds (in build 1786), and on that occasion the test was legitimately
blocking a regression.
The QFactoryLoader test was derived from the QPluginLoader test and has
not failed since its first run on March 29, 2012.
Task-number: QTBUG-22765
Change-Id: I866b4b8e30e393e0c7e7292119c072b27008ab43
Reviewed-by: Bradley T. Hughes <bradley.hughes@nokia.com>
This test is like qguieventdispatcher, it duplicates a corelib test in
the gui test suite, since the QtGui library often gets a different event
dispatcher implementation from the platform plugin.
Change-Id: Ifd724066950bc3b98a804bc2e5d40ce7b0429af4
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart <ogoffart@woboq.com>
QTimeLine appears to have very poor timing characteristics. Historical
CI logs show roughly one failure in every twenty-five test runs on
Windows, and less frequent failures on Mac and Linux.
The root of the problem seems to be that QTimeLine's currentTime
counter appears to run at a variable speed and the only guarantee is
that it is slower than wall time. The frameChanged() test
function waited for double the expected duration of the timeline and
still found that the timeline had failed to finish in about one in every
thirty test runs. The interpolation() test function also failed for the
same reason, though less often.
This commit makes the frameChanged test more strict so that the poor
timing will be demonstrated more often, waiting only 1.5 times the
duration instead of double the duration. It also makes the test fail
gracefully so that this known issue won't disrupt CI when the test is
made significant in a later commit.
Task-number: QTBUG-24796
Change-Id: If469d43abb662e24445a9da619052eea9cf7c581
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
QTimeLine::currentTime() is an integer in the range [0..duration], not a
float in the range [0.0..1.0]. The aim of the test appears to be to
verify that currentTime() is at least 90% of the way to duration() when
the timeline is almost due to finish, so verify that and give the
corresponding 10% tolerance on reaching the end state.
Change-Id: I38646947c3b9189a4e8e91a450c6071430ddc66a
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
This test hangs ~2.6% of the time in CI.
Task-number: QTBUG-25342
Change-Id: I2c3531140e15edfe2dc2524e101b84e3206a4e61
Reviewed-by: Kalle Lehtonen <kalle.ju.lehtonen@nokia.com>
Otherwise, the order of updating of the indexes will cause
inconsistent results because it will rely on ordering within a
QHash (which is indeterminate).
Task-number: QTBUG-25325
Change-Id: I7d99578c8ee2954b8562dc5aff7dc32e74d41fb5
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
This test has not failed in the last 500 Continuous Integration runs.
Task-number: QTBUG-22769
Change-Id: Ib2e95bb2291757941baa0ea46d568816eef20b09
Reviewed-by: Bradley T. Hughes <bradley.hughes@nokia.com>
The testChildrenLayoutsChanged fails randomly. This happens rarely,
f.i. wasn't spotted by CI when QHash randomization itself was merged;
but is indeed reproducible by running the test a few times in a row.
This is now blocking api_merges integration, and I have no idea
how to fix it.
This patch marks the test as insignificant for now (the bug
tracking this test failure is QTBUG-25325), and switches the failing
tests from QVERIFY(a == b) to a proper QCOMPARE (so that the
expected values do show up in the build logs).
Change-Id: I16f0e28bcbb06dbac2e7169f4676a19ccf626a92
Reviewed-by: Stephen Kelly <stephen.kelly@kdab.com>
http://unicode.org/versions/corrigendum6.html:
> in Unicode 5.0, the list of characters with the Bidi_Mirrored property
> was made consistent for brackets and quotation marks, in preparation for
> new constraints on bidi mirroring. However, after publication of
> Unicode 5.0.0 it was discovered that this change adversely affected
> several quotation mark characters in deployed data.
Task-number: QTBUG-25169
Change-Id: Id49caf401af2d5a1e6dbcc32b2f350aa20b7f901
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
The key returned by QHash::key is an arbitrary one that maps to the
given value. The test instead relied on it being a specific one.
Change-Id: I090351797e8b52036d78160fd810518a11e8107d
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
The hash autotest is wrong: it assumed that the iterator on the hash
would reach the end after iterating on two elements with identical key.
But three elements were added to that hash, and the third one
can appear after the other two.
That code path is left for the map test only.
Change-Id: I51de7987e2b132b6caff7bb4bac6a57fb7fcb530
Reviewed-by: Robin Burchell <robin+qt@viroteck.net>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
That was a regression introduced in 1c5db1aff
Example:
signals: int *someSignal();
would produce this code:
int* _t0 = int*();
which does not compile
So have special handling for pointer to change it to '= 0'
Change-Id: Ie695e15e309d15c3cfd5c5a69ac8bf6d61ae9915
Reviewed-by: Stephen Kelly <stephen.kelly@kdab.com>
This test hangs 2-3% of the time.
Task-number: QTBUG-25284
Change-Id: I32e01696262be2de7e015b8f811d1666551426cc
Reviewed-by: Toby Tomkins <toby.tomkins@nokia.com>
The new QUrl is able to distinguish a URL component that is empty from
one that is absent. The previous one already had that capability for
the port, fragment and query, and the new one extends that to the username,
password and path. The path did not need this handling because its
delimiter from the authority it part of the path.
For example, a URL with no username is one where it's set to QString()
(null). A URL like "http://:kde@kde.org" is understood as an
empty-but-present username, for which toString(RemovePassword) will
return "http://@kde.org", keeping the empty-but-present username.
Change-Id: I2d97a7656f3f1099e3cf400b199e68e4c480d924
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
This test no longer fails, so we can remove CONFIG+=insignificant_test
Task-number: QTBUG-22767
Change-Id: If3ca194fc982ad8fdc3e9a7f62fc346190ff01ea
Reviewed-by: Jason McDonald <jason.mcdonald@nokia.com>
This test no longer fails, so we can remove CONFIG+=insignificant_test
Task-number: QTBUG-22766
Change-Id: I379873d5c483157e414201e5f8a13c3f4407f9fd
Reviewed-by: Jason McDonald <jason.mcdonald@nokia.com>
This does not fail anymore, remove CONFIG+=insignificant_test
Change-Id: I4f98cfad563adfa460910976317c91e852db6872
Reviewed-by: Jason McDonald <jason.mcdonald@nokia.com>
Most of the tests were removed while QUrl::toEncoded or fromEncoded
were deprecated in the development process. Since they aren't
deprecated in the end, bring them back.
Change-Id: Ibdb6cd3c4b83869150724a8e327a03a2cd22580d
Reviewed-by: Robin Burchell <robin+qt@viroteck.net>
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
By having the default value equal to zero, we follow the principle of
least surprise. For example, if we had
url.path()
and we refactored to
url.path(QUrl::DecodeSpaces)
Then instead of ensuring spaces are decoded, we make spaces the only
thing encoded (unicode, delimiters and reserved characters are
encoded).
Besides, modifying the default can only be used to encode something
that wasn't encoded previously, so having the enums as Encode makes
more sense.
As a side-effect, toEncoded() does not support any extra encoding
options.
Change-Id: I2624ec446e65c2d979e9ca2f81bd3db22b00bb13
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
This allows things like http://example.com/{1234-5678}?id={abcd-ef01}.
But do not allow it in other parts of the URL. I could allow it in the
fragment, but in the username and password it would be too ugly.
In order to do that, make DecodeReserved use two bits and have
PrettyDecoded set only one of them. That way, toString(PrettyDecoded)
can be distinguished from toString(PrettyDecoded | DecodeReserved),
just as path(PrettyDecoded) can be distinguished from
path(PrettyDecoded & ~DecodeDelimiters).
Also, take the opportunity to avoid decoding the reserved characters
in the query. Keep them encoded as they should be.
Change-Id: I1604a0c8015c6b03dc2fbf49ea9d1dbed96fc186
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
DecodeReserved applies to all characters between 0x21 and 0x7E that
aren't unreserved, a delimiter, or the percent sign itself.
Change-Id: Ie64bddb6b814dfa3bb8380e3aa24de1bb3645a65
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
There's little value in having the DecodeUnambiguousDelimiters option
since neither QUrl nor QUrlQuery can return values that are ambiguous
in that particular context, ever.
This option could be used to encode a character if, when placed
in a URL, it would need to be encoded. Such cases are hash (#) or
question marks (?) in the path component, or slashes (/) and at signs
(@) in the userinfo.
However, we don't need two enums for that, since there are no
other characters that can appear in either form. Still, leave two bits
for this enum. In the future, if we want to split the gen-delims from
the sub-delims, we are able to.
Change-Id: If5416b524680eb67dd4abbe7d072ca0ef7218506
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
This tests how QUrl encodes and decodes certain characters and leaves
some other ones alone. It also tests that the output of toString() (in
whichever encoding was being tested) is also parsed again to be
exactly the same as the previously decoded form.
Change-Id: Ie358d001f8b903409db61db48bde1ea679241a60
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
This is the same fix as the previous commit did for the other
components of the URL. But we're also changing how we handle the "[]"
characters in a query: previously the handling was like for other
sub-delims; now, they're always decoded, assuming that the RFC had a
mistake and they were meant to be decoded.
Change-Id: If4b1c3df8f341cb114f2cc4860de22f8bf0be743
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
Refactor the way that QUrl stores and returns the components of the
URL so that ambiguous delimiters (gen-delims that could change the
meaning of the parsing) are interpreted correctly. Previously, QUrl
called "unambiguous" the form found in a full URL, even though each
item in isolation could have more characters decoded.
Now, instead, store only the fully decoded form. To recreate the
compound forms (the full URL, as well as the user info and the
authority), we need to do more processing.
This commit applies to the user name, password, path and fragment
only. The scheme, host and port do not need this work because they are
special; the query is handled separately.
Change-Id: I5907ba9b8fe048fff23c128be95668c22820663a
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
0xfdef-0xfdd0 is definitely 31 and not 15 :)
also fix all copy-pastes of this code (greping for '0xfdd0' helps ;)
Change-Id: I8f3bd4fd9d85f9de066f0f5df378b9188c12bd48
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Denis Dzyubenko <denis.dzyubenko@nokia.com>
Just like qMalloc/qRealloc/qFree, there is absolutely no reason to wrap these
functions just to avoid an include, except to pay for it with worse runtime
performance.
On OS X, on byte sizes from 50 up to 1000, calling memset directly is 28-15%
faster(!) than adding an additional call to qMemSet. The advantage on sizes
above that is unmeasurable.
For qMemCopy, the benefits are a little more modest: 16-7%.
Change-Id: I98aa92bb765aea0448e3f20af42a039b369af0b3
Reviewed-by: Giuseppe D'Angelo <dangelog@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: John Brooks <john.brooks@dereferenced.net>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Some FTP implementations (currently not including QNAM) strip the first
slash off the path in an FTP URL so that the path in the URL is relative
to the login path (the user's home directory). To reach the root
directory, another slash is necessary, hence the double slash.
In anticipation of future URL normalisation, which Qt 4 could do, "//"
could be rendered to "/", so this extra slash should be "%2F".
This operation is done only in QUrl::fromUserInput.
Change-Id: If9619ef6b546a3f4026cb26b74a7a5a865123609
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
QT_NO_STL is now no longer defined, so remove the conditionals and
select the STL side.
Change-Id: Ieedd248ae16e5a128b4ac287f850b3ebc8fb6181
Reviewed-by: João Abecasis <joao.abecasis@nokia.com>
Two equal QByteArrays must return the same hash.
Change-Id: Iddd45b0c420213ca2b82bbcb164367acb6104ec8
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Two equal strings / stringrefs must return the same hash.
Change-Id: I2af9a11ab721ca25f4039048a7e5f260e6ff0148
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
It was confusing DataLocation and GenericDataLocation, and the same
for CacheLocation and GenericCacheLocation. The test was passing in
the api_changes branch because these were giving the same result
(empty app name), but the QCoreApplication::applicationName fix in master
makes these different, so the bug in the test showed up after merging.
Change-Id: I80ef6883c96cfd02b8c277d9d686717028d396bb
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
This uses an alternative approach to the testing formerly introduced
in 4ef5a626. Zero-termination tests are injected into all QCOMPARE/QTEST
invocations. This makes such testing more thorough and widespread, and
gets seamlessly extended by future tests.
It also fixes an issue uncovered by the test where using a past-the-end
position with QString::insert(pos, char), could move uninitialized data
and clobber the null-terminator.
Change-Id: I7392580245b419ee65c3ae6f261b6e851d66dd4f
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@nokia.com>
The approach used to verify for zero-termination is too intrusive and
requires additional maintenance work to ensure new zero-termination
tests are added with new functionality.
Zero-termination testing will be re-established in a subsequent commit.
This reverts commit 4ef5a6269c.
Change-Id: I862434a072f447f7f0c4bbf8f757ba216212db3c
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@nokia.com>
This enables easier updating of those structs, by reducing the amount of
code that needs to be fixed. The common (and known) use cases are
covered by the two macros being introduced in each case.
Change-Id: I44981ca9b9b034f99238a11797b30bb85471cfb7
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
There were two constuctors offering essentially the same functionality.
One taking the QStatic*Data<N> struct, the other what essentially
amounts to a pointer wrapper of that struct. The former was dropped and
the latter untemplatized and kept, as that is the most generic and
widely applicable. The template parameter in the wrapper was not very
useful as it essentially duplicated information that already maintained
in the struct, and there were no consistency checks to ensure they were
in sync.
In this case, using a wrapper is preferred over the use of naked
pointers both as a way to make explicit the transfer of ownership as
well as to avoid unintended conversions. By using the reference count
(even if only by calling deref() in the destructor), QByteArray and
QString must own their Data pointers.
Const qualification was dropped from the member variable in these
wrappers as it causes some compilers to emit warnings on the lack of
constructors, and because it isn't needed there.
To otherwise reduce noise, QStatic*Data<N> gained a member function to
directly access the const_cast'ed naked pointer. This plays nicely with
the above constructor. Its use also allows us to do further changes in
the QStatic*Data structs with fewer changes in remaining code. The
function has an assert on isStatic(), to ensure it is not inadvertently
used with data that requires ref-count operations.
With this change, the need for the private constructor taking a naked
Q*Data pointer is obviated and that was dropped too.
In updating QStringBuilder's QConcatenable specializations I noticed
they were broken (using data, instead of data()), so a test was added to
avoid this happening again in the future.
An unnecessary ref-count increment in QByteArray::clear was also
dropped.
Change-Id: I9b92fbaae726ab9807837e83d0d19812bf7db5ab
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Algorithmic complexity attacks against hash tables have been known
since 2003 (cf. [1, 2]), and they have been left unpatched for years
until the 2011 attacks [3] against many libraries /
(reference) implementations of programming languages.
This patch adds a qHash overload taking two arguments: the value to
be hashed, and a uint to be used as a seed for the hash function
itself (support the global QHash seed was added in a previous patch).
The seed itself is not used just yet; instead, 0 is passed.
Compatibility with the one-argument qHash(T) implementation is kept
through a catch-all template.
[1] http://www.cs.rice.edu/~scrosby/hash/CrosbyWallach_UsenixSec2003.pdf
[2] http://perldoc.perl.org/perlsec.html#Algorithmic-Complexity-Attacks
[3] http://www.ocert.org/advisories/ocert-2011-003.html
Task-number: QTBUG-23529
Change-Id: I1d0a84899476d134db455418c8043a349a7e5317
Reviewed-by: João Abecasis <joao.abecasis@nokia.com>
It is an extension coming from the use case when you, for instance, need to
implement a countdown timer in client codes, and manually maintain a dedicated
variable for counting down with the help of yet another Timer. There might be
other use cases as well. The returned value is meant to be in milliseconds, as
the method documentation says, since it is reasonable, and consistent with the
rest (ie. the interval accessor).
The elapsed time is already being tracked inside the event dispatcher, thus the
effort is only exposing that for all platforms supported according to the
desired timer identifier, and propagating up to the QTimer public API. It is
done by using the QTimerInfoList class in the glib and unix dispatchers, and the
WinTimeInfo struct for the windows dispatcher.
It might be a good idea to to establish a QWinTimerInfo
(qtimerinfo_win{_p.h,cpp}) in the future for resembling the interface for
windows with the glib/unix management so that it would be consistent. That would
mean abstracting out a base class (~interface) for the timer info classes.
Something like that QAbstractTimerInfo.
Test: Build test only on (Arch)Linux, Windows and Mac. I have also run the unit
tests and they passed as well.
Change-Id: Ie37b3aff909313ebc92e511e27d029abb070f110
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Bradley T. Hughes <bradley.hughes@nokia.com>
While QArrayDataPointer offers generic detach() functionality, this is
only useful for operations that may modify data, but don't otherwise
affect the container itself, such as non-const iteration, front() and
back().
For other modifying operations, users of the API typically need to
decide whether a detach is needed based on QArrayData's requirements
(is data mutable? is it currently shared?) and its own (do we have
spare capacity for growth?).
Now that data may be shared, static or otherwise immutable (e.g.,
fromRawData) it no longer suffices to check the ref-count for
isShared().
This commit adds needsDetach() which, from the point-of-view of
QArrayData(Pointer), answers the question: 'Can contained data and
associated metadata be changed?'.
This fixes QArrayDataPointer::setSharable for static data (e.g.,
Q_ARRAY_LITERAL), previously it only catered to shared_null.
SimpleVector is also fixed since it wasn't checking Mutability and it
needs to because it supports fromRawData().
Change-Id: I3c7f9c85c83dfd02333762852fa456208e96d5ad
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
This enables a truncating resize() to be implemented. It is similar to
destroyAll(), but updates the size() as it goes, so it is safe to use
outside a container's destructor (and doesn't necessarily destroy all
elements).
The appendInitialize test was repurposed and now doubles as an
additional test for QArrayDataOps as well as exercising SimpleVector's
resize().
Change-Id: Iee94a685c9ea436c6af5b1b77486734a38c49ca1
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
This follows QArrayData::detachFlags's lead. Given the (known) size for
a detached container, the function helps determine capacity, ensuring
the capacityReserved flag is respected.
This further helps aggregating behaviour on detach in QArrayData itself.
SimpleVector was previously using qMax(capacity(), newSize), but there's
no reason to pin the previous capacity value if reserve() wasn't
requested. It now uses detachCapacity().
Change-Id: Ide2d99ea7ecd2cd98ae4c1aa397b4475d09c8485
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Adds given number of default-initialized elements at end of array. For
POD types, initialization is reduced to a single memset call. Other
types get default constructed in place.
As part of adding a test for the new functionality the arrayOps test was
extended to verify objects are being constructed and assigned as
desired.
Change-Id: I9fb2afe0d92667e76993313fcd370fe129d72b90
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Callers should just call the standard allocation functions directly.
Adding an extra function call onto all basic memory management for the sake of
making it instrumentable in rare cases isn't really fair to everyone else.
What's more, this wasn't completely reliable, as not everything was using them
in a number of places. Memory management can still be overridden using tricks
like LD_PRELOAD if needed.
Their aligned equivilents cannot be deprecated, as no standard equivilents
exist, although investigation into posix_memalign(3) is a possibility
for the future.
Change-Id: Ic5f74b14be33f8bc188fe7236c55e15c36a23fc7
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
For data allocated and maintained by QByteArray, there's a guarantee
that data() is null-terminated. This holds true even for null and empty,
where logically the terminating character should never be dereferenced.
For tests that modify or generate QByteArrays, this ensures the
invariant is kept.
In the toFromHex() text, const-ness of temporary variables was dropped
to enable the test macro to be used, as the qualification didn't add
much to the test otherwise.
Change-Id: I7ee52e79e3a9df7de18c743f3698dab688e6bf0e
Reviewed-by: Jędrzej Nowacki <jedrzej.nowacki@nokia.com>
There are probably lots of places that rely on that behaviour, so go
back to what it was.
Change-Id: I4d1503a0ee105a50cdfaab52d9a5862a02c70757
Reviewed-by: David Faure <faure@kde.org>
I don't know if the bug is in moc or in qmake. But it bails out trying
to parse the .cpp file after the
tst_QUrlInternal::nameprep_testsuite_data function. If the #include is
placed above, it works. If it's placed below, it doesn't.
Change-Id: Ide554aa5aa3f1999e29604ba6d25ccdb09f6ef28
Reviewed-by: Marius Storm-Olsen <marius.storm-olsen@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@nokia.com>
Don't crash when either side is null but not both sides.
Also make sure operator< is working properly and satisfies the basic
conditions of a type (such as that if A < B, then !(B < A)).
Change-Id: Idd9e9fc593e1a7781d9f4f2b13a1024b643926fd
Reviewed-by: Giuseppe D'Angelo <dangelog@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
The strict mode check is now implemented after the tolerant parser has
finished, and only if the tolerant parser has not found any errors. We
catch the use of disallowed characters (control characters plus a few
not permitted anywhere) and broken percent encodings.
We do not catch the use of Unicode characters, as they are permitted
in IRIs.
In the tests, remove the old errorString test since it makes little
sense.
Change-Id: I8261a2ccad031ad68fc6377a206e59c9db89fb38
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Note that QUrl can only remember one error. If the URL contains more
than one error condition, only the latest (in whichever parsing order
URL decides to use) will be reported.
I don't want too keep too much data in QUrlPrivate for validation, so
let's use 4 bytes only.
Change-Id: I2afbf80734d3633f41f779984ab76b3a5ba293a2
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Also say hello to QUrl's constructor and QUrl::toString being allowed
again.
QUrl operates now on UTF-16 encoded data, where a Unicode character
matches its UTF-8 percent-encoded form (as per RFC 3987). The data may
exist in different levels of encoding, but it is always in encoded
form (a percent is always "%25"). For that reason, the previously
dangerous methods are no longer dangerous.
The QUrl parser is much more lenient now. Instead of blindly following
the grammar from RFC 3986, we try to use common-sense. Hopefully, this
will also mean the code is faster. It also operates on QStrings and,
for the common case, will not perform any memory allocations it
doesn't keep (i.e., it allocates only for the data that is stored in
QUrlPrivate).
The Null/Empty behaviour that fragments and queries had in Qt4 are now
extended to the scheme, username, password and host parts. This means
QUrl can remember the difference between "http://@example.com" and
"http://example.com".
Missing from this commit:
- more unit tests, for the new functionality
- the implementation of the StrictMode parser
- errorString() support
- normalisation
Change-Id: I6d340b19c1a11b98a48145152513ffec58fb3fe3
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Now that QUrlQuery exists, these methods are no longer necessary in
QUrl itself. Manipulation of the items should be done using the new
class.
They are now implemented using a temporary QUrlQuery. This is hardly
efficient but it works.
Change-Id: I34820b3101424593d0715841a2057ac3f74d74f0
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
This class is meant to replace the QUrl functionality that handled
key-value pairs in the query part of an URL. We therefore split the
URL parsing code from the code dealing with the pairs: QUrl now only
needs to deal with one encoded string, without knowing what it is.
Since it doesn't know how to decode the query, QUrl also becomes
limited in what it can decode. Following the letter of the RFC,
queries will not encode "gen-delims" nor "sub-delims" nor the plus
sign (+), thus allowing the most common delimiters options to remain
unchanged.
QUrlQuery has some undefined behaviour when it comes to empty query
keys. It may drop them or keep them; it may merge them, etc.
Change-Id: Ia61096fe5060b486196ffb8532e7494eff58fec1
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Change it to operate on QChar pointers, which gains a little in
performance. This also avoids unnecessary detaching in the QString
source.
In addition, make the output be appended to an existing QString. This
will be useful later when we're reconstructing a URL from its
components.
Change-Id: I7e2f64028277637bd329af5f98001ace253a50c7
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
The reason for this change is that the strict parser made little sense
to exist. What would the recoder do if it was passed an invalid
string?
I believe that the tolerant recoder is more efficient than the
correcting code followed by the strict recoder. This makes the recoder
more complex and probably a little less efficient, but it's better in
the common case (tolerant that doesn't need fixes) and in the worst
case (needs fixes).
Change-Id: I68a0c9fda6765de05914cbd6ba7d3cea560a7cd6
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
This one function is an all-in-one:
- UTF-8 encoder
- UTF-8 decoder
- percent encoder
- percent decoder
The next step is add the ability to modify the behaviour, by telling
the function what else it must encode or decode and what it should
leave untouched.
Change-Id: I997eccfd2f9ad8487305670b18d6c806f4cf6717
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
These functions are now aliases to {to,from}Ace, which are usually
what you want. The original functions from Qt 4.0 had the wrong
semantics and wrong name. The new ones from Qt 4.2 execute the ACE
processing from IDNA (specifically, the ToASCII and ToUnicode
operations described in the RFC).
But so as not to be without tests, export the tests in unit testing
environment and test the punycode roundtrip. Note that the
tst_QUrl::idna_test_suite test tests *only* the Punycode roundtrip,
not the nameprepping.
Change-Id: I9b95b4bd07b4425344a5c6ef5cce7cfcb9846d3e
Reviewed-by: João Abecasis <joao.abecasis@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: David Faure <faure@kde.org>
Copy the unit tests that related to percent-encoding to
tst_qbytearray.cpp and use public functions to execute
QUrl::fromPercentEncoded and QUrl::toPercentEncoded.
Change-Id: I6639ea566d82dabeb91280177a854e89e18f6f8d
Reviewed-by: João Abecasis <joao.abecasis@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: David Faure <faure@kde.org>
The clone() method didn't detach if we had enough memory
allocated, but didn't consider that the object being
modified is not the root object of the binary blob.
Change-Id: I9a479ae1c873b7fe9cff7e13c539e7a41961bf68
Reviewed-by: Cristiano di Flora <cristiano.di-flora@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: abcd <amos.choy@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Jamey Hicks <jamey.hicks@nokia.com>
The change in plugin loading has meant that different plugins in the
same plugin folder will not be handled properly when loaded with
different instances of QFactoryLoader.
A solution is to only unload compatability plugins from
QFactoryLoader::update() since they are the only plugins that are
actually loaded in that method.
This auto test shows the error on the current version of QFactoryLoader
and passes with the fix described above.
Change-Id: I12001525d51bb631d6742c5965357598322f247c
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Similarly, only test against the libc function on Linux, as other OS
sometimes have different behaviour.
Change-Id: I9b8ef9a3d660a59882396d695202865ca307e528
Reviewed-by: João Abecasis <joao.abecasis@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
In the unit test, check against inet_aton on Linux with GLIBC
only. Other platforms have this function too, but they sometimes have
different behaviour, so don't try to test them equally.
Change-Id: I1a77e405ac7e713d4cf1cee03ea5ce17fb47feef
Reviewed-by: João Abecasis <joao.abecasis@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Shane Kearns <shane.kearns@accenture.com>
QStandardPaths now knows a "test mode" which changes writable locations
to point to test directories, in order to prevent auto tests from reading from
or writing to the current user's configuration.
This affects the locations into which test programs might write files:
GenericDataLocation, DataLocation, ConfigLocation,
GenericCacheLocation, CacheLocation.
Other locations are not affected.
Change-Id: I29606c2e74714360edd871a8c387a5c1ef7d1f54
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jason McDonald <jason.mcdonald@nokia.com>