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>
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>
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>
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 UK still uses the Imperial system at least for distances
and many other things.
Change-Id: I99379de35620114328ad6a7fc9b226a46692bedd
Reviewed-by: Denis Dzyubenko <denis.dzyubenko@nokia.com>
Internally we construct QByteArrays from QStaticByteArrays. For example
moc is generating QStaticByteArray structure for every string it saves.
New test cases check if a QByteArray constructed from a QStaticByteArray
behaves as a not statically constructed one.
Change-Id: Ia4aa9a1a5bc0209507636c683a782dda00eae85c
Reviewed-by: João Abecasis <joao.abecasis@nokia.com>
Use QEXPECT_FAIL instead (QRegExp is bugged w.r.t. the specific
test data).
Task-number: QTBUG-22466
Change-Id: Id5af01fa0d5c0536845fd4db19d4264498a8675b
Reviewed-by: hjk <qthjk@ovi.com>
Reviewed-by: Jason McDonald <jason.mcdonald@nokia.com>
QSharedPointer is about to be made final. Instead
of inheriting from it to gain access to the
d-pointer, cast it to a layout-compatible struct
and access the pointer from there.
Assert liberally to ensure layout compatibility.
Change-Id: Ifc0fa6a6608e861469286673844325663f4f7fcc
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
QMap used to use a skiplist in Qt 4.x, which has variable
sized nodes and we can thus not optimise using custom
allocators.
The rewrite now uses a red-black tree, and all allocations
and tree operations happen in the cpp file. This will allow
us to introduce custom allocation schemes in later versions
of Qt.
Added some more tests and a benchmark. Memory consumption
of the new QMap implementation is pretty much the same as before.
Performance of insertion and lookup has increased by 10-30%. iteration
is slower, but still extremely fast and should not matter compared
to the work usually done when iterating.
Change-Id: I8796c0e4b207d01111e2ead7ae55afb464dd88f5
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
C++11 adds cbegin()/cend() functions for the same reason Qt has
constBegin()/constEnd(). This patch adds these functions to the
Qt containers with the same implementation as constBegin()/constEnd().
It also fixes the return types in the documentation of existing
constFind() functions (documentation only).
C++11 only adds cbegin()/cend() (and crbegin()/crend(), which Qt doesn't have).
In particular, it doesn't add cfind(), so I didn't supply these, even though
Qt comes with constFind().
This is a forward-port of https://qt.gitorious.org/qt/qt/merge_requests/1365.
Change-Id: Ida086b64246b24e25254eafbcb06c8e33388502b
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart <ogoffart@woboq.com>
Commit 3fe1eed0 changed the QVERIFY in line 1354 to QCOMPARE. This was
done to work around a (not yet understood) compiler issue. That however
was wrong, as char pointers in QCOMPARE are assumed to point to
'\0'-terminated strings and will get dereferenced.
In this case the intent was to compare the actual pointer values, as the
pointers point past the end of the array and should not be dereferenced.
Explicitly casting to (void *) and using QCOMPARE will not only keep the
intent, it will hopefully also provide meaningful output on failures. As
such the fix was applied throughout the test.
Change-Id: Ib0968df492ccc11d7c391bb69037cd7241e55493
Reviewed-by: Robin Burchell <robin+qt@viroteck.net>
The tst_QSharedPointer generate another Process to test some invalid
codes, and it expect that the prcoess will crash and return a non-zero
value.
The process which is a console application was linked to windows
subsystem, and QProcess seems can not get its return value. This
cause the unit test fail.
In addition, when the process crash under debug mode, a debug error
report-dialog will appear, which is very annoying, so I suppress it too.
Task-number: QTBUG-24160
Change-Id: Ia1c872d4515c83b0aa516bcfe3783f59797d2d49
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@nokia.com>
This test has been repeatedly unstable.
Task-number: QTBUG-24796
Change-Id: I603965c0189ad6da0cdf48527c4919c55e1918b4
Reviewed-by: Toby Tomkins <toby.tomkins@nokia.com>
Added support for QString overloads taking a QRegularExpression.
Change-Id: I8608ab0b66e5fdd2e966992e1072cf1ef7883c8e
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Seen with gcc 4.6:
tst_qarraydata.cpp: In member function 'void tst_QArrayData::grow()':
tst_qarraydata.cpp:1445:29: error: narrowing conversion of 'i' from
'size_t {aka long unsigned int}' to 'int' inside { } [-fpermissive]
Change-Id: Iad55659554b64ee34655640d606153f058a8cd05
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
In commit 75286739 it was assumed that negative positions shouldn't
influence the size of the returned substring. That however changes
behaviour that was depended on even inside Qt.
With this change, the old behaviour is reestablished.
A negative value of n is still taken to mean "all the way to the end",
regardless of position, and overflows are still avoided.
Change-Id: I7d6ed17cc5e274c7c7ddf0eb0c3238e1159ec4f6
Reviewed-by: Kent Hansen <kent.hansen@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Bradley T. Hughes <bradley.hughes@nokia.com>
Although passing a null pointer to pcre16_get_stringnumber for
the compiled pattern should simply make it error out, it's actually
an undocumented behaviour, so let's stay safe and add an explicit
check.
Tests for this codepath are added.
Change-Id: Ifd9c87874f6812ba487104ec1a5bbc83c3b16761
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
PCRE's JIT uses by default 32K on the pcre_exec caller's stack. This
is fine for most situations, but in some cases (esp. patterns with
lot of recursion) more memory is required.
Therefore, if a match execution fails due to exhausting JIT memory,
we let PCRE allocate up to 512KB to be used for the JIT's stack.
The pointer to the allocated memory is put in thread local storage
(so it can be reused from the same thread, if needed, and automatically
goes away when the thread dies).
Change-Id: Ica5fb7d517068befff88ebb198a603a26ec5d8a7
Reviewed-by: Bradley T. Hughes <bradley.hughes@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Besides rvalue-references, this test depends on the compiler to generate
implicit move operators on a derived class, based on the ones available
on its base class.
At least Visual Studio 2010 and some variations of clang 3.0 are known
not to generate implicit move constructors and assignment operators. Gcc
4.6 and up seem to support the feature.
Change-Id: Ied464ef678f517321b19f8a7bacddb6cd6665585
Reviewed-by: Kent Hansen <kent.hansen@nokia.com>
Exporting the counter that controls the optimization of a compiled
pattern lets us to forcibly optimize all patterns. Therefore,
two tests are now run: one with default optimization values
and another one which always optimizes the pattern.
The counter itself was renamed with a qt_ prefix and put
inside the Qt compilation namespace
(thanks to rohanpm for pointing it out).
Change-Id: I56602433d37adc127772b2d0d2cdaf2e49d43c71
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Some minor fixes: obviously, a valid match always come from a
valid regular expression, but a valid regular expression can create
an invalid match (internal error during matching).
Also, testing an invalid iterator should silence the emitted
warnings.
Change-Id: I585bb99a81e22f108601fd66bf30b56e0229d68b
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
QRegularExpression::captureCount() returns the number of
capturing groups inside the regular expression pattern.
Change-Id: Ib90ce67c67d06ab2966f0c98bd91da21defc156d
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Trivial change: compare dpointers first, then the data.
Added test function for operator==.
Change-Id: I33ac64a59db4ccad56c30be17622187e42415f38
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Added QRegularExpression, QRegularExpressionMatch and
QRegularExpressionMatchIterator as PCRE-enabled, regexp classes.
Documentation is included, as well as a first round of autotests.
Task-number: QTBUG-23489
Change-Id: Id47031b80602c913ccd2fd740070e3024ea06abc
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Remove the -armfpa option the config.tests/unix/doubleformat*
detection. The places where we used QT_ARMFPA and Q_DOUBLE_FORMAT
has been removed as well.
Rationale: ARM FPA with GCC does not work with EABI. Qt currently
does not support compiling without EABI, making ARM FPA an
impossibility. It is unknown whether other compilers provide ARM FPA
support with EABI. Support for ARM FPA can be re-added in the future
should the need arise, but since ARM VFP is available for ARMv5 and up,
we should encourage implementors to instead use soft-floats or VFP.
Change-Id: I3671aba575118ae3e3e6d769759301c8f2f496f5
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@nokia.com>
Specialise QTypeInfo<QPair<T1,T2>> based on the properties of
T1 and T2:
- If either T1 or T2 is Q_COMPLEX_TYPE, so is QPair<T1,T2>.
- Otherwise, if either T1 or T2 is Q_MOVABLE_TYPE, so is QPair<T1,T2>.
- Otherwise, QPair<T1,T2> is Q_PRIMITIVE_TYPE.
Change-Id: I8aecbd37e3b7924f77f38967498deabf1a19ca24
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart <ogoffart@woboq.com>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Stephen Kelly <stephen.kelly@kdab.com>
- It was trying to install syslocaleapp sub program as TESTDATA
instead of an application.
Change-Id: I2117d11335bc2fd37a8ccc9a03b0337382f0177f
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>