This requires building a command line tool and running it using
QProcess, which is not a supported deployment option on Android.
Change-Id: I795374bf809a8e4d8634a55f5ebf1699ee9745d1
Reviewed-by: Christian Stromme <christian.stromme@theqtcompany.com>
On Unix systems where the GUI event dispatcher uses a notification
system for socket notifiers that is out of band compared to select(),
it's possible for the QSocketNotifier to activate after the pipe has
been read from. When that happened, the ioctl(2) call with FIONREAD
might return 0 bytes available, which we interpreted to mean EOF.
Instead of doing that, always try to read at least one byte and examine
the returned byte count from read(2). If it returns 0, that's a real
EOF; if it returns -1 EWOULDBLOCK, we simply ignore the situation.
That's the case on OS X: the Cocoa event dispatcher uses CFSocket to get
notifications and those use kevent (and, apparently, an auxiliary
thread) instead of an in-thread select() or poll(). That means the event
loop would activate the QSocketNotifier even though there is nothing to
be read.
Task-number: QTBUG-39488
Change-Id: I1a58b5b1db7a47034fb36a78a005ebff96290efb
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@digia.com>