964f91fd25
The POSIX rule parser used by QTzTimeZonePrivate recklessly assumed that, if splitting the rule on a dot produced more than one part, it necessarily produced at least three. That's true for well-formed POSIX rules, but we should catch the case of malformed rules. Likewise, when calculating the dates of transitions, splitting the date rule on dots might produce too few fragments; and the fragments might not parse as valid numbers, or might be out of range for their respective fields in a date. Check all these cases, too. Added a test that crashed previously. Changed QTimeZone::offsetFromUtc() so that its "return zero on invalid" applies also to the case where the backend returns invalid, in support of this. Fixes: QTBUG-92808 Pick-to: 6.1 6.1.0 6.0 5.15 Change-Id: Ica383a7a987465483341bdef8dcfd42edb6b43d6 Reviewed-by: Andrei Golubev <andrei.golubev@qt.io> Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Löhning <robert.loehning@qt.io> |
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auto | ||
baselineserver | ||
benchmarks | ||
global | ||
libfuzzer | ||
manual | ||
shared | ||
testserver | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
README |
This directory contains autotests and benchmarks based on Qt Test. In order to run the autotests reliably, you need to configure a desktop to match the test environment that these tests are written for. Linux X11: * The user must be logged in to an active desktop; you can't run the autotests without a valid DISPLAY that allows X11 connections. * The tests are run against a KDE3 or KDE4 desktop. * Window manager uses "click to focus", and not "focus follows mouse". Many tests move the mouse cursor around and expect this to not affect focus and activation. * Disable "click to activate", i.e., when a window is opened, the window manager should automatically activate it (give it input focus) and not wait for the user to click the window.