| /* |
| * Copyright © 2007, 2008 Ryan Lortie |
| * Copyright © 2010 Codethink Limited |
| * |
| * This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or |
| * modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public |
| * License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either |
| * version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. |
| * |
| * This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
| * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
| * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU |
| * Lesser General Public License for more details. |
| * |
| * You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public |
| * License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. |
| */ |
| |
| #include "config.h" |
| |
| #include <glib/gvariant-core.h> |
| |
| #include <glib/gvariant-internal.h> |
| #include <glib/gvariant-serialiser.h> |
| #include <glib/gtestutils.h> |
| #include <glib/gbitlock.h> |
| #include <glib/gatomic.h> |
| #include <glib/gbytes.h> |
| #include <glib/gslice.h> |
| #include <glib/gmem.h> |
| #include <glib/grefcount.h> |
| #include <string.h> |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * This file includes the structure definition for GVariant and a small |
| * set of functions that are allowed to access the structure directly. |
| * |
| * This minimises the amount of code that can possibly touch a GVariant |
| * structure directly to a few simple fundamental operations. These few |
| * operations are written to be completely threadsafe with respect to |
| * all possible outside access. This means that we only need to be |
| * concerned about thread safety issues in this one small file. |
| * |
| * Most GVariant API functions are in gvariant.c. |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * GVariant: |
| * |
| * #GVariant is an opaque data structure and can only be accessed |
| * using the following functions. |
| * |
| * Since: 2.24 |
| **/ |
| struct _GVariant |
| /* see below for field member documentation */ |
| { |
| GVariantTypeInfo *type_info; |
| gsize size; |
| |
| union |
| { |
| struct |
| { |
| GBytes *bytes; |
| gconstpointer data; |
| } serialised; |
| |
| struct |
| { |
| GVariant **children; |
| gsize n_children; |
| } tree; |
| } contents; |
| |
| gint state; |
| gatomicrefcount ref_count; |
| gsize depth; |
| }; |
| |
| /* struct GVariant: |
| * |
| * There are two primary forms of GVariant instances: "serialized form" |
| * and "tree form". |
| * |
| * "serialized form": A serialized GVariant instance stores its value in |
| * the GVariant serialization format. All |
| * basic-typed instances (ie: non-containers) are in |
| * serialized format, as are some containers. |
| * |
| * "tree form": Some containers are in "tree form". In this case, |
| * instead of containing the serialized data for the |
| * container, the instance contains an array of pointers to |
| * the child values of the container (thus forming a tree). |
| * |
| * It is possible for an instance to transition from tree form to |
| * serialized form. This happens, implicitly, if the serialized data is |
| * requested (eg: via g_variant_get_data()). Serialized form instances |
| * never transition into tree form. |
| * |
| * |
| * The fields of the structure are documented here: |
| * |
| * type_info: this is a reference to a GVariantTypeInfo describing the |
| * type of the instance. When the instance is freed, this |
| * reference must be released with g_variant_type_info_unref(). |
| * |
| * The type_info field never changes during the life of the |
| * instance, so it can be accessed without a lock. |
| * |
| * size: this is the size of the serialized form for the instance, if it |
| * is known. If the instance is in serialized form then it is, by |
| * definition, known. If the instance is in tree form then it may |
| * be unknown (in which case it is -1). It is possible for the |
| * size to be known when in tree form if, for example, the user |
| * has called g_variant_get_size() without calling |
| * g_variant_get_data(). Additionally, even when the user calls |
| * g_variant_get_data() the size of the data must first be |
| * determined so that a large enough buffer can be allocated for |
| * the data. |
| * |
| * Once the size is known, it can never become unknown again. |
| * g_variant_ensure_size() is used to ensure that the size is in |
| * the known state -- it calculates the size if needed. After |
| * that, the size field can be accessed without a lock. |
| * |
| * contents: a union containing either the information associated with |
| * holding a value in serialized form or holding a value in |
| * tree form. |
| * |
| * .serialised: Only valid when the instance is in serialized form. |
| * |
| * Since an instance can never transition away from |
| * serialized form, once these fields are set, they will |
| * never be changed. It is therefore valid to access |
| * them without holding a lock. |
| * |
| * .bytes: the #GBytes that contains the memory pointed to by |
| * .data, or %NULL if .data is %NULL. In the event that |
| * the instance was deserialized from another instance, |
| * then the bytes will be shared by both of them. When |
| * the instance is freed, this reference must be released |
| * with g_bytes_unref(). |
| * |
| * .data: the serialized data (of size 'size') of the instance. |
| * This pointer should not be freed or modified in any way. |
| * #GBytes is responsible for memory management. |
| * |
| * This pointer may be %NULL in two cases: |
| * |
| * - if the serialized size of the instance is 0 |
| * |
| * - if the instance is of a fixed-sized type and was |
| * deserialized out of a corrupted container such that |
| * the container contains too few bytes to point to the |
| * entire proper fixed-size of this instance. In this |
| * case, 'size' will still be equal to the proper fixed |
| * size, but this pointer will be %NULL. This is exactly |
| * the reason that g_variant_get_data() sometimes returns |
| * %NULL. For all other calls, the effect should be as |
| * if .data pointed to the appropriate number of nul |
| * bytes. |
| * |
| * .tree: Only valid when the instance is in tree form. |
| * |
| * Note that accesses from other threads could result in |
| * conversion of the instance from tree form to serialized form |
| * at any time. For this reason, the instance lock must always |
| * be held while performing any operations on 'contents.tree'. |
| * |
| * .children: the array of the child instances of this instance. |
| * When the instance is freed (or converted to serialized |
| * form) then each child must have g_variant_unref() |
| * called on it and the array must be freed using |
| * g_free(). |
| * |
| * .n_children: the number of items in the .children array. |
| * |
| * state: a bitfield describing the state of the instance. It is a |
| * bitwise-or of the following STATE_* constants: |
| * |
| * STATE_LOCKED: the instance lock is held. This is the bit used by |
| * g_bit_lock(). |
| * |
| * STATE_SERIALISED: the instance is in serialized form. If this |
| * flag is not set then the instance is in tree |
| * form. |
| * |
| * STATE_TRUSTED: for serialized form instances, this means that the |
| * serialized data is known to be in normal form (ie: |
| * not corrupted). |
| * |
| * For tree form instances, this means that all of the |
| * child instances in the contents.tree.children array |
| * are trusted. This means that if the container is |
| * serialized then the resulting data will be in |
| * normal form. |
| * |
| * If this flag is unset it does not imply that the |
| * data is corrupted. It merely means that we're not |
| * sure that it's valid. See g_variant_is_trusted(). |
| * |
| * STATE_FLOATING: if this flag is set then the object has a floating |
| * reference. See g_variant_ref_sink(). |
| * |
| * ref_count: the reference count of the instance |
| * |
| * depth: the depth of the GVariant in a hierarchy of nested containers, |
| * increasing with the level of nesting. The top-most GVariant has depth |
| * zero. This is used to avoid recursing too deeply and overflowing the |
| * stack when handling deeply nested untrusted serialized GVariants. |
| */ |
| #define STATE_LOCKED 1 |
| #define STATE_SERIALISED 2 |
| #define STATE_TRUSTED 4 |
| #define STATE_FLOATING 8 |
| |
| /* -- private -- */ |
| /* < private > |
| * g_variant_lock: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * |
| * Locks @value for performing sensitive operations. |
| */ |
| static void |
| g_variant_lock (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| g_bit_lock (&value->state, 0); |
| } |
| |
| /* < private > |
| * g_variant_unlock: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * |
| * Unlocks @value after performing sensitive operations. |
| */ |
| static void |
| g_variant_unlock (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| g_bit_unlock (&value->state, 0); |
| } |
| |
| /* < private > |
| * g_variant_release_children: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * |
| * Releases the reference held on each child in the 'children' array of |
| * @value and frees the array itself. @value must be in tree form. |
| * |
| * This is done when freeing a tree-form instance or converting it to |
| * serialized form. |
| * |
| * The current thread must hold the lock on @value. |
| */ |
| static void |
| g_variant_release_children (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| gsize i; |
| |
| g_assert (value->state & STATE_LOCKED); |
| g_assert (~value->state & STATE_SERIALISED); |
| |
| for (i = 0; i < value->contents.tree.n_children; i++) |
| g_variant_unref (value->contents.tree.children[i]); |
| |
| g_free (value->contents.tree.children); |
| } |
| |
| /* This begins the main body of the recursive serializer. |
| * |
| * There are 3 functions here that work as a team with the serializer to |
| * get things done. g_variant_store() has a trivial role, but as a |
| * public API function, it has its definition elsewhere. |
| * |
| * Note that "serialization" of an instance does not mean that the |
| * instance is converted to serialized form -- it means that the |
| * serialized form of an instance is written to an external buffer. |
| * g_variant_ensure_serialised() (which is not part of this set of |
| * functions) is the function that is responsible for converting an |
| * instance to serialized form. |
| * |
| * We are only concerned here with container types since non-container |
| * instances are always in serialized form. For these instances, |
| * storing their serialized form merely involves a memcpy(). |
| * |
| * Serialization is a two-step process. First, the size of the |
| * serialized data must be calculated so that an appropriately-sized |
| * buffer can be allocated. Second, the data is written into the |
| * buffer. |
| * |
| * Determining the size: |
| * The process of determining the size is triggered by a call to |
| * g_variant_ensure_size() on a container. This invokes the |
| * serializer code to determine the size. The serializer is passed |
| * g_variant_fill_gvs() as a callback. |
| * |
| * g_variant_fill_gvs() is called by the serializer on each child of |
| * the container which, in turn, calls g_variant_ensure_size() on |
| * itself and fills in the result of its own size calculation. |
| * |
| * The serializer uses the size information from the children to |
| * calculate the size needed for the entire container. |
| * |
| * Writing the data: |
| * After the buffer has been allocated, g_variant_serialise() is |
| * called on the container. This invokes the serializer code to write |
| * the bytes to the container. The serializer is, again, passed |
| * g_variant_fill_gvs() as a callback. |
| * |
| * This time, when g_variant_fill_gvs() is called for each child, the |
| * child is given a pointer to a sub-region of the allocated buffer |
| * where it should write its data. This is done by calling |
| * g_variant_store(). In the event that the instance is in serialized |
| * form this means a memcpy() of the serialized data into the |
| * allocated buffer. In the event that the instance is in tree form |
| * this means a recursive call back into g_variant_serialise(). |
| * |
| * |
| * The forward declaration here allows corecursion via callback: |
| */ |
| static void g_variant_fill_gvs (GVariantSerialised *, gpointer); |
| |
| /* < private > |
| * g_variant_ensure_size: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * |
| * Ensures that the ->size field of @value is filled in properly. This |
| * must be done as a precursor to any serialization of the value in |
| * order to know how large of a buffer is needed to store the data. |
| * |
| * The current thread must hold the lock on @value. |
| */ |
| static void |
| g_variant_ensure_size (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| g_assert (value->state & STATE_LOCKED); |
| |
| if (value->size == (gsize) -1) |
| { |
| gpointer *children; |
| gsize n_children; |
| |
| children = (gpointer *) value->contents.tree.children; |
| n_children = value->contents.tree.n_children; |
| value->size = g_variant_serialiser_needed_size (value->type_info, |
| g_variant_fill_gvs, |
| children, n_children); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* < private > |
| * g_variant_serialise: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * @data: an appropriately-sized buffer |
| * |
| * Serializes @value into @data. @value must be in tree form. |
| * |
| * No change is made to @value. |
| * |
| * The current thread must hold the lock on @value. |
| */ |
| static void |
| g_variant_serialise (GVariant *value, |
| gpointer data) |
| { |
| GVariantSerialised serialised = { 0, }; |
| gpointer *children; |
| gsize n_children; |
| |
| g_assert (~value->state & STATE_SERIALISED); |
| g_assert (value->state & STATE_LOCKED); |
| |
| serialised.type_info = value->type_info; |
| serialised.size = value->size; |
| serialised.data = data; |
| serialised.depth = value->depth; |
| |
| children = (gpointer *) value->contents.tree.children; |
| n_children = value->contents.tree.n_children; |
| |
| g_variant_serialiser_serialise (serialised, g_variant_fill_gvs, |
| children, n_children); |
| } |
| |
| /* < private > |
| * g_variant_fill_gvs: |
| * @serialised: a pointer to a #GVariantSerialised |
| * @data: a #GVariant instance |
| * |
| * This is the callback that is passed by a tree-form container instance |
| * to the serializer. This callback gets called on each child of the |
| * container. Each child is responsible for performing the following |
| * actions: |
| * |
| * - reporting its type |
| * |
| * - reporting its serialized size (requires knowing the size first) |
| * |
| * - possibly storing its serialized form into the provided buffer |
| */ |
| static void |
| g_variant_fill_gvs (GVariantSerialised *serialised, |
| gpointer data) |
| { |
| GVariant *value = data; |
| |
| g_variant_lock (value); |
| g_variant_ensure_size (value); |
| g_variant_unlock (value); |
| |
| if (serialised->type_info == NULL) |
| serialised->type_info = value->type_info; |
| g_assert (serialised->type_info == value->type_info); |
| |
| if (serialised->size == 0) |
| serialised->size = value->size; |
| g_assert (serialised->size == value->size); |
| serialised->depth = value->depth; |
| |
| if (serialised->data) |
| /* g_variant_store() is a public API, so it |
| * it will reacquire the lock if it needs to. |
| */ |
| g_variant_store (value, serialised->data); |
| } |
| |
| /* this ends the main body of the recursive serializer */ |
| |
| /* < private > |
| * g_variant_ensure_serialised: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * |
| * Ensures that @value is in serialized form. |
| * |
| * If @value is in tree form then this function ensures that the |
| * serialized size is known and then allocates a buffer of that size and |
| * serializes the instance into the buffer. The 'children' array is |
| * then released and the instance is set to serialized form based on the |
| * contents of the buffer. |
| * |
| * The current thread must hold the lock on @value. |
| */ |
| static void |
| g_variant_ensure_serialised (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| g_assert (value->state & STATE_LOCKED); |
| |
| if (~value->state & STATE_SERIALISED) |
| { |
| GBytes *bytes; |
| gpointer data; |
| |
| g_variant_ensure_size (value); |
| data = g_malloc (value->size); |
| g_variant_serialise (value, data); |
| |
| g_variant_release_children (value); |
| |
| bytes = g_bytes_new_take (data, value->size); |
| value->contents.serialised.data = g_bytes_get_data (bytes, NULL); |
| value->contents.serialised.bytes = bytes; |
| value->state |= STATE_SERIALISED; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* < private > |
| * g_variant_alloc: |
| * @type: the type of the new instance |
| * @serialised: if the instance will be in serialised form |
| * @trusted: if the instance will be trusted |
| * |
| * Allocates a #GVariant instance and does some common work (such as |
| * looking up and filling in the type info), setting the state field, |
| * and setting the ref_count to 1. |
| * |
| * Returns: a new #GVariant with a floating reference |
| */ |
| static GVariant * |
| g_variant_alloc (const GVariantType *type, |
| gboolean serialised, |
| gboolean trusted) |
| { |
| GVariant *value; |
| |
| value = g_slice_new (GVariant); |
| value->type_info = g_variant_type_info_get (type); |
| value->state = (serialised ? STATE_SERIALISED : 0) | |
| (trusted ? STATE_TRUSTED : 0) | |
| STATE_FLOATING; |
| value->size = (gssize) -1; |
| g_atomic_ref_count_init (&value->ref_count); |
| value->depth = 0; |
| |
| return value; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_variant_new_from_bytes: |
| * @type: a #GVariantType |
| * @bytes: a #GBytes |
| * @trusted: if the contents of @bytes are trusted |
| * |
| * Constructs a new serialized-mode #GVariant instance. This is the |
| * inner interface for creation of new serialized values that gets |
| * called from various functions in gvariant.c. |
| * |
| * A reference is taken on @bytes. |
| * |
| * The data in @bytes must be aligned appropriately for the @type being loaded. |
| * Otherwise this function will internally create a copy of the memory (since |
| * GLib 2.60) or (in older versions) fail and exit the process. |
| * |
| * Returns: (transfer none): a new #GVariant with a floating reference |
| * |
| * Since: 2.36 |
| */ |
| GVariant * |
| g_variant_new_from_bytes (const GVariantType *type, |
| GBytes *bytes, |
| gboolean trusted) |
| { |
| GVariant *value; |
| guint alignment; |
| gsize size; |
| GBytes *owned_bytes = NULL; |
| GVariantSerialised serialised; |
| |
| value = g_variant_alloc (type, TRUE, trusted); |
| |
| g_variant_type_info_query (value->type_info, |
| &alignment, &size); |
| |
| /* Ensure the alignment is correct. This is a huge performance hit if it’s |
| * not correct, but that’s better than aborting if a caller provides data |
| * with the wrong alignment (which is likely to happen very occasionally, and |
| * only cause an abort on some architectures — so is unlikely to be caught |
| * in testing). Callers can always actively ensure they use the correct |
| * alignment to avoid the performance hit. */ |
| serialised.type_info = value->type_info; |
| serialised.data = (guchar *) g_bytes_get_data (bytes, &serialised.size); |
| serialised.depth = 0; |
| |
| if (!g_variant_serialised_check (serialised)) |
| { |
| #ifdef HAVE_POSIX_MEMALIGN |
| gpointer aligned_data = NULL; |
| gsize aligned_size = g_bytes_get_size (bytes); |
| |
| /* posix_memalign() requires the alignment to be a multiple of |
| * sizeof(void*), and a power of 2. See g_variant_type_info_query() for |
| * details on the alignment format. */ |
| if (posix_memalign (&aligned_data, MAX (sizeof (void *), alignment + 1), |
| aligned_size) != 0) |
| g_error ("posix_memalign failed"); |
| |
| if (aligned_size != 0) |
| memcpy (aligned_data, g_bytes_get_data (bytes, NULL), aligned_size); |
| |
| bytes = owned_bytes = g_bytes_new_with_free_func (aligned_data, |
| aligned_size, |
| free, aligned_data); |
| aligned_data = NULL; |
| #else |
| /* NOTE: there may be platforms that lack posix_memalign() and also |
| * have malloc() that returns non-8-aligned. if so, we need to try |
| * harder here. |
| */ |
| bytes = owned_bytes = g_bytes_new (g_bytes_get_data (bytes, NULL), |
| g_bytes_get_size (bytes)); |
| #endif |
| } |
| |
| value->contents.serialised.bytes = g_bytes_ref (bytes); |
| |
| if (size && g_bytes_get_size (bytes) != size) |
| { |
| /* Creating a fixed-sized GVariant with a bytes of the wrong |
| * size. |
| * |
| * We should do the equivalent of pulling a fixed-sized child out |
| * of a brozen container (ie: data is NULL size is equal to the correct |
| * fixed size). |
| */ |
| value->contents.serialised.data = NULL; |
| value->size = size; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| value->contents.serialised.data = g_bytes_get_data (bytes, &value->size); |
| } |
| |
| g_clear_pointer (&owned_bytes, g_bytes_unref); |
| |
| return value; |
| } |
| |
| /* -- internal -- */ |
| |
| /* < internal > |
| * g_variant_new_from_children: |
| * @type: a #GVariantType |
| * @children: an array of #GVariant pointers. Consumed. |
| * @n_children: the length of @children |
| * @trusted: %TRUE if every child in @children in trusted |
| * |
| * Constructs a new tree-mode #GVariant instance. This is the inner |
| * interface for creation of new serialized values that gets called from |
| * various functions in gvariant.c. |
| * |
| * @children is consumed by this function. g_free() will be called on |
| * it some time later. |
| * |
| * Returns: a new #GVariant with a floating reference |
| */ |
| GVariant * |
| g_variant_new_from_children (const GVariantType *type, |
| GVariant **children, |
| gsize n_children, |
| gboolean trusted) |
| { |
| GVariant *value; |
| |
| value = g_variant_alloc (type, FALSE, trusted); |
| value->contents.tree.children = children; |
| value->contents.tree.n_children = n_children; |
| |
| return value; |
| } |
| |
| /* < internal > |
| * g_variant_get_type_info: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * |
| * Returns the #GVariantTypeInfo corresponding to the type of @value. A |
| * reference is not added, so the return value is only good for the |
| * duration of the life of @value. |
| * |
| * Returns: the #GVariantTypeInfo for @value |
| */ |
| GVariantTypeInfo * |
| g_variant_get_type_info (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| return value->type_info; |
| } |
| |
| /* < internal > |
| * g_variant_is_trusted: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * |
| * Determines if @value is trusted by #GVariant to contain only |
| * fully-valid data. All values constructed solely via #GVariant APIs |
| * are trusted, but values containing data read in from other sources |
| * are usually not trusted. |
| * |
| * The main advantage of trusted data is that certain checks can be |
| * skipped. For example, we don't need to check that a string is |
| * properly nul-terminated or that an object path is actually a |
| * properly-formatted object path. |
| * |
| * Returns: if @value is trusted |
| */ |
| gboolean |
| g_variant_is_trusted (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| return (value->state & STATE_TRUSTED) != 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* < internal > |
| * g_variant_get_depth: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * |
| * Gets the nesting depth of a #GVariant. This is 0 for a #GVariant with no |
| * children. |
| * |
| * Returns: nesting depth of @value |
| */ |
| gsize |
| g_variant_get_depth (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| return value->depth; |
| } |
| |
| /* -- public -- */ |
| |
| /** |
| * g_variant_unref: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * |
| * Decreases the reference count of @value. When its reference count |
| * drops to 0, the memory used by the variant is freed. |
| * |
| * Since: 2.24 |
| **/ |
| void |
| g_variant_unref (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| g_return_if_fail (value != NULL); |
| |
| if (g_atomic_ref_count_dec (&value->ref_count)) |
| { |
| if G_UNLIKELY (value->state & STATE_LOCKED) |
| g_critical ("attempting to free a locked GVariant instance. " |
| "This should never happen."); |
| |
| value->state |= STATE_LOCKED; |
| |
| g_variant_type_info_unref (value->type_info); |
| |
| if (value->state & STATE_SERIALISED) |
| g_bytes_unref (value->contents.serialised.bytes); |
| else |
| g_variant_release_children (value); |
| |
| memset (value, 0, sizeof (GVariant)); |
| g_slice_free (GVariant, value); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_variant_ref: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * |
| * Increases the reference count of @value. |
| * |
| * Returns: the same @value |
| * |
| * Since: 2.24 |
| **/ |
| GVariant * |
| g_variant_ref (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| g_return_val_if_fail (value != NULL, NULL); |
| |
| g_atomic_ref_count_inc (&value->ref_count); |
| |
| return value; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_variant_ref_sink: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * |
| * #GVariant uses a floating reference count system. All functions with |
| * names starting with `g_variant_new_` return floating |
| * references. |
| * |
| * Calling g_variant_ref_sink() on a #GVariant with a floating reference |
| * will convert the floating reference into a full reference. Calling |
| * g_variant_ref_sink() on a non-floating #GVariant results in an |
| * additional normal reference being added. |
| * |
| * In other words, if the @value is floating, then this call "assumes |
| * ownership" of the floating reference, converting it to a normal |
| * reference. If the @value is not floating, then this call adds a |
| * new normal reference increasing the reference count by one. |
| * |
| * All calls that result in a #GVariant instance being inserted into a |
| * container will call g_variant_ref_sink() on the instance. This means |
| * that if the value was just created (and has only its floating |
| * reference) then the container will assume sole ownership of the value |
| * at that point and the caller will not need to unreference it. This |
| * makes certain common styles of programming much easier while still |
| * maintaining normal refcounting semantics in situations where values |
| * are not floating. |
| * |
| * Returns: the same @value |
| * |
| * Since: 2.24 |
| **/ |
| GVariant * |
| g_variant_ref_sink (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| g_return_val_if_fail (value != NULL, NULL); |
| g_return_val_if_fail (!g_atomic_ref_count_compare (&value->ref_count, 0), NULL); |
| |
| g_variant_lock (value); |
| |
| if (~value->state & STATE_FLOATING) |
| g_variant_ref (value); |
| else |
| value->state &= ~STATE_FLOATING; |
| |
| g_variant_unlock (value); |
| |
| return value; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_variant_take_ref: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * |
| * If @value is floating, sink it. Otherwise, do nothing. |
| * |
| * Typically you want to use g_variant_ref_sink() in order to |
| * automatically do the correct thing with respect to floating or |
| * non-floating references, but there is one specific scenario where |
| * this function is helpful. |
| * |
| * The situation where this function is helpful is when creating an API |
| * that allows the user to provide a callback function that returns a |
| * #GVariant. We certainly want to allow the user the flexibility to |
| * return a non-floating reference from this callback (for the case |
| * where the value that is being returned already exists). |
| * |
| * At the same time, the style of the #GVariant API makes it likely that |
| * for newly-created #GVariant instances, the user can be saved some |
| * typing if they are allowed to return a #GVariant with a floating |
| * reference. |
| * |
| * Using this function on the return value of the user's callback allows |
| * the user to do whichever is more convenient for them. The caller |
| * will always receives exactly one full reference to the value: either |
| * the one that was returned in the first place, or a floating reference |
| * that has been converted to a full reference. |
| * |
| * This function has an odd interaction when combined with |
| * g_variant_ref_sink() running at the same time in another thread on |
| * the same #GVariant instance. If g_variant_ref_sink() runs first then |
| * the result will be that the floating reference is converted to a hard |
| * reference. If g_variant_take_ref() runs first then the result will |
| * be that the floating reference is converted to a hard reference and |
| * an additional reference on top of that one is added. It is best to |
| * avoid this situation. |
| * |
| * Returns: the same @value |
| **/ |
| GVariant * |
| g_variant_take_ref (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| g_return_val_if_fail (value != NULL, NULL); |
| g_return_val_if_fail (!g_atomic_ref_count_compare (&value->ref_count, 0), NULL); |
| |
| g_atomic_int_and (&value->state, ~STATE_FLOATING); |
| |
| return value; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_variant_is_floating: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * |
| * Checks whether @value has a floating reference count. |
| * |
| * This function should only ever be used to assert that a given variant |
| * is or is not floating, or for debug purposes. To acquire a reference |
| * to a variant that might be floating, always use g_variant_ref_sink() |
| * or g_variant_take_ref(). |
| * |
| * See g_variant_ref_sink() for more information about floating reference |
| * counts. |
| * |
| * Returns: whether @value is floating |
| * |
| * Since: 2.26 |
| **/ |
| gboolean |
| g_variant_is_floating (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| g_return_val_if_fail (value != NULL, FALSE); |
| |
| return (value->state & STATE_FLOATING) != 0; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_variant_get_size: |
| * @value: a #GVariant instance |
| * |
| * Determines the number of bytes that would be required to store @value |
| * with g_variant_store(). |
| * |
| * If @value has a fixed-sized type then this function always returned |
| * that fixed size. |
| * |
| * In the case that @value is already in serialized form or the size has |
| * already been calculated (ie: this function has been called before) |
| * then this function is O(1). Otherwise, the size is calculated, an |
| * operation which is approximately O(n) in the number of values |
| * involved. |
| * |
| * Returns: the serialized size of @value |
| * |
| * Since: 2.24 |
| **/ |
| gsize |
| g_variant_get_size (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| g_variant_lock (value); |
| g_variant_ensure_size (value); |
| g_variant_unlock (value); |
| |
| return value->size; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_variant_get_data: |
| * @value: a #GVariant instance |
| * |
| * Returns a pointer to the serialized form of a #GVariant instance. |
| * The returned data may not be in fully-normalised form if read from an |
| * untrusted source. The returned data must not be freed; it remains |
| * valid for as long as @value exists. |
| * |
| * If @value is a fixed-sized value that was deserialized from a |
| * corrupted serialized container then %NULL may be returned. In this |
| * case, the proper thing to do is typically to use the appropriate |
| * number of nul bytes in place of @value. If @value is not fixed-sized |
| * then %NULL is never returned. |
| * |
| * In the case that @value is already in serialized form, this function |
| * is O(1). If the value is not already in serialized form, |
| * serialization occurs implicitly and is approximately O(n) in the size |
| * of the result. |
| * |
| * To deserialize the data returned by this function, in addition to the |
| * serialized data, you must know the type of the #GVariant, and (if the |
| * machine might be different) the endianness of the machine that stored |
| * it. As a result, file formats or network messages that incorporate |
| * serialized #GVariants must include this information either |
| * implicitly (for instance "the file always contains a |
| * %G_VARIANT_TYPE_VARIANT and it is always in little-endian order") or |
| * explicitly (by storing the type and/or endianness in addition to the |
| * serialized data). |
| * |
| * Returns: (transfer none): the serialized form of @value, or %NULL |
| * |
| * Since: 2.24 |
| **/ |
| gconstpointer |
| g_variant_get_data (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| g_variant_lock (value); |
| g_variant_ensure_serialised (value); |
| g_variant_unlock (value); |
| |
| return value->contents.serialised.data; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_variant_get_data_as_bytes: |
| * @value: a #GVariant |
| * |
| * Returns a pointer to the serialized form of a #GVariant instance. |
| * The semantics of this function are exactly the same as |
| * g_variant_get_data(), except that the returned #GBytes holds |
| * a reference to the variant data. |
| * |
| * Returns: (transfer full): A new #GBytes representing the variant data |
| * |
| * Since: 2.36 |
| */ |
| GBytes * |
| g_variant_get_data_as_bytes (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| const gchar *bytes_data; |
| const gchar *data; |
| gsize bytes_size; |
| gsize size; |
| |
| g_variant_lock (value); |
| g_variant_ensure_serialised (value); |
| g_variant_unlock (value); |
| |
| bytes_data = g_bytes_get_data (value->contents.serialised.bytes, &bytes_size); |
| data = value->contents.serialised.data; |
| size = value->size; |
| |
| if (data == NULL) |
| { |
| g_assert (size == 0); |
| data = bytes_data; |
| } |
| |
| if (data == bytes_data && size == bytes_size) |
| return g_bytes_ref (value->contents.serialised.bytes); |
| else |
| return g_bytes_new_from_bytes (value->contents.serialised.bytes, |
| data - bytes_data, size); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * g_variant_n_children: |
| * @value: a container #GVariant |
| * |
| * Determines the number of children in a container #GVariant instance. |
| * This includes variants, maybes, arrays, tuples and dictionary |
| * entries. It is an error to call this function on any other type of |
| * #GVariant. |
| * |
| * For variants, the return value is always 1. For values with maybe |
| * types, it is always zero or one. For arrays, it is the length of the |
| * array. For tuples it is the number of tuple items (which depends |
| * only on the type). For dictionary entries, it is always 2 |
| * |
| * This function is O(1). |
| * |
| * Returns: the number of children in the container |
| * |
| * Since: 2.24 |
| **/ |
| gsize |
| g_variant_n_children (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| gsize n_children; |
| |
| g_variant_lock (value); |
| |
| if (value->state & STATE_SERIALISED) |
| { |
| GVariantSerialised serialised = { |
| value->type_info, |
| (gpointer) value->contents.serialised.data, |
| value->size, |
| value->depth, |
| }; |
| |
| n_children = g_variant_serialised_n_children (serialised); |
| } |
| else |
| n_children = value->contents.tree.n_children; |
| |
| g_variant_unlock (value); |
| |
| return n_children; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_variant_get_child_value: |
| * @value: a container #GVariant |
| * @index_: the index of the child to fetch |
| * |
| * Reads a child item out of a container #GVariant instance. This |
| * includes variants, maybes, arrays, tuples and dictionary |
| * entries. It is an error to call this function on any other type of |
| * #GVariant. |
| * |
| * It is an error if @index_ is greater than the number of child items |
| * in the container. See g_variant_n_children(). |
| * |
| * The returned value is never floating. You should free it with |
| * g_variant_unref() when you're done with it. |
| * |
| * Note that values borrowed from the returned child are not guaranteed to |
| * still be valid after the child is freed even if you still hold a reference |
| * to @value, if @value has not been serialized at the time this function is |
| * called. To avoid this, you can serialize @value by calling |
| * g_variant_get_data() and optionally ignoring the return value. |
| * |
| * There may be implementation specific restrictions on deeply nested values, |
| * which would result in the unit tuple being returned as the child value, |
| * instead of further nested children. #GVariant is guaranteed to handle |
| * nesting up to at least 64 levels. |
| * |
| * This function is O(1). |
| * |
| * Returns: (transfer full): the child at the specified index |
| * |
| * Since: 2.24 |
| **/ |
| GVariant * |
| g_variant_get_child_value (GVariant *value, |
| gsize index_) |
| { |
| g_return_val_if_fail (index_ < g_variant_n_children (value), NULL); |
| g_return_val_if_fail (value->depth < G_MAXSIZE, NULL); |
| |
| if (~g_atomic_int_get (&value->state) & STATE_SERIALISED) |
| { |
| g_variant_lock (value); |
| |
| if (~value->state & STATE_SERIALISED) |
| { |
| GVariant *child; |
| |
| child = g_variant_ref (value->contents.tree.children[index_]); |
| g_variant_unlock (value); |
| |
| return child; |
| } |
| |
| g_variant_unlock (value); |
| } |
| |
| { |
| GVariantSerialised serialised = { |
| value->type_info, |
| (gpointer) value->contents.serialised.data, |
| value->size, |
| value->depth, |
| }; |
| GVariantSerialised s_child; |
| GVariant *child; |
| |
| /* get the serializer to extract the serialized data for the child |
| * from the serialized data for the container |
| */ |
| s_child = g_variant_serialised_get_child (serialised, index_); |
| |
| /* Check whether this would cause nesting too deep. If so, return a fake |
| * child. The only situation we expect this to happen in is with a variant, |
| * as all other deeply-nested types have a static type, and hence should |
| * have been rejected earlier. In the case of a variant whose nesting plus |
| * the depth of its child is too great, return a unit variant () instead of |
| * the real child. */ |
| if (!(value->state & STATE_TRUSTED) && |
| g_variant_type_info_query_depth (s_child.type_info) >= |
| G_VARIANT_MAX_RECURSION_DEPTH - value->depth) |
| { |
| g_assert (g_variant_is_of_type (value, G_VARIANT_TYPE_VARIANT)); |
| return g_variant_new_tuple (NULL, 0); |
| } |
| |
| /* create a new serialized instance out of it */ |
| child = g_slice_new (GVariant); |
| child->type_info = s_child.type_info; |
| child->state = (value->state & STATE_TRUSTED) | |
| STATE_SERIALISED; |
| child->size = s_child.size; |
| g_atomic_ref_count_init (&child->ref_count); |
| child->depth = value->depth + 1; |
| child->contents.serialised.bytes = |
| g_bytes_ref (value->contents.serialised.bytes); |
| child->contents.serialised.data = s_child.data; |
| |
| return child; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_variant_store: |
| * @value: the #GVariant to store |
| * @data: (not nullable): the location to store the serialized data at |
| * |
| * Stores the serialized form of @value at @data. @data should be |
| * large enough. See g_variant_get_size(). |
| * |
| * The stored data is in machine native byte order but may not be in |
| * fully-normalised form if read from an untrusted source. See |
| * g_variant_get_normal_form() for a solution. |
| * |
| * As with g_variant_get_data(), to be able to deserialize the |
| * serialized variant successfully, its type and (if the destination |
| * machine might be different) its endianness must also be available. |
| * |
| * This function is approximately O(n) in the size of @data. |
| * |
| * Since: 2.24 |
| **/ |
| void |
| g_variant_store (GVariant *value, |
| gpointer data) |
| { |
| g_variant_lock (value); |
| |
| if (value->state & STATE_SERIALISED) |
| { |
| if (value->contents.serialised.data != NULL) |
| memcpy (data, value->contents.serialised.data, value->size); |
| else |
| memset (data, 0, value->size); |
| } |
| else |
| g_variant_serialise (value, data); |
| |
| g_variant_unlock (value); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_variant_is_normal_form: |
| * @value: a #GVariant instance |
| * |
| * Checks if @value is in normal form. |
| * |
| * The main reason to do this is to detect if a given chunk of |
| * serialized data is in normal form: load the data into a #GVariant |
| * using g_variant_new_from_data() and then use this function to |
| * check. |
| * |
| * If @value is found to be in normal form then it will be marked as |
| * being trusted. If the value was already marked as being trusted then |
| * this function will immediately return %TRUE. |
| * |
| * There may be implementation specific restrictions on deeply nested values. |
| * GVariant is guaranteed to handle nesting up to at least 64 levels. |
| * |
| * Returns: %TRUE if @value is in normal form |
| * |
| * Since: 2.24 |
| **/ |
| gboolean |
| g_variant_is_normal_form (GVariant *value) |
| { |
| if (value->state & STATE_TRUSTED) |
| return TRUE; |
| |
| g_variant_lock (value); |
| |
| if (value->depth >= G_VARIANT_MAX_RECURSION_DEPTH) |
| return FALSE; |
| |
| if (value->state & STATE_SERIALISED) |
| { |
| GVariantSerialised serialised = { |
| value->type_info, |
| (gpointer) value->contents.serialised.data, |
| value->size, |
| value->depth |
| }; |
| |
| if (g_variant_serialised_is_normal (serialised)) |
| value->state |= STATE_TRUSTED; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| gboolean normal = TRUE; |
| gsize i; |
| |
| for (i = 0; i < value->contents.tree.n_children; i++) |
| normal &= g_variant_is_normal_form (value->contents.tree.children[i]); |
| |
| if (normal) |
| value->state |= STATE_TRUSTED; |
| } |
| |
| g_variant_unlock (value); |
| |
| return (value->state & STATE_TRUSTED) != 0; |
| } |