* Add support for creating torrents with a source flag
* Add the source flag functionality for Mac OSX
* Source flag should be a part of the info dictionary
* Address review comments
* Rename "sourceFlag" to "source" since "Flag" is usually reserved for booleans.
* Free the "source" pointer in tr_metainfoFree.
* Add information about transmission-create argument to its manpage.
* Replace all occurences of "sourceFlag" with "source" and use "Source tag" in UI
* Settle on just "Source" in UI
* The last usage of "flag" hopefully bites the dust! ;-)
* Add a missing free for the source in tr_metainfoFree
* Add a "source" field to the torrent-get RPC method
* uncrustify
* Test for torrents having different infohashes due to different source flags.
This is the whole point of this feature, so it makes sense to test it.
* case is important
* try to incorporate the macosx xml changes
* refactor: const correctness
* refactor: fix some implicit conversions
* refactor: make local pointers const if their objects are not modified
* refactor: do not cast away const in torrent-cell-renderer
* refactor: remove call to deprecated gtk_icon_size_lookup_for_settings
* refactor: member functions that do not mutate their objects should be declared const
* chore: do not end comments with a semicolon
* Support .git files (e.g. for worktrees, submodules)
* Fix symlinks in source tarball, switch to TXZ, adjust non-release name
* Remove autotools stuff
Since there is no way to mark parameters as [potentially] unused in
standard C and when using MSVC compiler, use the widely accepted
cast-to-void approach instead.
* refactor: make variant_headers reusable to qt app.
Torrent.cc's `change()` template methods are generically useful to deal
with tr_variant wrangling, but previously were only used in Torrent.cc.
This PR moves them into a new API `VariantHelpers.h` for use by Prefs,
Session, TorrentModel, etc.
* fix: __attribute__(__printf__) warnings
* fix: implicit fallthrough warning
* fixup! fix: implicit fallthrough warning
* fix: disable warnings for 3rd party code
Since we want to leave upstream code as-is
* fixup! fix: disable warnings for 3rd party code
* fixup! fix: disable warnings for 3rd party code
* silence spurious alignment warning
Xrefs
Discussion: https://stackoverflow.com/a/35554349
Macro inspiration: 90ac46f710/f/src/util/util_safealign.h (_35)
* fixup! fix: disable warnings for 3rd party code
* fixup! fix: implicit fallthrough warning
* make uncrustify happy
* remove uncrustify-test.sh
that's probably off-topic for this PR
* fixup! fix: __attribute__(__printf__) warnings
* Update libtransmission/CMakeLists.txt
Co-Authored-By: ckerr <ckerr@github.com>
* fixup! silence spurious alignment warning
* use -w for DISABLE_WARNINGS in Clang
* refactor: fix libtransmission deprecation warnings
* fix: pthread_create's start_routine's return value
This was defined as `void` on non-Windows but should have been `void*`
* chore: uncrustify
* fix: add DISABLE_WARNINGS option for SunPro Studio
* fix "unused in lambda capture" warnings by clang++
* fix 'increases required alignment' warning
Caused from storing int16_t's in a char array.
* fix net.c 'increases required alignment' warning
The code passes in a `struct sockaddr_storage*` which is a padded struct
large enough for the necessary alignment. Unfortunately it was recast as
a `struct sockaddr*` which has less padding and a smaller alignment. The
warning occrred because of these differing alignments.
* make building quieter so warnings are more visible
* fixup! fix 'increases required alignment' warning
* Fix -Wcast-function-type warnings in GTK+ app code
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-terminal/issues/96 talks about both
the issue and its solution.
GCC 8's -Wcast-function-type, enabled by -Wextra, is problematic in glib
applications because it's idiomatic there to recast function signatures,
e.g. `g_slist_free(list, (GFunc)g_free, NULL);`.
Disabling the warning with pragmas causes "unrecognized pragma" warnings
on clang and older versions of gcc, and disabling the warning could miss
actual bugs. GCC defines `void (*)(void)` as a special case that matches
anything so we can silence warnings by double-casting through GCallback.
In the previous example, the warning is silenced by changing the code to
read `g_slist_free(list, (GFunc)(GCallback)g_free, NULL);`).
* fixup! fix "unused in lambda capture" warnings by clang++
* fixup! fix "unused in lambda capture" warnings by clang++
* fix two more libtransmission compiler warnings
* fix: in watchdir, use TR_ENABLE_ASSERTS not NDEBUG
RFC 2616 defines headers as case-insensitive, so if rpc is behind a
reverse proxy that lowers the case of headers, transmission will not
parse them correctly.
A new wrapper function, `tr_strcasestr` is added to
libtransmission/utils.c to allow for comparisons of headers case
insensitively, and checks in cmake and autogen are included.
Assignments explicitly enclosed in parentheses are ignored.
* MISRA C:2004, 13.1 - Assignment operators shall not be used in expressions
that yield a Boolean value
* MISRA C++:2008, 6-2-1 - Assignment operators shall not be used in
sub-expressions
* MISRA C:2012, 13.4 - The result of an assignment operator should not be used
* MITRE, CWE-481 - Assigning instead of Comparing
* CERT, EXP45-C. - Do not perform assignments in selection statements
* CERT, EXP51-J. - Do not perform assignments in conditional expressions
* Silence coverity CHECKED_RETURN on added.f load
The existing code behaved alright since added.f is optional.
However, by testing for success we can both silence the warning
and prevent a useless initialization of NULL/0 to added_f and
added_f_length.
* Silence coverity CHECKED_RETURN on added6.f load
ipv6 variant of previous commit.
* Silence coverity CHECKED_RETURN writing benc strs
saveStringFunc() gets the target string by calling tr_variantGetStr().
It previously didn't check to see if this function succeeded because
saveStringFunc() isn't reached without the type already being known.
However, checking the return value costs nothing and makes Coverity happy.
* Silence coverity CHECKED_RETURN on ut metadata
Like earlier few Coverity commits in this PR, we're handling optional
values by declaring stack locals set to the default (e.g. -1) and then
trying to read the variant.
Unlike the earlier commits, there is a two-part step to thise read:
checking for the metadata, then checking for the individual fields.
The earlier fixes' aproach -- e.g. initializing to -1 only if the reads
failed -- would involve new nested conditionals. I find the new complexity
to outweigh the benefit of removing the dead store, so in this case I'm
casting the return value to `(void)` to tell Coverity to shush.
* Silence coverity CHECKED_RETURN on scrape
Check the return value of tr_variantGetInt() when showing
seeder and leecher counts in transmission-show.
* Silence CHECKED_RETURN on rpc recently-active
When building a list of removed torrent IDs from variants, confirm that
we can read the IDs from the variants before adding them to the list.
I don't _think_ this would have failed before, but Coverity's right that
it's reasonable to add a safeguard here.
* fix: better fix to serializing benc strings
The approach in 33e2ece7e5 was
a little problematic: GetString() shouldn't fail here; but if
it somehow did, we still want to encode a zero-length benc string here.
* chore: make uncrustify happy
* applied changes from https://github.com/Elbandi/transmission/tree/elbandi/labels to official transmission repo
* Fix compilation errors
* Address review comments
Changed `tr_ptrArray* labels` to `tr_ptrArray labels`;
Removed tr_ptrArrayNew() tr_ptrArrayDup() tr_ptrArrayFree()
Use tr_strsep() to split string by delimiters
Update transmission-remote.1
Update rpc-spec.txt
* Fix warning, address comments
* Rebase, fix formatting and address comments
Use uncrustify to format changed files
Fix "const <type>" -> "<type> const"
Fix small comments
* Lock torrent for setLabels, check for duplicates
* Check for empty labels in daemon
* Stop on first error
This way all the qualifiers (`const`, `volatile`, `mutable`) are grouped
together, e.g. `T const* const x` vs. `const T* const x`. Also helps reading
types right-to-left, e.g. "constant pointer to constant T" vs. "constant
pointer to T which is constant".
There're places where manual intervention is still required as uncrustify
is not ideal (unfortunately), but at least one may rely on it to do the
right thing most of the time (e.g. when sending in a patch).
The style itself is quite different from what we had before but making it
uniform across all the codebase is the key. I also hope that it'll make the
code more readable (YMMV) and less sensitive to further changes.