Mercurial > pidgin.yaz
view doc/sound-signals.dox @ 23995:85bed17fe5c1
The variable we use to keep track of the watcher of the ssl connection
should be unsigned. This isn't really a problem in Pidgin, where we
use glib's mainloop and GIOChannels because glib starts assigning the
handle IDs sequentially starting from 1.
But if an eventloop implementation ever returns a handle ID greater
than the largest possible signed integer (2,147,483,647) then we
won't be able to remove the watcher because purple_ssl_close() in
sslconn.c only removes it if inpa > 0, and since it interprets inpa
as a signed value then handles over 2,147,483,647 appear as negative
numbers.
I stumbled upon this when playing around with libevent, which can
use epoll. My implementation generated a random handle ID which
was sometimes greater than 2,147,483,647.
I don't believe this breaks binary compatibility. And I don't think
it breaks source compatibility, but I guess it might depend on what
compiler you're using.
author | Mark Doliner <mark@kingant.net> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 04 Sep 2008 18:04:29 +0000 |
parents | e0613cf8c493 |
children |
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/** @page sound-signals Sound Signals @signals @signal playing-sound-event @endsignals @see sound.h <hr> @signaldef playing-sound-event @signalproto gboolean (*playing_sound_event)(PurpleSoundEventID event, PurpleAccount *account); @endsignalproto @signaldesc Emitted when libpurple is going to play a sound event. This can be used to cancel playing sound by returning TRUE. @param event The event this sound represents. @param account The account the sound is being played for. @return @c TRUE if the sound should not be played, or @c FALSE otherwise. @endsignaldef */ // vim: syntax=c.doxygen tw=75 et