If we leave a space between the macro name and opening parenthese for argument
lists, the args are not considered macro args (which will be discovered when
using it). I experienced this issue while testing code on some plug-in
yesterday, so thought I might as well fix all these broken macros for casting to
the specific GimpPlugIn subclass, so that we won't have a next time.
The various information (width, height, image type and number of layers) are
those of the full image, not of the thumbnail. Make it clear in the docs of
GimpRunThumbnailFunc.
Additionally:
- file-xmc was returning the proper information but variables were wrongly
named, which was confusing.
- Fix file-ico thumbnail proc which was returning the thumbnail width/height.
- In file-darktable, initialize width/height to 0 so that we just don't show any
size when we don't get the information. It's better not to show anything than
completely wrong information (the thumbnail target size).
… than a GimpValueArray.
Similar to other GimpProcedure, move to using a config object. A difference is
that thumbnail procedures are always run non-interactively.
Also fixing WMF load thumbnail procedure: the dimension computation was wrong
when the image was wider than tall.
- This is unneeded in all import procedures. See previous commit. Note though
that this is not because of a change in previous commit. This was already
useless previously. The file set with this PDB function was overridden by the
core anyway (i.e. even before the previous commits).
In app/file/file-import.c:file_import_image(), the imported file is correctly
set (so there is no need to set it from plug-in, which anyway libgimp's
gimp_image_set_file() was not doing) and the XCF file is reset to NULL
(rendering the call to gimp_image_set_file() in a GimpLoadProcedure useless).
- Similarly, this is a useless call in export procedures because
app/file/file-save.c:file_save() overrides such call too. I could only see one
such case for JPEG export, which was quite useless.
- Finally in other types of plug-ins, setting a non-XCF file extension was
interfering with the save feature (similarly to commit e6e73e14c7). I only
fixed the screenshot implementations doing such a thing.
- I left a few usages which will have to be looked at more in details later.
This is the consequence of previous commit. Plug-ins' label and
documentation are now localized before sending these data to GIMP core.
In other words, we replace N_() macros with basic gettext calls.
Hence avoiding the stderr messages. These are going to be localized with
centrally installed catalogs "gimp*-std-plugins", "gimp*-script-fu" and
"gimp*-python".
We now handle core plug-in localizations differently and in particular,
with kind of a reverse logic:
- We don't consider "gimp*-std-plugins" to be the default catalog
anymore. It made sense in the old world where we would consider the
core plug-ins to be the most important and numerous ones. But we want
to push a world where people are even more encouraged to develop their
own plug-ins. These won't use the standard catalog anymore (because
there are nearly no reasons that the strings are the same, it's only a
confusing logic). So let's explicitly set the standard catalogs with
DEFINE_STD_SET_I18N macro (which maps to a different catalog for
script-fu plug-ins).
- Doing something similar for Python plug-ins which have again their own
catalog.
- Getting rid of the INIT_I18N macro since now all the locale domain
binding is done automatically by libgimp when using the set_i18n()
method infrastructure.
As explained in previous commits, the _peek_ call is advantageous
because:
- It is less bug-prone as we don't have to handle freeing the string. In
all the cases I changed, I even spotted at least 2 cases where we were
leaking a string (in file-mng, `temp_file_name` is never freed; and we
were also leaking in an error case of gfig).
- As a consequence of the previous point: simpler code with less lines.
- In local file cases, the _peek_ variant does not even need to allocate
an additional string.
- In other case, if we query several times the path, it is allocated
once and cached so it stays efficient.
- When possible, working on the GFile rather than on a path string may
be more robust. For instance I changed one g_unlink() into a
g_file_delete(). Actually most reading/writing should be done with the
GIO API when possible, but I didn't want to change too much code
logics on this commit.
The gimp_drawable_type() is an issue though as gimp_drawable_get_type()
is already defined as a common GObject API.
Though I'm actually wondering if GimpImageType is well called. Rather
than Type, shouldn't we go with ColorModel?
sed -i 's/\<gimp_drawable_bpp\>/gimp_drawable_get_bpp/g' "$@"
sed -i 's/\<gimp_drawable_width\>/gimp_drawable_get_width/g' "$@"
sed -i 's/\<gimp_drawable_height\>/gimp_drawable_get_height/g' "$@"
sed -i 's/\<gimp_drawable_offsets\>/gimp_drawable_get_offsets/g' "$@"
Similarly to the previous commit, it is not only about using the new
API. I also make sure we do not assume that parasite data is
nul-terminated. In many places, we were just assuming so because these
were supposed to be parasite our code set. Yet these are data input
contained in files which can be wrong for any reason (corrupted file,
bugs, other scripts/plug-ins editing these parasites…). So instead of
assuming string parasites are always correctly formatted, I make sure
they are nul-terminated by passing them through g_strndup() when
necessary.
This fixes various similar warnings:
> file-xmc.c:2276:53: warning: ‘save_rgn.height’ may be used uninitialized in this function
Note that I have not looked in details, but it would seem that these are
actually initialized by get_cropped_region() which uses goto-s quite
extensively, so obviously it's hard to follow (for humans as well as for
the compiler). So let's just assume there is no code error and let's
just add default initialization to silence the compiler.
This commit just changes our saving API (i.e. the GimpSaveProcedure
class) to take an array of drawables as argument instead of a single
drawable.
It actually doesn't matter much for exporting as the whole API seems
more or less bogus there and all formats plug-ins mostly care only
whether they will merge/flatten all visible layers (the selected ones
don't really matter) or if the format supports layers of some sort. It
may be worth later strengthening a bit this whole logics, and maybe
allow partial exports for instance.
As for saving, it was not even looking at the passed GimpDrawable either
and was simply re-querying the active layer anyway.
Note that I don't implement the multi-selection saving in XCF yet in
this commit. I only updated the API. The reason is that the current
commit won't be backportable to gimp-2-10 because it is an API break. On
the other hand, the code to save multi-selection can still be backported
even though the save() API will only pass a single drawable (as I said
anyway, this argument was mostly bogus until now, hence it doesn't
matter much for 2.10 logics).
gimp_int_radio_group_new() was still complaining about the scope of
radio_button_callback(). Make it (scope notified) because it needs to
stay alive after the function returns and may be called multiple times.
Also adding a GDestroyNotify to free the callback data once the widget
is destroyed (additionally it will also serve as a notifier for bindings
to properly free the callback closure itself, not only it's data).
With this last one done, GObject Introspection generation now happens
without any warning output.
and in an attack of madness, changes almost all file plug-in
code to use GFile instead of filenames, which means passing
the GFile down to the bottom and get its filename at the very
end where it's actually needed.
We now have both variants, one returning a GList, and another
returning an array. Turns out that while a list is often nicer,
sometimes a random-access array really keeps the code much simpler.
Adapt all plug-ins, and clean up a bit (like use g_list_reverse() once
instead of iterating the list reversed).
And always pass URIs to all file procedures, the ones what didn't
register as "handles remove" will only ever get local file:// URIs.
Change all file plug-ins (also legacy ones) to expect URIs instead
of filenames, and convert to local paths in the plug-in.
The wire protocol should now be almost 100% clean of non-UTF-8 strings.
Add missing fclose invocations and fix copy-paste issue.
This issues has been discovered by coverity scan proceeded by Red Hat.
Fixed some mistakes in the patch and added more fclose() (Mitch)
(cherry picked from commit 56c8f8320d)
After discussing with Mitch and understanding better the X bitmap/pixmap
history, I make the warning more specific to X bitmap cursors only (not
pixmap).
Also I can see our code always exports RGBA data, so I am not quite sure
if this warning even makes sense since X bitmaps are bicolor maps. On
the other hand, Mitch tells me that "these days gdk turns pixbufs into
bitmaps if the x server doesn't support rgba cursors", so maybe that can
still be of use to warn cursor designers for max compatibility.
Still that's pretty old compatibility stuff, so let's replace "may" by
"might".
Leading 0s have no special value, we use base 10 anyway. Removing
leading 0s allows to not trigger the 8-digit test, hence modify a valid
cursor size unecessarily.
We were basing our max export size on a macro value defined in
libXCursor code: MAX_BITMAP_CURSOR_SIZE. This macro is still defined in
libXCursor and still has the same value (64), yet it is unsure how far
or even where this is enforced since it seems we can get at least 96px
cursors in GNOME/X11.
As a consequence, this commit:
- still warns when cursor size is over this value, with more explicit
text, yet does not change the cursor size anymore! So it is now
possible to export bigger cursors, but you still get a warning.
- only changes the cursor size for the existing more-than-8-digits test
and I add a warning when it does so (we should never modify an image
silently!).
- adds the size 96 as not triggering the warning about GNOME Settings
since it definitely looks like this size is valid there (according to
my own empirical tests). Also since 96 is higher than the libXCursor
current MAX macro value, this really raises the question to where this
max is enforced and whether we should not just drop the first warning.
Note that it breaks a bit the string freeze since I modify one string
and adds one. Sorry for this!
A malicious XMC file can contain an invalid TOC count, which could lead
to an out of boundary write on 32 bit systems due to integer overflow.
This error occurs during thumbnail creation.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Stoeckmann <tobias@stoeckmann.org>
...in both the core and libgimp.
Images now know what the default mode for new layers is:
- NORMAL for empty images
- NORMAL for images with any non-legacy layer
- NORMAL_LEGAVY for images with only legacy layers
This changes behavior when layers are created from the UI, but *also*
when created by plug-ins (yes there is a compat issue here):
- Most (all?) single-layer file importers now create NORMAL layers
- Screenshot, Webpage etc also create NORMAL layers
Scripts that create images from scratch (logos etc) should not be
affected because they usually have NORMAL_LEGACY hardcoded.
3rd party plug-ins and scripts will also behave old-style unless they
get ported to gimp_image_get_default_new_layer_mode().
with proper value names. Mark most values as _BROKEN because they use
weird alpha compositing that has to die. Move GimpLayerModeEffects to
libgimpbase, deprecate it, and set it as compat enum for GimpLayerMode.
Add the GimpLayerModeEffects values as compat constants to script-fu
and pygimp.