Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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We control the random functions in crypto_core, so we can make them
deterministic more easily. This will help test reproducibility in the
future.
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We're not gaining much from this library, and it's a burden, especially
for windows development.
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This changes only code, no string literals or comments.
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Port of the first tox instance will be 33445 only if this port was not
in use during testing
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Tests are not actually ran on appveyor for now, since they all fault for
some reason. For now, we just build them. Also, some tests are disabled
on msvc entirely, because they don't even compile. We'll need to look
into those, later. They are disabled using `MSVC_DONT_BUILD`.
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Also fix a mistake with forgotten braces around parameter
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This reverts commit 59e2a844f04a8725e8079f854158aa86ef5988b2, and
defines _DARWIN_C_SOURCE in toxcore/network.c
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This reverts commit f3469070fe899e8e4fd88665386a55bad9f77cd8.
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- CFLAG gnu99 was changed to c99.
- CXXFLAG c++98 was changed to c++11.
- CFLAG -pedantic-errors was added so that non-ISO C now throws errors.
- _XOPEN_SOURCE feature test macro added and set to 600 to expose SUSv3
and c99 definitions in modules that required them.
- Fixed tests (and bootstrap daemon logging) that were failing due to
the altered build flags.
- Avoid string suffix misinterpretation; explicit narrowing conversion.
- Misc. additions to .gitignore to make sure build artifacts don't wind
up in version control.
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Previously, all log messages generated by tox_new (which is quite a lot)
were dropped, because client code had no chance to register a logging
callback, yet. This change allows setting the log callback from the
beginning and removes the ability to unset it.
Since the log callback is forever special, since it can't be stateless,
we don't necessarily need to treat it uniformly (with `event`).
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Compiling as C++ changes nothing semantically, but ensures that we don't
break C++ compatibility while also retaining C compatibility.
C++ compatibility is useful for tooling and additional diagnostics and
analyses.
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In a next step, we will remove tests from each file to have a per-binary
split of tests. This will help identify which tests fail most often on
Travis CI.
In another future step, we will split the large one_test into several
auto tests, which will make testing quite a bit slower (adding about 10
seconds setup time to each), but hopefully a lot more stable ("Tox went
offline" should not happen as much anymore).
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