- the host system's /etc/group is being read, and that varies between
host OS versions; since I was doing today's release on KaOS, the
test was failing because of arbitrary differences between the
default groups on each Linux flavor.
FIXES#1604
(Admittedly, this fixes the problem only when there's Plasma Solid automount
present, and not any of the other kinds; but none of those have been reported
yet, and adding them into AutoMount.cpp is opaque to the rest of the
system)
- It shouldn't be necessary to explicitly .get() pointers for
logging, and it's convenient to know when a pointer is smart.
* no annotation means raw (e.g. @0x0)
* S means shared
* U means unique
- switch logging in job to VERBOSE because we don't want to be printing
pointers to the regular session log
- switch logging in test to VERBOSE to actually see the messages from the Job
- hook the test into the build
The popup now cuts down messages to a manageable length.
Hopefully the part that is preserved, will still show
something meaningful for the user (8 lines of text should
be sufficient for the kind of things we do).
FIXES#1613
- Although unique_ptr is only used when ICU is enabled, include it
always because it is likely that we'll use more unique_ptr
in the implementation at some point.
Ever since signed shim binaries for multiple architectures became
available, the shim binaries installed in Linux distributions have
been renamed to include the EFI architecture in the binary names.
This started in Fedora, but is now used in openSUSE and Ubuntu too.
Reference for shim binary names comes from shim spec in Fedora:
d8c3c8e392/f/shim.spec (_23-32)
- Some minor bits snuck in with the string-truncation code
- While here, make UPDATE_BUTTON_PROPERTY more statement-like
so it doesn't confuse code-formatters.
Writing `Logger::NoQuote{}`` has annoyed me for a while, so
switch it to a constant, like SubEntry, so it looks more
like a regular manipulator object.
The value inside a unique_ptr can't be opaque, it needs to be known
at any site where the pointer may be deleted. shared_ptr does not
have that (deletion is part of the shared_ptr object, which is larger
than the unique_ptr) and so can be used for opaque deletions.