Previously embedded libcheck versions did not depend on (u)intmax_t and
doing so would require projects using GStreamer's check framework to add
AX_CREATE_STDINT_H to their configure.ac. A workaround is to fallback to
glib types. This patch assumes that glib.h is always included before
internal-check.h which is ok since everything Gstreamer would include
gst/gstcheck.h instead of directly including internal-check.h.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727826
Reintroduced patches:
* Make sure that fail_if(1) actually fails
from commit 9f99d056a2
New patches due to updated libcheck (based on 0.9.14):
* Checks in m4/check-checks.m4 to cater for new dependencies
* Conditional compile-time compat POSIX fallbacks for libcheck
* Avoid relative paths for libcheck header files
* Make timer_create() usage depend on posix timers, not librt
* Rely on default AX_PTHREAD behavior to allow HAVE_PTHREAD to be used
when checking for types and functions (like clock_gettime())
* Avoid double declaration of clock_gettime() when availabe outside of
librt by making compat clock_gettime() declaration conditional
* check 0.9.9 renamed _fail_unless() and 0.9.12 later renamed it again
to _ck_assert_failed(), so ASSERT_{CRITICAL,WARNING}() now calls this
function
* Remove libcheck fallback infrastructure for malloc(), realloc(),
gettimeofday() and snprintf() since either they appear to be
available or they introduce even more dependencies.
The result is an embedded check in gstreamer that has been tested by
running check tests in core, -base, -good, -bad, -ugly and rtsp-server
on Linux, OSX and Windows.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727826
This lifts the files almost verbatim (the changes being running though
gst-indent and fixing the FSF address) from the upstream respository.
Therefore this commit reverts some GStreamer-specific patches to check
that will be reintroduced next.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727826
The fail() definition was changed to not fail with non-GCC compilers,
unfortunately the change was incorrect and appended the first argument
of fail to the expression string instead of making it the message.
This change does mean that fail() now requires a message to be passed
along.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680755