We were testing only for .ioctl files, but we may now have .pcap file
and ended up simply not running the synaptics test unless there was
still a .ioctl file present.
The new elanspi driver in particular needs a lot of ioctl's during the
test. On a normal machine, this would run quite quickly (less than 5s),
however, in busy CI environments this can take longer than 30s, causing
timeouts currently.
Increase the timeout from 10s to 15s. For CI this means the timeout now
is 45s which is hopefully enough.
The new features will be added in 0.16, so match against that. Also,
match against CI_PROJECT_NAME to detect our CI environment (and assume
that umockdev has been patched to the point of supporting all tests).
If the tile in question was hanging over the left edge we would not be
copying the full available width. Fix this and change the test to catch
the error condition (by forcing a too small image and overlap both
ways).
Simplify the code by only selecting the starting point inside the
image/frame and then just checking the both image and frame boundary in
the loop. Not quite as efficient, but it really shouldn't matter too
much here.
Unfortunately, the implementation was not thread safe and was not
sticking to the thread local main context.
In addition to this, it is not entirely clear to me how this API should
behave. The current approach is to simply cancel the transition with the
state machine halting in its current state. Instead, it could also make
sense for cancellation to cause the state machine to return a
G_IO_ERROR_CANCELLED.
As such, simply remove the feature for now. If anyone actually has a
good use-case then we can add it again.
In some situations one may want to guarantee that the last steps of an
SSM are run even when the SSM is completed early or failed.
This can easily be done by making fpi_ssm_mark_completed jump to the
next cleanup stage when called (this also includes mark_failed). Due to
the mechanism, it is still possible to explicitly jump cleanup states by
using fpi_ssm_jump_to_state, including a jump to the final state in
order to skip all cleanup states.
No need to provide a script that will break usage of `meson test --gdb`
when we can use a native and cleaner alternative.
We can then ignore LIBFPRINT_TEST_WRAPPER in basic tests, while it is
still needed by umockdev tests.
We can avoid having multiple device feature-check functions now and
just rely on a few.
Add uncrustify config to properly handle begin/end deprecation macros.
It can be convenient for device users to check what it supports, without
having multiple functions to check each single feature.
So expose this and add tests.
We always assumed a device can verify, but nothing prevents from having
a device that only can identify or capture.
So, given that we've more fine grained checks, let's stop the task if
this is the case.
Allows drivers to define more fine grained features for devices, not
strictly depending on assumptions we can make depending on the
implemented vfuncs.
We keep this per class but could be in theory moved to each instance.
In any case, added an utility function to initialize it in the way we
can ensure that we've a consistent way for setting them across all the
devices.
We were crashing as trying to still call the identify vfunc, so check if
identification is supported and if not return a relative error.
Added test as well
Some OEM will integrate fingerprint device with powerButton. It's
possible that a user may press the power button during fingerprint
enroll or identify. This would lead to unintended PC shutdown or
hibernation. We add pwr_btn_shield cmd and related process to shield
the power button function when the fingerprint functionality (enroll and
identify) is used and restore power button function afterwards.
We may want to be able to talk with the device while it's closed to
queue commands to be performed once it opens (could be even a script),
so to do this we need to close the device first, send those commands and
eventually process them.
We used a trick to send an invalid command before that was ignored by
release, but having the device available is just easier to handle.
So, when keep alive is enabled we don't stop the listener when closing
but only on actual device disposition.
The idea of the test was just checking what happens when we're opening a
device multiple times while a first request is still going.
However, it actually ends up also checking the previous commit change
because without it we'd stop the close iteration before the device is
actually closed and stop the open iteration before the device is
actually opened, leading to an infinite loop.
When opening the device we can process commands that we left for that
after the previous close, to do that we only have to inject an invalid
command that will be processed (and ignored) while closing, so that at
next device opening we will be able to proceed with the previously
sent commands.
Add tests to finally check this case!