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Author SHA1 Message Date
aszlig 1964b0c1b1
xkbvalidate: Don't rely on GNU extensions
The only reason why I was using _GNU_SOURCE was because of vasprintf(),
so getting rid of that extension should make the source way more
portable.

When using vsnprintf() with a null pointer for the output buffer and a
size of 0, I wasn't quite sure whether this would be undefined
behaviour, so I looked it up in the C11 standard.

In section 7.21.6.5, it explicitly mentions this case, so we're lucky:

  If n is zero, nothing is written, and s may be a null pointer.

Additionally, section 7.21.6.12 writes the following about vsnprintf():

  The vsnprintf function does not invoke the va_end macro.

So to be sure to avoid undefined behaviour I subsequently added the
corresponding va_end() calls.

With this, the platforms attribute is now "unix", because the program
should now even run on OS X, even though it usually wouldn't be needed.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
2019-08-15 00:59:58 +02:00
aszlig 6e5d2f8963
nixos/xserver: Properly validate XKB options
Checking the keyboard layout has been a long set of hurdles so far, with
several attempts. Originally, the checking was introduced by @lheckemann
in #23709.

The initial implementation just was trying to check whether the symbols/
directory contained the layout name.

Unfortunately, that wasn't enough and keyboard variants weren't
recognized, so if you set layout to eg. "dvorak" it will fail with an
error (#25526).

So my improvement on that was to use sed to filter rules/base.lst and
match the layout against that. I fucked up twice with this, first
because layout can be a comma-separated list which I didn't account for
and second because I ran into a Nix issue (NixOS/nix#1426).

After fixing this, it still wasn't enough (and this is btw. what
localectl also does), because we were *only* matching rules but not
symbols, so using "eu" as a layout won't work either.

I decided now it's the time to actually use libxkbcommon to try
compiling the keyboard options and see whether it succeeds. This comes
in the form of a helper tool called xkbvalidate.

IMHO this approach is a lot less error-prone and we can be sure that we
don't forget about anything because that's what the X server itself uses
to compile the keymap.

Another advantage of this is that we now validate the full set of XKB
options rather than just the layout.

Tested this against a variety of wrong and correct keyboard
configurations and against the "keymap" NixOS VM tests.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @lheckemann, @peti, @7c6f434c, @tohl, @vcunat, @lluchs
Fixes: #27597
2017-07-28 12:39:55 +02:00