Build fails on gcc 4.8 since version 9.1.1 and commit
7524165540:
libtests/cxx11.cc: In function 'void do_regex()':
libtests/cxx11.cc:347:42: error: 'strlen' is not a member of 'std'
std::cregex_iterator m3(str7, str7 + std::strlen(str7), expr4);
^
To fix the build failure, add missing include on cstring
Fixes:
- http://autobuild.buildroot.org/results/ad7fb68ae87850a85509eed80fd0cae8721b10c5
Signed-off-by: Fabrice Fontaine <fontaine.fabrice@gmail.com>
If QPDF_CRYPTO_PROVIDER is set, just run the tests for the given
provider. This is to support cases of running the entire test suite
for each provider. If QPDF_CRYPTO_PROVIDER is not set, run the tests
that exercise the cyrpto provider for each available provider.
Have classes contain only a single private member of type
PointerHolder<Members>. This makes it safe to change the structure of
the Members class without breaking binary compatibility. Many of the
classes already follow this pattern quite successfully. This brings in
the rest of the class that are part of the public API.
This makes all integer type conversions that have potential data loss
explicit with calls that do range checks and raise an exception. After
this commit, qpdf builds with no warnings when -Wsign-conversion
-Wconversion is used with gcc or clang or when -W3 -Wd4800 is used
with MSVC. This significantly reduces the likelihood of potential
crashes from bogus integer values.
There are some parts of the code that take int when they should take
size_t or an offset. Such places would make qpdf not support files
with more than 2^31 of something that usually wouldn't be so large. In
the event that such a file shows up and is valid, at least qpdf would
raise an error in the right spot so the issue could be legitimately
addressed rather than failing in some weird way because of a silent
overflow condition.
Unparse is admittedly strange, but I'd rather be strange and
consistent, and everything else in the qpdf library uses unparse to
serialize. (If you're reading this, the convention of using "unparse"
comes from the "clu" programming language.)