This is equivalent to the P2P_EVENT_INVITATION_RECEIVED signal on the
control interface. It can be used to sent the Invitation Received signal
to applications written using D-Bus.
Signed-off-by: Maneesh Jain <maneesh.jain@samsung.com>
add_interface() did not check for os_strdup() return value and could end
up dereferencing a NULL pointer if memory allocation failed.
Signed-off-by: Jouni Malinen <j@w1.fi>
This updates these files to use the license notification that uses only
the BSD license. The changes were acknowledged by email (Dan Williams
<dcbw@redhat.com>, Sun, 01 Jul 2012 15:53:36 -0500).
Signed-hostap: Jouni Malinen <j@w1.fi>
Commit e9c3c1afed added a new D-Bus
method and that was enough to push the Introspect XML buffer over
the previously allocated 8000 bytes. Increase the buffer size to
make enough room for P2P interface. In addition, add a debug
message to indicate if an XML segment does not fit into the buffer
to make this types of failures somewhat easier to catch.
Signed-hostap: Jouni Malinen <j@w1.fi>
The read, write, read-write permissions can be figured out from
getter/setter function pointers, so there is no need for maintaining
that information separately.
There is no need to duplicate the method/signal/property arrays that
were registered for objects. The registration was using static arrays
on methods/signals/properties in all places and we can as well use
those throughout without having to allocate memory and copy all the
entries for every object. This reduces number of allocations and
amount of unnecessary code quite a bit.
There is no need to go through methods, signals, and properties in
two loops and only collect interfaces in the first run. Get rid of
unnecessary CPU use by generating the XML data for interfaces with
a single pass.
The XML used in D-Bus introspection is simple and there is no need to use
libxml2 to generate it. This gets rid of the dependency on the large
library by using internal XML generation.
Simpler to use for loops instead of handling next pointer selection
in all places. In addition, couple of functions could have ended up
in an infinite loop on error path since the pointer update was missed.