The package will arrive eventually, and dataReceived will be emitted.
Otherwise we just end up calling dataReceived to no end.
Thanks Matthias Gerstner <mgerstner@suse.de> for reporting this.
Healthy identity packages shouldn't be that big and we don't want to
allow systems around us to send us ever humongous packages that will
just leave us without any memory.
Thanks Matthias Gerstner <mgerstner@suse.de> for reporting this.
## Summary
LanLinkProviderTest fails on Windows. This patch fixes that.
I believe the root cause is that we are using a shared UDP socket to listen for identity broadcasts both in the LanLinkProvider and in the test. Apparently this works on Linux, but on Windows the LanLinkProvider picks up its own identity packet and pairs with itself.
This patch gives a parameter to LanLinkProvider to allow it to listen and broadcast on different ports, then uses that ability in the test to make the test pass on Windows.
## Test Plan
### Before:
lanlinkprovider test fails, first because it can't bind its UDP listener socket, and then because Windows seems to handle shared sockets differently than Linux, so the UDP broadcasts were not reaching the test's listener.
### After:
lanlinkprovider test seems to pass reliably both in my Windows VM and in the CI
Summary:
As mentioned on telegram, there are some fundamental issues with bluetooth. The only approach I could get working was multiplexing: manually sending multiple streams of data over a single connection.
This is the description of that multiplexing protocol. I have an implementation of this protocol, but I'd first like some feedback to see if this is what we're going to use before finishing up those patches.
See the document itself for more details. I make the protocol forward-compatible, although I don't expect we will need ever that.
Test Plan: None, this is just a description.
Reviewers: #kde_connect, andyholmes, albertvaka
Reviewed By: #kde_connect, albertvaka
Subscribers: albertvaka, kdeconnect
Tags: #kde_connect
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D17987
Summary:
When android closes the payload socket (cancel share) calling m_socket.close() results
in a recursive call to onError eventually leading to a segmentation violation
Test Plan:
Install D16491, share a large file from desktop to android and cancel the share on Android through
the notification. kdeconnectd crashes almost 100% of the time. (It doesn't crash when it detects
a disconnect in sendNextPacket)
Reviewers: #kde_connect, nicolasfella
Reviewed By: #kde_connect, nicolasfella
Subscribers: kdeconnect
Tags: #kde_connect
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D17628