This command is useful to immediately continue rather than waiting for
input. It is only useful for non-scanning device actions and can be
important when steps need to be explicitly skipped (e.g. to inject an
error in the second command without a way to wait in between).
We were attaching the sources to the default main context. Instead, we
should be attaching them to the current tasks main context (or, failing
that, the current thread local main context).
g_idle_add attaches to the default main context, but the rest of
libfprint is using the thread local main context. Switch to use the
internal fpi_device_add_timeout API for the workaround in order to
not rely on the default main context.
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.
libfprint uses the thread local context in almost all cases. Update
FpContext to also use it and make sure that any sources are removed when
the FpContext object is finalized. Otherwise we may run into
use-after-free issues.
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.