[KDE/Mac] Review Request 120573: [OS X] make KDE's trash use the OS X trash

René J.V. Bertin rjvbertin at gmail.com
Wed Oct 15 16:25:05 UTC 2014



> On Oct. 14, 2014, 11:13 p.m., David Faure wrote:
> > kioslave/trash/trashimpl.cpp, line 170
> > <https://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/120573/diff/6/?file=318520#file318520line170>
> >
> >     Shouldn't this return false like the other blocks?
> >     
> >     And then I would swap the if and else blocks, removing the '!' in the condition... so that all if() blocks follow the same pattern.
> >     
> >     I see that the code below tries to cope with the case where we couldn't create KDE.trash ... but then we shouldn't set any error code, if we fallback to another solution.
> >     
> >     However I'm not sure I understand why this could happen though. Why wouldn't we be able to create "KDE.trash" but we would be able to create "info"? Well, this would be the case if KDE.trash existed already and was owned by another user, but then the same could happen with "info"...

Modified as suggested. I agree that the error shouldn't occur. Normally it *cannot* occur for the reason you indicate unless another user wrote an entry in this user's Trash explicitly and "by hand". However I'm not sure how KDE_mkdir handles a situation in which a (read-only) _file_ of the same name is already present, owned by the same user. While that is unlikely it's not entirely impossible either.


> On Oct. 14, 2014, 11:13 p.m., David Faure wrote:
> > kioslave/trash/trashimpl.cpp, line 351
> > <https://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/120573/diff/6/?file=318520#file318520line351>
> >
> >     this comment doesn't match the code in the macro, which merely concatenates two strings, it doesn't check anything nor create anything.
> >     
> >     On that note, macros expanding to code are not great... functions are much better.
> >     
> >     Or in this case, it's a two-liner used twice, I would just inline ("duplicate") the code.

Oh yes, the macro checks something, and creates it if it doesn't exist - or should I say that the `testDir` function called by the macro does that?

Understood that duplicating the code is acceptable here.


> On Oct. 14, 2014, 11:13 p.m., David Faure wrote:
> > kioslave/trash/trashimpl.cpp, line 382
> > <https://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/120573/diff/6/?file=318520#file318520line382>
> >
> >     same as above, why do we want this fallback?

What else would we want to do? I haven't seen provisions to move only the file and not create the `.trashinfo` entry that contains the relevant meta-data. I'm inclined to try as hard/much as possible to achieve "normal" behaviour, and have to tell the user that we couldn't move an item to the wastebin.


> On Oct. 14, 2014, 11:13 p.m., David Faure wrote:
> > kioslave/trash/trashimpl.cpp, line 854
> > <https://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/120573/diff/6/?file=318520#file318520line854>
> >
> >     deleteEmptyTrashInfraStructure is implemented on all OSes, but only called on Mac, which seems a bit inconsistent.
> >     
> >     I looked at the trash spec again, and given the special permissions required on trash dirs in other partitions (DIR/.Trash or DIR/.Trash-$uid), I would feel safer if we didn't delete trash infrastructure.
> >     So I would make the entire method OSX only.
> >     
> >     BTW you should use Q_OS_OSX instead of Q_OS_MAC. iOS for sure doesn't work this way.
> 
> René J.V. Bertin wrote:
>     KDE on iOS, seriously? Even if so, I'd hope Qt don't use Q_OS_MAC for that, because
>     1 MAC as in Macintosh refers to a line of desktop and laptop computers, not the iDevices
>     2 iOS is in fact an embedded form of OS X

Re: iOS: here's how Qt5 defines the platform tokens:

```C++
#if defined(Q_OS_DARWIN)
#  define Q_OS_MAC
#  if defined(Q_OS_DARWIN64)
#     define Q_OS_MAC64
#  elif defined(Q_OS_DARWIN32)
#     define Q_OS_MAC32
#  endif
#  include <TargetConditionals.h>
#  if defined(TARGET_OS_IPHONE) && TARGET_OS_IPHONE
#     define Q_OS_IOS
#  elif defined(TARGET_OS_MAC) && TARGET_OS_MAC
#     define Q_OS_OSX
#     define Q_OS_MACX // compatibility synonym
#  endif
#endif
```


> On Oct. 14, 2014, 11:13 p.m., David Faure wrote:
> > kioslave/trash/trashimpl.cpp, line 1043
> > <https://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/120573/diff/6/?file=318520#file318520line1043>
> >
> >     such a debug statement is more useful if it prints out the input to the method, i.e. "topdir".
> 
> René J.V. Bertin wrote:
>     Point(s) taken. For now I still don't know in what circumstances trashForMountPoint is called/used. Once that figured out the new debug statements can go altogether ...

I'm keeping the Q_OS_MAC except for the last debug statement, as a reminder to remove them when `trashForMountPoint` has been taken care of.

Unless it's a remnant from the past that's no longer being used?


- René J.V.


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On Oct. 14, 2014, 1:59 p.m., René J.V. Bertin wrote:
> 
> -----------------------------------------------------------
> This is an automatically generated e-mail. To reply, visit:
> https://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/120573/
> -----------------------------------------------------------
> 
> (Updated Oct. 14, 2014, 1:59 p.m.)
> 
> 
> Review request for KDE Software on Mac OS X, KDE Runtime and David Faure.
> 
> 
> Repository: kde-runtime
> 
> 
> Description
> -------
> 
> KDE on OS X does not handle the desktop session (no "Plasma") nor can it rely on XDG to obtain the proper paths to use for something like the trash. As a result, all applications that propose to move things they manage to the wastebin (Dolphin, but also digiKam) will store those items in a place that has no particular meaning on OS X, and that will thus tend to fill up.
> 
> OS X stores trash in one of several locations. Files trashed from the boot volume (and/or the volume containing $HOME, I don't actually know that) end up in `~/.Trash`. Files deleted from other volumes end up in `/Volumes/volName/.Trashes/uid`, where volName is the volume name (regardless whether it's an external or a remote drive; only mounted NFS shares are handled differently) and uid the numerical user id. Permissions on `.Trashes` are the same as those expected by KDE.
> 
> The kio_trash kioslave appears to support several actual trash directory locations, just like OS X. `TrashImpl::init()` creates a standard trash in `~/.local/share/Trash` (at least under OS X) but also `TrashImpl::trashForMountPoint()` that is used in cases I have not yet encountered.
> 
> On OS X, my modified `TrashImpl::init()` sets the standard trash directory to `~/.Trash/KDE.trash` and will create the `files` and `info` subdirectories as required, because they will of course be deleted when the user empties the OS X trash. `TrashImpl::fileRemoved()` has been modified to call a new function, `deleteEmptyTrashInfraStructure` to delete the KDE trash's internal infrastructure when the wastebin is empty so that OS X also sees the trash as emptied. (Since implementing `deleteEmptyTrashInfraStructure` this feature actually works, as expected as far as I can tell).
> 
> Remains to be done:
> - determine in what cases `trashForMountPoint()` is used, and finish the modifications for it to use `/.Trashes/uid/KDE.trash`
> 
> 
> Diffs
> -----
> 
>   kioslave/trash/kcmtrash.cpp f4811fd 
>   kioslave/trash/trashimpl.h bc68723 
>   kioslave/trash/trashimpl.cpp 30ee05b 
> 
> Diff: https://git.reviewboard.kde.org/r/120573/diff/
> 
> 
> Testing
> -------
> 
> On OS X 10.6.8 with kdelibs and kde-runtime git/4.14, using Dolphin. Tested actions are
> - move items to wastebin from $HOME and a directory on a different volume
> - restore items to both places
> - empty wastebin through Dolphin
> - empty OS X trashcan
> 
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> René J.V. Bertin
> 
>

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