Autocompletion failed for nicknames using non Latin scripts. We used
`g_str_to_ascii`, which replaces characters it cannot transliterate with
'?', leading search failures and false matches between different
scripts.
Now we do:
Use `g_utf8_casefold` for case-insensitive UTF-8 comparison. This
ensures that like 'Σ' correctly match 'σ' across all Unicode scripts,
providing correct results for non English nicknames.
If we don't fine anything typing a base ASCII character matches an
accented one (typing `e` matches `è`). This pass uses `g_str_to_ascii`
followed by `g_ascii_strdown` for comparison. It is now restricted to
run if the search string itself is valid ASCII, preventing the
"everything matches '?'" bug in non Latin scripts.
Autocomplete items are sorted using `strcmp`. `g_utf8_collate` provides
linguistical ordering for a specific language. But its behavior is
locale dependent and undefined when comparing strings from different
scripts. `strcmp` does byte-wise ordering that correctly follows Unicode
code order for UTF-8 strings.
As 9f2abc75 accidentally got the ordering of some of the includes wrong,
I decided to propose my initial solution again.
Additional to that, I've opened a MR against CMocka to solve this on
their side, since I believe that the current way this is done is not
sustainable [0].
[0] https://gitlab.com/cmocka/cmocka/-/merge_requests/91
Fixes: 9f2abc75 ("Fix tests with gcc15 (uintptr_t)")
Signed-off-by: Steffen Jaeckel <s@jaeckel.eu>
## Summary
Fixes https://github.com/profanity-im/profanity/issues/1907
Update functional and unit test code to comply with the current cmocka test runner.
## Changes
- `UnitTest` struct to `CMUnitTest` struct
- `unit_test()` macro to `cmocka_unit_test(f)` macro
- `unit_test_setup_teardown()` macro to `cmocka_unit_test_setup_teardown` macro
- `run_tests()` macro to `cmocka_run_group_tests()` function
- Setup and teardown functions return `int` instead of `void`
## Testing
### Unit Tests
`make check`
### Functional Tests
I did not compile or run functional tests because they are *shelved* for now.
### Valgrind
I'm not entirely sure how to fun Valgrind in this case. I did not do fancy memory management, so it should be fine.