| /* |
| * Copyright © 2008 Kristian Høgsberg |
| * |
| * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining |
| * a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the |
| * "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including |
| * without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, |
| * distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to |
| * permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to |
| * the following conditions: |
| * |
| * The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the |
| * next paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial |
| * portions of the Software. |
| * |
| * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, |
| * EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF |
| * MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND |
| * NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS |
| * BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN |
| * ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN |
| * CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE |
| * SOFTWARE. |
| */ |
| |
| /** \file wayland-util.h |
| * |
| * \brief Utility classes, functions, and macros. |
| */ |
| |
| #ifndef WAYLAND_UTIL_H |
| #define WAYLAND_UTIL_H |
| |
| #include <math.h> |
| #include <stddef.h> |
| #include <inttypes.h> |
| #include <stdarg.h> |
| |
| #ifdef __cplusplus |
| extern "C" { |
| #endif |
| |
| /** Visibility attribute */ |
| #if defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ >= 4 |
| #define WL_EXPORT __attribute__ ((visibility("default"))) |
| #else |
| #define WL_EXPORT |
| #endif |
| |
| /** Deprecated attribute */ |
| #if defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ >= 4 |
| #define WL_DEPRECATED __attribute__ ((deprecated)) |
| #else |
| #define WL_DEPRECATED |
| #endif |
| |
| /** |
| * Printf-style argument attribute |
| * |
| * \param x Ordinality of the format string argument |
| * \param y Ordinality of the argument to check against the format string |
| * |
| * \sa https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-3.2.1/gcc/Function-Attributes.html |
| */ |
| #if defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ >= 4 |
| #define WL_PRINTF(x, y) __attribute__((__format__(__printf__, x, y))) |
| #else |
| #define WL_PRINTF(x, y) |
| #endif |
| |
| /** \class wl_object |
| * |
| * \brief A protocol object. |
| * |
| * A `wl_object` is an opaque struct identifying the protocol object |
| * underlying a `wl_proxy` or `wl_resource`. |
| * |
| * \note Functions accessing a `wl_object` are not normally used by client code. |
| * Clients should normally use the higher level interface generated by the |
| * scanner to interact with compositor objects. |
| * |
| */ |
| struct wl_object; |
| |
| /** |
| * Protocol message signature |
| * |
| * A wl_message describes the signature of an actual protocol message, such as a |
| * request or event, that adheres to the Wayland protocol wire format. The |
| * protocol implementation uses a wl_message within its demarshal machinery for |
| * decoding messages between a compositor and its clients. In a sense, a |
| * wl_message is to a protocol message like a class is to an object. |
| * |
| * The `name` of a wl_message is the name of the corresponding protocol message. |
| * |
| * The `signature` is an ordered list of symbols representing the data types |
| * of message arguments and, optionally, a protocol version and indicators for |
| * nullability. A leading integer in the `signature` indicates the _since_ |
| * version of the protocol message. A `?` preceding a data type symbol indicates |
| * that the following argument type is nullable. While it is a protocol violation |
| * to send messages with non-nullable arguments set to `NULL`, event handlers in |
| * clients might still get called with non-nullable object arguments set to |
| * `NULL`. This can happen when the client destroyed the object being used as |
| * argument on its side and an event referencing that object was sent before the |
| * server knew about its destruction. As this race cannot be prevented, clients |
| * should - as a general rule - program their event handlers such that they can |
| * handle object arguments declared non-nullable being `NULL` gracefully. |
| * |
| * When no arguments accompany a message, `signature` is an empty string. |
| * |
| * Symbols: |
| * |
| * * `i`: int |
| * * `u`: uint |
| * * `f`: fixed |
| * * `s`: string |
| * * `o`: object |
| * * `n`: new_id |
| * * `a`: array |
| * * `h`: fd |
| * * `?`: following argument is nullable |
| * |
| * While demarshaling primitive arguments is straightforward, when demarshaling |
| * messages containing `object` or `new_id` arguments, the protocol |
| * implementation often must determine the type of the object. The `types` of a |
| * wl_message is an array of wl_interface references that correspond to `o` and |
| * `n` arguments in `signature`, with `NULL` placeholders for arguments with |
| * non-object types. |
| * |
| * Consider the protocol event wl_display `delete_id` that has a single `uint` |
| * argument. The wl_message is: |
| * |
| * \code |
| * { "delete_id", "u", [NULL] } |
| * \endcode |
| * |
| * Here, the message `name` is `"delete_id"`, the `signature` is `"u"`, and the |
| * argument `types` is `[NULL]`, indicating that the `uint` argument has no |
| * corresponding wl_interface since it is a primitive argument. |
| * |
| * In contrast, consider a `wl_foo` interface supporting protocol request `bar` |
| * that has existed since version 2, and has two arguments: a `uint` and an |
| * object of type `wl_baz_interface` that may be `NULL`. Such a `wl_message` |
| * might be: |
| * |
| * \code |
| * { "bar", "2u?o", [NULL, &wl_baz_interface] } |
| * \endcode |
| * |
| * Here, the message `name` is `"bar"`, and the `signature` is `"2u?o"`. Notice |
| * how the `2` indicates the protocol version, the `u` indicates the first |
| * argument type is `uint`, and the `?o` indicates that the second argument |
| * is an object that may be `NULL`. Lastly, the argument `types` array indicates |
| * that no wl_interface corresponds to the first argument, while the type |
| * `wl_baz_interface` corresponds to the second argument. |
| * |
| * \sa wl_argument |
| * \sa wl_interface |
| * \sa <a href="https://wayland.freedesktop.org/docs/html/ch04.html#sect-Protocol-Wire-Format">Wire Format</a> |
| */ |
| struct wl_message { |
| /** Message name */ |
| const char *name; |
| /** Message signature */ |
| const char *signature; |
| /** Object argument interfaces */ |
| const struct wl_interface **types; |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * Protocol object interface |
| * |
| * A wl_interface describes the API of a protocol object defined in the Wayland |
| * protocol specification. The protocol implementation uses a wl_interface |
| * within its marshalling machinery for encoding client requests. |
| * |
| * The `name` of a wl_interface is the name of the corresponding protocol |
| * interface, and `version` represents the version of the interface. The members |
| * `method_count` and `event_count` represent the number of `methods` (requests) |
| * and `events` in the respective wl_message members. |
| * |
| * For example, consider a protocol interface `foo`, marked as version `1`, with |
| * two requests and one event. |
| * |
| * \code{.xml} |
| * <interface name="foo" version="1"> |
| * <request name="a"></request> |
| * <request name="b"></request> |
| * <event name="c"></event> |
| * </interface> |
| * \endcode |
| * |
| * Given two wl_message arrays `foo_requests` and `foo_events`, a wl_interface |
| * for `foo` might be: |
| * |
| * \code |
| * struct wl_interface foo_interface = { |
| * "foo", 1, |
| * 2, foo_requests, |
| * 1, foo_events |
| * }; |
| * \endcode |
| * |
| * \note The server side of the protocol may define interface <em>implementation |
| * types</em> that incorporate the term `interface` in their name. Take |
| * care to not confuse these server-side `struct`s with a wl_interface |
| * variable whose name also ends in `interface`. For example, while the |
| * server may define a type `struct wl_foo_interface`, the client may |
| * define a `struct wl_interface wl_foo_interface`. |
| * |
| * \sa wl_message |
| * \sa wl_proxy |
| * \sa <a href="https://wayland.freedesktop.org/docs/html/ch04.html#sect-Protocol-Interfaces">Interfaces</a> |
| * \sa <a href="https://wayland.freedesktop.org/docs/html/ch04.html#sect-Protocol-Versioning">Versioning</a> |
| */ |
| struct wl_interface { |
| /** Interface name */ |
| const char *name; |
| /** Interface version */ |
| int version; |
| /** Number of methods (requests) */ |
| int method_count; |
| /** Method (request) signatures */ |
| const struct wl_message *methods; |
| /** Number of events */ |
| int event_count; |
| /** Event signatures */ |
| const struct wl_message *events; |
| }; |
| |
| /** \class wl_list |
| * |
| * \brief Doubly-linked list |
| * |
| * On its own, an instance of `struct wl_list` represents the sentinel head of |
| * a doubly-linked list, and must be initialized using wl_list_init(). |
| * When empty, the list head's `next` and `prev` members point to the list head |
| * itself, otherwise `next` references the first element in the list, and `prev` |
| * refers to the last element in the list. |
| * |
| * Use the `struct wl_list` type to represent both the list head and the links |
| * between elements within the list. Use wl_list_empty() to determine if the |
| * list is empty in O(1). |
| * |
| * All elements in the list must be of the same type. The element type must have |
| * a `struct wl_list` member, often named `link` by convention. Prior to |
| * insertion, there is no need to initialize an element's `link` - invoking |
| * wl_list_init() on an individual list element's `struct wl_list` member is |
| * unnecessary if the very next operation is wl_list_insert(). However, a |
| * common idiom is to initialize an element's `link` prior to removal - ensure |
| * safety by invoking wl_list_init() before wl_list_remove(). |
| * |
| * Consider a list reference `struct wl_list foo_list`, an element type as |
| * `struct element`, and an element's link member as `struct wl_list link`. |
| * |
| * The following code initializes a list and adds three elements to it. |
| * |
| * \code |
| * struct wl_list foo_list; |
| * |
| * struct element { |
| * int foo; |
| * struct wl_list link; |
| * }; |
| * struct element e1, e2, e3; |
| * |
| * wl_list_init(&foo_list); |
| * wl_list_insert(&foo_list, &e1.link); // e1 is the first element |
| * wl_list_insert(&foo_list, &e2.link); // e2 is now the first element |
| * wl_list_insert(&e2.link, &e3.link); // insert e3 after e2 |
| * \endcode |
| * |
| * The list now looks like <em>[e2, e3, e1]</em>. |
| * |
| * The `wl_list` API provides some iterator macros. For example, to iterate |
| * a list in ascending order: |
| * |
| * \code |
| * struct element *e; |
| * wl_list_for_each(e, foo_list, link) { |
| * do_something_with_element(e); |
| * } |
| * \endcode |
| * |
| * See the documentation of each iterator for details. |
| * \sa http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/include/linux/list.h |
| */ |
| struct wl_list { |
| /** Previous list element */ |
| struct wl_list *prev; |
| /** Next list element */ |
| struct wl_list *next; |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * Initializes the list. |
| * |
| * \param list List to initialize |
| * |
| * \memberof wl_list |
| */ |
| void |
| wl_list_init(struct wl_list *list); |
| |
| /** |
| * Inserts an element into the list, after the element represented by \p list. |
| * When \p list is a reference to the list itself (the head), set the containing |
| * struct of \p elm as the first element in the list. |
| * |
| * \note If \p elm is already part of a list, inserting it again will lead to |
| * list corruption. |
| * |
| * \param list List element after which the new element is inserted |
| * \param elm Link of the containing struct to insert into the list |
| * |
| * \memberof wl_list |
| */ |
| void |
| wl_list_insert(struct wl_list *list, struct wl_list *elm); |
| |
| /** |
| * Removes an element from the list. |
| * |
| * \note This operation leaves \p elm in an invalid state. |
| * |
| * \param elm Link of the containing struct to remove from the list |
| * |
| * \memberof wl_list |
| */ |
| void |
| wl_list_remove(struct wl_list *elm); |
| |
| /** |
| * Determines the length of the list. |
| * |
| * \note This is an O(n) operation. |
| * |
| * \param list List whose length is to be determined |
| * |
| * \return Number of elements in the list |
| * |
| * \memberof wl_list |
| */ |
| int |
| wl_list_length(const struct wl_list *list); |
| |
| /** |
| * Determines if the list is empty. |
| * |
| * \param list List whose emptiness is to be determined |
| * |
| * \return 1 if empty, or 0 if not empty |
| * |
| * \memberof wl_list |
| */ |
| int |
| wl_list_empty(const struct wl_list *list); |
| |
| /** |
| * Inserts all of the elements of one list into another, after the element |
| * represented by \p list. |
| * |
| * \note This leaves \p other in an invalid state. |
| * |
| * \param list List element after which the other list elements will be inserted |
| * \param other List of elements to insert |
| * |
| * \memberof wl_list |
| */ |
| void |
| wl_list_insert_list(struct wl_list *list, struct wl_list *other); |
| |
| /** |
| * Retrieves a pointer to a containing struct, given a member name. |
| * |
| * This macro allows "conversion" from a pointer to a member to its containing |
| * struct. This is useful if you have a contained item like a wl_list, |
| * wl_listener, or wl_signal, provided via a callback or other means, and would |
| * like to retrieve the struct that contains it. |
| * |
| * To demonstrate, the following example retrieves a pointer to |
| * `example_container` given only its `destroy_listener` member: |
| * |
| * \code |
| * struct example_container { |
| * struct wl_listener destroy_listener; |
| * // other members... |
| * }; |
| * |
| * void example_container_destroy(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) |
| * { |
| * struct example_container *ctr; |
| * |
| * ctr = wl_container_of(listener, ctr, destroy_listener); |
| * // destroy ctr... |
| * } |
| * \endcode |
| * |
| * \note `sample` need not be a valid pointer. A null or uninitialised pointer |
| * is sufficient. |
| * |
| * \param ptr Valid pointer to the contained member |
| * \param sample Pointer to a struct whose type contains \p ptr |
| * \param member Named location of \p ptr within the \p sample type |
| * |
| * \return The container for the specified pointer |
| */ |
| #define wl_container_of(ptr, sample, member) \ |
| (__typeof__(sample))((char *)(ptr) - \ |
| offsetof(__typeof__(*sample), member)) |
| |
| /** |
| * Iterates over a list. |
| * |
| * This macro expresses a for-each iterator for wl_list. Given a list and |
| * wl_list link member name (often named `link` by convention), this macro |
| * assigns each element in the list to \p pos, which can then be referenced in |
| * a trailing code block. For example, given a wl_list of `struct message` |
| * elements: |
| * |
| * \code |
| * struct message { |
| * char *contents; |
| * wl_list link; |
| * }; |
| * |
| * struct wl_list *message_list; |
| * // Assume message_list now "contains" many messages |
| * |
| * struct message *m; |
| * wl_list_for_each(m, message_list, link) { |
| * do_something_with_message(m); |
| * } |
| * \endcode |
| * |
| * \param pos Cursor that each list element will be assigned to |
| * \param head Head of the list to iterate over |
| * \param member Name of the link member within the element struct |
| * |
| * \relates wl_list |
| */ |
| #define wl_list_for_each(pos, head, member) \ |
| for (pos = wl_container_of((head)->next, pos, member); \ |
| &pos->member != (head); \ |
| pos = wl_container_of(pos->member.next, pos, member)) |
| |
| /** |
| * Iterates over a list, safe against removal of the list element. |
| * |
| * \note Only removal of the current element, \p pos, is safe. Removing |
| * any other element during traversal may lead to a loop malfunction. |
| * |
| * \sa wl_list_for_each() |
| * |
| * \param pos Cursor that each list element will be assigned to |
| * \param tmp Temporary pointer of the same type as \p pos |
| * \param head Head of the list to iterate over |
| * \param member Name of the link member within the element struct |
| * |
| * \relates wl_list |
| */ |
| #define wl_list_for_each_safe(pos, tmp, head, member) \ |
| for (pos = wl_container_of((head)->next, pos, member), \ |
| tmp = wl_container_of((pos)->member.next, tmp, member); \ |
| &pos->member != (head); \ |
| pos = tmp, \ |
| tmp = wl_container_of(pos->member.next, tmp, member)) |
| |
| /** |
| * Iterates backwards over a list. |
| * |
| * \sa wl_list_for_each() |
| * |
| * \param pos Cursor that each list element will be assigned to |
| * \param head Head of the list to iterate over |
| * \param member Name of the link member within the element struct |
| * |
| * \relates wl_list |
| */ |
| #define wl_list_for_each_reverse(pos, head, member) \ |
| for (pos = wl_container_of((head)->prev, pos, member); \ |
| &pos->member != (head); \ |
| pos = wl_container_of(pos->member.prev, pos, member)) |
| |
| /** |
| * Iterates backwards over a list, safe against removal of the list element. |
| * |
| * \note Only removal of the current element, \p pos, is safe. Removing |
| * any other element during traversal may lead to a loop malfunction. |
| * |
| * \sa wl_list_for_each() |
| * |
| * \param pos Cursor that each list element will be assigned to |
| * \param tmp Temporary pointer of the same type as \p pos |
| * \param head Head of the list to iterate over |
| * \param member Name of the link member within the element struct |
| * |
| * \relates wl_list |
| */ |
| #define wl_list_for_each_reverse_safe(pos, tmp, head, member) \ |
| for (pos = wl_container_of((head)->prev, pos, member), \ |
| tmp = wl_container_of((pos)->member.prev, tmp, member); \ |
| &pos->member != (head); \ |
| pos = tmp, \ |
| tmp = wl_container_of(pos->member.prev, tmp, member)) |
| |
| /** |
| * \class wl_array |
| * |
| * Dynamic array |
| * |
| * A wl_array is a dynamic array that can only grow until released. It is |
| * intended for relatively small allocations whose size is variable or not known |
| * in advance. While construction of a wl_array does not require all elements to |
| * be of the same size, wl_array_for_each() does require all elements to have |
| * the same type and size. |
| * |
| */ |
| struct wl_array { |
| /** Array size */ |
| size_t size; |
| /** Allocated space */ |
| size_t alloc; |
| /** Array data */ |
| void *data; |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * Initializes the array. |
| * |
| * \param array Array to initialize |
| * |
| * \memberof wl_array |
| */ |
| void |
| wl_array_init(struct wl_array *array); |
| |
| /** |
| * Releases the array data. |
| * |
| * \note Leaves the array in an invalid state. |
| * |
| * \param array Array whose data is to be released |
| * |
| * \memberof wl_array |
| */ |
| void |
| wl_array_release(struct wl_array *array); |
| |
| /** |
| * Increases the size of the array by \p size bytes. |
| * |
| * \param array Array whose size is to be increased |
| * \param size Number of bytes to increase the size of the array by |
| * |
| * \return A pointer to the beginning of the newly appended space, or NULL when |
| * resizing fails. |
| * |
| * \memberof wl_array |
| */ |
| void * |
| wl_array_add(struct wl_array *array, size_t size); |
| |
| /** |
| * Copies the contents of \p source to \p array. |
| * |
| * \param array Destination array to copy to |
| * \param source Source array to copy from |
| * |
| * \return 0 on success, or -1 on failure |
| * |
| * \memberof wl_array |
| */ |
| int |
| wl_array_copy(struct wl_array *array, struct wl_array *source); |
| |
| /** |
| * Iterates over an array. |
| * |
| * This macro expresses a for-each iterator for wl_array. It assigns each |
| * element in the array to \p pos, which can then be referenced in a trailing |
| * code block. \p pos must be a pointer to the array element type, and all |
| * array elements must be of the same type and size. |
| * |
| * \param pos Cursor that each array element will be assigned to |
| * \param array Array to iterate over |
| * |
| * \relates wl_array |
| * \sa wl_list_for_each() |
| */ |
| #define wl_array_for_each(pos, array) \ |
| for (pos = (array)->data; \ |
| (const char *) pos < ((const char *) (array)->data + (array)->size); \ |
| (pos)++) |
| |
| /** |
| * Fixed-point number |
| * |
| * A `wl_fixed_t` is a 24.8 signed fixed-point number with a sign bit, 23 bits |
| * of integer precision and 8 bits of decimal precision. Consider `wl_fixed_t` |
| * as an opaque struct with methods that facilitate conversion to and from |
| * `double` and `int` types. |
| */ |
| typedef int32_t wl_fixed_t; |
| |
| /** |
| * Converts a fixed-point number to a floating-point number. |
| * |
| * \param f Fixed-point number to convert |
| * |
| * \return Floating-point representation of the fixed-point argument |
| */ |
| static inline double |
| wl_fixed_to_double(wl_fixed_t f) |
| { |
| union { |
| double d; |
| int64_t i; |
| } u; |
| |
| u.i = ((1023LL + 44LL) << 52) + (1LL << 51) + f; |
| |
| return u.d - (3LL << 43); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * Converts a floating-point number to a fixed-point number. |
| * |
| * \param d Floating-point number to convert |
| * |
| * \return Fixed-point representation of the floating-point argument |
| */ |
| static inline wl_fixed_t |
| wl_fixed_from_double(double d) |
| { |
| union { |
| double d; |
| int64_t i; |
| } u; |
| |
| u.d = d + (3LL << (51 - 8)); |
| |
| return (wl_fixed_t)u.i; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * Converts a fixed-point number to an integer. |
| * |
| * \param f Fixed-point number to convert |
| * |
| * \return Integer component of the fixed-point argument |
| */ |
| static inline int |
| wl_fixed_to_int(wl_fixed_t f) |
| { |
| return f / 256; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * Converts an integer to a fixed-point number. |
| * |
| * \param i Integer to convert |
| * |
| * \return Fixed-point representation of the integer argument |
| */ |
| static inline wl_fixed_t |
| wl_fixed_from_int(int i) |
| { |
| return i * 256; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * Protocol message argument data types |
| * |
| * This union represents all of the argument types in the Wayland protocol wire |
| * format. The protocol implementation uses wl_argument within its marshalling |
| * machinery for dispatching messages between a client and a compositor. |
| * |
| * \sa wl_message |
| * \sa wl_interface |
| * \sa <a href="https://wayland.freedesktop.org/docs/html/ch04.html#sect-Protocol-wire-Format">Wire Format</a> |
| */ |
| union wl_argument { |
| int32_t i; /**< `int` */ |
| uint32_t u; /**< `uint` */ |
| wl_fixed_t f; /**< `fixed` */ |
| const char *s; /**< `string` */ |
| struct wl_object *o; /**< `object` */ |
| uint32_t n; /**< `new_id` */ |
| struct wl_array *a; /**< `array` */ |
| int32_t h; /**< `fd` */ |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * Dispatcher function type alias |
| * |
| * A dispatcher is a function that handles the emitting of callbacks in client |
| * code. For programs directly using the C library, this is done by using |
| * libffi to call function pointers. When binding to languages other than C, |
| * dispatchers provide a way to abstract the function calling process to be |
| * friendlier to other function calling systems. |
| * |
| * A dispatcher takes five arguments: The first is the dispatcher-specific |
| * implementation associated with the target object. The second is the object |
| * upon which the callback is being invoked (either wl_proxy or wl_resource). |
| * The third and fourth arguments are the opcode and the wl_message |
| * corresponding to the callback. The final argument is an array of arguments |
| * received from the other process via the wire protocol. |
| * |
| * \param "const void *" Dispatcher-specific implementation data |
| * \param "void *" Callback invocation target (wl_proxy or `wl_resource`) |
| * \param uint32_t Callback opcode |
| * \param "const struct wl_message *" Callback message signature |
| * \param "union wl_argument *" Array of received arguments |
| * |
| * \return 0 on success, or -1 on failure |
| */ |
| typedef int (*wl_dispatcher_func_t)(const void *, void *, uint32_t, |
| const struct wl_message *, |
| union wl_argument *); |
| |
| /** |
| * Log function type alias |
| * |
| * The C implementation of the Wayland protocol abstracts the details of |
| * logging. Users may customize the logging behavior, with a function conforming |
| * to the `wl_log_func_t` type, via `wl_log_set_handler_client` and |
| * `wl_log_set_handler_server`. |
| * |
| * A `wl_log_func_t` must conform to the expectations of `vprintf`, and |
| * expects two arguments: a string to write and a corresponding variable |
| * argument list. While the string to write may contain format specifiers and |
| * use values in the variable argument list, the behavior of any `wl_log_func_t` |
| * depends on the implementation. |
| * |
| * \note Take care to not confuse this with `wl_protocol_logger_func_t`, which |
| * is a specific server-side logger for requests and events. |
| * |
| * \param "const char *" String to write to the log, containing optional format |
| * specifiers |
| * \param "va_list" Variable argument list |
| * |
| * \sa wl_log_set_handler_client |
| * \sa wl_log_set_handler_server |
| */ |
| typedef void (*wl_log_func_t)(const char *, va_list) WL_PRINTF(1, 0); |
| |
| /** |
| * Return value of an iterator function |
| * |
| * \sa wl_client_for_each_resource_iterator_func_t |
| * \sa wl_client_for_each_resource |
| */ |
| enum wl_iterator_result { |
| /** Stop the iteration */ |
| WL_ITERATOR_STOP, |
| /** Continue the iteration */ |
| WL_ITERATOR_CONTINUE |
| }; |
| |
| #ifdef __cplusplus |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| #endif |