1 /* 2 * This file is part of gtkD. 3 * 4 * gtkD is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify 5 * it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License 6 * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 7 * of the License, or (at your option) any later version, with 8 * some exceptions, please read the COPYING file. 9 * 10 * gtkD is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 11 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 12 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 13 * GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. 14 * 15 * You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License 16 * along with gtkD; if not, write to the Free Software 17 * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110, USA 18 */ 19 20 // generated automatically - do not change 21 // find conversion definition on APILookup.txt 22 // implement new conversion functionalities on the wrap.utils pakage 23 24 25 module gio.Cancellable; 26 27 private import gio.c.functions; 28 public import gio.c.types; 29 private import glib.ConstructionException; 30 private import glib.ErrorG; 31 private import glib.GException; 32 private import glib.Source; 33 private import gobject.ObjectG; 34 private import gobject.Signals; 35 public import gtkc.giotypes; 36 private import std.algorithm; 37 38 39 /** 40 * GCancellable is a thread-safe operation cancellation stack used 41 * throughout GIO to allow for cancellation of synchronous and 42 * asynchronous operations. 43 */ 44 public class Cancellable : ObjectG 45 { 46 /** the main Gtk struct */ 47 protected GCancellable* gCancellable; 48 49 /** Get the main Gtk struct */ 50 public GCancellable* getCancellableStruct(bool transferOwnership = false) 51 { 52 if (transferOwnership) 53 ownedRef = false; 54 return gCancellable; 55 } 56 57 /** the main Gtk struct as a void* */ 58 protected override void* getStruct() 59 { 60 return cast(void*)gCancellable; 61 } 62 63 protected override void setStruct(GObject* obj) 64 { 65 gCancellable = cast(GCancellable*)obj; 66 super.setStruct(obj); 67 } 68 69 /** 70 * Sets our main struct and passes it to the parent class. 71 */ 72 public this (GCancellable* gCancellable, bool ownedRef = false) 73 { 74 this.gCancellable = gCancellable; 75 super(cast(GObject*)gCancellable, ownedRef); 76 } 77 78 79 /** */ 80 public static GType getType() 81 { 82 return g_cancellable_get_type(); 83 } 84 85 /** 86 * Creates a new #GCancellable object. 87 * 88 * Applications that want to start one or more operations 89 * that should be cancellable should create a #GCancellable 90 * and pass it to the operations. 91 * 92 * One #GCancellable can be used in multiple consecutive 93 * operations or in multiple concurrent operations. 94 * 95 * Returns: a #GCancellable. 96 * 97 * Throws: ConstructionException GTK+ fails to create the object. 98 */ 99 public this() 100 { 101 auto p = g_cancellable_new(); 102 103 if(p is null) 104 { 105 throw new ConstructionException("null returned by new"); 106 } 107 108 this(cast(GCancellable*) p, true); 109 } 110 111 /** 112 * Gets the top cancellable from the stack. 113 * 114 * Returns: a #GCancellable from the top 115 * of the stack, or %NULL if the stack is empty. 116 */ 117 public static Cancellable getCurrent() 118 { 119 auto p = g_cancellable_get_current(); 120 121 if(p is null) 122 { 123 return null; 124 } 125 126 return ObjectG.getDObject!(Cancellable)(cast(GCancellable*) p); 127 } 128 129 /** 130 * Will set @cancellable to cancelled, and will emit the 131 * #GCancellable::cancelled signal. (However, see the warning about 132 * race conditions in the documentation for that signal if you are 133 * planning to connect to it.) 134 * 135 * This function is thread-safe. In other words, you can safely call 136 * it from a thread other than the one running the operation that was 137 * passed the @cancellable. 138 * 139 * If @cancellable is %NULL, this function returns immediately for convenience. 140 * 141 * The convention within GIO is that cancelling an asynchronous 142 * operation causes it to complete asynchronously. That is, if you 143 * cancel the operation from the same thread in which it is running, 144 * then the operation's #GAsyncReadyCallback will not be invoked until 145 * the application returns to the main loop. 146 */ 147 public void cancel() 148 { 149 g_cancellable_cancel(gCancellable); 150 } 151 152 /** 153 * Convenience function to connect to the #GCancellable::cancelled 154 * signal. Also handles the race condition that may happen 155 * if the cancellable is cancelled right before connecting. 156 * 157 * @callback is called at most once, either directly at the 158 * time of the connect if @cancellable is already cancelled, 159 * or when @cancellable is cancelled in some thread. 160 * 161 * @data_destroy_func will be called when the handler is 162 * disconnected, or immediately if the cancellable is already 163 * cancelled. 164 * 165 * See #GCancellable::cancelled for details on how to use this. 166 * 167 * Since GLib 2.40, the lock protecting @cancellable is not held when 168 * @callback is invoked. This lifts a restriction in place for 169 * earlier GLib versions which now makes it easier to write cleanup 170 * code that unconditionally invokes e.g. g_cancellable_cancel(). 171 * 172 * Params: 173 * callback = The #GCallback to connect. 174 * data = Data to pass to @callback. 175 * dataDestroyFunc = Free function for @data or %NULL. 176 * 177 * Returns: The id of the signal handler or 0 if @cancellable has already 178 * been cancelled. 179 * 180 * Since: 2.22 181 */ 182 public gulong connect(GCallback callback, void* data, GDestroyNotify dataDestroyFunc) 183 { 184 return g_cancellable_connect(gCancellable, callback, data, dataDestroyFunc); 185 } 186 187 /** 188 * Disconnects a handler from a cancellable instance similar to 189 * g_signal_handler_disconnect(). Additionally, in the event that a 190 * signal handler is currently running, this call will block until the 191 * handler has finished. Calling this function from a 192 * #GCancellable::cancelled signal handler will therefore result in a 193 * deadlock. 194 * 195 * This avoids a race condition where a thread cancels at the 196 * same time as the cancellable operation is finished and the 197 * signal handler is removed. See #GCancellable::cancelled for 198 * details on how to use this. 199 * 200 * If @cancellable is %NULL or @handler_id is %0 this function does 201 * nothing. 202 * 203 * Params: 204 * handlerId = Handler id of the handler to be disconnected, or %0. 205 * 206 * Since: 2.22 207 */ 208 public void disconnect(gulong handlerId) 209 { 210 g_cancellable_disconnect(gCancellable, handlerId); 211 } 212 213 /** 214 * Gets the file descriptor for a cancellable job. This can be used to 215 * implement cancellable operations on Unix systems. The returned fd will 216 * turn readable when @cancellable is cancelled. 217 * 218 * You are not supposed to read from the fd yourself, just check for 219 * readable status. Reading to unset the readable status is done 220 * with g_cancellable_reset(). 221 * 222 * After a successful return from this function, you should use 223 * g_cancellable_release_fd() to free up resources allocated for 224 * the returned file descriptor. 225 * 226 * See also g_cancellable_make_pollfd(). 227 * 228 * Returns: A valid file descriptor. %-1 if the file descriptor 229 * is not supported, or on errors. 230 */ 231 public int getFd() 232 { 233 return g_cancellable_get_fd(gCancellable); 234 } 235 236 /** 237 * Checks if a cancellable job has been cancelled. 238 * 239 * Returns: %TRUE if @cancellable is cancelled, 240 * FALSE if called with %NULL or if item is not cancelled. 241 */ 242 public bool isCancelled() 243 { 244 return g_cancellable_is_cancelled(gCancellable) != 0; 245 } 246 247 /** 248 * Creates a #GPollFD corresponding to @cancellable; this can be passed 249 * to g_poll() and used to poll for cancellation. This is useful both 250 * for unix systems without a native poll and for portability to 251 * windows. 252 * 253 * When this function returns %TRUE, you should use 254 * g_cancellable_release_fd() to free up resources allocated for the 255 * @pollfd. After a %FALSE return, do not call g_cancellable_release_fd(). 256 * 257 * If this function returns %FALSE, either no @cancellable was given or 258 * resource limits prevent this function from allocating the necessary 259 * structures for polling. (On Linux, you will likely have reached 260 * the maximum number of file descriptors.) The suggested way to handle 261 * these cases is to ignore the @cancellable. 262 * 263 * You are not supposed to read from the fd yourself, just check for 264 * readable status. Reading to unset the readable status is done 265 * with g_cancellable_reset(). 266 * 267 * Params: 268 * pollfd = a pointer to a #GPollFD 269 * 270 * Returns: %TRUE if @pollfd was successfully initialized, %FALSE on 271 * failure to prepare the cancellable. 272 * 273 * Since: 2.22 274 */ 275 public bool makePollfd(GPollFD* pollfd) 276 { 277 return g_cancellable_make_pollfd(gCancellable, pollfd) != 0; 278 } 279 280 /** 281 * Pops @cancellable off the cancellable stack (verifying that @cancellable 282 * is on the top of the stack). 283 */ 284 public void popCurrent() 285 { 286 g_cancellable_pop_current(gCancellable); 287 } 288 289 /** 290 * Pushes @cancellable onto the cancellable stack. The current 291 * cancellable can then be received using g_cancellable_get_current(). 292 * 293 * This is useful when implementing cancellable operations in 294 * code that does not allow you to pass down the cancellable object. 295 * 296 * This is typically called automatically by e.g. #GFile operations, 297 * so you rarely have to call this yourself. 298 */ 299 public void pushCurrent() 300 { 301 g_cancellable_push_current(gCancellable); 302 } 303 304 /** 305 * Releases a resources previously allocated by g_cancellable_get_fd() 306 * or g_cancellable_make_pollfd(). 307 * 308 * For compatibility reasons with older releases, calling this function 309 * is not strictly required, the resources will be automatically freed 310 * when the @cancellable is finalized. However, the @cancellable will 311 * block scarce file descriptors until it is finalized if this function 312 * is not called. This can cause the application to run out of file 313 * descriptors when many #GCancellables are used at the same time. 314 * 315 * Since: 2.22 316 */ 317 public void releaseFd() 318 { 319 g_cancellable_release_fd(gCancellable); 320 } 321 322 /** 323 * Resets @cancellable to its uncancelled state. 324 * 325 * If cancellable is currently in use by any cancellable operation 326 * then the behavior of this function is undefined. 327 * 328 * Note that it is generally not a good idea to reuse an existing 329 * cancellable for more operations after it has been cancelled once, 330 * as this function might tempt you to do. The recommended practice 331 * is to drop the reference to a cancellable after cancelling it, 332 * and let it die with the outstanding async operations. You should 333 * create a fresh cancellable for further async operations. 334 */ 335 public void reset() 336 { 337 g_cancellable_reset(gCancellable); 338 } 339 340 /** 341 * If the @cancellable is cancelled, sets the error to notify 342 * that the operation was cancelled. 343 * 344 * Returns: %TRUE if @cancellable was cancelled, %FALSE if it was not 345 * 346 * Throws: GException on failure. 347 */ 348 public bool setErrorIfCancelled() 349 { 350 GError* err = null; 351 352 auto p = g_cancellable_set_error_if_cancelled(gCancellable, &err) != 0; 353 354 if (err !is null) 355 { 356 throw new GException( new ErrorG(err) ); 357 } 358 359 return p; 360 } 361 362 /** 363 * Creates a source that triggers if @cancellable is cancelled and 364 * calls its callback of type #GCancellableSourceFunc. This is 365 * primarily useful for attaching to another (non-cancellable) source 366 * with g_source_add_child_source() to add cancellability to it. 367 * 368 * For convenience, you can call this with a %NULL #GCancellable, 369 * in which case the source will never trigger. 370 * 371 * The new #GSource will hold a reference to the #GCancellable. 372 * 373 * Returns: the new #GSource. 374 * 375 * Since: 2.28 376 */ 377 public Source sourceNew() 378 { 379 auto p = g_cancellable_source_new(gCancellable); 380 381 if(p is null) 382 { 383 return null; 384 } 385 386 return new Source(cast(GSource*) p, true); 387 } 388 389 protected class OnCancelledDelegateWrapper 390 { 391 void delegate(Cancellable) dlg; 392 gulong handlerId; 393 394 this(void delegate(Cancellable) dlg) 395 { 396 this.dlg = dlg; 397 onCancelledListeners ~= this; 398 } 399 400 void remove(OnCancelledDelegateWrapper source) 401 { 402 foreach(index, wrapper; onCancelledListeners) 403 { 404 if (wrapper.handlerId == source.handlerId) 405 { 406 onCancelledListeners[index] = null; 407 onCancelledListeners = std.algorithm.remove(onCancelledListeners, index); 408 break; 409 } 410 } 411 } 412 } 413 OnCancelledDelegateWrapper[] onCancelledListeners; 414 415 /** 416 * Emitted when the operation has been cancelled. 417 * 418 * Can be used by implementations of cancellable operations. If the 419 * operation is cancelled from another thread, the signal will be 420 * emitted in the thread that cancelled the operation, not the 421 * thread that is running the operation. 422 * 423 * Note that disconnecting from this signal (or any signal) in a 424 * multi-threaded program is prone to race conditions. For instance 425 * it is possible that a signal handler may be invoked even after 426 * a call to g_signal_handler_disconnect() for that handler has 427 * already returned. 428 * 429 * There is also a problem when cancellation happens right before 430 * connecting to the signal. If this happens the signal will 431 * unexpectedly not be emitted, and checking before connecting to 432 * the signal leaves a race condition where this is still happening. 433 * 434 * In order to make it safe and easy to connect handlers there 435 * are two helper functions: g_cancellable_connect() and 436 * g_cancellable_disconnect() which protect against problems 437 * like this. 438 * 439 * An example of how to us this: 440 * |[<!-- language="C" --> 441 * // Make sure we don't do unnecessary work if already cancelled 442 * if (g_cancellable_set_error_if_cancelled (cancellable, error)) 443 * return; 444 * 445 * // Set up all the data needed to be able to handle cancellation 446 * // of the operation 447 * my_data = my_data_new (...); 448 * 449 * id = 0; 450 * if (cancellable) 451 * id = g_cancellable_connect (cancellable, 452 * G_CALLBACK (cancelled_handler) 453 * data, NULL); 454 * 455 * // cancellable operation here... 456 * 457 * g_cancellable_disconnect (cancellable, id); 458 * 459 * // cancelled_handler is never called after this, it is now safe 460 * // to free the data 461 * my_data_free (my_data); 462 * ]| 463 * 464 * Note that the cancelled signal is emitted in the thread that 465 * the user cancelled from, which may be the main thread. So, the 466 * cancellable signal should not do something that can block. 467 */ 468 gulong addOnCancelled(void delegate(Cancellable) dlg, ConnectFlags connectFlags=cast(ConnectFlags)0) 469 { 470 auto wrapper = new OnCancelledDelegateWrapper(dlg); 471 wrapper.handlerId = Signals.connectData( 472 this, 473 "cancelled", 474 cast(GCallback)&callBackCancelled, 475 cast(void*)wrapper, 476 cast(GClosureNotify)&callBackCancelledDestroy, 477 connectFlags); 478 return wrapper.handlerId; 479 } 480 481 extern(C) static void callBackCancelled(GCancellable* cancellableStruct, OnCancelledDelegateWrapper wrapper) 482 { 483 wrapper.dlg(wrapper.outer); 484 } 485 486 extern(C) static void callBackCancelledDestroy(OnCancelledDelegateWrapper wrapper, GClosure* closure) 487 { 488 wrapper.remove(wrapper); 489 } 490 }