glib/gio/gasyncresult.c
Dan Winship 55e7ca6e1b gio: deprecate gioscheduler, soft deprecate GSimpleAsyncResult
Reimplement gioscheduler in terms of GTask, and deprecate the original
gioscheduler methods. Update docs to point people to GTask rather than
gioscheduler and GSimpleAsyncResult, but don't actually formally
deprecate GSimpleAsyncResult yet.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=661767
2012-10-10 10:29:36 -04:00

236 lines
7.5 KiB
C

/* GIO - GLib Input, Output and Streaming Library
*
* Copyright (C) 2006-2007 Red Hat, Inc.
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
* version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General
* Public License along with this library; if not, write to the
* Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330,
* Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
*
* Author: Alexander Larsson <alexl@redhat.com>
*/
#include "config.h"
#include "gasyncresult.h"
#include "gsimpleasyncresult.h"
#include "glibintl.h"
/**
* SECTION:gasyncresult
* @short_description: Asynchronous Function Results
* @include: gio/gio.h
* @see_also: #GTask
*
* Provides a base class for implementing asynchronous function results.
*
* Asynchronous operations are broken up into two separate operations
* which are chained together by a #GAsyncReadyCallback. To begin
* an asynchronous operation, provide a #GAsyncReadyCallback to the
* asynchronous function. This callback will be triggered when the
* operation has completed, and will be passed a #GAsyncResult instance
* filled with the details of the operation's success or failure, the
* object the asynchronous function was started for and any error codes
* returned. The asynchronous callback function is then expected to call
* the corresponding "_finish()" function, passing the object the
* function was called for, the #GAsyncResult instance, and (optionally)
* an @error to grab any error conditions that may have occurred.
*
* The "_finish()" function for an operation takes the generic result
* (of type #GAsyncResult) and returns the specific result that the
* operation in question yields (e.g. a #GFileEnumerator for a
* "enumerate children" operation). If the result or error status of the
* operation is not needed, there is no need to call the "_finish()"
* function; GIO will take care of cleaning up the result and error
* information after the #GAsyncReadyCallback returns. You can pass
* %NULL for the #GAsyncReadyCallback if you don't need to take any
* action at all after the operation completes. Applications may also
* take a reference to the #GAsyncResult and call "_finish()" later;
* however, the "_finish()" function may be called at most once.
*
* Example of a typical asynchronous operation flow:
* |[
* void _theoretical_frobnitz_async (Theoretical *t,
* GCancellable *c,
* GAsyncReadyCallback *cb,
* gpointer u);
*
* gboolean _theoretical_frobnitz_finish (Theoretical *t,
* GAsyncResult *res,
* GError **e);
*
* static void
* frobnitz_result_func (GObject *source_object,
* GAsyncResult *res,
* gpointer user_data)
* {
* gboolean success = FALSE;
*
* success = _theoretical_frobnitz_finish (source_object, res, NULL);
*
* if (success)
* g_printf ("Hurray!\n");
* else
* g_printf ("Uh oh!\n");
*
* /<!-- -->* ... *<!-- -->/
*
* }
*
* int main (int argc, void *argv[])
* {
* /<!-- -->* ... *<!-- -->/
*
* _theoretical_frobnitz_async (theoretical_data,
* NULL,
* frobnitz_result_func,
* NULL);
*
* /<!-- -->* ... *<!-- -->/
* }
* ]|
*
* The callback for an asynchronous operation is called only once, and is
* always called, even in the case of a cancelled operation. On cancellation
* the result is a %G_IO_ERROR_CANCELLED error.
*
* <para id="io-priority"><indexterm><primary>I/O
* priority</primary></indexterm> Many I/O-related asynchronous
* operations have a priority parameter, which is used in certain
* cases to determine the order in which operations are executed. They
* are <emphasis>not</emphasis> used to determine system-wide I/O
* scheduling. Priorities are integers, with lower numbers indicating
* higher priority. It is recommended to choose priorities between
* %G_PRIORITY_LOW and %G_PRIORITY_HIGH, with %G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT as a
* default. </para>
**/
typedef GAsyncResultIface GAsyncResultInterface;
G_DEFINE_INTERFACE (GAsyncResult, g_async_result, G_TYPE_OBJECT)
static void
g_async_result_default_init (GAsyncResultInterface *iface)
{
}
/**
* g_async_result_get_user_data:
* @res: a #GAsyncResult.
*
* Gets the user data from a #GAsyncResult.
*
* Returns: (transfer full): the user data for @res.
**/
gpointer
g_async_result_get_user_data (GAsyncResult *res)
{
GAsyncResultIface *iface;
g_return_val_if_fail (G_IS_ASYNC_RESULT (res), NULL);
iface = G_ASYNC_RESULT_GET_IFACE (res);
return (* iface->get_user_data) (res);
}
/**
* g_async_result_get_source_object:
* @res: a #GAsyncResult
*
* Gets the source object from a #GAsyncResult.
*
* Returns: (transfer full): a new reference to the source object for the @res,
* or %NULL if there is none.
*/
GObject *
g_async_result_get_source_object (GAsyncResult *res)
{
GAsyncResultIface *iface;
g_return_val_if_fail (G_IS_ASYNC_RESULT (res), NULL);
iface = G_ASYNC_RESULT_GET_IFACE (res);
return (* iface->get_source_object) (res);
}
/**
* g_async_result_legacy_propagate_error:
* @res: a #GAsyncResult
* @error: (out): a location to propagate the error to.
*
* If @res is a #GSimpleAsyncResult, this is equivalent to
* g_simple_async_result_propagate_error(). Otherwise it returns
* %FALSE.
*
* This can be used for legacy error handling in async
* <literal>_finish ()</literal> wrapper functions that traditionally
* handled #GSimpleAsyncResult error returns themselves rather than
* calling into the virtual method. This should not be used in new
* code; #GAsyncResult errors that are set by virtual methods should
* also be extracted by virtual methods, to enable subclasses to chain
* up correctly.
*
* Returns: %TRUE if @error is has been filled in with an error from
* @res, %FALSE if not.
*
* Since: 2.34
**/
gboolean
g_async_result_legacy_propagate_error (GAsyncResult *res,
GError **error)
{
/* This doesn't use a vmethod, because it's only for code that used
* to use GSimpleAsyncResult. (But it's a GAsyncResult method so
* that callers don't need to worry about GSimpleAsyncResult
* deprecation warnings in the future.)
*/
if (G_IS_SIMPLE_ASYNC_RESULT (res))
{
return g_simple_async_result_propagate_error (G_SIMPLE_ASYNC_RESULT (res),
error);
}
else
return FALSE;
}
/**
* g_async_result_is_tagged:
* @res: a #GAsyncResult
* @source_tag: an application-defined tag
*
* Checks if @res has the given @source_tag (generally a function
* pointer indicating the function @res was created by).
*
* Returns: %TRUE if @res has the indicated @source_tag, %FALSE if
* not.
*
* Since: 2.34
**/
gboolean
g_async_result_is_tagged (GAsyncResult *res,
gpointer source_tag)
{
GAsyncResultIface *iface;
g_return_val_if_fail (G_IS_ASYNC_RESULT (res), FALSE);
iface = G_ASYNC_RESULT_GET_IFACE (res);
if (!iface->is_tagged)
return FALSE;
return (* iface->is_tagged) (res, source_tag);
}