- Dec 21, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
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- Nov 25, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
Now the WpPipewireObject interface is directly implemented by the mixin and there is another interface that users of the mixin must implement in order for the mixin to work proprely. A lot of manual stuff that proxy classes had to do before are now in the mixin. Also most of the data that would normally reside in Private structures is now in the mixin data structure (stored as qdata on the object). This is achieving the best amount of code reuse so far. For impl objects (WpImpl*) there are also default implementations of the standard pipewire object methods and the INFO & PARAM_* features are more coherently enabled during the whole lifetime of these objects.
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- Nov 13, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
This is an attempt to unclutter the API of WpProxy and split functionality into smaller pieces, making it easier to work with. In this new class layout, we have the following classes: - WpObject: base class for everything; handles activating | and deactivating "features" |- WpProxy: base class for anything that wraps a pw_proxy; | handles events from pw_proxy and nothing more |- WpGlobalProxy: handles integration with the registry All the other classes derive from WpGlobalProxy. The reason for separating WpGlobalProxy from WpProxy, though, is that classes such as WpImplNode / WpSpaDevice can also derive from WpProxy now, without interfacing with the registry. All objects that come with an "info" structure and have properties and/or params also implement the WpPipewireObject interface. This provides the API to query properties and get/set params. Essentially, this is implemented by all classes except WpMetadata (pw_metadata does not have info) This interface is implemented on each object separately, using a private "mixin", which is a set of vfunc implementations and helper functions (and macros) to facilitate the implementation of this interface. A notable difference to the old WpProxy is that now features can be deactivated, so it is possible to enable something and later disable it again. This commit disables modules, tests, tools, etc, to avoid growing the patch more, while ensuring that the project compiles.
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