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authortoma <toma@283d02a7-25f6-0310-bc7c-ecb5cbfe19da>2009-11-25 17:56:58 +0000
committertoma <toma@283d02a7-25f6-0310-bc7c-ecb5cbfe19da>2009-11-25 17:56:58 +0000
commit90825e2392b2d70e43c7a25b8a3752299a933894 (patch)
treee33aa27f02b74604afbfd0ea4f1cfca8833d882a /dcopperl/DCOP.pm
downloadtdebindings-90825e2392b2d70e43c7a25b8a3752299a933894.tar.gz
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Copy the KDE 3.5 branch to branches/trinity for new KDE 3.5 features.
BUG:215923 git-svn-id: svn://anonsvn.kde.org/home/kde/branches/trinity/kdebindings@1054174 283d02a7-25f6-0310-bc7c-ecb5cbfe19da
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+package DCOP;
+
+use strict;
+use vars qw($VERSION @ISA);
+
+use DynaLoader;
+use DCOP::Object;
+
+@ISA = qw(DynaLoader);
+
+$VERSION = '0.01';
+
+bootstrap DCOP $VERSION;
+
+# Returns a DCOP::Object that is logically bound to a specific object of a specific app
+sub createObject
+{
+ my ($self, $app, $obj) = @_;
+ $obj = "default" unless defined $obj;
+ $self = {
+ CLIENT => $self,
+ APP => $app,
+ OBJ => $obj,
+ };
+ bless $self, "DCOP::Object";
+}
+
+# That's it :)
+
+1;
+__END__
+
+=head1 NAME
+
+DCOP - Perl extension for communcation with KDE's DCOP server
+
+=head1 SYNOPSIS
+
+use DCOP;
+
+my $client = new DCOP;
+$client->attach();
+$running_apps = $client->registeredApplications();
+$client->send("kmail", "KMailIface", "checkMail()");
+
+my $kmail = $client->createObject("kmail", "KMailIface");
+$kmail->openComposer("fred@outer.space",
+ undef,
+ undef,
+ "This is a mail initiated by DCOP.pm",
+ 0,
+ "file:/home/joe/file/with/mail/to/send");
+
+=head1 DESCRIPTION
+
+The Desktop COmmunication Protocol is used by almost every KDE application
+and is a lightweight but powerful IPC mechanism. For more information look at
+
+http://developer.kde.org/documentation/library/2.0-api/dcop/HOWTO.html
+
+This Perl extension can be used to send commands to any currently registered
+DCOP application, as well as query which apps are registered and what
+interfaces with what functions they offer. Additionally you can use DCOP::Object
+to trigger DCOP sends or calls as native methods of DCOP::Object
+(see the secion on Autoload Magic below).
+
+=head2 Creation, Attachment and Registration
+
+Creating a DCOP client is as simple as it gets:
+
+ use DCOP;
+
+ $client = new DCOP;
+
+That's it. Some arguments to new are planned for future releases.
+After creation the client is not attached to the server. The easiest way to
+establish a connection is
+
+ $client->attach();
+
+which registers your DCOP client anonymously.
+To register with a well known name use:
+
+ $client->registerAs("fred");
+NOTE: registerAs is currently disabled
+
+To close the connection, simply call
+
+ $client->detach();
+
+=head2 Hello World!
+
+Now that you have your client registered with the server, either anonymously
+or by name, you can use it to query information about other registered applications.
+To get a list with names of all clients, use:
+
+ $client->registeredApplications();
+
+To retrieve the Qt object hierarchy of an application, call
+
+ $client->remoteObjects($appname);
+
+Similarly you can get a list of supported interfaces with
+
+ $client->remoteIterfaces($appname, $objectname);
+
+And to know what you can do with all these nice interfaces, learn about their functions:
+
+ $client->remoteFunctions($appname, $objectname);
+
+=head2 Let them do something
+
+To simply dispatch a command neglecting its return value, use
+
+ $client->send($appname, $objectname, $function, ...);
+
+If you're interested in the return value, consider call:
+
+ $client->call($appname, $objectname, $function, ...);
+
+=head2 Autoload Magic
+
+A much more intuitive way to use send and call is via DCOP::Object. This class
+is not intended for explicit instantiation and is merely a very small autoload stub.
+To get a DCOP::Object, simply call
+
+ $obj = $client->createObject($appname [, $objectname]);
+
+The returned $obj is a DCOP::Object "bound" to the specified application and object
+(or the app's default object if $objectname is omitted or undef). This DCOP::Object
+has only two known methods, _app() and _object() which return the application and object
+name respectively and are merely for internal use. Any other method you call will be
+looked up in the functions() list of the target object. So, if you created it e.g. with
+
+ $obj = $client->createObject("kmail", "KMailIface");
+
+You can simply invoke
+
+ $obj->checkMail();
+
+instead of
+
+ $client->send("kmail", "KMailIface", "checkMail()");
+
+=head2 Detailed Reference
+
+sub new(); [ class method ]
+
+takes no arguments by now and returns a blessed reference to a new DCOP client.
+
+sub attach();
+
+returns a true value if the attachment succeeded or undef on error.
+
+sub detach();
+
+returns a true value if the client was successfully detached or undef on error.
+
+sub isAttached();
+
+returns true or undef whether the client is attached or not.
+
+sub registerAs($appId [, $addPID]);
+CURRENTLY DISABLED
+
+registers the client with the name $appId or $appId with a number appended if a
+client by that name already exists. If $addPID is true, the PID of the client is
+appended to the appId, seperated by a hyphen. If addPID is ommited, it defaults to
+true. To not add a PID, specify undef or zero.
+registerAs returns the actual appId after the PID or possibly a sequence number has
+been added.
+If you call this method on an already attached or registered client, the old appId will
+be replaced with the new one.
+
+sub isRegistered();
+CURRENTLY DISABLED
+
+like isAttached but returns true only if the client used registerAs.
+
+sub appId();
+
+returns the appId the client is known as or undef if it's not registered or only
+attached anonymously.
+
+sub send($app, $object, $function [, ...])
+
+dispatches a function call without waiting for completion and thus without retrieving
+a return value. Returns true if a matching object has been found or undef otherwise.
+$app is the name of a registered application,
+$object the name of an object implemented by $app or undef for the default object,
+$function is the signature of the function to be called.
+Any following arguments are passed as parameters to the called function.
+Make sure that they match the function's signature in count and types (see Datatypes below)
+or your program will die. (This will be configurable in later versions)
+
+sub call($app, $object, $function [, ...])
+
+like send, but blocks until the called function returns and supplies the return value of that
+function (see Datatypes below). In scalar context, the value returned is the function's return
+value, in list context call returns a two element list with the first item set to the function's
+repturn value and the second set to true or undef according to success or failure of the DCOP call.
+
+
+sub findObject
+
+not really implemented, yet.
+
+sub emitDCOPSignal
+
+dito.
+
+sub isApplicationRegistered($app)
+
+returns true if an application with the given name is known to the DCOP server or otherwise undef.
+
+sub registeredApplications()
+
+returns a reference to an array with the names of all currently registered applications.
+On error it returns undef.
+
+sub remoteObjects($app)
+
+returns a reference to an array with the names of the objects supported by the named application.
+On error it returns undef.
+
+sub remoteInterfaces($app, $object)
+
+returns a reference to an array with the names of the interfaces supported by the given application
+and object. On error it returns undef.
+
+sub remoteFunctions($app, $object)
+
+returns a reference to an array with the names of the functions the specified interface supports.
+The functions are returned as their signatures with parameter names and return type like
+
+ QCStringList functions()
+
+sub normalizeSignature($signature)
+
+removes extraneous whitespace from a function signature.
+
+sub canonicalizeSignature($signature)
+
+mostly for internal use. Calls normalizeSignature and then strips parameter names and
+return type from it.
+
+=head2 Datatypes
+
+The following datatypes are currently supported in arguments to send and call and as
+return values:
+
+=over 4
+
+=item * int
+mapped to scalar
+
+=item * QCString
+mapped to scalar
+
+=item * QString (no Unicode support yet, just latin 1)
+mapped to scalar
+
+=item * QCStringList
+mapped to a reference to an array of scalars.
+
+=item * QStringList
+mapped to a reference to an array of scalars.
+
+=item * QPoint (untested)
+mapped to a reference to a two elemtent array [$x, $y]
+named value support via hash planned.
+
+=item * QSize (untested)
+mapped to a reference to a two elemtent array [$width, $height]
+named value support via hash planned.
+
+=item * QRect (untested)
+mapped to a reference to a four elemtent array [$left, $top, $width, $height]
+named value support via hash planned (including alternative right and bottom / width height)
+
+=item * KURL (only QString url() now)
+mapped to scalar
+
+=item * DCOPRef (partially)
+mapped to DCOP::Object, methods like isNull() missing.
+
+=back
+
+=head1 BUGS
+Most probably many. A lot of memory leaks I fear, but that has to be proven.
+There are many important features missing also. By now, it is not possible to
+use DCOP.pm to receive DCOP messages. That is planned.
+
+=head1 AUTHOR
+
+Malte Starostik, malte@kde.org
+
+=head1 SEE ALSO
+
+perl(1).
+
+=cut
+