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-rw-r--r--client-lib/CMakeLists.txt12
-rw-r--r--client-lib/doc/AFBClient.md306
-rw-r--r--client-lib/doc/CMakeLists.txt4
3 files changed, 322 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/client-lib/CMakeLists.txt b/client-lib/CMakeLists.txt
index 2478da4..d44c1e6 100644
--- a/client-lib/CMakeLists.txt
+++ b/client-lib/CMakeLists.txt
@@ -69,3 +69,15 @@ if (NOT ${SANITIZER_MODE} STREQUAL "none" AND NOT ${SANITIZER_MODE} STREQUAL "")
PROPERTIES
LINK_FLAGS "-fsanitize=${SANITIZER_MODE} -g")
endif()
+
+install(
+ TARGETS afbclient
+ DESTINATION ${CMAKE_INSTALL_LIBDIR}
+ COMPONENT "runtime")
+
+install(
+ FILES AFBClient.h
+ DESTINATION ${CMAKE_INSTALL_INCLUDEDIR}
+ COMPONENT "development")
+
+add_subdirectory(doc)
diff --git a/client-lib/doc/AFBClient.md b/client-lib/doc/AFBClient.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..cc803e6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/client-lib/doc/AFBClient.md
@@ -0,0 +1,306 @@
+Introduction
+============
+
+The AFBClient library provides a simple interface to manipulate and
+query the s of the window manager application framework binding. It is
+composed of one singleton class that needs to be integrated and called
+from the client application.
+
+Intended audience
+-----------------
+
+This document is intended to be useful to application developers.
+
+Scope of this Document
+----------------------
+
+This document describes the singleton class interface to the *Window
+Manager* binding service.
+
+class AFBClient
+===============
+
+This is the public interface of the class `AFBClient`. Private members
+and methods are not reproduced as they will not affect usage of the
+class by client applications.
+
+ class AFBClient
+ {
+ public:
+ static AFBClient &instance();
+
+ int init(int port, char const *token);
+ int dispatch();
+
+ // WM API
+ int requestSurface(const char *label);
+ int activateSurface(const char *label);
+ int deactivateSurface(const char *label);
+ int endDraw(const char *label);
+
+ enum EventType {
+ Event_Active,
+ Event_Inactive,
+ Event_Visible,
+ Event_Invisible,
+ Event_SyncDraw,
+ Event_FlushDraw,
+ };
+
+ void set_event_handler(enum EventType et,
+ std::function<void(char const *label)> f);
+ };
+
+Errors
+------
+
+Methods returning an `int` signal successful operation when returning
+`0`. In case of an error, an error value is returned as a negative errno
+value. E.g. `-EINVAL` to signal that some input value was invalid.
+
+Additionally, logging of error messages is done on the standard error
+file descriptor to help debugging the issue.
+
+Labels
+------
+
+Surface labels are any valid strings. For `requestSurface()` these
+strings must match the *Window Manager* configuration in order to be
+allowed to be displayed on one layer or the other. For all other calls
+the label must match the exact name of a requested surface.
+
+Caveats
+-------
+
+Any of the API calls to the *Window Manager* will be synchronous (and
+thus block until a reply from the *Window Manager* service is received).
+
+These are the Methods `requestSurface()`, `activateSurface()`,
+`deactivateSurface()` and `endDraw()`. However, `requestSurface()` is
+only ever called once to request a surface so this should not be a
+concern for this Method.
+
+Methods
+-------
+
+### AFBClient::init(port, token)
+
+Initialize the Binding communication.
+
+The `token` parameter is a string consisting of only alphanumeric
+characters, and with a maximum length of 20 characters. If these
+conditions are not met, the AFBClient instance will not initialize, i.e.
+this call will return `-EINVAL`.
+
+The `port` parameter is the port the afb daemon is listening on, an
+invalid port will lead to a failure of the call and return `-EINVAL`.
+
+### AFBClient::requestSurface(label)
+
+This method requests a surface with the label given from the *Window
+Manager*. It will return `0` for a successful surface request, and
+`-errno` on failure. Additionally, on the standard error, messages are
+logged to help debgging the issue.
+
+### AFBClient::activateSurface(label)
+
+This method is mainly intended for *manager* applications that control
+other applications (think an application manager or the *HomeScreen*).
+It instructs the window manager to activate the surface with the given
+*label*.
+
+This method only is effective after the actual window or surface was
+created by the application.
+
+### AFBClient::deactivateSurface(label)
+
+This method is mainly intended for *manager* applications that control
+other applications. It instructs the window manager to deactivate the
+surface associated with the given label. Note, that deactivating a
+surface also means to implicitly activate another (the last active or if
+not available *main surface* or *HomeScreen*.)
+
+This method only is effective after the actual window or surface was
+created by the application.
+
+### AFBClient::endDraw(label)
+
+This function is called from a client application when it is done
+drawing its surface content.
+
+It is not crucial to make this call at every time a drawing is finished
+- it is mainly intended to allow the window manager to synchronize
+drawing in case of layout switch. The exact semantics are explained in
+the next [Events](#_events) Section.
+
+### AFBClient::dispatch()
+
+This function needs to be called periodically from the application main
+loop in order to dispatch binder events and requests. This function will
+block at most 1ms if no events are ready. For more information, see the
+[Usage](#_usage) and [Example Use Case](#_example_use_case) sections
+below.
+
+### AFBClient::set\_event\_handler(et, func)
+
+This method needs to be used to register event handlers for the WM
+events described in the EventType enum. Only one hendler for each
+EventType is possible, i.e. if it is called multiple times with the same
+EventType the previous handler will be replaced.
+
+The `func` handler functions will receive the label of the surface this
+event is targeted at.
+
+See Section [Events](#_events) for mor detailed information about event
+delivery to client applications.
+
+Usage
+-----
+
+### Initialization of AFBClient
+
+Before usage of the AFBClient singleton, the method `init()` must be
+called once, it will return `-errno` in case of en error and log
+diagnostic messages to stderr.
+
+### Request a surface
+
+When creating a surface with *Qt* - it is necessary to request a surface
+from the WM, internally this will communicate with the window manager
+binding. Only after `requestSurface()` was successful, a surface should
+be created.
+
+This is also true for *QML* aplications, where only after the
+`requestSurface()` should the load of the resource be done. The method
+returns `0` after the surface was requested successfully.
+
+#### Workings of requestSurface()
+
+`AFBClient::requestSurface()` calls the AFB binding verb
+`requestsurface` of the `winman` API. This API call will return a
+numeric ID to be used when creating the surface. This ID is never
+explicitly returned to the client application, instead, it is set in the
+application environment in order for *Qt* to then use it when creating
+the surface.
+
+With the current *Qt* implementation this means, that only one surface
+will be available to client applications, as subsequent windows will
+increment this numeric ID internally - which then will lead to IDs that
+cannot be known by the window manager as there is no direct
+communication from *Qt* to the WM.
+
+### Integration into the application main loop
+
+Calls directed at the window manager are synchronoous, i.e. they wil
+ensure communication to the WM happens at the time of the call and
+finishes before returning to the client application. However, in order
+for events to be received by the application, the `dispatch()` method
+needs to be called periodically with a small timeout from the
+application mainloop. In *Qt* this can be achieved by a code fragment
+analogous to the following:
+
+ QTimer timer;
+ QObject::connect(&timer, &QTimer::timeout, &app,
+ [] {AFBClient::instance().dispatch();});
+ timer.setInterval(16);
+ timer.start();
+
+This creates a contineously firing timer that calls the AFBClient’s
+`dispatch()` method. Note that calls to event handlers will be done in
+this context from the thread that called `dispatch()`.
+
+The timeout should be small in order to not block too long, but also a 0
+timeout will not dispatch anything and return immediately (see
+[epoll\_wait(2)](https://linux.die.net/man/2/epoll_wait)).
+
+Events
+------
+
+Events are a way for the *Window Manager* to propagate information to
+client applications. It was vital for the project to implement a number
+of events, that mirror functionality that is already present in the
+wayland protocol.
+
+All events have the surface `label` as argument - a way to enable future
+multi-surface applications.
+
+As already stated above, this is currently not possible with the way
+*Qt* implements its surface ID setting.
+
+### Active and Inactive Events
+
+These events signal an application that it was activated or deactivated
+respectively. Usually this means it was switched visible - which means
+the surface will now be on the screen and therefor continue to render.
+
+### Visible and Invisible
+
+These events signal an application that it was switched to be visible or
+invisible respectively. These events too are handled implicitly through
+the wayland protocol by means of `wl_surface::enter` and
+`wl_surface::leave` events to the client.
+
+### SyncDraw and FlushDraw
+
+These events instruct applications that they should redraw their surface
+contents - again, this is handled implicitly by the wayland protocol.
+
+`SyncDraw` is sent to the application when it has to redraw its surface.
+
+`FlushDraw` is sent to the application when it should swap its buffers,
+that is *signal* the compositor that its surface contains new content.
+
+Example Use Case
+----------------
+
+In order to enable application to use the `WM` surface registration
+function the above described steps need to be implemented.
+
+As a minimal example the usage and initialization can look like the
+following.
+
+ // Assume a program argc and argv.
+ QGuiApplication app(argc, argv);
+
+ auto &wm = AFBClient::instance();
+
+ // initialize the AFBClient binding.
+ if(wm.init(1234, "wmtest") != 0) {
+ exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
+ }
+
+ // Request a surface label from the WM.
+ char const *surface_label = "AppMediaPlayer";
+ if (wm.requestSurface(surface_label) != 0) {
+ exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
+ }
+
+ // Register an Active event handler.
+ wm.set_event_handler(Event_Active,
+ [](char const *label) {
+ qDebug() << "Surface" << label << "got activated";
+ });
+
+ // Initialize application window
+ // ...
+
+ // request to activate the surface, this should usually
+ // not be done by the client application.
+ if (wm.activateSurface(surface_label) != 0) {
+ fprintf(stderr, "Could not activate the surface\n");
+ exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
+ }
+
+ // enable main loop integration.
+ QTimer timer;
+ QObject::connect(&timer, &QTimer::timeout, &app,
+ [&wm] {wm.dispatch();});
+ timer.setInterval(16);
+ timer.start();
+
+ // e.g. exec the qt application
+ app.exec();
+
+Alternatively to the `QTimer` mainloop integration a thread could be
+started up which does the periodic polling of the binding. However,
+using a timer event is a much cleaner approach.
diff --git a/client-lib/doc/CMakeLists.txt b/client-lib/doc/CMakeLists.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..aba1ac1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/client-lib/doc/CMakeLists.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+install(
+ FILES AFBClient.md
+ DESTINATION ${CMAKE_INSTALL_DOCDIR}
+ COMPONENT "development")