This patch introduces code generation for the WindowServer IPC with
its clients. The client/server endpoints are defined by the two .ipc
files in Servers/WindowServer/: WindowServer.ipc and WindowClient.ipc
It now becomes significantly easier to add features and capabilities
to WindowServer since you don't have to know nearly as much about all
the intricate paths that IPC messages take between LibGUI and WSWindow.
The new system also uses significantly less IPC bandwidth since we're
now doing packed serialization instead of passing fixed-sized structs
of ~600 bytes for each message.
Some repaint coalescing optimizations are lost in this conversion and
we'll need to look at how to implement those in the new world.
The old CoreIPC::Client::Connection and CoreIPC::Server::Connection
classes are removed by this patch and replaced by use of ConnectionNG,
which will be renamed eventually.
Goodbye, old WindowServer IPC. You served us well :^)
Client-side connection objects must now provide both client and server
endpoint types. When a message is received from the server side, we try
to decode it using both endpoint types and then send it to the right
place for handling.
This now makes it possible for AudioServer to send unsolicited messages
to its clients. This opens up a ton of possibilities :^)
The C_OBJECT macro now also inserts a static construct(...) helper into
the class. Now we can make the constructor(s) private and instead call:
auto socket = CTCPSocket::construct(arguments);
construct() returns an ObjectPtr<T>, which we'll later switch to being
a NonnullRefPtr<T>, once everything else in in place for ref-counting.
Fork the IPC Connection classes into Server:: and Client::ConnectionNG.
The new IPC messages are serialized very snugly instead of using the
same generic data structure for all messages.
Remove ASAPI.h since we now generate all of it from AudioServer.ipc :^)
The goal here is to generate most of this code from IPC protocol
descriptions, but for now I've spelled them all out to get started.
Each message gets a wrapper class in the ASAPI_Client or ASAPI_Server
namespace. They are convertible to and from the old message structs.
The real hotness happens when you want to make a synchronous request
to the other side:
auto response = send_sync<ASAPI_Client::GetMainMixVolume>();
Each request class knows his corresponding response class, so in the
above example, "response" will be an ASAPI_Server::DidGetMainMixVolume
object, and we can get the volume like so:
int volume = response.volume();
For posting messages that don't expect a response, you can still use
post_message() since the message classes are convertible:
post_message(ASAPI_Server::DidGetMainMixVolume(volume));
It's not perfect yet, but I already really like it. :^)
This macro goes at the top of every CObject-derived class like so:
class SomeClass : public CObject {
C_OBJECT(SomeClass)
public:
...
At the moment, all it does is create an override for the class_name() getter
but in the future this will be used to automatically insert member functions
into these classes.
Add a trivial CSafeSyscall template that calls a callback until it stops
returning EINTR, and use it everywhere we use select() now.
Thanks to Andreas for the suggestion of using a template parameter for
the syscall function to invoke.
Sticking these in a namespace allows us to use a more generic
("Connection") term without clashing, which is way easier to understand
than to try to come up with unique names for both.
2019-07-17 20:16:44 +02:00
Renamed from Libraries/LibCore/CIPCClientSideConnection.h (Browse further)