It's now possible to mark struct fields and function params as "references",
which causes them to become pointers in C (in bindings, they become whatever
is necessary). They're not a part of the type and are much more restricted
than pointers, allowing bindings to be easier. This system will be gradually
utilized and expanded as required.
@feature
Complex types (i.e. list, array, hash, accessor etc.) now do not require
pointers with them anymore (the pointer is implied) and the same goes for
class handles. Eolian now explicitly disallows creating pointers to these
as well. This is the first part of the work to remove pointers from Eolian
completely, with the goal of simplifying the DSL (higher level) and therefore
making it easier for bindings (as well as easier API usage).
@feature
Previously events used to use class name as a prefix and ignored eo_prefix
when specified. This is no longer the case. Events follow eo_prefix by default
now. In order to get around this for classes where this is undesirable, a new
field event_prefix was added which takes priority over eo_prefix. If neither
is specified, class name is used like previously.
@feature
Modify the way hooks are defined and used by promise generation in
Eolian in the Eo API.
Instead of passing macro names as parameters to EO_FUNC_BODY macros,
just re-define the actual hooks when it is needed.
Add two parameters for macros that generate API functions in Eo so
that the generation can be customized with macros used by Eolian.
Signed-off-by: Cedric Bail <cedric@osg.samsung.com>
While we had the functionality to generate type stubs header we never had
these tested in our unit test setup. Adding to simple cases for struct
and typedef which we already use for normal header generation tests.
I just ran my script (email to follow) to migrate all of the EFL
automatically. This commit is *only* the automatic conversion, so it can
be easily reverted and re-run.
Until now it wasn't allowed/possible to init (eo_init) eo after it has
been shut down (eo_shutdown). This commit fixes that, so now that is
fully legal to have as many init/shutdown cycles as you want.
There was a previous workaround for this issue:
e47edc250d.
This should allow more flexibility when using the EFL in loadable
modules and in various other scenarios.
The problem is that the class_get() functions cache the previously
created class for efficiency, but the class is freed if eo is shut down,
so the cached pointer is actually invalid.
The solution to the problem was to maintain a generation count
(incremented every time we shut down eo), and compare that to a locally
saved version in class_get(). If they don't match, recreate the class,
as it has already been freed.
@feature
Summary:
Add code to unit test to check if Eolian correctly recognize a struct
name as a struct type when it is used in a method.
Add new method to struct.eo to create this test.
Update struct_ref.c accordingly.
Reviewers: tasn, q66
Differential Revision: https://phab.enlightenment.org/D3213
As described by Carsten in his email to edev ML titled:
"[E-devel] eo stability - i think we need to postpone that"
with the switch to Eo2 we significantly increased our usage of RW memory
pages, and thus significantly increased our memory usage when running
multiple applications.
The problem was that during the migration to Eo2 the op id cache and the
op description arrays were merged, causing the op description arrays to
no longer be RO. This patch enables users of Eo (mainly Eolian) to
declare those arrays as const (RO) again, saving that memory.
There might be performance implications with this patch. I had to remove
the op desc array sorting, and I used a hash table for the lookup. I
think the op desc sorting doesn't really affect performance because that
array is seldom accessed and is usually pretty short. The hash table
is not a problem either, because it's behind the scenes, so it can be
changed to a more efficient data structure if the hash table is not good
enough. The hash table itself is also rarely accessed, so it's mostly
about memory.
Please keep an eye for any bugs, performance or excessive memory usage.
I believe this should be better on all fronts.
This commit *BREAKS ABI*.
@fix
This hasn't been used for a while. Since we are going to break Eo a bit anyway
it's a good opportunity to drop this.
This may cause a slight performance issues with legacy events, such as
smart callbacks. This shouldn't really be a problem as we've migrated away from
them. If it does, we need to migrate the remaining parts. Only relevant
for callbacks that are added before the classes are created, which
shouldn't be possible except for smart, only for old evas callbacks.
This is kind of ugly, but I didn't see a better way to do it without turning
this into a much more complicated parser. So this will have to do unless we
find something else to add, in which case a new doc parser will be required.
@feature
This commit adds the necessary generator logic to emit doc
comments from the new doc syntax. Old doc comments are kept
in for the time being as they're used within the EFL but they
will be removed eventually. This new generator focuses all the
important code in one place, making usage easy.
@feature
This adds new APIs that deal with the new documentation syntax
provided by Eolian. The old doc comment APIs are considered
deprecated from now on and will be removed.
@feature
Sometimes it is necessary to specify a different set of values for a
getter or a setter. This commit allows such specializations. This also
renders @const_get and @const_set useless (soon to be removed).
To function correctly, this required adjustment of several public APIs
as well as deprecation of eolian_function_parameter_get_by_name.
This function was not used in any generator and was pretty much
useless in the first place, so it was removed.
@fix
Instead of "@in type name;" we now use "@in name: type;". This change
is done because of consistency with the rest of Eolian; pretty much
every other part of Eolian syntax uses the latter form.
This is a big breaking change in the .eo format, so please update your
.eo files accordingly and compile Elementary together with the EFL.
@feature
Typedef word was not generated for enums. Camel case was not respected
for type definition.
Tests have been updated to check enums generation.
@fix T2400
From now on, there are 5 builtin complex types, particularly accessor, array,
iterator, hash and list. All other types are simple - they can't have a complex
part. Also, the <> now binds to the type itself, not the pointer. More builtin
complex types will be added as needed.
Local and base class functions are supported.
When @empty is provided, dummy functions (initializing the parameters with default
values if needed) are generated.
When @auto is provided on properties, access to internal data variables is done. On
set, it will assign parameters values to private data members. On get,
parameters are set with private data members values.
See the supplied tests as examples.
@feature
This is needed when get properties or methods have to return a
value in case of failure or to initialize parameters.
The way used is to generate an intermediate function that will
initialize the parameters and then invoke the "user" function.
This change adds a new API to retrieve the legacy prefix for enum members
and also adds support for generating enums into the C generator. Besides that,
it prevents generation of entire struct contents when the .eo file declares
a named struct inside of a typedef - as the struct itself gets generated later on.
Also added API to retrieve value of a variable (forgot about that one)
and made it impossible to create extern constants (doesn't make sense)
as well as made it impossible to give extern globals values.
This way we can only lex expr related tokens (operators etc.) when actually
about to parse an expression. That allows stuff like nested complex types
without the lexer treating the endings as right shift.
so the test suites were useless because they didn't ecompile what was
generated. it was missing a ) at the end of calling eo_do_super to
start with. it was missing a call to do_uper fo destructors too. also
it didnt deal with the #include "blah.eo.c" at the file end either so
it produced uncompilable src at the start. again - also fix. this also
fixes test case comparisons to match the now correct generation that
compiles.
By using -gi option, the generator appends the functions that are
present into the given eo file and missing into the developer file
(given via -o option as an in/out file).
@feature
It includes parser updates, database fill and tests on basic and complex
types.
One can define types in this way:
type Evas_Coord: int; /* Simple type definition */
type List_Objects: Eina_List * <Eo *>;
@feature
It includes too fixes for the complex type. If I had listened to Tasn,
I would have detected them a long time ago.
But he didn't insist enough. He just said:
"Write your tests, ?#@*&%! french!"