Summary:
Instead of surrounding all the #include "*.eo.h" lines in Efl.h
with #ifdef EFL_BETA_API_SUPPORT, include these files unconditionally, but mark
all classes as @beta in the eo files.
This will allow taking them out of beta one by one as we deem them stable enough.
Otherwise, the current procedure involves moving the #include line out of the
ifdef block, which is cumbersome and messes include order.
Depends on D7950
Fixes T7692
Test Plan: Nothing changes
Reviewers: zmike, bu5hm4n, cedric
Subscribers: #reviewers, #committers
Tags: #efl
Maniphest Tasks: T7692
Differential Revision: https://phab.enlightenment.org/D7951
Summary: I had fixed some typos and some wrong expressions in API reference doc
Test Plan: N/A
Reviewers: raster, zmike, Hermet, segfaultxavi
Reviewed By: Hermet
Subscribers: cedric, #reviewers, #committers
Tags: #efl
Differential Revision: https://phab.enlightenment.org/D6943
Summary:
All events must have a type now, otherwise bindings don't know how to handle
the event_info field.
Most of the missing event types were actually "void" (no event_info present).
Some struct definitions had to be moved to eo instead of h files, so they
are available to bindings. Some have not, and are marked with FIXME.
Some namespaces have been fixed (like Efl_Event_Cb -> Efl.Event_Cb).
In general, there are hundreds of changed files, but mostly to add a type which
was not present before, so there's no harm done.
Also, A lot of FIXMEs have been added which should be, like, fixed.
For example, some events can send different types of event_info, which is
very inconvenient (and error prone).
Test Plan: make with c# bindings works, make check and make examples work too.
Reviewers: cedric, q66, lauromoura
Subscribers: zmike
Tags: #efl
Differential Revision: https://phab.enlightenment.org/D6169
Summary: I had fixed some typos and wrong expressions, euch as capital letters, singular Etc. in Ecore and Edje API reference doxygen.
Test Plan: Doxygen Revision
Reviewers: stefan, cedric, raster, Jaehyun_Cho, jpeg
Subscribers: conr2d
Differential Revision: https://phab.enlightenment.org/D4677
I just realized that if a client is not referenced it would leak in
the 'ssl' server as we must del it.
However, if we del the SSL socket, we're going to close the underlying
TCP. But we're from the TCP "client,add" callback and this causes
issues since "closed" will be emitted, our close callback will
unparent the client, which lead to it being deleted.
The proper solution is to only monitor "closed" if the client is
accepted. Otherwise we just check if it was closed, if we're the
parent, etc...
Fixing this in all servers were painful, we could share since most
inherit from Efl.Net.Server.Fd. Then add the "client_announce"
protected method to do it, and document how it should work.
this allows nicer usage such as 'localhost:http' as the address, which
will resolve to [::1]:80 (if IPv6 is enabled) or 127.0.0.1:80 if only
IPv4 exists.
Efl.Net.Server defines how to accept new connections, doing the
bind(), listen() and accept() for protocols such as TCP.
Efl.Net.Dialer defines to to reach a server.
Both are based on Efl.Net.Socket as communication interface that is
based on Efl.Io.Reader, Efl.Io.Writer and Efl.Io.Closer, thus being
usable with code such as Efl.Io.Copier.
The Server will emit an event "client,add" with the established
Socket, which is a child and can be closed by both the server or the
user.
The Dialer extends the Socket and allows for creating one given an
address, that will be resolved and connected.
TCP is the initial implementation so we an validate the
interfaces. UDP, Unix-Local and SSL will come later as derivate
classes.
The examples are documented and should cover the basic principles:
- efl_io_copier_example can accept "tcp://IP:PORT" and will work as a
"netcat", can send data from socket, file or stdin to a socket,
file, stdout or stderr.
- efl_net_server_example listens for connections and can either reply
"Hello World!" and take some data or work as an echo-server,
looping back all received data to the user.
More complex interactions that require a "chat" between client and
server will be covered with new classes later, such as a queue that
empties itself once data is read.