VirtualBox

source: vbox/trunk/src/VBox/Main/include/VirtualBoxBase.h@ 18622

Last change on this file since 18622 was 17688, checked in by vboxsync, 16 years ago

Main API: cosmetics only; no code changes.

  • Property svn:eol-style set to native
  • Property svn:keywords set to Author Date Id Revision
File size: 103.8 KB
Line 
1/** @file
2 *
3 * VirtualBox COM base classes definition
4 */
5
6/*
7 * Copyright (C) 2006-2009 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
8 *
9 * This file is part of VirtualBox Open Source Edition (OSE), as
10 * available from http://www.virtualbox.org. This file is free software;
11 * you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU
12 * General Public License (GPL) as published by the Free Software
13 * Foundation, in version 2 as it comes in the "COPYING" file of the
14 * VirtualBox OSE distribution. VirtualBox OSE is distributed in the
15 * hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY of any kind.
16 *
17 * Please contact Sun Microsystems, Inc., 4150 Network Circle, Santa
18 * Clara, CA 95054 USA or visit http://www.sun.com if you need
19 * additional information or have any questions.
20 */
21
22#ifndef ____H_VIRTUALBOXBASEIMPL
23#define ____H_VIRTUALBOXBASEIMPL
24
25#include <iprt/cdefs.h>
26#include <iprt/critsect.h>
27#include <iprt/thread.h>
28
29#include <list>
30#include <map>
31
32#include "VBox/com/ErrorInfo.h"
33
34#include "VBox/com/VirtualBox.h"
35
36// avoid including VBox/settings.h and VBox/xml.h;
37// only declare the classes
38namespace settings
39{
40class XmlTreeBackend;
41class TreeBackend;
42class Key;
43}
44
45namespace xml
46{
47class File;
48}
49
50#include "AutoLock.h"
51
52using namespace com;
53using namespace util;
54
55#if !defined (VBOX_WITH_XPCOM)
56
57#include <atlcom.h>
58
59/* use a special version of the singleton class factory,
60 * see KB811591 in msdn for more info. */
61
62#undef DECLARE_CLASSFACTORY_SINGLETON
63#define DECLARE_CLASSFACTORY_SINGLETON(obj) DECLARE_CLASSFACTORY_EX(CMyComClassFactorySingleton<obj>)
64
65template <class T>
66class CMyComClassFactorySingleton : public CComClassFactory
67{
68public:
69 CMyComClassFactorySingleton() : m_hrCreate(S_OK){}
70 virtual ~CMyComClassFactorySingleton(){}
71 // IClassFactory
72 STDMETHOD(CreateInstance)(LPUNKNOWN pUnkOuter, REFIID riid, void** ppvObj)
73 {
74 HRESULT hRes = E_POINTER;
75 if (ppvObj != NULL)
76 {
77 *ppvObj = NULL;
78 // Aggregation is not supported in singleton objects.
79 ATLASSERT(pUnkOuter == NULL);
80 if (pUnkOuter != NULL)
81 hRes = CLASS_E_NOAGGREGATION;
82 else
83 {
84 if (m_hrCreate == S_OK && m_spObj == NULL)
85 {
86 Lock();
87 __try
88 {
89 // Fix: The following If statement was moved inside the __try statement.
90 // Did another thread arrive here first?
91 if (m_hrCreate == S_OK && m_spObj == NULL)
92 {
93 // lock the module to indicate activity
94 // (necessary for the monitor shutdown thread to correctly
95 // terminate the module in case when CreateInstance() fails)
96 _pAtlModule->Lock();
97 CComObjectCached<T> *p;
98 m_hrCreate = CComObjectCached<T>::CreateInstance(&p);
99 if (SUCCEEDED(m_hrCreate))
100 {
101 m_hrCreate = p->QueryInterface(IID_IUnknown, (void**)&m_spObj);
102 if (FAILED(m_hrCreate))
103 {
104 delete p;
105 }
106 }
107 _pAtlModule->Unlock();
108 }
109 }
110 __finally
111 {
112 Unlock();
113 }
114 }
115 if (m_hrCreate == S_OK)
116 {
117 hRes = m_spObj->QueryInterface(riid, ppvObj);
118 }
119 else
120 {
121 hRes = m_hrCreate;
122 }
123 }
124 }
125 return hRes;
126 }
127 HRESULT m_hrCreate;
128 CComPtr<IUnknown> m_spObj;
129};
130
131#endif /* !defined (VBOX_WITH_XPCOM) */
132
133// macros
134////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
135
136/**
137 * Special version of the Assert macro to be used within VirtualBoxBase
138 * subclasses that also inherit the VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImpl template.
139 *
140 * In the debug build, this macro is equivalent to Assert.
141 * In the release build, this macro uses |setError (E_FAIL, ...)| to set the
142 * error info from the asserted expression.
143 *
144 * @see VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImpl::setError
145 *
146 * @param expr Expression which should be true.
147 */
148#if defined (DEBUG)
149#define ComAssert(expr) Assert (expr)
150#else
151#define ComAssert(expr) \
152 do { \
153 if (!(expr)) \
154 setError (E_FAIL, "Assertion failed: [%s] at '%s' (%d) in %s.\n" \
155 "Please contact the product vendor!", \
156 #expr, __FILE__, __LINE__, __PRETTY_FUNCTION__); \
157 } while (0)
158#endif
159
160/**
161 * Special version of the AssertMsg macro to be used within VirtualBoxBase
162 * subclasses that also inherit the VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImpl template.
163 *
164 * See ComAssert for more info.
165 *
166 * @param expr Expression which should be true.
167 * @param a printf argument list (in parenthesis).
168 */
169#if defined (DEBUG)
170#define ComAssertMsg(expr, a) AssertMsg (expr, a)
171#else
172#define ComAssertMsg(expr, a) \
173 do { \
174 if (!(expr)) \
175 setError (E_FAIL, "Assertion failed: [%s] at '%s' (%d) in %s.\n" \
176 "%s.\n" \
177 "Please contact the product vendor!", \
178 #expr, __FILE__, __LINE__, __PRETTY_FUNCTION__, Utf8StrFmt a .raw()); \
179 } while (0)
180#endif
181
182/**
183 * Special version of the AssertRC macro to be used within VirtualBoxBase
184 * subclasses that also inherit the VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImpl template.
185 *
186 * See ComAssert for more info.
187 *
188 * @param vrc VBox status code.
189 */
190#if defined (DEBUG)
191#define ComAssertRC(vrc) AssertRC (vrc)
192#else
193#define ComAssertRC(vrc) ComAssertMsgRC (vrc, ("%Rra", vrc))
194#endif
195
196/**
197 * Special version of the AssertMsgRC macro to be used within VirtualBoxBase
198 * subclasses that also inherit the VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImpl template.
199 *
200 * See ComAssert for more info.
201 *
202 * @param vrc VBox status code.
203 * @param msg printf argument list (in parenthesis).
204 */
205#if defined (DEBUG)
206#define ComAssertMsgRC(vrc, msg) AssertMsgRC (vrc, msg)
207#else
208#define ComAssertMsgRC(vrc, msg) ComAssertMsg (RT_SUCCESS (vrc), msg)
209#endif
210
211
212/**
213 * Special version of the AssertFailed macro to be used within VirtualBoxBase
214 * subclasses that also inherit the VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImpl template.
215 *
216 * See ComAssert for more info.
217 */
218#if defined (DEBUG)
219#define ComAssertFailed() AssertFailed()
220#else
221#define ComAssertFailed() \
222 do { \
223 setError (E_FAIL, "Assertion failed at '%s' (%d) in %s.\n" \
224 "Please contact the product vendor!", \
225 __FILE__, __LINE__, __PRETTY_FUNCTION__); \
226 } while (0)
227#endif
228
229/**
230 * Special version of the AssertMsgFailed macro to be used within VirtualBoxBase
231 * subclasses that also inherit the VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImpl template.
232 *
233 * See ComAssert for more info.
234 *
235 * @param a printf argument list (in parenthesis).
236 */
237#if defined (DEBUG)
238#define ComAssertMsgFailed(a) AssertMsgFailed(a)
239#else
240#define ComAssertMsgFailed(a) \
241 do { \
242 setError (E_FAIL, "Assertion failed at '%s' (%d) in %s.\n" \
243 "%s.\n" \
244 "Please contact the product vendor!", \
245 __FILE__, __LINE__, __PRETTY_FUNCTION__, Utf8StrFmt a .raw()); \
246 } while (0)
247#endif
248
249/**
250 * Special version of the ComAssertMsgFailed macro that additionally takes
251 * line number, file and function arguments to inject an assertion position
252 * that differs from the position where this macro is instantiated.
253 *
254 * @param a printf argument list (in parenthesis).
255 * @param file, line, func Line number (int), file and function (const char *).
256 */
257#if defined (DEBUG)
258#define ComAssertMsgFailedPos(a, file, line, func) \
259 do { \
260 AssertMsg1 ((const char *) 0, line, file, func); \
261 AssertMsg2 a; \
262 AssertBreakpoint(); \
263 } while (0)
264#else
265#define ComAssertMsgFailedPos(a, file, line, func) \
266 do { \
267 setError (E_FAIL, \
268 "Assertion failed at '%s' (%d) in %s.\n" \
269 "%s.\n" \
270 "Please contact the product vendor!", \
271 file, line, func, Utf8StrFmt a .raw()); \
272 } while (0)
273#endif
274
275/**
276 * Special version of the AssertComRC macro to be used within VirtualBoxBase
277 * subclasses that also inherit the VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImpl template.
278 *
279 * See ComAssert for more info.
280 *
281 * @param rc COM result code
282 */
283#if defined (DEBUG)
284#define ComAssertComRC(rc) AssertComRC (rc)
285#else
286#define ComAssertComRC(rc) ComAssertMsg (SUCCEEDED (rc), ("COM RC = %Rhrc (0x%08X)", (rc), (rc)))
287#endif
288
289
290/** Special version of ComAssert that returns ret if expr fails */
291#define ComAssertRet(expr, ret) \
292 do { ComAssert (expr); if (!(expr)) return (ret); } while (0)
293/** Special version of ComAssertMsg that returns ret if expr fails */
294#define ComAssertMsgRet(expr, a, ret) \
295 do { ComAssertMsg (expr, a); if (!(expr)) return (ret); } while (0)
296/** Special version of ComAssertRC that returns ret if vrc does not succeed */
297#define ComAssertRCRet(vrc, ret) \
298 do { ComAssertRC (vrc); if (!RT_SUCCESS (vrc)) return (ret); } while (0)
299/** Special version of ComAssertMsgRC that returns ret if vrc does not succeed */
300#define ComAssertMsgRCRet(vrc, msg, ret) \
301 do { ComAssertMsgRC (vrc, msg); if (!RT_SUCCESS (vrc)) return (ret); } while (0)
302/** Special version of ComAssertFailed that returns ret */
303#define ComAssertFailedRet(ret) \
304 do { ComAssertFailed(); return (ret); } while (0)
305/** Special version of ComAssertMsgFailed that returns ret */
306#define ComAssertMsgFailedRet(msg, ret) \
307 do { ComAssertMsgFailed (msg); return (ret); } while (0)
308/** Special version of ComAssertComRC that returns ret if rc does not succeed */
309#define ComAssertComRCRet(rc, ret) \
310 do { ComAssertComRC (rc); if (!SUCCEEDED (rc)) return (ret); } while (0)
311/** Special version of ComAssertComRC that returns rc if rc does not succeed */
312#define ComAssertComRCRetRC(rc) \
313 do { ComAssertComRC (rc); if (!SUCCEEDED (rc)) return (rc); } while (0)
314
315
316/** Special version of ComAssert that evaluates eval and breaks if expr fails */
317#define ComAssertBreak(expr, eval) \
318 if (1) { ComAssert (expr); if (!(expr)) { eval; break; } } else do {} while (0)
319/** Special version of ComAssertMsg that evaluates eval and breaks if expr fails */
320#define ComAssertMsgBreak(expr, a, eval) \
321 if (1) { ComAssertMsg (expr, a); if (!(expr)) { eval; break; } } else do {} while (0)
322/** Special version of ComAssertRC that evaluates eval and breaks if vrc does not succeed */
323#define ComAssertRCBreak(vrc, eval) \
324 if (1) { ComAssertRC (vrc); if (!RT_SUCCESS (vrc)) { eval; break; } } else do {} while (0)
325/** Special version of ComAssertMsgRC that evaluates eval and breaks if vrc does not succeed */
326#define ComAssertMsgRCBreak(vrc, msg, eval) \
327 if (1) { ComAssertMsgRC (vrc, msg); if (!RT_SUCCESS (vrc)) { eval; break; } } else do {} while (0)
328/** Special version of ComAssertFailed that evaluates eval and breaks */
329#define ComAssertFailedBreak(eval) \
330 if (1) { ComAssertFailed(); { eval; break; } } else do {} while (0)
331/** Special version of ComAssertMsgFailed that evaluates eval and breaks */
332#define ComAssertMsgFailedBreak(msg, eval) \
333 if (1) { ComAssertMsgFailed (msg); { eval; break; } } else do {} while (0)
334/** Special version of ComAssertComRC that evaluates eval and breaks if rc does not succeed */
335#define ComAssertComRCBreak(rc, eval) \
336 if (1) { ComAssertComRC (rc); if (!SUCCEEDED (rc)) { eval; break; } } else do {} while (0)
337/** Special version of ComAssertComRC that just breaks if rc does not succeed */
338#define ComAssertComRCBreakRC(rc) \
339 if (1) { ComAssertComRC (rc); if (!SUCCEEDED (rc)) { break; } } else do {} while (0)
340
341
342/** Special version of ComAssert that evaluates eval and throws it if expr fails */
343#define ComAssertThrow(expr, eval) \
344 if (1) { ComAssert (expr); if (!(expr)) { throw (eval); } } else do {} while (0)
345/** Special version of ComAssertMsg that evaluates eval and throws it if expr fails */
346#define ComAssertMsgThrow(expr, a, eval) \
347 if (1) { ComAssertMsg (expr, a); if (!(expr)) { throw (eval); } } else do {} while (0)
348/** Special version of ComAssertRC that evaluates eval and throws it if vrc does not succeed */
349#define ComAssertRCThrow(vrc, eval) \
350 if (1) { ComAssertRC (vrc); if (!RT_SUCCESS (vrc)) { throw (eval); } } else do {} while (0)
351/** Special version of ComAssertMsgRC that evaluates eval and throws it if vrc does not succeed */
352#define ComAssertMsgRCThrow(vrc, msg, eval) \
353 if (1) { ComAssertMsgRC (vrc, msg); if (!RT_SUCCESS (vrc)) { throw (eval); } } else do {} while (0)
354/** Special version of ComAssertFailed that evaluates eval and throws it */
355#define ComAssertFailedThrow(eval) \
356 if (1) { ComAssertFailed(); { throw (eval); } } else do {} while (0)
357/** Special version of ComAssertMsgFailed that evaluates eval and throws it */
358#define ComAssertMsgFailedThrow(msg, eval) \
359 if (1) { ComAssertMsgFailed (msg); { throw (eval); } } else do {} while (0)
360/** Special version of ComAssertComRC that evaluates eval and throws it if rc does not succeed */
361#define ComAssertComRCThrow(rc, eval) \
362 if (1) { ComAssertComRC (rc); if (!SUCCEEDED (rc)) { throw (eval); } } else do {} while (0)
363/** Special version of ComAssertComRC that just throws rc if rc does not succeed */
364#define ComAssertComRCThrowRC(rc) \
365 if (1) { ComAssertComRC (rc); if (!SUCCEEDED (rc)) { throw rc; } } else do {} while (0)
366
367////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
368
369/**
370 * Checks that the pointer argument is not NULL and returns E_INVALIDARG +
371 * extended error info on failure.
372 * @param arg Input pointer-type argument (strings, interface pointers...)
373 */
374#define CheckComArgNotNull(arg) \
375 do { \
376 if ((arg) == NULL) \
377 return setError (E_INVALIDARG, tr ("Argument %s is NULL"), #arg); \
378 } while (0)
379
380/**
381 * Checks that safe array argument is not NULL and returns E_INVALIDARG +
382 * extended error info on failure.
383 * @param arg Input safe array argument (strings, interface pointers...)
384 */
385#define CheckComArgSafeArrayNotNull(arg) \
386 do { \
387 if (ComSafeArrayInIsNull (arg)) \
388 return setError (E_INVALIDARG, tr ("Argument %s is NULL"), #arg); \
389 } while (0)
390
391/**
392 * Checks that the string argument is not a NULL or empty string and returns
393 * E_INVALIDARG + extended error info on failure.
394 * @param arg Input string argument (BSTR etc.).
395 */
396#define CheckComArgStrNotEmptyOrNull(arg) \
397 do { \
398 if ((arg) == NULL || *(arg) == '\0') \
399 return setError (E_INVALIDARG, \
400 tr ("Argument %s is emtpy or NULL"), #arg); \
401 } while (0)
402
403/**
404 * Checks that the given expression (that must involve the argument) is true and
405 * returns E_INVALIDARG + extended error info on failure.
406 * @param arg Argument.
407 * @param expr Expression to evaluate.
408 */
409#define CheckComArgExpr(arg, expr) \
410 do { \
411 if (!(expr)) \
412 return setError (E_INVALIDARG, \
413 tr ("Argument %s is invalid (must be %s)"), #arg, #expr); \
414 } while (0)
415
416/**
417 * Checks that the given expression (that must involve the argument) is true and
418 * returns E_INVALIDARG + extended error info on failure. The error message must
419 * be customized.
420 * @param arg Argument.
421 * @param expr Expression to evaluate.
422 * @param msg Parenthesized printf-like expression (must start with a verb,
423 * like "must be one of...", "is not within...").
424 */
425#define CheckComArgExprMsg(arg, expr, msg) \
426 do { \
427 if (!(expr)) \
428 return setError (E_INVALIDARG, tr ("Argument %s %s"), \
429 #arg, Utf8StrFmt msg .raw()); \
430 } while (0)
431
432/**
433 * Checks that the given pointer to an output argument is valid and returns
434 * E_POINTER + extended error info otherwise.
435 * @param arg Pointer argument.
436 */
437#define CheckComArgOutPointerValid(arg) \
438 do { \
439 if (!VALID_PTR (arg)) \
440 return setError (E_POINTER, \
441 tr ("Output argument %s points to invalid memory location (%p)"), \
442 #arg, (void *) (arg)); \
443 } while (0)
444
445/**
446 * Checks that the given pointer to an output safe array argument is valid and
447 * returns E_POINTER + extended error info otherwise.
448 * @param arg Safe array argument.
449 */
450#define CheckComArgOutSafeArrayPointerValid(arg) \
451 do { \
452 if (ComSafeArrayOutIsNull (arg)) \
453 return setError (E_POINTER, \
454 tr ("Output argument %s points to invalid memory location (%p)"), \
455 #arg, (void *) (arg)); \
456 } while (0)
457
458/**
459 * Sets the extended error info and returns E_NOTIMPL.
460 */
461#define ReturnComNotImplemented() \
462 do { \
463 return setError (E_NOTIMPL, tr ("Method %s is not implemented"), __FUNCTION__); \
464 } while (0)
465
466////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
467
468/// @todo (dmik) remove after we switch to VirtualBoxBaseNEXT completely
469/**
470 * Checks whether this object is ready or not. Objects are typically ready
471 * after they are successfully created by their parent objects and become
472 * not ready when the respective parent itself becomes not ready or gets
473 * destroyed while a reference to the child is still held by the caller
474 * (which prevents it from destruction).
475 *
476 * When this object is not ready, the macro sets error info and returns
477 * E_ACCESSDENIED (the translatable error message is defined in null context).
478 * Otherwise, the macro does nothing.
479 *
480 * This macro <b>must</b> be used at the beginning of all interface methods
481 * (right after entering the class lock) in classes derived from both
482 * VirtualBoxBase and VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImpl.
483 */
484#define CHECK_READY() \
485 do { \
486 if (!isReady()) \
487 return setError (E_ACCESSDENIED, tr ("The object is not ready")); \
488 } while (0)
489
490/**
491 * Declares an empty constructor and destructor for the given class.
492 * This is useful to prevent the compiler from generating the default
493 * ctor and dtor, which in turn allows to use forward class statements
494 * (instead of including their header files) when declaring data members of
495 * non-fundamental types with constructors (which are always called implicitly
496 * by constructors and by the destructor of the class).
497 *
498 * This macro is to be placed within (the public section of) the class
499 * declaration. Its counterpart, DEFINE_EMPTY_CTOR_DTOR, must be placed
500 * somewhere in one of the translation units (usually .cpp source files).
501 *
502 * @param cls class to declare a ctor and dtor for
503 */
504#define DECLARE_EMPTY_CTOR_DTOR(cls) cls(); ~cls();
505
506/**
507 * Defines an empty constructor and destructor for the given class.
508 * See DECLARE_EMPTY_CTOR_DTOR for more info.
509 */
510#define DEFINE_EMPTY_CTOR_DTOR(cls) \
511 cls::cls () {}; cls::~cls () {};
512
513////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
514
515namespace stdx
516{
517 /**
518 * A wrapper around the container that owns pointers it stores.
519 *
520 * @note
521 * Ownership is recognized only when destructing the container!
522 * Pointers are not deleted when erased using erase() etc.
523 *
524 * @param container
525 * class that meets Container requirements (for example, an instance of
526 * std::list<>, std::vector<> etc.). The given class must store
527 * pointers (for example, std::list <MyType *>).
528 */
529 template <typename container>
530 class ptr_container : public container
531 {
532 public:
533 ~ptr_container()
534 {
535 for (typename container::iterator it = container::begin();
536 it != container::end();
537 ++ it)
538 delete (*it);
539 }
540 };
541}
542
543////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
544
545/**
546 * Abstract base class for all component classes implementing COM
547 * interfaces of the VirtualBox COM library.
548 *
549 * Declares functionality that should be available in all components.
550 *
551 * Note that this class is always subclassed using the virtual keyword so
552 * that only one instance of its VTBL and data is present in each derived class
553 * even in case if VirtualBoxBaseProto appears more than once among base classes
554 * of the particular component as a result of multiple inheritance.
555 *
556 * This makes it possible to have intermediate base classes used by several
557 * components that implement some common interface functionality but still let
558 * the final component classes choose what VirtualBoxBase variant it wants to
559 * use.
560 *
561 * Among the basic functionality implemented by this class is the primary object
562 * state that indicates if the object is ready to serve the calls, and if not,
563 * what stage it is currently at. Here is the primary state diagram:
564 *
565 * +-------------------------------------------------------+
566 * | |
567 * | (InitFailed) -----------------------+ |
568 * | ^ | |
569 * v | v |
570 * [*] ---> NotReady ----> (InInit) -----> Ready -----> (InUninit) ----+
571 * ^ | ^ | ^
572 * | v | v |
573 * | Limited | (MayUninit) --> (WillUninit)
574 * | | | |
575 * +-------+ +-------+
576 *
577 * The object is fully operational only when its state is Ready. The Limited
578 * state means that only some vital part of the object is operational, and it
579 * requires some sort of reinitialization to become fully operational. The
580 * NotReady state means the object is basically dead: it either was not yet
581 * initialized after creation at all, or was uninitialized and is waiting to be
582 * destroyed when the last reference to it is released. All other states are
583 * transitional.
584 *
585 * The NotReady->InInit->Ready, NotReady->InInit->Limited and
586 * NotReady->InInit->InitFailed transition is done by the AutoInitSpan smart
587 * class.
588 *
589 * The Limited->InInit->Ready, Limited->InInit->Limited and
590 * Limited->InInit->InitFailed transition is done by the AutoReinitSpan smart
591 * class.
592 *
593 * The Ready->InUninit->NotReady, InitFailed->InUninit->NotReady and
594 * WillUninit->InUninit->NotReady transitions are done by the AutoUninitSpan
595 * smart class.
596 *
597 * The Ready->MayUninit->Ready and Ready->MayUninit->WillUninit transitions are
598 * done by the AutoMayUninitSpan smart class.
599 *
600 * In order to maintain the primary state integrity and declared functionality
601 * all subclasses must:
602 *
603 * 1) Use the above Auto*Span classes to perform state transitions. See the
604 * individual class descriptions for details.
605 *
606 * 2) All public methods of subclasses (i.e. all methods that can be called
607 * directly, not only from within other methods of the subclass) must have a
608 * standard prolog as described in the AutoCaller and AutoLimitedCaller
609 * documentation. Alternatively, they must use addCaller()/releaseCaller()
610 * directly (and therefore have both the prolog and the epilog), but this is
611 * not recommended.
612 */
613class ATL_NO_VTABLE VirtualBoxBaseProto : public Lockable
614{
615public:
616
617 enum State { NotReady, Ready, InInit, InUninit, InitFailed, Limited,
618 MayUninit, WillUninit };
619
620protected:
621
622 VirtualBoxBaseProto();
623 virtual ~VirtualBoxBaseProto();
624
625public:
626
627 // util::Lockable interface
628 virtual RWLockHandle *lockHandle() const;
629
630 /**
631 * Unintialization method.
632 *
633 * Must be called by all final implementations (component classes) when the
634 * last reference to the object is released, before calling the destructor.
635 *
636 * This method is also automatically called by the uninit() method of this
637 * object's parent if this object is a dependent child of a class derived
638 * from VirtualBoxBaseWithChildren (see
639 * VirtualBoxBaseWithChildren::addDependentChild).
640 *
641 * @note Never call this method the AutoCaller scope or after the
642 * #addCaller() call not paired by #releaseCaller() because it is a
643 * guaranteed deadlock. See AutoUninitSpan for details.
644 */
645 virtual void uninit() {}
646
647 virtual HRESULT addCaller (State *aState = NULL, bool aLimited = false);
648 virtual void releaseCaller();
649
650 /**
651 * Adds a limited caller. This method is equivalent to doing
652 * <tt>addCaller (aState, true)</tt>, but it is preferred because provides
653 * better self-descriptiveness. See #addCaller() for more info.
654 */
655 HRESULT addLimitedCaller (State *aState = NULL)
656 {
657 return addCaller (aState, true /* aLimited */);
658 }
659
660 /**
661 * Smart class that automatically increases the number of callers of the
662 * given VirtualBoxBase object when an instance is constructed and decreases
663 * it back when the created instance goes out of scope (i.e. gets destroyed).
664 *
665 * If #rc() returns a failure after the instance creation, it means that
666 * the managed VirtualBoxBase object is not Ready, or in any other invalid
667 * state, so that the caller must not use the object and can return this
668 * failed result code to the upper level.
669 *
670 * See VirtualBoxBase::addCaller(), VirtualBoxBase::addLimitedCaller() and
671 * VirtualBoxBase::releaseCaller() for more details about object callers.
672 *
673 * @param aLimited |false| if this template should use
674 * VirtualiBoxBase::addCaller() calls to add callers, or
675 * |true| if VirtualiBoxBase::addLimitedCaller() should be
676 * used.
677 *
678 * @note It is preferable to use the AutoCaller and AutoLimitedCaller
679 * classes than specify the @a aLimited argument, for better
680 * self-descriptiveness.
681 */
682 template <bool aLimited>
683 class AutoCallerBase
684 {
685 public:
686
687 /**
688 * Increases the number of callers of the given object by calling
689 * VirtualBoxBase::addCaller().
690 *
691 * @param aObj Object to add a caller to. If NULL, this
692 * instance is effectively turned to no-op (where
693 * rc() will return S_OK and state() will be
694 * NotReady).
695 */
696 AutoCallerBase (VirtualBoxBaseProto *aObj)
697 : mObj (aObj)
698 , mRC (S_OK)
699 , mState (NotReady)
700 {
701 if (mObj)
702 mRC = mObj->addCaller (&mState, aLimited);
703 }
704
705 /**
706 * If the number of callers was successfully increased, decreases it
707 * using VirtualBoxBase::releaseCaller(), otherwise does nothing.
708 */
709 ~AutoCallerBase()
710 {
711 if (mObj && SUCCEEDED (mRC))
712 mObj->releaseCaller();
713 }
714
715 /**
716 * Stores the result code returned by VirtualBoxBase::addCaller() after
717 * instance creation or after the last #add() call. A successful result
718 * code means the number of callers was successfully increased.
719 */
720 HRESULT rc() const { return mRC; }
721
722 /**
723 * Returns |true| if |SUCCEEDED (rc())| is |true|, for convenience.
724 * |true| means the number of callers was successfully increased.
725 */
726 bool isOk() const { return SUCCEEDED (mRC); }
727
728 /**
729 * Stores the object state returned by VirtualBoxBase::addCaller() after
730 * instance creation or after the last #add() call.
731 */
732 State state() const { return mState; }
733
734 /**
735 * Temporarily decreases the number of callers of the managed object.
736 * May only be called if #isOk() returns |true|. Note that #rc() will
737 * return E_FAIL after this method succeeds.
738 */
739 void release()
740 {
741 Assert (SUCCEEDED (mRC));
742 if (SUCCEEDED (mRC))
743 {
744 if (mObj)
745 mObj->releaseCaller();
746 mRC = E_FAIL;
747 }
748 }
749
750 /**
751 * Restores the number of callers decreased by #release(). May only be
752 * called after #release().
753 */
754 void add()
755 {
756 Assert (!SUCCEEDED (mRC));
757 if (mObj && !SUCCEEDED (mRC))
758 mRC = mObj->addCaller (&mState, aLimited);
759 }
760
761 /**
762 * Attaches another object to this caller instance.
763 * The previous object's caller is released before the new one is added.
764 *
765 * @param aObj New object to attach, may be @c NULL.
766 */
767 void attach (VirtualBoxBaseProto *aObj)
768 {
769 /* detect simple self-reattachment */
770 if (mObj != aObj)
771 {
772 if (mObj && SUCCEEDED (mRC))
773 release();
774 mObj = aObj;
775 add();
776 }
777 }
778
779 /** Verbose equivalent to <tt>attach (NULL)</tt>. */
780 void detach() { attach (NULL); }
781
782 private:
783
784 DECLARE_CLS_COPY_CTOR_ASSIGN_NOOP (AutoCallerBase)
785 DECLARE_CLS_NEW_DELETE_NOOP (AutoCallerBase)
786
787 VirtualBoxBaseProto *mObj;
788 HRESULT mRC;
789 State mState;
790 };
791
792 /**
793 * Smart class that automatically increases the number of normal
794 * (non-limited) callers of the given VirtualBoxBase object when an instance
795 * is constructed and decreases it back when the created instance goes out
796 * of scope (i.e. gets destroyed).
797 *
798 * A typical usage pattern to declare a normal method of some object (i.e. a
799 * method that is valid only when the object provides its full
800 * functionality) is:
801 * <code>
802 * STDMETHODIMP Component::Foo()
803 * {
804 * AutoCaller autoCaller (this);
805 * CheckComRCReturnRC (autoCaller.rc());
806 * ...
807 * </code>
808 *
809 * Using this class is equivalent to using the AutoCallerBase template with
810 * the @a aLimited argument set to |false|, but this class is preferred
811 * because provides better self-descriptiveness.
812 *
813 * See AutoCallerBase for more information about auto caller functionality.
814 */
815 typedef AutoCallerBase <false> AutoCaller;
816
817 /**
818 * Smart class that automatically increases the number of limited callers of
819 * the given VirtualBoxBase object when an instance is constructed and
820 * decreases it back when the created instance goes out of scope (i.e. gets
821 * destroyed).
822 *
823 * A typical usage pattern to declare a limited method of some object (i.e.
824 * a method that is valid even if the object doesn't provide its full
825 * functionality) is:
826 * <code>
827 * STDMETHODIMP Component::Bar()
828 * {
829 * AutoLimitedCaller autoCaller (this);
830 * CheckComRCReturnRC (autoCaller.rc());
831 * ...
832 * </code>
833 *
834 * Using this class is equivalent to using the AutoCallerBase template with
835 * the @a aLimited argument set to |true|, but this class is preferred
836 * because provides better self-descriptiveness.
837 *
838 * See AutoCallerBase for more information about auto caller functionality.
839 */
840 typedef AutoCallerBase <true> AutoLimitedCaller;
841
842protected:
843
844 /**
845 * Smart class to enclose the state transition NotReady->InInit->Ready.
846 *
847 * The purpose of this span is to protect object initialization.
848 *
849 * Instances must be created as a stack-based variable taking |this| pointer
850 * as the argument at the beginning of init() methods of VirtualBoxBase
851 * subclasses. When this variable is created it automatically places the
852 * object to the InInit state.
853 *
854 * When the created variable goes out of scope (i.e. gets destroyed) then,
855 * depending on the result status of this initialization span, it either
856 * places the object to Ready or Limited state or calls the object's
857 * VirtualBoxBase::uninit() method which is supposed to place the object
858 * back to the NotReady state using the AutoUninitSpan class.
859 *
860 * The initial result status of the initialization span is determined by the
861 * @a aResult argument of the AutoInitSpan constructor (Result::Failed by
862 * default). Inside the initialization span, the success status can be set
863 * to Result::Succeeded using #setSucceeded(), to to Result::Limited using
864 * #setLimited() or to Result::Failed using #setFailed(). Please don't
865 * forget to set the correct success status before getting the AutoInitSpan
866 * variable destroyed (for example, by performing an early return from
867 * the init() method)!
868 *
869 * Note that if an instance of this class gets constructed when the object
870 * is in the state other than NotReady, #isOk() returns |false| and methods
871 * of this class do nothing: the state transition is not performed.
872 *
873 * A typical usage pattern is:
874 * <code>
875 * HRESULT Component::init()
876 * {
877 * AutoInitSpan autoInitSpan (this);
878 * AssertReturn (autoInitSpan.isOk(), E_FAIL);
879 * ...
880 * if (FAILED (rc))
881 * return rc;
882 * ...
883 * if (SUCCEEDED (rc))
884 * autoInitSpan.setSucceeded();
885 * return rc;
886 * }
887 * </code>
888 *
889 * @note Never create instances of this class outside init() methods of
890 * VirtualBoxBase subclasses and never pass anything other than |this|
891 * as the argument to the constructor!
892 */
893 class AutoInitSpan
894 {
895 public:
896
897 enum Result { Failed = 0x0, Succeeded = 0x1, Limited = 0x2 };
898
899 AutoInitSpan (VirtualBoxBaseProto *aObj, Result aResult = Failed);
900 ~AutoInitSpan();
901
902 /**
903 * Returns |true| if this instance has been created at the right moment
904 * (when the object was in the NotReady state) and |false| otherwise.
905 */
906 bool isOk() const { return mOk; }
907
908 /**
909 * Sets the initialization status to Succeeded to indicates successful
910 * initialization. The AutoInitSpan destructor will place the managed
911 * VirtualBoxBase object to the Ready state.
912 */
913 void setSucceeded() { mResult = Succeeded; }
914
915 /**
916 * Sets the initialization status to Succeeded to indicate limited
917 * (partly successful) initialization. The AutoInitSpan destructor will
918 * place the managed VirtualBoxBase object to the Limited state.
919 */
920 void setLimited() { mResult = Limited; }
921
922 /**
923 * Sets the initialization status to Failure to indicates failed
924 * initialization. The AutoInitSpan destructor will place the managed
925 * VirtualBoxBase object to the InitFailed state and will automatically
926 * call its uninit() method which is supposed to place the object back
927 * to the NotReady state using AutoUninitSpan.
928 */
929 void setFailed() { mResult = Failed; }
930
931 /** Returns the current initialization result. */
932 Result result() { return mResult; }
933
934 private:
935
936 DECLARE_CLS_COPY_CTOR_ASSIGN_NOOP (AutoInitSpan)
937 DECLARE_CLS_NEW_DELETE_NOOP (AutoInitSpan)
938
939 VirtualBoxBaseProto *mObj;
940 Result mResult : 3; // must be at least total number of bits + 1 (sign)
941 bool mOk : 1;
942 };
943
944 /**
945 * Smart class to enclose the state transition Limited->InInit->Ready.
946 *
947 * The purpose of this span is to protect object re-initialization.
948 *
949 * Instances must be created as a stack-based variable taking |this| pointer
950 * as the argument at the beginning of methods of VirtualBoxBase
951 * subclasses that try to re-initialize the object to bring it to the Ready
952 * state (full functionality) after partial initialization (limited
953 * functionality). When this variable is created, it automatically places
954 * the object to the InInit state.
955 *
956 * When the created variable goes out of scope (i.e. gets destroyed),
957 * depending on the success status of this initialization span, it either
958 * places the object to the Ready state or brings it back to the Limited
959 * state.
960 *
961 * The initial success status of the re-initialization span is |false|. In
962 * order to make it successful, #setSucceeded() must be called before the
963 * instance is destroyed.
964 *
965 * Note that if an instance of this class gets constructed when the object
966 * is in the state other than Limited, #isOk() returns |false| and methods
967 * of this class do nothing: the state transition is not performed.
968 *
969 * A typical usage pattern is:
970 * <code>
971 * HRESULT Component::reinit()
972 * {
973 * AutoReinitSpan autoReinitSpan (this);
974 * AssertReturn (autoReinitSpan.isOk(), E_FAIL);
975 * ...
976 * if (FAILED (rc))
977 * return rc;
978 * ...
979 * if (SUCCEEDED (rc))
980 * autoReinitSpan.setSucceeded();
981 * return rc;
982 * }
983 * </code>
984 *
985 * @note Never create instances of this class outside re-initialization
986 * methods of VirtualBoxBase subclasses and never pass anything other than
987 * |this| as the argument to the constructor!
988 */
989 class AutoReinitSpan
990 {
991 public:
992
993 AutoReinitSpan (VirtualBoxBaseProto *aObj);
994 ~AutoReinitSpan();
995
996 /**
997 * Returns |true| if this instance has been created at the right moment
998 * (when the object was in the Limited state) and |false| otherwise.
999 */
1000 bool isOk() const { return mOk; }
1001
1002 /**
1003 * Sets the re-initialization status to Succeeded to indicates
1004 * successful re-initialization. The AutoReinitSpan destructor will place
1005 * the managed VirtualBoxBase object to the Ready state.
1006 */
1007 void setSucceeded() { mSucceeded = true; }
1008
1009 private:
1010
1011 DECLARE_CLS_COPY_CTOR_ASSIGN_NOOP (AutoReinitSpan)
1012 DECLARE_CLS_NEW_DELETE_NOOP (AutoReinitSpan)
1013
1014 VirtualBoxBaseProto *mObj;
1015 bool mSucceeded : 1;
1016 bool mOk : 1;
1017 };
1018
1019 /**
1020 * Smart class to enclose the state transition Ready->InUnnit->NotReady,
1021 * InitFailed->InUnnit->NotReady or WillUninit->InUnnit->NotReady.
1022 *
1023 * The purpose of this span is to protect object uninitialization.
1024 *
1025 * Instances must be created as a stack-based variable taking |this| pointer
1026 * as the argument at the beginning of uninit() methods of VirtualBoxBase
1027 * subclasses. When this variable is created it automatically places the
1028 * object to the InUninit state, unless it is already in the NotReady state
1029 * as indicated by #uninitDone() returning |true|. In the latter case, the
1030 * uninit() method must immediately return because there should be nothing
1031 * to uninitialize.
1032 *
1033 * When this variable goes out of scope (i.e. gets destroyed), it places the
1034 * object to NotReady state.
1035 *
1036 * A typical usage pattern is:
1037 * <code>
1038 * void Component::uninit()
1039 * {
1040 * AutoUninitSpan autoUninitSpan (this);
1041 * if (autoUninitSpan.uninitDone())
1042 * return;
1043 * ...
1044 * }
1045 * </code>
1046 *
1047 * @note The constructor of this class blocks the current thread execution
1048 * until the number of callers added to the object using #addCaller()
1049 * or AutoCaller drops to zero. For this reason, it is forbidden to
1050 * create instances of this class (or call uninit()) within the
1051 * AutoCaller or #addCaller() scope because it is a guaranteed
1052 * deadlock.
1053 *
1054 * @note Never create instances of this class outside uninit() methods and
1055 * never pass anything other than |this| as the argument to the
1056 * constructor!
1057 */
1058 class AutoUninitSpan
1059 {
1060 public:
1061
1062 AutoUninitSpan (VirtualBoxBaseProto *aObj);
1063 ~AutoUninitSpan();
1064
1065 /** |true| when uninit() is called as a result of init() failure */
1066 bool initFailed() { return mInitFailed; }
1067
1068 /** |true| when uninit() has already been called (so the object is NotReady) */
1069 bool uninitDone() { return mUninitDone; }
1070
1071 private:
1072
1073 DECLARE_CLS_COPY_CTOR_ASSIGN_NOOP (AutoUninitSpan)
1074 DECLARE_CLS_NEW_DELETE_NOOP (AutoUninitSpan)
1075
1076 VirtualBoxBaseProto *mObj;
1077 bool mInitFailed : 1;
1078 bool mUninitDone : 1;
1079 };
1080
1081 /**
1082 * Smart class to enclose the state transition Ready->MayUninit->NotReady or
1083 * Ready->MayUninit->WillUninit.
1084 *
1085 * The purpose of this span is to safely check if unintialization is
1086 * possible at the given moment and seamlessly perform it if so.
1087 *
1088 * Instances must be created as a stack-based variable taking |this| pointer
1089 * as the argument at the beginning of methods of VirtualBoxBase
1090 * subclasses that want to uninitialize the object if a necessary set of
1091 * criteria is met and leave it Ready otherwise.
1092 *
1093 * When this variable is created it automatically places the object to the
1094 * MayUninit state if it is Ready, does nothing but returns |true| in
1095 * response to #alreadyInProgress() if it is already in MayUninit, or
1096 * returns a failure in response to #rc() in any other case. The example
1097 * below shows how the user must react in latter two cases.
1098 *
1099 * When this variable goes out of scope (i.e. gets destroyed), it places the
1100 * object back to Ready state unless #acceptUninit() is called in which case
1101 * the object is placed to WillUninit state and uninit() is immediately
1102 * called after that.
1103 *
1104 * A typical usage pattern is:
1105 * <code>
1106 * void Component::uninit()
1107 * {
1108 * AutoMayUninitSpan mayUninitSpan (this);
1109 * CheckComRCReturnRC (mayUninitSpan.rc());
1110 * if (mayUninitSpan.alreadyInProgress())
1111 * return S_OK;
1112 * ...
1113 * if (FAILED (rc))
1114 * return rc; // will go back to Ready
1115 * ...
1116 * if (SUCCEEDED (rc))
1117 * mayUninitSpan.acceptUninit(); // will call uninit()
1118 * return rc;
1119 * }
1120 * </code>
1121 *
1122 * @note The constructor of this class blocks the current thread execution
1123 * until the number of callers added to the object using #addCaller()
1124 * or AutoCaller drops to zero. For this reason, it is forbidden to
1125 * create instances of this class (or call uninit()) within the
1126 * AutoCaller or #addCaller() scope because it is a guaranteed
1127 * deadlock.
1128 */
1129 class AutoMayUninitSpan
1130 {
1131 public:
1132
1133 AutoMayUninitSpan (VirtualBoxBaseProto *aObj);
1134 ~AutoMayUninitSpan();
1135
1136 /**
1137 * Returns a failure if the AutoMayUninitSpan variable was constructed
1138 * at an improper time. If there is a failure, do nothing but return
1139 * it to the caller.
1140 */
1141 HRESULT rc() { return mRC; }
1142
1143 /**
1144 * Returns |true| if AutoMayUninitSpan is already in progress on some
1145 * other thread. If it's the case, do nothing but return S_OK to
1146 * the caller.
1147 */
1148 bool alreadyInProgress() { return mAlreadyInProgress; }
1149
1150 /*
1151 * Accepts uninitialization and causes the destructor to go to
1152 * WillUninit state and call uninit() afterwards.
1153 */
1154 void acceptUninit() { mAcceptUninit = true; }
1155
1156 private:
1157
1158 DECLARE_CLS_COPY_CTOR_ASSIGN_NOOP (AutoMayUninitSpan)
1159 DECLARE_CLS_NEW_DELETE_NOOP (AutoMayUninitSpan)
1160
1161 VirtualBoxBaseProto *mObj;
1162
1163 HRESULT mRC;
1164 bool mAlreadyInProgress : 1;
1165 bool mAcceptUninit : 1;
1166 };
1167
1168 /**
1169 * Returns a lock handle used to protect the primary state fields (used by
1170 * #addCaller(), AutoInitSpan, AutoUninitSpan, etc.). Only intended to be
1171 * used for similar purposes in subclasses. WARNING: NO any other locks may
1172 * be requested while holding this lock!
1173 */
1174 WriteLockHandle *stateLockHandle() { return &mStateLock; }
1175
1176private:
1177
1178 void setState (State aState)
1179 {
1180 Assert (mState != aState);
1181 mState = aState;
1182 mStateChangeThread = RTThreadSelf();
1183 }
1184
1185 /** Primary state of this object */
1186 State mState;
1187 /** Thread that caused the last state change */
1188 RTTHREAD mStateChangeThread;
1189 /** Total number of active calls to this object */
1190 unsigned mCallers;
1191 /** Posted when the number of callers drops to zero */
1192 RTSEMEVENT mZeroCallersSem;
1193 /** Posted when the object goes from InInit/InUninit to some other state */
1194 RTSEMEVENTMULTI mInitUninitSem;
1195 /** Number of threads waiting for mInitUninitDoneSem */
1196 unsigned mInitUninitWaiters;
1197
1198 /** Protects access to state related data members */
1199 WriteLockHandle mStateLock;
1200
1201 /** User-level object lock for subclasses */
1202 mutable RWLockHandle *mObjectLock;
1203};
1204
1205////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1206
1207/**
1208 * This macro adds the error info support to methods of the VirtualBoxBase
1209 * class (by overriding them). Place it to the public section of the
1210 * VirtualBoxBase subclass and the following methods will set the extended
1211 * error info in case of failure instead of just returning the result code:
1212 *
1213 * <ul>
1214 * <li>VirtualBoxBase::addCaller()
1215 * </ul>
1216 *
1217 * @note The given VirtualBoxBase subclass must also inherit from both
1218 * VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImpl and VirtualBoxSupportTranslation templates!
1219 *
1220 * @param C VirtualBoxBase subclass to add the error info support to
1221 */
1222#define VIRTUALBOXBASE_ADD_ERRORINFO_SUPPORT(C) \
1223 virtual HRESULT addCaller (VirtualBoxBaseProto::State *aState = NULL, \
1224 bool aLimited = false) \
1225 { \
1226 VirtualBoxBaseProto::State state; \
1227 HRESULT rc = VirtualBoxBaseProto::addCaller (&state, aLimited); \
1228 if (FAILED (rc)) \
1229 { \
1230 if (state == VirtualBoxBaseProto::Limited) \
1231 rc = setError (rc, tr ("The object functionality is limited")); \
1232 else \
1233 rc = setError (rc, tr ("The object is not ready")); \
1234 } \
1235 if (aState) \
1236 *aState = state; \
1237 return rc; \
1238 } \
1239
1240////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1241
1242/// @todo (dmik) remove after we switch to VirtualBoxBaseNEXT completely
1243class ATL_NO_VTABLE VirtualBoxBase
1244 : virtual public VirtualBoxBaseProto
1245#if !defined (VBOX_WITH_XPCOM)
1246 , public CComObjectRootEx <CComMultiThreadModel>
1247#else
1248 , public CComObjectRootEx
1249#endif
1250{
1251
1252public:
1253 VirtualBoxBase()
1254 {
1255 mReady = false;
1256 }
1257 virtual ~VirtualBoxBase()
1258 {
1259 }
1260
1261 /**
1262 * Virtual unintialization method. Called during parent object's
1263 * uninitialization, if the given subclass instance is a dependent child of
1264 * a class derived from VirtualBoxBaseWithChildren (@sa
1265 * VirtualBoxBaseWithChildren::addDependentChild). In this case, this
1266 * method's implementation must call setReady (false),
1267 */
1268 virtual void uninit() {}
1269
1270
1271 // sets the ready state of the object
1272 void setReady(bool isReady)
1273 {
1274 mReady = isReady;
1275 }
1276 // get the ready state of the object
1277 bool isReady()
1278 {
1279 return mReady;
1280 }
1281
1282 static const char *translate (const char *context, const char *sourceText,
1283 const char *comment = 0);
1284
1285private:
1286
1287 // flag determining whether an object is ready
1288 // for usage, i.e. methods may be called
1289 bool mReady;
1290 // mutex semaphore to lock the object
1291};
1292
1293/**
1294 * Temporary class to disable deprecated methods of VirtualBoxBase.
1295 * Can be used as a base for components that are completely switched to
1296 * the new locking scheme (VirtualBoxBaseProto).
1297 *
1298 * @todo remove after we switch to VirtualBoxBaseNEXT completely.
1299 */
1300class VirtualBoxBaseNEXT : public VirtualBoxBase
1301{
1302private:
1303
1304 void lock();
1305 void unlock();
1306 void setReady (bool isReady);
1307 bool isReady();
1308};
1309
1310////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1311
1312/** Helper for VirtualBoxSupportTranslation. */
1313class VirtualBoxSupportTranslationBase
1314{
1315protected:
1316 static bool cutClassNameFrom__PRETTY_FUNCTION__ (char *aPrettyFunctionName);
1317};
1318
1319/**
1320 * The VirtualBoxSupportTranslation template implements the NLS string
1321 * translation support for the given class.
1322 *
1323 * Translation support is provided by the static #tr() function. This function,
1324 * given a string in UTF-8 encoding, looks up for a translation of the given
1325 * string by calling the VirtualBoxBase::translate() global function which
1326 * receives the name of the enclosing class ("context of translation") as the
1327 * additional argument and returns a translated string based on the currently
1328 * active language.
1329 *
1330 * @param C Class that needs to support the string translation.
1331 *
1332 * @note Every class that wants to use the #tr() function in its own methods
1333 * must inherit from this template, regardless of whether its base class
1334 * (if any) inherits from it or not. Otherwise, the translation service
1335 * will not work correctly. However, the declaration of the derived
1336 * class must contain
1337 * the <tt>COM_SUPPORTTRANSLATION_OVERRIDE (<ClassName>)</tt> macro if one
1338 * of its base classes also inherits from this template (to resolve the
1339 * ambiguity of the #tr() function).
1340 */
1341template <class C>
1342class VirtualBoxSupportTranslation : virtual protected VirtualBoxSupportTranslationBase
1343{
1344public:
1345
1346 /**
1347 * Translates the given text string by calling VirtualBoxBase::translate()
1348 * and passing the name of the C class as the first argument ("context of
1349 * translation") See VirtualBoxBase::translate() for more info.
1350 *
1351 * @param aSourceText String to translate.
1352 * @param aComment Comment to the string to resolve possible
1353 * ambiguities (NULL means no comment).
1354 *
1355 * @return Translated version of the source string in UTF-8 encoding, or
1356 * the source string itself if the translation is not found in the
1357 * specified context.
1358 */
1359 inline static const char *tr (const char *aSourceText,
1360 const char *aComment = NULL)
1361 {
1362 return VirtualBoxBase::translate (className(), aSourceText, aComment);
1363 }
1364
1365protected:
1366
1367 static const char *className()
1368 {
1369 static char fn [sizeof (__PRETTY_FUNCTION__) + 1];
1370 if (!sClassName)
1371 {
1372 strcpy (fn, __PRETTY_FUNCTION__);
1373 cutClassNameFrom__PRETTY_FUNCTION__ (fn);
1374 sClassName = fn;
1375 }
1376 return sClassName;
1377 }
1378
1379private:
1380
1381 static const char *sClassName;
1382};
1383
1384template <class C>
1385const char *VirtualBoxSupportTranslation <C>::sClassName = NULL;
1386
1387/**
1388 * This macro must be invoked inside the public section of the declaration of
1389 * the class inherited from the VirtualBoxSupportTranslation template in case
1390 * if one of its other base classes also inherits from that template. This is
1391 * necessary to resolve the ambiguity of the #tr() function.
1392 *
1393 * @param C Class that inherits the VirtualBoxSupportTranslation template
1394 * more than once (through its other base clases).
1395 */
1396#define VIRTUALBOXSUPPORTTRANSLATION_OVERRIDE(C) \
1397 inline static const char *tr (const char *aSourceText, \
1398 const char *aComment = NULL) \
1399 { \
1400 return VirtualBoxSupportTranslation <C>::tr (aSourceText, aComment); \
1401 }
1402
1403/**
1404 * Dummy macro that is used to shut down Qt's lupdate tool warnings in some
1405 * situations. This macro needs to be present inside (better at the very
1406 * beginning) of the declaration of the class that inherits from
1407 * VirtualBoxSupportTranslation template, to make lupdate happy.
1408 */
1409#define Q_OBJECT
1410
1411////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1412
1413/**
1414 * Helper for the VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImpl template.
1415 */
1416/// @todo switch to com::SupportErrorInfo* and remove
1417class VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImplBase
1418{
1419 static HRESULT setErrorInternal (HRESULT aResultCode, const GUID &aIID,
1420 const Bstr &aComponent, const Bstr &aText,
1421 bool aWarning, bool aLogIt);
1422
1423protected:
1424
1425 /**
1426 * The MultiResult class is a com::FWResult enhancement that also acts as a
1427 * switch to turn on multi-error mode for #setError() or #setWarning()
1428 * calls.
1429 *
1430 * When an instance of this class is created, multi-error mode is turned on
1431 * for the current thread and the turn-on counter is increased by one. In
1432 * multi-error mode, a call to #setError() or #setWarning() does not
1433 * overwrite the current error or warning info object possibly set on the
1434 * current thread by other method calls, but instead it stores this old
1435 * object in the IVirtualBoxErrorInfo::next attribute of the new error
1436 * object being set.
1437 *
1438 * This way, error/warning objects are stacked together and form a chain of
1439 * errors where the most recent error is the first one retrieved by the
1440 * calling party, the preceding error is what the
1441 * IVirtualBoxErrorInfo::next attribute of the first error points to, and so
1442 * on, up to the first error or warning occurred which is the last in the
1443 * chain. See IVirtualBoxErrorInfo documentation for more info.
1444 *
1445 * When the instance of the MultiResult class goes out of scope and gets
1446 * destroyed, it automatically decreases the turn-on counter by one. If
1447 * the counter drops to zero, multi-error mode for the current thread is
1448 * turned off and the thread switches back to single-error mode where every
1449 * next error or warning object overwrites the previous one.
1450 *
1451 * Note that the caller of a COM method uses a non-S_OK result code to
1452 * decide if the method has returned an error (negative codes) or a warning
1453 * (positive non-zero codes) and will query extended error info only in
1454 * these two cases. However, since multi-error mode implies that the method
1455 * doesn't return control return to the caller immediately after the first
1456 * error or warning but continues its execution, the functionality provided
1457 * by the base com::FWResult class becomes very useful because it allows to
1458 * preserve the error or the warning result code even if it is later assigned
1459 * a S_OK value multiple times. See com::FWResult for details.
1460 *
1461 * Here is the typical usage pattern:
1462 * <code>
1463
1464 HRESULT Bar::method()
1465 {
1466 // assume multi-errors are turned off here...
1467
1468 if (something)
1469 {
1470 // Turn on multi-error mode and make sure severity is preserved
1471 MultiResult rc = foo->method1();
1472
1473 // return on fatal error, but continue on warning or on success
1474 CheckComRCReturnRC (rc);
1475
1476 rc = foo->method2();
1477 // no matter what result, stack it and continue
1478
1479 // ...
1480
1481 // return the last worst result code (it will be preserved even if
1482 // foo->method2() returns S_OK.
1483 return rc;
1484 }
1485
1486 // multi-errors are turned off here again...
1487
1488 return S_OK;
1489 }
1490
1491 * </code>
1492 *
1493 *
1494 * @note This class is intended to be instantiated on the stack, therefore
1495 * You cannot create them using new(). Although it is possible to copy
1496 * instances of MultiResult or return them by value, please never do
1497 * that as it is breaks the class semantics (and will assert).
1498 */
1499 class MultiResult : public com::FWResult
1500 {
1501 public:
1502
1503 /**
1504 * @copydoc com::FWResult::FWResult().
1505 */
1506 MultiResult (HRESULT aRC = E_FAIL) : FWResult (aRC) { init(); }
1507
1508 MultiResult (const MultiResult &aThat) : FWResult (aThat)
1509 {
1510 /* We need this copy constructor only for GCC that wants to have
1511 * it in case of expressions like |MultiResult rc = E_FAIL;|. But
1512 * we assert since the optimizer should actually avoid the
1513 * temporary and call the other constructor directly instead. */
1514 AssertFailed();
1515 init();
1516 }
1517
1518 ~MultiResult();
1519
1520 MultiResult &operator= (HRESULT aRC)
1521 {
1522 com::FWResult::operator= (aRC);
1523 return *this;
1524 }
1525
1526 MultiResult &operator= (const MultiResult &aThat)
1527 {
1528 /* We need this copy constructor only for GCC that wants to have
1529 * it in case of expressions like |MultiResult rc = E_FAIL;|. But
1530 * we assert since the optimizer should actually avoid the
1531 * temporary and call the other constructor directly instead. */
1532 AssertFailed();
1533 com::FWResult::operator= (aThat);
1534 return *this;
1535 }
1536
1537 private:
1538
1539 DECLARE_CLS_NEW_DELETE_NOOP (MultiResult)
1540
1541 void init();
1542
1543 static RTTLS sCounter;
1544
1545 friend class VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImplBase;
1546 };
1547
1548 static HRESULT setError (HRESULT aResultCode, const GUID &aIID,
1549 const Bstr &aComponent,
1550 const Bstr &aText,
1551 bool aLogIt = true)
1552 {
1553 return setErrorInternal (aResultCode, aIID, aComponent, aText,
1554 false /* aWarning */, aLogIt);
1555 }
1556
1557 static HRESULT setWarning (HRESULT aResultCode, const GUID &aIID,
1558 const Bstr &aComponent,
1559 const Bstr &aText)
1560 {
1561 return setErrorInternal (aResultCode, aIID, aComponent, aText,
1562 true /* aWarning */, true /* aLogIt */);
1563 }
1564
1565 static HRESULT setError (HRESULT aResultCode, const GUID &aIID,
1566 const Bstr &aComponent,
1567 const char *aText, va_list aArgs, bool aLogIt = true)
1568 {
1569 return setErrorInternal (aResultCode, aIID, aComponent,
1570 Utf8StrFmtVA (aText, aArgs),
1571 false /* aWarning */, aLogIt);
1572 }
1573
1574 static HRESULT setWarning (HRESULT aResultCode, const GUID &aIID,
1575 const Bstr &aComponent,
1576 const char *aText, va_list aArgs)
1577 {
1578 return setErrorInternal (aResultCode, aIID, aComponent,
1579 Utf8StrFmtVA (aText, aArgs),
1580 true /* aWarning */, true /* aLogIt */);
1581 }
1582};
1583
1584/**
1585 * This template implements ISupportErrorInfo for the given component class
1586 * and provides the #setError() method to conveniently set the error information
1587 * from within interface methods' implementations.
1588 *
1589 * On Windows, the template argument must define a COM interface map using
1590 * BEGIN_COM_MAP / END_COM_MAP macros and this map must contain a
1591 * COM_INTERFACE_ENTRY(ISupportErrorInfo) definition. All interface entries
1592 * that follow it will be considered to support IErrorInfo, i.e. the
1593 * InterfaceSupportsErrorInfo() implementation will return S_OK for the
1594 * corresponding IID.
1595 *
1596 * On all platforms, the template argument must also define the following
1597 * method: |public static const wchar_t *C::getComponentName()|. See
1598 * #setError (HRESULT, const char *, ...) for a description on how it is
1599 * used.
1600 *
1601 * @param C
1602 * component class that implements one or more COM interfaces
1603 * @param I
1604 * default interface for the component. This interface's IID is used
1605 * by the shortest form of #setError, for convenience.
1606 */
1607/// @todo switch to com::SupportErrorInfo* and remove
1608template <class C, class I>
1609class ATL_NO_VTABLE VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImpl
1610 : protected VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImplBase
1611#if !defined (VBOX_WITH_XPCOM)
1612 , public ISupportErrorInfo
1613#else
1614#endif
1615{
1616public:
1617
1618#if !defined (VBOX_WITH_XPCOM)
1619 STDMETHOD(InterfaceSupportsErrorInfo) (REFIID riid)
1620 {
1621 const _ATL_INTMAP_ENTRY* pEntries = C::_GetEntries();
1622 Assert (pEntries);
1623 if (!pEntries)
1624 return S_FALSE;
1625
1626 BOOL bSupports = FALSE;
1627 BOOL bISupportErrorInfoFound = FALSE;
1628
1629 while (pEntries->pFunc != NULL && !bSupports)
1630 {
1631 if (!bISupportErrorInfoFound)
1632 {
1633 // skip the com map entries until ISupportErrorInfo is found
1634 bISupportErrorInfoFound =
1635 InlineIsEqualGUID (*(pEntries->piid), IID_ISupportErrorInfo);
1636 }
1637 else
1638 {
1639 // look for the requested interface in the rest of the com map
1640 bSupports = InlineIsEqualGUID (*(pEntries->piid), riid);
1641 }
1642 pEntries++;
1643 }
1644
1645 Assert (bISupportErrorInfoFound);
1646
1647 return bSupports ? S_OK : S_FALSE;
1648 }
1649#endif // !defined (VBOX_WITH_XPCOM)
1650
1651protected:
1652
1653 /**
1654 * Sets the error information for the current thread.
1655 * This information can be retrieved by a caller of an interface method
1656 * using IErrorInfo on Windows or nsIException on Linux, or the cross-platform
1657 * IVirtualBoxErrorInfo interface that provides extended error info (only
1658 * for components from the VirtualBox COM library). Alternatively, the
1659 * platform-independent class com::ErrorInfo (defined in VBox[XP]COM.lib)
1660 * can be used to retrieve error info in a convenient way.
1661 *
1662 * It is assumed that the interface method that uses this function returns
1663 * an unsuccessful result code to the caller (otherwise, there is no reason
1664 * for the caller to try to retrieve error info after method invocation).
1665 *
1666 * Here is a table of correspondence between this method's arguments
1667 * and IErrorInfo/nsIException/IVirtualBoxErrorInfo attributes/methods:
1668 *
1669 * argument IErrorInfo nsIException IVirtualBoxErrorInfo
1670 * ----------------------------------------------------------------
1671 * resultCode -- result resultCode
1672 * iid GetGUID -- interfaceID
1673 * component GetSource -- component
1674 * text GetDescription message text
1675 *
1676 * This method is rarely needs to be used though. There are more convenient
1677 * overloaded versions, that automatically substitute some arguments
1678 * taking their values from the template parameters. See
1679 * #setError (HRESULT, const char *, ...) for an example.
1680 *
1681 * @param aResultCode result (error) code, must not be S_OK
1682 * @param aIID IID of the interface that defines the error
1683 * @param aComponent name of the component that generates the error
1684 * @param aText error message (must not be null), an RTStrPrintf-like
1685 * format string in UTF-8 encoding
1686 * @param ... list of arguments for the format string
1687 *
1688 * @return
1689 * the error argument, for convenience, If an error occurs while
1690 * creating error info itself, that error is returned instead of the
1691 * error argument.
1692 */
1693 static HRESULT setError (HRESULT aResultCode, const GUID &aIID,
1694 const wchar_t *aComponent,
1695 const char *aText, ...)
1696 {
1697 va_list args;
1698 va_start (args, aText);
1699 HRESULT rc = VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImplBase::setError
1700 (aResultCode, aIID, aComponent, aText, args, true /* aLogIt */);
1701 va_end (args);
1702 return rc;
1703 }
1704
1705 /**
1706 * This method is the same as #setError() except that it makes sure @a
1707 * aResultCode doesn't have the error severity bit (31) set when passed
1708 * down to the created IVirtualBoxErrorInfo object.
1709 *
1710 * The error severity bit is always cleared by this call, thereof you can
1711 * use ordinary E_XXX result code constants, for convenience. However, this
1712 * behavior may be non-standard on some COM platforms.
1713 */
1714 static HRESULT setWarning (HRESULT aResultCode, const GUID &aIID,
1715 const wchar_t *aComponent,
1716 const char *aText, ...)
1717 {
1718 va_list args;
1719 va_start (args, aText);
1720 HRESULT rc = VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImplBase::setWarning
1721 (aResultCode, aIID, aComponent, aText, args);
1722 va_end (args);
1723 return rc;
1724 }
1725
1726 /**
1727 * Sets the error information for the current thread.
1728 * A convenience method that automatically sets the default interface
1729 * ID (taken from the I template argument) and the component name
1730 * (a value of C::getComponentName()).
1731 *
1732 * See #setError (HRESULT, const GUID &, const wchar_t *, const char *text, ...)
1733 * for details.
1734 *
1735 * This method is the most common (and convenient) way to set error
1736 * information from within interface methods. A typical pattern of usage
1737 * is looks like this:
1738 *
1739 * <code>
1740 * return setError (E_FAIL, "Terrible Error");
1741 * </code>
1742 * or
1743 * <code>
1744 * HRESULT rc = setError (E_FAIL, "Terrible Error");
1745 * ...
1746 * return rc;
1747 * </code>
1748 */
1749 static HRESULT setError (HRESULT aResultCode, const char *aText, ...)
1750 {
1751 va_list args;
1752 va_start (args, aText);
1753 HRESULT rc = VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImplBase::setError
1754 (aResultCode, COM_IIDOF(I), C::getComponentName(), aText, args, true /* aLogIt */);
1755 va_end (args);
1756 return rc;
1757 }
1758
1759 /**
1760 * This method is the same as #setError() except that it makes sure @a
1761 * aResultCode doesn't have the error severity bit (31) set when passed
1762 * down to the created IVirtualBoxErrorInfo object.
1763 *
1764 * The error severity bit is always cleared by this call, thereof you can
1765 * use ordinary E_XXX result code constants, for convenience. However, this
1766 * behavior may be non-standard on some COM platforms.
1767 */
1768 static HRESULT setWarning (HRESULT aResultCode, const char *aText, ...)
1769 {
1770 va_list args;
1771 va_start (args, aText);
1772 HRESULT rc = VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImplBase::setWarning
1773 (aResultCode, COM_IIDOF(I), C::getComponentName(), aText, args);
1774 va_end (args);
1775 return rc;
1776 }
1777
1778 /**
1779 * Sets the error information for the current thread, va_list variant.
1780 * A convenience method that automatically sets the default interface
1781 * ID (taken from the I template argument) and the component name
1782 * (a value of C::getComponentName()).
1783 *
1784 * See #setError (HRESULT, const GUID &, const wchar_t *, const char *text, ...)
1785 * and #setError (HRESULT, const char *, ...) for details.
1786 */
1787 static HRESULT setErrorV (HRESULT aResultCode, const char *aText,
1788 va_list aArgs)
1789 {
1790 HRESULT rc = VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImplBase::setError
1791 (aResultCode, COM_IIDOF(I), C::getComponentName(), aText, aArgs, true /* aLogIt */);
1792 return rc;
1793 }
1794
1795 /**
1796 * This method is the same as #setErrorV() except that it makes sure @a
1797 * aResultCode doesn't have the error severity bit (31) set when passed
1798 * down to the created IVirtualBoxErrorInfo object.
1799 *
1800 * The error severity bit is always cleared by this call, thereof you can
1801 * use ordinary E_XXX result code constants, for convenience. However, this
1802 * behavior may be non-standard on some COM platforms.
1803 */
1804 static HRESULT setWarningV (HRESULT aResultCode, const char *aText,
1805 va_list aArgs)
1806 {
1807 HRESULT rc = VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImplBase::setWarning
1808 (aResultCode, COM_IIDOF(I), C::getComponentName(), aText, aArgs);
1809 return rc;
1810 }
1811
1812 /**
1813 * Sets the error information for the current thread, BStr variant.
1814 * A convenience method that automatically sets the default interface
1815 * ID (taken from the I template argument) and the component name
1816 * (a value of C::getComponentName()).
1817 *
1818 * This method is preferred if you have a ready (translated and formatted)
1819 * Bstr string, because it omits an extra conversion Utf8Str -> Bstr.
1820 *
1821 * See #setError (HRESULT, const GUID &, const wchar_t *, const char *text, ...)
1822 * and #setError (HRESULT, const char *, ...) for details.
1823 */
1824 static HRESULT setErrorBstr (HRESULT aResultCode, const Bstr &aText)
1825 {
1826 HRESULT rc = VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImplBase::setError
1827 (aResultCode, COM_IIDOF(I), C::getComponentName(), aText, true /* aLogIt */);
1828 return rc;
1829 }
1830
1831 /**
1832 * This method is the same as #setErrorBstr() except that it makes sure @a
1833 * aResultCode doesn't have the error severity bit (31) set when passed
1834 * down to the created IVirtualBoxErrorInfo object.
1835 *
1836 * The error severity bit is always cleared by this call, thereof you can
1837 * use ordinary E_XXX result code constants, for convenience. However, this
1838 * behavior may be non-standard on some COM platforms.
1839 */
1840 static HRESULT setWarningBstr (HRESULT aResultCode, const Bstr &aText)
1841 {
1842 HRESULT rc = VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImplBase::setWarning
1843 (aResultCode, COM_IIDOF(I), C::getComponentName(), aText);
1844 return rc;
1845 }
1846
1847 /**
1848 * Sets the error information for the current thread.
1849 * A convenience method that automatically sets the component name
1850 * (a value of C::getComponentName()), but allows to specify the interface
1851 * id manually.
1852 *
1853 * See #setError (HRESULT, const GUID &, const wchar_t *, const char *text, ...)
1854 * for details.
1855 */
1856 static HRESULT setError (HRESULT aResultCode, const GUID &aIID,
1857 const char *aText, ...)
1858 {
1859 va_list args;
1860 va_start (args, aText);
1861 HRESULT rc = VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImplBase::setError
1862 (aResultCode, aIID, C::getComponentName(), aText, args, true /* aLogIt */);
1863 va_end (args);
1864 return rc;
1865 }
1866
1867 /**
1868 * This method is the same as #setError() except that it makes sure @a
1869 * aResultCode doesn't have the error severity bit (31) set when passed
1870 * down to the created IVirtualBoxErrorInfo object.
1871 *
1872 * The error severity bit is always cleared by this call, thereof you can
1873 * use ordinary E_XXX result code constants, for convenience. However, this
1874 * behavior may be non-standard on some COM platforms.
1875 */
1876 static HRESULT setWarning (HRESULT aResultCode, const GUID &aIID,
1877 const char *aText, ...)
1878 {
1879 va_list args;
1880 va_start (args, aText);
1881 HRESULT rc = VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImplBase::setWarning
1882 (aResultCode, aIID, C::getComponentName(), aText, args);
1883 va_end (args);
1884 return rc;
1885 }
1886
1887 /**
1888 * Sets the error information for the current thread but doesn't put
1889 * anything in the release log. This is very useful for avoiding
1890 * harmless error from causing confusion.
1891 *
1892 * It is otherwise identical to #setError (HRESULT, const char *text, ...).
1893 */
1894 static HRESULT setErrorNoLog (HRESULT aResultCode, const char *aText, ...)
1895 {
1896 va_list args;
1897 va_start (args, aText);
1898 HRESULT rc = VirtualBoxSupportErrorInfoImplBase::setError
1899 (aResultCode, COM_IIDOF(I), C::getComponentName(), aText, args, false /* aLogIt */);
1900 va_end (args);
1901 return rc;
1902 }
1903
1904private:
1905
1906};
1907
1908////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1909
1910/**
1911 * Base class to track VirtualBoxBase children of the component.
1912 *
1913 * This class is a preferable VirtualBoxBase replacement for components
1914 * that operate with collections of child components. It gives two useful
1915 * possibilities:
1916 *
1917 * <ol><li>
1918 * Given an IUnknown instance, it's possible to quickly determine
1919 * whether this instance represents a child object created by the given
1920 * component, and if so, get a valid VirtualBoxBase pointer to the child
1921 * object. The returned pointer can be then safely casted to the
1922 * actual class of the child object (to get access to its "internal"
1923 * non-interface methods) provided that no other child components implement
1924 * the same initial interface IUnknown is queried from.
1925 * </li><li>
1926 * When the parent object uninitializes itself, it can easily unintialize
1927 * all its VirtualBoxBase derived children (using their
1928 * VirtualBoxBase::uninit() implementations). This is done simply by
1929 * calling the #uninitDependentChildren() method.
1930 * </li></ol>
1931 *
1932 * In order to let the above work, the following must be done:
1933 * <ol><li>
1934 * When a child object is initialized, it calls #addDependentChild() of
1935 * its parent to register itself within the list of dependent children.
1936 * </li><li>
1937 * When a child object it is uninitialized, it calls #removeDependentChild()
1938 * to unregister itself. This must be done <b>after</b> the child has called
1939 * setReady(false) to indicate it is no more valid, and <b>not</b> from under
1940 * the child object's lock. Note also, that the first action the child's
1941 * uninit() implementation must do is to check for readiness after acquiring
1942 * the object's lock and return immediately if not ready.
1943 * </li></ol>
1944 *
1945 * Children added by #addDependentChild() are <b>weakly</b> referenced
1946 * (i.e. AddRef() is not called), so when a child is externally destructed
1947 * (i.e. its reference count goes to zero), it will automatically remove
1948 * itself from a map of dependent children, provided that it follows the
1949 * rules described here.
1950 *
1951 * @note
1952 * Because of weak referencing, deadlocks and assertions are very likely
1953 * if #addDependentChild() or #removeDependentChild() are used incorrectly
1954 * (called at inappropriate times). Check the above rules once more.
1955 *
1956 * @deprecated Use VirtualBoxBaseWithChildrenNEXT for new classes.
1957 */
1958class VirtualBoxBaseWithChildren : public VirtualBoxBase
1959{
1960public:
1961
1962 VirtualBoxBaseWithChildren()
1963 : mUninitDoneSem (NIL_RTSEMEVENT), mChildrenLeft (0)
1964 {}
1965
1966 virtual ~VirtualBoxBaseWithChildren()
1967 {}
1968
1969 /**
1970 * Adds the given child to the map of dependent children.
1971 * Intended to be called from the child's init() method,
1972 * from under the child's lock.
1973 *
1974 * @param C the child object to add (must inherit VirtualBoxBase AND
1975 * implement some interface)
1976 */
1977 template <class C>
1978 void addDependentChild (C *child)
1979 {
1980 AssertReturn (child, (void) 0);
1981 addDependentChild (child, child);
1982 }
1983
1984 /**
1985 * Removes the given child from the map of dependent children.
1986 * Must be called <b>after<b> the child has called setReady(false), and
1987 * <b>not</b> from under the child object's lock.
1988 *
1989 * @param C the child object to remove (must inherit VirtualBoxBase AND
1990 * implement some interface)
1991 */
1992 template <class C>
1993 void removeDependentChild (C *child)
1994 {
1995 AssertReturn (child, (void) 0);
1996 /// @todo (r=dmik) the below check (and the relevant comment above)
1997 // seems to be not necessary any more once we completely switch to
1998 // the NEXT locking scheme. This requires altering removeDependentChild()
1999 // and uninitDependentChildren() as well (due to the new state scheme,
2000 // there is a separate mutex for state transition, so calling the
2001 // child's uninit() from under the children map lock should not produce
2002 // dead-locks any more).
2003 Assert (!child->isWriteLockOnCurrentThread() || child->lockHandle() == lockHandle());
2004 removeDependentChild (ComPtr <IUnknown> (child));
2005 }
2006
2007protected:
2008
2009 void uninitDependentChildren();
2010
2011 VirtualBoxBase *getDependentChild (const ComPtr <IUnknown> &unk);
2012
2013private:
2014
2015 void addDependentChild (const ComPtr <IUnknown> &unk, VirtualBoxBase *child);
2016 void removeDependentChild (const ComPtr <IUnknown> &unk);
2017
2018 typedef std::map <IUnknown *, VirtualBoxBase *> DependentChildren;
2019 DependentChildren mDependentChildren;
2020
2021 WriteLockHandle mMapLock;
2022
2023 RTSEMEVENT mUninitDoneSem;
2024 unsigned mChildrenLeft;
2025};
2026
2027////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2028
2029/**
2030 * Base class to track VirtualBoxBaseNEXT chlidren of the component.
2031 *
2032 * This class is a preferrable VirtualBoxBase replacement for components that
2033 * operate with collections of child components. It gives two useful
2034 * possibilities:
2035 *
2036 * <ol><li>
2037 * Given an IUnknown instance, it's possible to quickly determine
2038 * whether this instance represents a child object that belongs to the
2039 * given component, and if so, get a valid VirtualBoxBase pointer to the
2040 * child object. The returned pointer can be then safely casted to the
2041 * actual class of the child object (to get access to its "internal"
2042 * non-interface methods) provided that no other child components implement
2043 * the same original COM interface IUnknown is queried from.
2044 * </li><li>
2045 * When the parent object uninitializes itself, it can easily unintialize
2046 * all its VirtualBoxBase derived children (using their
2047 * VirtualBoxBase::uninit() implementations). This is done simply by
2048 * calling the #uninitDependentChildren() method.
2049 * </li></ol>
2050 *
2051 * In order to let the above work, the following must be done:
2052 * <ol><li>
2053 * When a child object is initialized, it calls #addDependentChild() of
2054 * its parent to register itself within the list of dependent children.
2055 * </li><li>
2056 * When the child object it is uninitialized, it calls
2057 * #removeDependentChild() to unregister itself.
2058 * </li></ol>
2059 *
2060 * Note that if the parent object does not call #uninitDependentChildren() when
2061 * it gets uninitialized, it must call uninit() methods of individual children
2062 * manually to disconnect them; a failure to do so will cause crashes in these
2063 * methods when children get destroyed. The same applies to children not calling
2064 * #removeDependentChild() when getting destroyed.
2065 *
2066 * Note that children added by #addDependentChild() are <b>weakly</b> referenced
2067 * (i.e. AddRef() is not called), so when a child object is deleted externally
2068 * (because it's reference count goes to zero), it will automatically remove
2069 * itself from the map of dependent children provided that it follows the rules
2070 * described here.
2071 *
2072 * Access to the child list is serialized using the #childrenLock() lock handle
2073 * (which defaults to the general object lock handle (see
2074 * VirtualBoxBase::lockHandle()). This lock is used by all add/remove methods of
2075 * this class so be aware of the need to preserve the {parent, child} lock order
2076 * when calling these methods.
2077 *
2078 * Read individual method descriptions to get further information.
2079 *
2080 * @todo This is a VirtualBoxBaseWithChildren equivalent that uses the
2081 * VirtualBoxBaseNEXT implementation. Will completely supersede
2082 * VirtualBoxBaseWithChildren after the old VirtualBoxBase implementation
2083 * has gone.
2084 */
2085class VirtualBoxBaseWithChildrenNEXT : public VirtualBoxBaseNEXT
2086{
2087public:
2088
2089 VirtualBoxBaseWithChildrenNEXT()
2090 {}
2091
2092 virtual ~VirtualBoxBaseWithChildrenNEXT()
2093 {}
2094
2095 /**
2096 * Lock handle to use when adding/removing child objects from the list of
2097 * children. It is guaranteed that no any other lock is requested in methods
2098 * of this class while holding this lock.
2099 *
2100 * @warning By default, this simply returns the general object's lock handle
2101 * (see VirtualBoxBase::lockHandle()) which is sufficient for most
2102 * cases.
2103 */
2104 virtual RWLockHandle *childrenLock() { return lockHandle(); }
2105
2106 /**
2107 * Adds the given child to the list of dependent children.
2108 *
2109 * Usually gets called from the child's init() method.
2110 *
2111 * @note @a aChild (unless it is in InInit state) must be protected by
2112 * VirtualBoxBase::AutoCaller to make sure it is not uninitialized on
2113 * another thread during this method's call.
2114 *
2115 * @note When #childrenLock() is not overloaded (returns the general object
2116 * lock) and this method is called from under the child's read or
2117 * write lock, make sure the {parent, child} locking order is
2118 * preserved by locking the callee (this object) for writing before
2119 * the child's lock.
2120 *
2121 * @param aChild Child object to add (must inherit VirtualBoxBase AND
2122 * implement some interface).
2123 *
2124 * @note Locks #childrenLock() for writing.
2125 */
2126 template <class C>
2127 void addDependentChild (C *aChild)
2128 {
2129 AssertReturnVoid (aChild != NULL);
2130 doAddDependentChild (ComPtr <IUnknown> (aChild), aChild);
2131 }
2132
2133 /**
2134 * Equivalent to template <class C> void addDependentChild (C *aChild)
2135 * but takes a ComObjPtr <C> argument.
2136 */
2137 template <class C>
2138 void addDependentChild (const ComObjPtr <C> &aChild)
2139 {
2140 AssertReturnVoid (!aChild.isNull());
2141 doAddDependentChild (ComPtr <IUnknown> (static_cast <C *> (aChild)), aChild);
2142 }
2143
2144 /**
2145 * Removes the given child from the list of dependent children.
2146 *
2147 * Usually gets called from the child's uninit() method.
2148 *
2149 * Keep in mind that the called (parent) object may be no longer available
2150 * (i.e. may be deleted deleted) after this method returns, so you must not
2151 * call any other parent's methods after that!
2152 *
2153 * @note Locks #childrenLock() for writing.
2154 *
2155 * @note @a aChild (unless it is in InUninit state) must be protected by
2156 * VirtualBoxBase::AutoCaller to make sure it is not uninitialized on
2157 * another thread during this method's call.
2158 *
2159 * @note When #childrenLock() is not overloaded (returns the general object
2160 * lock) and this method is called from under the child's read or
2161 * write lock, make sure the {parent, child} locking order is
2162 * preserved by locking the callee (this object) for writing before
2163 * the child's lock. This is irrelevant when the method is called from
2164 * under this object's VirtualBoxBaseProto::AutoUninitSpan (i.e. in
2165 * InUninit state) since in this case no locking is done.
2166 *
2167 * @param aChild Child object to remove.
2168 *
2169 * @note Locks #childrenLock() for writing.
2170 */
2171 template <class C>
2172 void removeDependentChild (C *aChild)
2173 {
2174 AssertReturnVoid (aChild != NULL);
2175 doRemoveDependentChild (ComPtr <IUnknown> (aChild));
2176 }
2177
2178 /**
2179 * Equivalent to template <class C> void removeDependentChild (C *aChild)
2180 * but takes a ComObjPtr <C> argument.
2181 */
2182 template <class C>
2183 void removeDependentChild (const ComObjPtr <C> &aChild)
2184 {
2185 AssertReturnVoid (!aChild.isNull());
2186 doRemoveDependentChild (ComPtr <IUnknown> (static_cast <C *> (aChild)));
2187 }
2188
2189protected:
2190
2191 void uninitDependentChildren();
2192
2193 VirtualBoxBaseNEXT *getDependentChild (const ComPtr <IUnknown> &aUnk);
2194
2195private:
2196
2197 /// @todo temporarily reinterpret VirtualBoxBase * as VirtualBoxBaseNEXT *
2198 // until ported HardDisk and Progress to the new scheme.
2199 void doAddDependentChild (IUnknown *aUnk, VirtualBoxBase *aChild)
2200 {
2201 doAddDependentChild (aUnk,
2202 reinterpret_cast <VirtualBoxBaseNEXT *> (aChild));
2203 }
2204
2205 void doAddDependentChild (IUnknown *aUnk, VirtualBoxBaseNEXT *aChild);
2206 void doRemoveDependentChild (IUnknown *aUnk);
2207
2208 typedef std::map <IUnknown *, VirtualBoxBaseNEXT *> DependentChildren;
2209 DependentChildren mDependentChildren;
2210};
2211
2212////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2213
2214/**
2215 * Base class to track component's children of some particular type.
2216 *
2217 * This class is similar to VirtualBoxBaseWithChildren, with the exception
2218 * that all children must be of the same type. For this reason, it's not
2219 * necessary to use a map to store children, so a list is used instead.
2220 *
2221 * As opposed to VirtualBoxBaseWithChildren, children added by
2222 * #addDependentChild() are <b>strongly</b> referenced, so that they cannot
2223 * be externally destructed until #removeDependentChild() is called.
2224 *
2225 * Also, this class doesn't have the
2226 * VirtualBoxBaseWithChildrenNEXT::getDependentChild() method because it would
2227 * be not fast for long lists.
2228 *
2229 * @param C type of child objects (must inherit VirtualBoxBase AND
2230 * implement some interface)
2231 *
2232 * @deprecated Use VirtualBoxBaseWithTypedChildrenNEXT for new classes.
2233 */
2234template <class C>
2235class VirtualBoxBaseWithTypedChildren : public VirtualBoxBase
2236{
2237public:
2238
2239 typedef std::list <ComObjPtr <C> > DependentChildren;
2240
2241 VirtualBoxBaseWithTypedChildren() : mInUninit (false) {}
2242
2243 virtual ~VirtualBoxBaseWithTypedChildren() {}
2244
2245 /**
2246 * Adds the given child to the list of dependent children.
2247 * Must be called from the child's init() method,
2248 * from under the child's lock.
2249 *
2250 * @param C the child object to add (must inherit VirtualBoxBase AND
2251 * implement some interface)
2252 */
2253 void addDependentChild (C *child)
2254 {
2255 AssertReturn (child, (void) 0);
2256
2257 AutoWriteLock alock (mMapLock);
2258 if (mInUninit)
2259 return;
2260
2261 mDependentChildren.push_back (child);
2262 }
2263
2264 /**
2265 * Removes the given child from the list of dependent children.
2266 * Must be called from the child's uninit() method,
2267 * under the child's lock.
2268 *
2269 * @param C the child object to remove (must inherit VirtualBoxBase AND
2270 * implement some interface)
2271 */
2272 void removeDependentChild (C *child)
2273 {
2274 AssertReturn (child, (void) 0);
2275
2276 AutoWriteLock alock (mMapLock);
2277 if (mInUninit)
2278 return;
2279
2280 mDependentChildren.remove (child);
2281 }
2282
2283protected:
2284
2285 /**
2286 * Returns an internal lock handle to lock the list of children
2287 * returned by #dependentChildren() using AutoReadLock/AutoWriteLock:
2288 * <code>
2289 * AutoReadLock alock (dependentChildrenLock());
2290 * </code>
2291 *
2292 * This is necessary for example to access the list of children returned by
2293 * #dependentChildren().
2294 */
2295 RWLockHandle *dependentChildrenLock() const { return &mMapLock; }
2296
2297 /**
2298 * Returns the read-only list of all dependent children.
2299 * @note
2300 * Access the returned list (iterate, get size etc.) only after
2301 * doing |AutoWriteLock alock (dependentChildrenLock());|!
2302 */
2303 const DependentChildren &dependentChildren() const { return mDependentChildren; }
2304
2305 /**
2306 * Uninitializes all dependent children registered with #addDependentChild().
2307 *
2308 * @note
2309 * This method will call uninit() methods of children. If these methods
2310 * access the parent object, uninitDependentChildren() must be called
2311 * either at the beginning of the parent uninitialization sequence (when
2312 * it is still operational) or after setReady(false) is called to
2313 * indicate the parent is out of action.
2314 */
2315 void uninitDependentChildren()
2316 {
2317 AutoWriteLock alock (this);
2318 AutoWriteLock mapLock (mMapLock);
2319
2320 if (mDependentChildren.size())
2321 {
2322 // set flag to ignore #removeDependentChild() called from child->uninit()
2323 mInUninit = true;
2324
2325 // leave the locks to let children waiting for #removeDependentChild() run
2326 mapLock.leave();
2327 alock.leave();
2328
2329 for (typename DependentChildren::iterator it = mDependentChildren.begin();
2330 it != mDependentChildren.end(); ++ it)
2331 {
2332 C *child = (*it);
2333 Assert (child);
2334 if (child)
2335 child->uninit();
2336 }
2337 mDependentChildren.clear();
2338
2339 alock.enter();
2340 mapLock.enter();
2341
2342 mInUninit = false;
2343 }
2344 }
2345
2346 /**
2347 * Removes (detaches) all dependent children registered with
2348 * #addDependentChild(), without uninitializing them.
2349 *
2350 * @note This method must be called from under the main object's lock
2351 */
2352 void removeDependentChildren()
2353 {
2354 AutoWriteLock alock (mMapLock);
2355 mDependentChildren.clear();
2356 }
2357
2358private:
2359
2360 DependentChildren mDependentChildren;
2361
2362 bool mInUninit;
2363 mutable RWLockHandle mMapLock;
2364};
2365
2366////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2367
2368/**
2369 * Base class to track component's children of the particular type.
2370 *
2371 * This class is similar to VirtualBoxBaseWithChildrenNEXT with the exception
2372 * that all children must be of the same type. For this reason, it's not
2373 * necessary to use a map to store children -- a list is used instead.
2374 *
2375 * Also, as opposed to VirtualBoxBaseWithChildren, children added by
2376 * #addDependentChild() are <b>strongly</b> referenced, so that they cannot be
2377 * deleted (even by a third party) until #removeDependentChild() is called on
2378 * them. This also means that a failure to call #removeDependentChild() and
2379 * #uninitDependentChildren() at appropriate times as described in
2380 * VirtualBoxBaseWithChildrenNEXT may cause stuck references that won't be able
2381 * uninitialize themselves.
2382 *
2383 * See individual method descriptions for further information.
2384 *
2385 * @param C Type of child objects (must inherit VirtualBoxBase AND implement
2386 * some interface).
2387 *
2388 * @todo This is a VirtualBoxBaseWithChildren equivalent that uses the
2389 * VirtualBoxBaseNEXT implementation. Will completely supersede
2390 * VirtualBoxBaseWithChildren after the old VirtualBoxBase implementation
2391 * has gone.
2392 */
2393template <class C>
2394class VirtualBoxBaseWithTypedChildrenNEXT : public VirtualBoxBaseNEXT
2395{
2396public:
2397
2398 typedef std::list <ComObjPtr <C> > DependentChildren;
2399
2400 VirtualBoxBaseWithTypedChildrenNEXT() {}
2401
2402 virtual ~VirtualBoxBaseWithTypedChildrenNEXT() {}
2403
2404 /**
2405 * Lock handle to use when adding/removing child objects from the list of
2406 * children. It is guaranteed that no any other lock is requested in methods
2407 * of this class while holding this lock.
2408 *
2409 * @warning By default, this simply returns the general object's lock handle
2410 * (see VirtualBoxBase::lockHandle()) which is sufficient for most
2411 * cases.
2412 */
2413 virtual RWLockHandle *childrenLock() { return lockHandle(); }
2414
2415 /**
2416 * Adds the given child to the list of dependent children.
2417 *
2418 * Usually gets called from the child's init() method.
2419 *
2420 * @note @a aChild (unless it is in InInit state) must be protected by
2421 * VirtualBoxBase::AutoCaller to make sure it is not uninitialized on
2422 * another thread during this method's call.
2423 *
2424 * @note When #childrenLock() is not overloaded (returns the general object
2425 * lock) and this method is called from under the child's read or
2426 * write lock, make sure the {parent, child} locking order is
2427 * preserved by locking the callee (this object) for writing before
2428 * the child's lock.
2429 *
2430 * @param aChild Child object to add.
2431 *
2432 * @note Locks #childrenLock() for writing.
2433 */
2434 void addDependentChild (C *aChild)
2435 {
2436 AssertReturnVoid (aChild != NULL);
2437
2438 AutoCaller autoCaller (this);
2439
2440 /* sanity */
2441 AssertReturnVoid (autoCaller.state() == InInit ||
2442 autoCaller.state() == Ready ||
2443 autoCaller.state() == Limited);
2444
2445 AutoWriteLock chLock (childrenLock());
2446 mDependentChildren.push_back (aChild);
2447 }
2448
2449 /**
2450 * Removes the given child from the list of dependent children.
2451 *
2452 * Usually gets called from the child's uninit() method.
2453 *
2454 * Keep in mind that the called (parent) object may be no longer available
2455 * (i.e. may be deleted deleted) after this method returns, so you must not
2456 * call any other parent's methods after that!
2457 *
2458 * @note @a aChild (unless it is in InUninit state) must be protected by
2459 * VirtualBoxBase::AutoCaller to make sure it is not uninitialized on
2460 * another thread during this method's call.
2461 *
2462 * @note When #childrenLock() is not overloaded (returns the general object
2463 * lock) and this method is called from under the child's read or
2464 * write lock, make sure the {parent, child} locking order is
2465 * preserved by locking the callee (this object) for writing before
2466 * the child's lock. This is irrelevant when the method is called from
2467 * under this object's AutoUninitSpan (i.e. in InUninit state) since
2468 * in this case no locking is done.
2469 *
2470 * @param aChild Child object to remove.
2471 *
2472 * @note Locks #childrenLock() for writing.
2473 */
2474 void removeDependentChild (C *aChild)
2475 {
2476 AssertReturnVoid (aChild);
2477
2478 AutoCaller autoCaller (this);
2479
2480 /* sanity */
2481 AssertReturnVoid (autoCaller.state() == InUninit ||
2482 autoCaller.state() == InInit ||
2483 autoCaller.state() == Ready ||
2484 autoCaller.state() == Limited);
2485
2486 /* return shortly; we are strongly referenced so the object won't get
2487 * deleted if it calls init() before uninitDependentChildren() does
2488 * and therefore the list will still contain a valid reference that will
2489 * be correctly processed by uninitDependentChildren() anyway */
2490 if (autoCaller.state() == InUninit)
2491 return;
2492
2493 AutoWriteLock chLock (childrenLock());
2494 mDependentChildren.remove (aChild);
2495 }
2496
2497protected:
2498
2499 /**
2500 * Returns the read-only list of all dependent children.
2501 *
2502 * @note Access the returned list (iterate, get size etc.) only after making
2503 * sure #childrenLock() is locked for reading or for writing!
2504 */
2505 const DependentChildren &dependentChildren() const { return mDependentChildren; }
2506
2507 /**
2508 * Uninitializes all dependent children registered on this object with
2509 * #addDependentChild().
2510 *
2511 * Must be called from within the VirtualBoxBaseProto::AutoUninitSpan (i.e.
2512 * typically from this object's uninit() method) to uninitialize children
2513 * before this object goes out of service and becomes unusable.
2514 *
2515 * Note that this method will call uninit() methods of child objects. If
2516 * these methods need to call the parent object during uninitialization,
2517 * #uninitDependentChildren() must be called before the relevant part of the
2518 * parent is uninitialized: usually at the beginning of the parent
2519 * uninitialization sequence.
2520 *
2521 * @note May lock something through the called children.
2522 */
2523 void uninitDependentChildren()
2524 {
2525 AutoCaller autoCaller (this);
2526
2527 /* We don't want to hold the childrenLock() write lock here (necessary
2528 * to protect mDependentChildren) when uninitializing children because
2529 * we want to avoid a possible deadlock where we could get stuck in
2530 * child->uninit() blocked by AutoUninitSpan waiting for the number of
2531 * child's callers to drop to zero (or for another AutoUninitSpan to
2532 * finish), while some other thread is stuck in our
2533 * removeDependentChild() method called for that child and waiting for
2534 * the childrenLock()'s write lock.
2535 *
2536 * The only safe place to not lock and keep accessing our data members
2537 * is the InUninit state (no active call to our object may exist on
2538 * another thread when we are in InUinint, provided that all such calls
2539 * use the AutoCaller class of course). InUinint is also used as a flag
2540 * by removeDependentChild() that prevents touching mDependentChildren
2541 * from outside. Therefore, we assert. Note that InInit is also fine
2542 * since no any object may access us by that time.
2543 */
2544 AssertReturnVoid (autoCaller.state() == InUninit ||
2545 autoCaller.state() == InInit);
2546
2547 if (mDependentChildren.size())
2548 {
2549 for (typename DependentChildren::iterator it = mDependentChildren.begin();
2550 it != mDependentChildren.end(); ++ it)
2551 {
2552 C *child = (*it);
2553 Assert (child);
2554
2555 /* Note that if child->uninit() happens to be called on another
2556 * thread right before us and is not yet finished, the second
2557 * uninit() call will wait until the first one has done so
2558 * (thanks to AutoUninitSpan). */
2559 if (child)
2560 child->uninit();
2561 }
2562
2563 /* release all strong references we hold */
2564 mDependentChildren.clear();
2565 }
2566 }
2567
2568 /**
2569 * Removes (detaches) all dependent children registered with
2570 * #addDependentChild(), without uninitializing them.
2571 *
2572 * @note @a |this| (unless it is in InUninit state) must be protected by
2573 * VirtualBoxBase::AutoCaller to make sure it is not uninitialized on
2574 * another thread during this method's call.
2575 *
2576 * @note Locks #childrenLock() for writing.
2577 */
2578 void removeDependentChildren()
2579 {
2580 AutoWriteLock chLock (childrenLock());
2581 mDependentChildren.clear();
2582 }
2583
2584private:
2585
2586 DependentChildren mDependentChildren;
2587};
2588
2589////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2590
2591/// @todo (dmik) remove after we switch to VirtualBoxBaseNEXT completely
2592/**
2593 * Simple template that manages data structure allocation/deallocation
2594 * and supports data pointer sharing (the instance that shares the pointer is
2595 * not responsible for memory deallocation as opposed to the instance that
2596 * owns it).
2597 */
2598template <class D>
2599class Shareable
2600{
2601public:
2602
2603 Shareable() : mData (NULL), mIsShared (FALSE) {}
2604 ~Shareable() { free(); }
2605
2606 void allocate() { attach (new D); }
2607
2608 virtual void free() {
2609 if (mData) {
2610 if (!mIsShared)
2611 delete mData;
2612 mData = NULL;
2613 mIsShared = false;
2614 }
2615 }
2616
2617 void attach (D *data) {
2618 AssertMsg (data, ("new data must not be NULL"));
2619 if (data && mData != data) {
2620 if (mData && !mIsShared)
2621 delete mData;
2622 mData = data;
2623 mIsShared = false;
2624 }
2625 }
2626
2627 void attach (Shareable &data) {
2628 AssertMsg (
2629 data.mData == mData || !data.mIsShared,
2630 ("new data must not be shared")
2631 );
2632 if (this != &data && !data.mIsShared) {
2633 attach (data.mData);
2634 data.mIsShared = true;
2635 }
2636 }
2637
2638 void share (D *data) {
2639 AssertMsg (data, ("new data must not be NULL"));
2640 if (mData != data) {
2641 if (mData && !mIsShared)
2642 delete mData;
2643 mData = data;
2644 mIsShared = true;
2645 }
2646 }
2647
2648 void share (const Shareable &data) { share (data.mData); }
2649
2650 void attachCopy (const D *data) {
2651 AssertMsg (data, ("data to copy must not be NULL"));
2652 if (data)
2653 attach (new D (*data));
2654 }
2655
2656 void attachCopy (const Shareable &data) {
2657 attachCopy (data.mData);
2658 }
2659
2660 virtual D *detach() {
2661 D *d = mData;
2662 mData = NULL;
2663 mIsShared = false;
2664 return d;
2665 }
2666
2667 D *data() const {
2668 return mData;
2669 }
2670
2671 D *operator->() const {
2672 AssertMsg (mData, ("data must not be NULL"));
2673 return mData;
2674 }
2675
2676 bool isNull() const { return mData == NULL; }
2677 bool operator!() const { return isNull(); }
2678
2679 bool isShared() const { return mIsShared; }
2680
2681protected:
2682
2683 D *mData;
2684 bool mIsShared;
2685};
2686
2687/// @todo (dmik) remove after we switch to VirtualBoxBaseNEXT completely
2688/**
2689 * Simple template that enhances Shareable<> and supports data
2690 * backup/rollback/commit (using the copy constructor of the managed data
2691 * structure).
2692 */
2693template <class D>
2694class Backupable : public Shareable <D>
2695{
2696public:
2697
2698 Backupable() : Shareable <D> (), mBackupData (NULL) {}
2699
2700 void free()
2701 {
2702 AssertMsg (this->mData || !mBackupData, ("backup must be NULL if data is NULL"));
2703 rollback();
2704 Shareable <D>::free();
2705 }
2706
2707 D *detach()
2708 {
2709 AssertMsg (this->mData || !mBackupData, ("backup must be NULL if data is NULL"));
2710 rollback();
2711 return Shareable <D>::detach();
2712 }
2713
2714 void share (const Backupable &data)
2715 {
2716 AssertMsg (!data.isBackedUp(), ("data to share must not be backed up"));
2717 if (!data.isBackedUp())
2718 Shareable <D>::share (data.mData);
2719 }
2720
2721 /**
2722 * Stores the current data pointer in the backup area, allocates new data
2723 * using the copy constructor on current data and makes new data active.
2724 */
2725 void backup()
2726 {
2727 AssertMsg (this->mData, ("data must not be NULL"));
2728 if (this->mData && !mBackupData)
2729 {
2730 mBackupData = this->mData;
2731 this->mData = new D (*mBackupData);
2732 }
2733 }
2734
2735 /**
2736 * Deletes new data created by #backup() and restores previous data pointer
2737 * stored in the backup area, making it active again.
2738 */
2739 void rollback()
2740 {
2741 if (this->mData && mBackupData)
2742 {
2743 delete this->mData;
2744 this->mData = mBackupData;
2745 mBackupData = NULL;
2746 }
2747 }
2748
2749 /**
2750 * Commits current changes by deleting backed up data and clearing up the
2751 * backup area. The new data pointer created by #backup() remains active
2752 * and becomes the only managed pointer.
2753 *
2754 * This method is much faster than #commitCopy() (just a single pointer
2755 * assignment operation), but makes the previous data pointer invalid
2756 * (because it is freed). For this reason, this method must not be
2757 * used if it's possible that data managed by this instance is shared with
2758 * some other Shareable instance. See #commitCopy().
2759 */
2760 void commit()
2761 {
2762 if (this->mData && mBackupData)
2763 {
2764 if (!this->mIsShared)
2765 delete mBackupData;
2766 mBackupData = NULL;
2767 this->mIsShared = false;
2768 }
2769 }
2770
2771 /**
2772 * Commits current changes by assigning new data to the previous data
2773 * pointer stored in the backup area using the assignment operator.
2774 * New data is deleted, the backup area is cleared and the previous data
2775 * pointer becomes active and the only managed pointer.
2776 *
2777 * This method is slower than #commit(), but it keeps the previous data
2778 * pointer valid (i.e. new data is copied to the same memory location).
2779 * For that reason it's safe to use this method on instances that share
2780 * managed data with other Shareable instances.
2781 */
2782 void commitCopy()
2783 {
2784 if (this->mData && mBackupData)
2785 {
2786 *mBackupData = *(this->mData);
2787 delete this->mData;
2788 this->mData = mBackupData;
2789 mBackupData = NULL;
2790 }
2791 }
2792
2793 void assignCopy (const D *data)
2794 {
2795 AssertMsg (this->mData, ("data must not be NULL"));
2796 AssertMsg (data, ("data to copy must not be NULL"));
2797 if (this->mData && data)
2798 {
2799 if (!mBackupData)
2800 {
2801 mBackupData = this->mData;
2802 this->mData = new D (*data);
2803 }
2804 else
2805 *this->mData = *data;
2806 }
2807 }
2808
2809 void assignCopy (const Backupable &data)
2810 {
2811 assignCopy (data.mData);
2812 }
2813
2814 bool isBackedUp() const
2815 {
2816 return mBackupData != NULL;
2817 }
2818
2819 bool hasActualChanges() const
2820 {
2821 AssertMsg (this->mData, ("data must not be NULL"));
2822 return this->mData != NULL && mBackupData != NULL &&
2823 !(*this->mData == *mBackupData);
2824 }
2825
2826 D *backedUpData() const
2827 {
2828 return mBackupData;
2829 }
2830
2831protected:
2832
2833 D *mBackupData;
2834};
2835
2836#endif // ____H_VIRTUALBOXBASEIMPL
2837/* vi: set tabstop=4 shiftwidth=4 expandtab: */
Note: See TracBrowser for help on using the repository browser.

© 2024 Oracle Support Privacy / Do Not Sell My Info Terms of Use Trademark Policy Automated Access Etiquette