/* * Copyright 2007, Haiku, Inc. All Rights Reserved. * Distributed under the terms of the MIT License. * * Documentation by: * Niels Sascha Reedijk * Corresponds to: * /trunk/headers/os/support/Archivable.h rev 19972 * /trunk/src/kits/support/Archivable.cpp rev 19095 */ /*! \file Archivable.h \brief Provides the BArchivable interface. */ /*! \class BArchivable \ingroup support \ingroup libbe \brief Interfaced for objects that can be archived into a BMessage. BArchivable provides an interface for objects that can be archived into messages and unarchived to objects in another location. By these means you are able to send objects between applications, or even between computers over networks. BArchivable differs from BFlattenable in way that BFlattenable is designed to store objects to flat streams of data, where the main objective is storing it to disk. The objective of this interface is to archive objects that will be restored as objects. To illustrate that point, BArchivable messages know how to restore itself, whereas BFlattenables have a datatype which you manually need to map to classes. Archiving is done with the Archive() method. If your class support it, the caller can request your class to to a deep archivation, which means that all child objects should be stored. Unarchiving works with the Instantiate() method, which is static. However, since the interface is designed to unarchive objects without the caller knowing what kind of object it actually is, the global function #instantiate_object() instantiates a message without you manually having to determine the class the message is from. This adds considerable flexibility and allows BArchivable to be used in combination with add-ons. To provide this interface in your classes, you should publicly inherit this class. You should reimplement Archive() and Instantiate(), and provide one constructor that takes one BMessage argument. */ /*! \fn BArchivable::BArchivable(BMessage* from) \brief Constructor. Does nothing. If you inherit this interface, you should at least provide one constructor that takes one BMessage argument. */ /*! \fn BArchivable::BArchivable() \brief Constructor. Does nothing. */ /*! \fn BArchivable::~BArchivable() \brief Destructor. Does nothing. */ /*! \fn virtual status_t BArchivable::Archive(BMessage* into, bool deep = true) const \brief Archive the object into a BMessage. You should call this method from your derived implementation, as it finishes the message to contain data to instantiate your object. \param into The message you may store your object in. \param deep If \c true, all child object of this object should be stored as well. Naturally, only pay attention of this parameter if you actually have child objects. \retval B_OK The archiving succeeded. \retval "error codes" The archiving did not succeed. */ /*! \fn static BArchivable* BArchivable::Instantiate(BMessage* archive) \brief Static member to restore objects from messages. You should always check that the \a archive argument actually corresponds to your class. The automatic functions, such as #instantiate_object() will not choose the wrong class, but some manual calls to this member might be faulty. \param archive The message with the data to restore an object. \retval You should return a pointer to your object, or \c NULL if you failed to succeed. \warning The default implementation will always return \c NULL. Even though it is possible to store plain BArchive objects, it is impossible to restore them. \see instantiate_object(BMessage *from) */ /*! \fn virtual status_t BArchivable::Perform(perform_code d, void* arg) \brief Internal method. \internal This method is used to extend the API or to provide 'hidden' features. Currently nothing of interest is implemented. */ ///////////////////// Global methods /*! \addtogroup support_globals @{ */ /*! \typedef typedef BArchivable* (*instantiation_func)(BMessage*) \brief Internal definition of a function that can instantiate objects that have been created with the BArchivable API. */ /*! \fn BArchivable* instantiate_object(BMessage *from, image_id *id) \brief Instantiate an archived object with the object being defined in a different application or library. This function is similar to instantiate_object(BMessage *from), except that it takes the \a id argument that refers to an image where the object might come from. \note Images are names for executable files. Image ids refer to these executable files that have been loaded by your application. Have a look at the kernel API. */ /*! \fn BArchivable* instantiate_object(BMessage *from) \brief Instantiate an archived object. This global function will determine the base class based on the \a from argument, and it will call the Instantiate() function of that object to restore it. \param from The archived object. \return The object returns a pointer to the instantiated object, or \c NULL if the instantiation failed. The global \c errno variable will contain the reason it failed. \see instantiate_object(BMessage *from, image_id *id) */ /*! \fn bool validate_instantiation(BMessage* from, const char* className) \brief Internal function that checks if the \a className is the same as the one stored in the \a from message. */ /*! \fn instantiation_func find_instantiation_func(const char* className, const char* signature) \brief Internal function that searches for the instantiation func with a specific signature. Use instantiate_object() instead. */ /*! \fn instantiation_func find_instantiation_func(const char* className) \brief Internal function that searches for the instantiation func of a specific class. Use instantiate_object() instead. */ /*! \fn instantiation_func find_instantiation_func(BMessage* archive) \brief Internal function that searches for the instantiation func that works on the specified \a archive. Use instantiate_object() instead. */ //! @}