root/lv2_ui.h

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Basic external UI

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1/************************************************************************
2 *
3 * In-process UI extension for LV2
4 *
5 * Copyright (C) 2006-2008 Lars Luthman <lars.luthman@gmail.com>
6 *
7 * Based on lv2.h, which was
8 *
9 * Copyright (C) 2000-2002 Richard W.E. Furse, Paul Barton-Davis,
10 *                         Stefan Westerfeld
11 * Copyright (C) 2006 Steve Harris, Dave Robillard.
12 *
13 * This header is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
14 * under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published
15 * by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License,
16 * or (at your option) any later version.
17 *
18 * This header is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
19 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
20 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
21 * Lesser General Public License for more details.
22 *
23 * You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
24 * License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software
25 * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301
26 * USA.
27 *
28 ***********************************************************************/
29
30/** @file
31    This extension defines an interface that can be used in LV2 plugins and
32    hosts to create UIs for plugins. The UIs are plugins that reside in
33    shared object files in an LV2 bundle and are referenced in the RDF data
34    using the triples (Turtle shown)
35<pre>    
36    @@prefix uiext: <http://lv2plug.in/ns/extensions/ui#> .
37    <http://my.plugin>    uiext:ui     <http://my.pluginui> .
38    <http://my.plugin>    a            uiext:GtkUI .
39    <http://my.pluginui>  uiext:binary <myui.so> .
40</pre>
41    where <http://my.plugin> is the URI of the plugin, <http://my.pluginui> is
42    the URI of the plugin UI and <myui.so> is the relative URI to the shared
43    object file. While it is possible to have the plugin UI and the plugin in
44    the same shared object file it is probably a good idea to keep them
45    separate so that hosts that don't want UIs don't have to load the UI code.
46    A UI MUST specify its class in the RDF data, in this case uiext:GtkUI. The
47    class defines what type the UI is, e.g. what graphics toolkit it uses.
48    There are no UI classes defined in this extension, those are specified
49    separately (and anyone can define their own).
50   
51    (Note: the prefix above is used throughout this file for the same URI)
52   
53    It's entirely possible to have multiple UIs for the same plugin, or to have
54    the UI for a plugin in a different bundle from the actual plugin - this
55    way people other than the plugin author can write plugin UIs independently
56    without editing the original plugin bundle.
57   
58    Note that the process that loads the shared object file containing the UI
59    code and the process that loads the shared object file containing the
60    actual plugin implementation does not have to be the same. There are many
61    valid reasons for having the plugin and the UI in different processes, or
62    even on different machines. This means that you can _not_ use singletons
63    and global variables and expect them to refer to the same objects in the
64    UI and the actual plugin. The function callback interface defined in this
65    header is all you can expect to work.
66   
67    Since the LV2 specification itself allows for extensions that may add
68    new types of data and configuration parameters that plugin authors may
69    want to control with a UI, this extension allows for meta-extensions that
70    can extend the interface between the UI and the host. These extensions
71    mirror the extensions used for plugins - there are required and optional
72    "features" that you declare in the RDF data for the UI as
73<pre>    
74    <http://my.pluginui> uiext:requiredFeature <http://my.feature> .
75    <http://my.pluginui> uiext:optionalFeature <http://my.feature> .
76</pre>
77    These predicates have the same semantics as lv2:requiredFeature and
78    lv2:optionalFeature - if a UI is declaring a feature as required, the
79    host is NOT allowed to load it unless it supports that feature, and if it
80    does support a feature (required or optional) it MUST pass that feature's
81    URI and any additional data (specified by the meta-extension that defines
82    the feature) in a LV2_Feature struct (as defined in lv2.h) to the UI's
83    instantiate() function.
84   
85    These features may be used to specify how to pass data between the UI
86    and the plugin port buffers - see LV2UI_Write_Function for details.
87   
88    There are four features defined in this extension that hosts may want to
89    implement:
90
91<pre>
92    uiext:makeResident
93</pre>
94    If this feature is required by a UI the host MUST NEVER unload the shared
95    library containing the UI implementation during the lifetime of the host
96    process (e.g. never calling dlclose() on Linux). This feature may be
97    needed by e.g. a Gtk UI that registers its own Glib types using
98    g_type_register_static() - if it gets unloaded and then loaded again the
99    type registration will break, since there is no way to unregister the
100    types when the library is unloaded. The data pointer in the LV2_Feature
101    for this feature should always be set to NULL.
102
103<pre>
104    uiext:makeSONameResident
105</pre>
106    This feature is ELF specific - it should only be used by UIs that
107    use the ELF file format for the UI shared object files (e.g. on Linux).
108    If it is required by an UI the UI should also list a number of SO names
109    (shared object names) for libraries that the UI shared object
110    depends on and that may not be unloaded during the lifetime of the host
111    process, using the predicate @c uiext:residentSONames, like this:
112<pre>
113    <http://my.pluginui> uiext:residentSONames "libgtkmm-2.4.so.1", "libfoo.so.0"
114</pre>
115    The host MUST then make sure that the shared libraries with the given ELF
116    SO names are not unloaded when the plugin UI is, but stay loaded during
117    the entire lifetime of the host process. On Linux this can be accomplished
118    by calling dlopen() on the shared library file with that SO name and never
119    calling a matching dlclose(). However, if a plugin UI requires the
120    @c uiext:makeSONameResident feature, it MUST ALWAYS be safe for the host to
121    just never unload the shared object containing the UI implementation, i.e.
122    act as if the UI required the @c uiext:makeResident feature instead. Thus
123    the host only needs to find the shared library files corresponding to the
124    given SO names if it wants to save RAM by unloading the UI shared object
125    file when it is no longer needed. The data pointer for the LV2_Feature for
126    this feature should always be set to NULL.
127
128<pre>
129    uiext:noUserResize
130</pre>
131    If an UI requires this feature it indicates that it does not make sense
132    to let the user resize the main widget, and the host should prevent that.
133    This feature may not make sense for all UI types. The data pointer for the
134    LV2_Feature for this feature should always be set to NULL.
135
136<pre>
137    uiext:fixedSize
138</pre>
139    If an UI requires this feature it indicates the same thing as
140    uiext:noUserResize, and additionally it means that the UI will not resize
141    the main widget on its own - it will always remain the same size (e.g. a
142    pixmap based GUI). This feature may not make sense for all UI types.
143    The data pointer for the LV2_Feature for this feature should always be set
144    to NULL.
145   
146   
147    UIs written to this specification do not need to be threadsafe - the
148    functions defined below may only be called in the same thread as the UI
149    main loop is running in.
150   
151    Note that this UI extension is NOT a lv2:Feature. There is no way for a
152    plugin to know whether the host that loads it supports UIs or not, and
153    the plugin must ALWAYS work without the UI (although it may be rather
154    useless unless it has been configured using the UI in a previous session).
155   
156    A UI does not have to be a graphical widget, it could just as well be a
157    server listening for OSC input or an interface to some sort of hardware
158    device, depending on the RDF class of the UI.
159*/
160
161#ifndef LV2_UI_H
162#define LV2_UI_H
163
164#include "lv2.h"
165
166#define LV2_UI_URI "http://lv2plug.in/ns/extensions/ui"
167
168
169#ifdef __cplusplus
170extern "C" {
171#endif
172
173
174/** A pointer to some widget or other type of UI handle.
175    The actual type is defined by the type URI of the UI.
176    All the functionality provided by this extension is toolkit
177    independent, the host only needs to pass the necessary callbacks and
178    display the widget, if possible. Plugins may have several UIs, in various
179    toolkits. */
180typedef void* LV2UI_Widget;
181
182
183/** This handle indicates a particular instance of a UI.
184    It is valid to compare this to NULL (0 for C++) but otherwise the
185    host MUST not attempt to interpret it. The UI plugin may use it to
186    reference internal instance data. */
187typedef void* LV2UI_Handle;
188
189
190/** This handle indicates a particular plugin instance, provided by the host.
191    It is valid to compare this to NULL (0 for C++) but otherwise the
192    UI plugin MUST not attempt to interpret it. The host may use it to
193    reference internal plugin instance data. */
194typedef void* LV2UI_Controller;
195
196
197/** This is the type of the host-provided function that the UI can use to
198    send data to a plugin's input ports. The @c buffer parameter must point
199    to a block of data, @c buffer_size bytes large. The contents of this buffer
200    and what the host should do with it depends on the value of the @c format
201    parameter.
202   
203    The @c format parameter should either be 0 or a numeric ID for a "Transfer
204    mechanism". Transfer mechanisms are Features and may be defined in
205    meta-extensions. They specify how to translate the data buffers passed
206    to this function to input data for the plugin ports. If a UI wishes to
207    write data to an input port, it must list a transfer mechanism Feature
208    for that port's class as an optional or required feature (depending on
209    whether the UI will work without being able to write to that port or not).
210    The only exception is when the UI wants to write single float values to
211    input ports of the class lv2:ControlPort, in which case @c buffer_size
212    should always be 4, the buffer should always contain a single IEEE-754
213    float, and @c format should be 0.
214   
215    The numeric IDs for the transfer mechanisms are provided by a
216    URI-to-integer mapping function provided by the host, using the URI Map
217    feature <http://lv2plug.in/ns/ext/uri-map> with the map URI
218    "http://lv2plug.in/ns/extensions/ui". Thus a UI that requires transfer
219    mechanism features also requires the URI Map feature, but this is
220    implicit - the UI does not have to list the URI map feature as a required
221    or optional feature in it's RDF data.
222   
223    An UI MUST NOT pass a @c format parameter value (except 0) that has not
224    been returned by the host-provided URI mapping function for a
225    host-supported transfer mechanism feature URI.
226
227    The UI MUST NOT try to write to a port for which there is no specified
228    transfer mechanism, or to an output port. The UI is responsible for
229    allocating the buffer and deallocating it after the call.
230*/
231typedef void (*LV2UI_Write_Function)(LV2UI_Controller controller,
232                                     uint32_t         port_index,
233                                     uint32_t         buffer_size,
234                                     uint32_t         format,
235                                     const void*      buffer);
236
237
238/** This struct contains the implementation of an UI. A pointer to an
239    object of this type is returned by the lv2ui_descriptor() function.
240*/
241typedef struct _LV2UI_Descriptor {
242 
243  /** The URI for this UI (not for the plugin it controls). */
244  const char* URI;
245 
246  /** Create a new UI object and return a handle to it. This function works
247      similarly to the instantiate() member in LV2_Descriptor.
248     
249      @param descriptor The descriptor for the UI that you want to instantiate.
250      @param plugin_uri The URI of the plugin that this UI will control.
251      @param bundle_path The path to the bundle containing the RDF data file
252                         that references this shared object file, including the
253                         trailing '/'.
254      @param write_function A function provided by the host that the UI can
255                            use to send data to the plugin's input ports.
256      @param controller A handle for the plugin instance that should be passed
257                        as the first parameter of @c write_function.
258      @param widget     A pointer to an LV2UI_Widget. The UI will write a
259                        widget pointer to this location (what type of widget
260                        depends on the RDF class of the UI) that will be the
261                        main UI widget.
262      @param features   An array of LV2_Feature pointers. The host must pass
263                        all feature URIs that it and the UI supports and any
264                        additional data, just like in the LV2 plugin
265                        instantiate() function. Note that UI features and plugin
266                        features are NOT necessarily the same, they just share
267                        the same data structure - this will probably not be the
268                        same array as the one the plugin host passes to a
269                        plugin.
270  */
271  LV2UI_Handle (*instantiate)(const struct _LV2UI_Descriptor* descriptor,
272                              const char*                     plugin_uri,
273                              const char*                     bundle_path,
274                              LV2UI_Write_Function            write_function,
275                              LV2UI_Controller                controller,
276                              LV2UI_Widget*                   widget,
277                              const LV2_Feature* const*       features);
278
279 
280  /** Destroy the UI object and the associated widget. The host must not try
281      to access the widget after calling this function.
282   */
283  void (*cleanup)(LV2UI_Handle ui);
284 
285  /** Tell the UI that something interesting has happened at a plugin port.
286      What is interesting and how it is written to the buffer passed to this
287      function is defined by the @c format parameter, which has the same
288      meaning as in LV2UI_Write_Function. The only exception is ports of the
289      class lv2:ControlPort, for which this function should be called
290      when the port value changes (it does not have to be called for every
291      single change if the host's UI thread has problems keeping up with
292      the thread the plugin is running in), @c buffer_size should be 4 and the
293      buffer should contain a single IEEE-754 float. In this case the @c format
294      parameter should be 0.
295     
296      By default, the host should only call this function for input ports of
297      the lv2:ControlPort class. However, the default setting can be modified
298      by using the following URIs in the UI's RDF data:
299      <pre>
300      uiext:portNotification
301      uiext:noPortNotification
302      uiext:plugin
303      uiext:portIndex
304      </pre>
305      For example, if you want the UI with uri
306      <code><http://my.pluginui></code> for the plugin with URI
307      <code><http://my.plugin></code> to get notified when the value of the
308      output control port with index 4 changes, you would use the following
309      in the RDF for your UI:
310      <pre>
311      <http://my.pluginui> uiext:portNotification [ uiext:plugin <http://my.plugin> ;
312                                                      uiext:portIndex 4 ] .
313      </pre>
314      and similarly with <code>uiext:noPortNotification</code> if you wanted
315      to prevent notifications for a port for which it would be on by default
316      otherwise. The UI is not allowed to request notifications for ports of
317      types for which no transfer mechanism is specified, if it does it should
318      be considered broken and the host should not load it.
319     
320      The @c buffer is only valid during the time of this function call, so if
321      the UI wants to keep it for later use it has to copy the contents to an
322      internal buffer.
323     
324      This member may be set to NULL if the UI is not interested in any
325      port events.
326  */
327  void (*port_event)(LV2UI_Handle ui,
328                     uint32_t     port_index,
329                     uint32_t     buffer_size,
330                     uint32_t     format,
331                     const void*  buffer);
332 
333  /** Returns a data structure associated with an extension URI, for example
334      a struct containing additional function pointers. Avoid returning
335      function pointers directly since standard C++ has no valid way of
336      casting a void* to a function pointer. This member may be set to NULL
337      if the UI is not interested in supporting any extensions. This is similar
338      to the extension_data() member in LV2_Descriptor.
339  */
340  const void* (*extension_data)(const char*  uri);
341
342} LV2UI_Descriptor;
343
344
345
346/** A plugin UI programmer must include a function called "lv2ui_descriptor"
347    with the following function prototype within the shared object
348    file. This function will have C-style linkage (if you are using
349    C++ this is taken care of by the 'extern "C"' clause at the top of
350    the file). This function will be accessed by the UI host using the
351    @c dlsym() function and called to get a LV2UI_UIDescriptor for the
352    wanted plugin.
353   
354    Just like lv2_descriptor(), this function takes an index parameter. The
355    index should only be used for enumeration and not as any sort of ID number -
356    the host should just iterate from 0 and upwards until the function returns
357    NULL or a descriptor with an URI matching the one the host is looking for.
358*/
359const LV2UI_Descriptor* lv2ui_descriptor(uint32_t index);
360
361
362/** This is the type of the lv2ui_descriptor() function. */
363typedef const LV2UI_Descriptor* (*LV2UI_DescriptorFunction)(uint32_t index);
364
365
366
367#ifdef __cplusplus
368}
369#endif
370
371
372#endif
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