qemu-patch-raspberry4/include/qemu/object.h
Anthony Liguori 33e95c6328 qom: Reimplement Interfaces
The current implementation of Interfaces is poorly designed.  Each interface
that an object implements ends up being an object that's tracked by the
implementing object.  There's all sorts of gymnastics to deal with casting
between these objects.

But an interface shouldn't be associated with an Object.  Interfaces are global
to a class.  This patch moves all Interface knowledge to ObjectClass eliminating
the relationship between Object and Interfaces.

Interfaces are now abstract (as they should be) but this is okay.  Interfaces
essentially act as additional parents for the classes and are treated as such.

With this new implementation, we should fully support derived interfaces
including reimplementing an inherited interface.

PC: Rebased against qom-next merge Jun-2012.

PC: Removed replication of cast logic for interfaces, i.e. there is only
one cast function - object_dynamic_cast() (and object_dynamic_cast_assert())

Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter A. G. Crosthwaite <peter.crosthwaite@petalogix.com>
Acked-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Edgar E. Iglesias <edgar.iglesias@gmail.com>
2012-08-13 11:20:41 +02:00

977 lines
31 KiB
C

/*
* QEMU Object Model
*
* Copyright IBM, Corp. 2011
*
* Authors:
* Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
*
* This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2 or later.
* See the COPYING file in the top-level directory.
*
*/
#ifndef QEMU_OBJECT_H
#define QEMU_OBJECT_H
#include <glib.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include "qemu-queue.h"
struct Visitor;
struct Error;
struct TypeImpl;
typedef struct TypeImpl *Type;
typedef struct ObjectClass ObjectClass;
typedef struct Object Object;
typedef struct TypeInfo TypeInfo;
typedef struct InterfaceClass InterfaceClass;
typedef struct InterfaceInfo InterfaceInfo;
#define TYPE_OBJECT "object"
/**
* SECTION:object.h
* @title:Base Object Type System
* @short_description: interfaces for creating new types and objects
*
* The QEMU Object Model provides a framework for registering user creatable
* types and instantiating objects from those types. QOM provides the following
* features:
*
* - System for dynamically registering types
* - Support for single-inheritance of types
* - Multiple inheritance of stateless interfaces
*
* <example>
* <title>Creating a minimal type</title>
* <programlisting>
* #include "qdev.h"
*
* #define TYPE_MY_DEVICE "my-device"
*
* // No new virtual functions: we can reuse the typedef for the
* // superclass.
* typedef DeviceClass MyDeviceClass;
* typedef struct MyDevice
* {
* DeviceState parent;
*
* int reg0, reg1, reg2;
* } MyDevice;
*
* static TypeInfo my_device_info = {
* .name = TYPE_MY_DEVICE,
* .parent = TYPE_DEVICE,
* .instance_size = sizeof(MyDevice),
* };
*
* static void my_device_register_types(void)
* {
* type_register_static(&my_device_info);
* }
*
* type_init(my_device_register_types)
* </programlisting>
* </example>
*
* In the above example, we create a simple type that is described by #TypeInfo.
* #TypeInfo describes information about the type including what it inherits
* from, the instance and class size, and constructor/destructor hooks.
*
* Every type has an #ObjectClass associated with it. #ObjectClass derivatives
* are instantiated dynamically but there is only ever one instance for any
* given type. The #ObjectClass typically holds a table of function pointers
* for the virtual methods implemented by this type.
*
* Using object_new(), a new #Object derivative will be instantiated. You can
* cast an #Object to a subclass (or base-class) type using
* object_dynamic_cast(). You typically want to define macro wrappers around
* OBJECT_CHECK() and OBJECT_CLASS_CHECK() to make it easier to convert to a
* specific type:
*
* <example>
* <title>Typecasting macros</title>
* <programlisting>
* #define MY_DEVICE_GET_CLASS(obj) \
* OBJECT_GET_CLASS(MyDeviceClass, obj, TYPE_MY_DEVICE)
* #define MY_DEVICE_CLASS(klass) \
* OBJECT_CLASS_CHECK(MyDeviceClass, klass, TYPE_MY_DEVICE)
* #define MY_DEVICE(obj) \
* OBJECT_CHECK(MyDevice, obj, TYPE_MY_DEVICE)
* </programlisting>
* </example>
*
* # Class Initialization #
*
* Before an object is initialized, the class for the object must be
* initialized. There is only one class object for all instance objects
* that is created lazily.
*
* Classes are initialized by first initializing any parent classes (if
* necessary). After the parent class object has initialized, it will be
* copied into the current class object and any additional storage in the
* class object is zero filled.
*
* The effect of this is that classes automatically inherit any virtual
* function pointers that the parent class has already initialized. All
* other fields will be zero filled.
*
* Once all of the parent classes have been initialized, #TypeInfo::class_init
* is called to let the class being instantiated provide default initialize for
* its virtual functions. Here is how the above example might be modified
* to introduce an overridden virtual function:
*
* <example>
* <title>Overriding a virtual function</title>
* <programlisting>
* #include "qdev.h"
*
* void my_device_class_init(ObjectClass *klass, void *class_data)
* {
* DeviceClass *dc = DEVICE_CLASS(klass);
* dc->reset = my_device_reset;
* }
*
* static TypeInfo my_device_info = {
* .name = TYPE_MY_DEVICE,
* .parent = TYPE_DEVICE,
* .instance_size = sizeof(MyDevice),
* .class_init = my_device_class_init,
* };
* </programlisting>
* </example>
*
* Introducing new virtual functions requires a class to define its own
* struct and to add a .class_size member to the TypeInfo. Each function
* will also have a wrapper to call it easily:
*
* <example>
* <title>Defining an abstract class</title>
* <programlisting>
* #include "qdev.h"
*
* typedef struct MyDeviceClass
* {
* DeviceClass parent;
*
* void (*frobnicate) (MyDevice *obj);
* } MyDeviceClass;
*
* static TypeInfo my_device_info = {
* .name = TYPE_MY_DEVICE,
* .parent = TYPE_DEVICE,
* .instance_size = sizeof(MyDevice),
* .abstract = true, // or set a default in my_device_class_init
* .class_size = sizeof(MyDeviceClass),
* };
*
* void my_device_frobnicate(MyDevice *obj)
* {
* MyDeviceClass *klass = MY_DEVICE_GET_CLASS(obj);
*
* klass->frobnicate(obj);
* }
* </programlisting>
* </example>
*
* # Interfaces #
*
* Interfaces allow a limited form of multiple inheritance. Instances are
* similar to normal types except for the fact that are only defined by
* their classes and never carry any state. You can dynamically cast an object
* to one of its #Interface types and vice versa.
*/
/**
* ObjectPropertyAccessor:
* @obj: the object that owns the property
* @v: the visitor that contains the property data
* @opaque: the object property opaque
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: a pointer to an Error that is filled if getting/setting fails.
*
* Called when trying to get/set a property.
*/
typedef void (ObjectPropertyAccessor)(Object *obj,
struct Visitor *v,
void *opaque,
const char *name,
struct Error **errp);
/**
* ObjectPropertyRelease:
* @obj: the object that owns the property
* @name: the name of the property
* @opaque: the opaque registered with the property
*
* Called when a property is removed from a object.
*/
typedef void (ObjectPropertyRelease)(Object *obj,
const char *name,
void *opaque);
typedef struct ObjectProperty
{
gchar *name;
gchar *type;
ObjectPropertyAccessor *get;
ObjectPropertyAccessor *set;
ObjectPropertyRelease *release;
void *opaque;
QTAILQ_ENTRY(ObjectProperty) node;
} ObjectProperty;
/**
* ObjectClass:
*
* The base for all classes. The only thing that #ObjectClass contains is an
* integer type handle.
*/
struct ObjectClass
{
/*< private >*/
Type type;
GSList *interfaces;
};
/**
* Object:
*
* The base for all objects. The first member of this object is a pointer to
* a #ObjectClass. Since C guarantees that the first member of a structure
* always begins at byte 0 of that structure, as long as any sub-object places
* its parent as the first member, we can cast directly to a #Object.
*
* As a result, #Object contains a reference to the objects type as its
* first member. This allows identification of the real type of the object at
* run time.
*
* #Object also contains a list of #Interfaces that this object
* implements.
*/
struct Object
{
/*< private >*/
ObjectClass *class;
QTAILQ_HEAD(, ObjectProperty) properties;
uint32_t ref;
Object *parent;
};
/**
* TypeInfo:
* @name: The name of the type.
* @parent: The name of the parent type.
* @instance_size: The size of the object (derivative of #Object). If
* @instance_size is 0, then the size of the object will be the size of the
* parent object.
* @instance_init: This function is called to initialize an object. The parent
* class will have already been initialized so the type is only responsible
* for initializing its own members.
* @instance_finalize: This function is called during object destruction. This
* is called before the parent @instance_finalize function has been called.
* An object should only free the members that are unique to its type in this
* function.
* @abstract: If this field is true, then the class is considered abstract and
* cannot be directly instantiated.
* @class_size: The size of the class object (derivative of #ObjectClass)
* for this object. If @class_size is 0, then the size of the class will be
* assumed to be the size of the parent class. This allows a type to avoid
* implementing an explicit class type if they are not adding additional
* virtual functions.
* @class_init: This function is called after all parent class initialization
* has occurred to allow a class to set its default virtual method pointers.
* This is also the function to use to override virtual methods from a parent
* class.
* @class_base_init: This function is called for all base classes after all
* parent class initialization has occurred, but before the class itself
* is initialized. This is the function to use to undo the effects of
* memcpy from the parent class to the descendents.
* @class_finalize: This function is called during class destruction and is
* meant to release and dynamic parameters allocated by @class_init.
* @class_data: Data to pass to the @class_init, @class_base_init and
* @class_finalize functions. This can be useful when building dynamic
* classes.
* @interfaces: The list of interfaces associated with this type. This
* should point to a static array that's terminated with a zero filled
* element.
*/
struct TypeInfo
{
const char *name;
const char *parent;
size_t instance_size;
void (*instance_init)(Object *obj);
void (*instance_finalize)(Object *obj);
bool abstract;
size_t class_size;
void (*class_init)(ObjectClass *klass, void *data);
void (*class_base_init)(ObjectClass *klass, void *data);
void (*class_finalize)(ObjectClass *klass, void *data);
void *class_data;
InterfaceInfo *interfaces;
};
/**
* OBJECT:
* @obj: A derivative of #Object
*
* Converts an object to a #Object. Since all objects are #Objects,
* this function will always succeed.
*/
#define OBJECT(obj) \
((Object *)(obj))
/**
* OBJECT_CLASS:
* @class: A derivative of #ObjectClass.
*
* Converts a class to an #ObjectClass. Since all objects are #Objects,
* this function will always succeed.
*/
#define OBJECT_CLASS(class) \
((ObjectClass *)(class))
/**
* OBJECT_CHECK:
* @type: The C type to use for the return value.
* @obj: A derivative of @type to cast.
* @name: The QOM typename of @type
*
* A type safe version of @object_dynamic_cast_assert. Typically each class
* will define a macro based on this type to perform type safe dynamic_casts to
* this object type.
*
* If an invalid object is passed to this function, a run time assert will be
* generated.
*/
#define OBJECT_CHECK(type, obj, name) \
((type *)object_dynamic_cast_assert(OBJECT(obj), (name)))
/**
* OBJECT_CLASS_CHECK:
* @class: The C type to use for the return value.
* @obj: A derivative of @type to cast.
* @name: the QOM typename of @class.
*
* A type safe version of @object_class_dynamic_cast_assert. This macro is
* typically wrapped by each type to perform type safe casts of a class to a
* specific class type.
*/
#define OBJECT_CLASS_CHECK(class, obj, name) \
((class *)object_class_dynamic_cast_assert(OBJECT_CLASS(obj), (name)))
/**
* OBJECT_GET_CLASS:
* @class: The C type to use for the return value.
* @obj: The object to obtain the class for.
* @name: The QOM typename of @obj.
*
* This function will return a specific class for a given object. Its generally
* used by each type to provide a type safe macro to get a specific class type
* from an object.
*/
#define OBJECT_GET_CLASS(class, obj, name) \
OBJECT_CLASS_CHECK(class, object_get_class(OBJECT(obj)), name)
/**
* InterfaceInfo:
* @type: The name of the interface.
*
* The information associated with an interface.
*/
struct InterfaceInfo {
const char *type;
};
/**
* InterfaceClass:
* @parent_class: the base class
*
* The class for all interfaces. Subclasses of this class should only add
* virtual methods.
*/
struct InterfaceClass
{
ObjectClass parent_class;
/*< private >*/
ObjectClass *concrete_class;
};
#define TYPE_INTERFACE "interface"
/**
* INTERFACE_CLASS:
* @klass: class to cast from
* Returns: An #InterfaceClass or raise an error if cast is invalid
*/
#define INTERFACE_CLASS(klass) \
OBJECT_CLASS_CHECK(InterfaceClass, klass, TYPE_INTERFACE)
/**
* INTERFACE_CHECK:
* @interface: the type to return
* @obj: the object to convert to an interface
* @name: the interface type name
*
* Returns: @obj casted to @interface if cast is valid, otherwise raise error.
*/
#define INTERFACE_CHECK(interface, obj, name) \
((interface *)object_dynamic_cast_assert(OBJECT((obj)), (name)))
/**
* object_new:
* @typename: The name of the type of the object to instantiate.
*
* This function will initialize a new object using heap allocated memory. This
* function should be paired with object_delete() to free the resources
* associated with the object.
*
* Returns: The newly allocated and instantiated object.
*/
Object *object_new(const char *typename);
/**
* object_new_with_type:
* @type: The type of the object to instantiate.
*
* This function will initialize a new object using heap allocated memory. This
* function should be paired with object_delete() to free the resources
* associated with the object.
*
* Returns: The newly allocated and instantiated object.
*/
Object *object_new_with_type(Type type);
/**
* object_delete:
* @obj: The object to free.
*
* Finalize an object and then free the memory associated with it. This should
* be paired with object_new() to free the resources associated with an object.
*/
void object_delete(Object *obj);
/**
* object_initialize_with_type:
* @obj: A pointer to the memory to be used for the object.
* @type: The type of the object to instantiate.
*
* This function will initialize an object. The memory for the object should
* have already been allocated.
*/
void object_initialize_with_type(void *data, Type type);
/**
* object_initialize:
* @obj: A pointer to the memory to be used for the object.
* @typename: The name of the type of the object to instantiate.
*
* This function will initialize an object. The memory for the object should
* have already been allocated.
*/
void object_initialize(void *obj, const char *typename);
/**
* object_finalize:
* @obj: The object to finalize.
*
* This function destroys and object without freeing the memory associated with
* it.
*/
void object_finalize(void *obj);
/**
* object_dynamic_cast:
* @obj: The object to cast.
* @typename: The @typename to cast to.
*
* This function will determine if @obj is-a @typename. @obj can refer to an
* object or an interface associated with an object.
*
* Returns: This function returns @obj on success or #NULL on failure.
*/
Object *object_dynamic_cast(Object *obj, const char *typename);
/**
* object_dynamic_cast_assert:
*
* See object_dynamic_cast() for a description of the parameters of this
* function. The only difference in behavior is that this function asserts
* instead of returning #NULL on failure.
*/
Object *object_dynamic_cast_assert(Object *obj, const char *typename);
/**
* object_get_class:
* @obj: A derivative of #Object
*
* Returns: The #ObjectClass of the type associated with @obj.
*/
ObjectClass *object_get_class(Object *obj);
/**
* object_get_typename:
* @obj: A derivative of #Object.
*
* Returns: The QOM typename of @obj.
*/
const char *object_get_typename(Object *obj);
/**
* type_register_static:
* @info: The #TypeInfo of the new type.
*
* @info and all of the strings it points to should exist for the life time
* that the type is registered.
*
* Returns: 0 on failure, the new #Type on success.
*/
Type type_register_static(const TypeInfo *info);
/**
* type_register:
* @info: The #TypeInfo of the new type
*
* Unlike type_register_static(), this call does not require @info or its
* string members to continue to exist after the call returns.
*
* Returns: 0 on failure, the new #Type on success.
*/
Type type_register(const TypeInfo *info);
/**
* object_class_dynamic_cast_assert:
* @klass: The #ObjectClass to attempt to cast.
* @typename: The QOM typename of the class to cast to.
*
* Returns: This function always returns @klass and asserts on failure.
*/
ObjectClass *object_class_dynamic_cast_assert(ObjectClass *klass,
const char *typename);
ObjectClass *object_class_dynamic_cast(ObjectClass *klass,
const char *typename);
/**
* object_class_get_parent:
* @klass: The class to obtain the parent for.
*
* Returns: The parent for @klass or %NULL if none.
*/
ObjectClass *object_class_get_parent(ObjectClass *klass);
/**
* object_class_get_name:
* @klass: The class to obtain the QOM typename for.
*
* Returns: The QOM typename for @klass.
*/
const char *object_class_get_name(ObjectClass *klass);
/**
* object_class_by_name:
* @typename: The QOM typename to obtain the class for.
*
* Returns: The class for @typename or %NULL if not found.
*/
ObjectClass *object_class_by_name(const char *typename);
void object_class_foreach(void (*fn)(ObjectClass *klass, void *opaque),
const char *implements_type, bool include_abstract,
void *opaque);
/**
* object_class_get_list:
* @implements_type: The type to filter for, including its derivatives.
* @include_abstract: Whether to include abstract classes.
*
* Returns: A singly-linked list of the classes in reverse hashtable order.
*/
GSList *object_class_get_list(const char *implements_type,
bool include_abstract);
/**
* object_ref:
* @obj: the object
*
* Increase the reference count of a object. A object cannot be freed as long
* as its reference count is greater than zero.
*/
void object_ref(Object *obj);
/**
* qdef_unref:
* @obj: the object
*
* Decrease the reference count of a object. A object cannot be freed as long
* as its reference count is greater than zero.
*/
void object_unref(Object *obj);
/**
* object_property_add:
* @obj: the object to add a property to
* @name: the name of the property. This can contain any character except for
* a forward slash. In general, you should use hyphens '-' instead of
* underscores '_' when naming properties.
* @type: the type name of the property. This namespace is pretty loosely
* defined. Sub namespaces are constructed by using a prefix and then
* to angle brackets. For instance, the type 'virtio-net-pci' in the
* 'link' namespace would be 'link<virtio-net-pci>'.
* @get: The getter to be called to read a property. If this is NULL, then
* the property cannot be read.
* @set: the setter to be called to write a property. If this is NULL,
* then the property cannot be written.
* @release: called when the property is removed from the object. This is
* meant to allow a property to free its opaque upon object
* destruction. This may be NULL.
* @opaque: an opaque pointer to pass to the callbacks for the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*/
void object_property_add(Object *obj, const char *name, const char *type,
ObjectPropertyAccessor *get,
ObjectPropertyAccessor *set,
ObjectPropertyRelease *release,
void *opaque, struct Error **errp);
void object_property_del(Object *obj, const char *name, struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_find:
* @obj: the object
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*
* Look up a property for an object and return its #ObjectProperty if found.
*/
ObjectProperty *object_property_find(Object *obj, const char *name,
struct Error **errp);
void object_unparent(Object *obj);
/**
* object_property_get:
* @obj: the object
* @v: the visitor that will receive the property value. This should be an
* Output visitor and the data will be written with @name as the name.
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*
* Reads a property from a object.
*/
void object_property_get(Object *obj, struct Visitor *v, const char *name,
struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_set_str:
* @value: the value to be written to the property
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*
* Writes a string value to a property.
*/
void object_property_set_str(Object *obj, const char *value,
const char *name, struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_get_str:
* @obj: the object
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*
* Returns: the value of the property, converted to a C string, or NULL if
* an error occurs (including when the property value is not a string).
* The caller should free the string.
*/
char *object_property_get_str(Object *obj, const char *name,
struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_set_link:
* @value: the value to be written to the property
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*
* Writes an object's canonical path to a property.
*/
void object_property_set_link(Object *obj, Object *value,
const char *name, struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_get_link:
* @obj: the object
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*
* Returns: the value of the property, resolved from a path to an Object,
* or NULL if an error occurs (including when the property value is not a
* string or not a valid object path).
*/
Object *object_property_get_link(Object *obj, const char *name,
struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_set_bool:
* @value: the value to be written to the property
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*
* Writes a bool value to a property.
*/
void object_property_set_bool(Object *obj, bool value,
const char *name, struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_get_bool:
* @obj: the object
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*
* Returns: the value of the property, converted to a boolean, or NULL if
* an error occurs (including when the property value is not a bool).
*/
bool object_property_get_bool(Object *obj, const char *name,
struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_set_int:
* @value: the value to be written to the property
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*
* Writes an integer value to a property.
*/
void object_property_set_int(Object *obj, int64_t value,
const char *name, struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_get_int:
* @obj: the object
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*
* Returns: the value of the property, converted to an integer, or NULL if
* an error occurs (including when the property value is not an integer).
*/
int64_t object_property_get_int(Object *obj, const char *name,
struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_set:
* @obj: the object
* @v: the visitor that will be used to write the property value. This should
* be an Input visitor and the data will be first read with @name as the
* name and then written as the property value.
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*
* Writes a property to a object.
*/
void object_property_set(Object *obj, struct Visitor *v, const char *name,
struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_parse:
* @obj: the object
* @string: the string that will be used to parse the property value.
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*
* Parses a string and writes the result into a property of an object.
*/
void object_property_parse(Object *obj, const char *string,
const char *name, struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_print:
* @obj: the object
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*
* Returns a string representation of the value of the property. The
* caller shall free the string.
*/
char *object_property_print(Object *obj, const char *name,
struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_get_type:
* @obj: the object
* @name: the name of the property
* @errp: returns an error if this function fails
*
* Returns: The type name of the property.
*/
const char *object_property_get_type(Object *obj, const char *name,
struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_get_root:
*
* Returns: the root object of the composition tree
*/
Object *object_get_root(void);
/**
* object_get_canonical_path:
*
* Returns: The canonical path for a object. This is the path within the
* composition tree starting from the root.
*/
gchar *object_get_canonical_path(Object *obj);
/**
* object_resolve_path:
* @path: the path to resolve
* @ambiguous: returns true if the path resolution failed because of an
* ambiguous match
*
* There are two types of supported paths--absolute paths and partial paths.
*
* Absolute paths are derived from the root object and can follow child<> or
* link<> properties. Since they can follow link<> properties, they can be
* arbitrarily long. Absolute paths look like absolute filenames and are
* prefixed with a leading slash.
*
* Partial paths look like relative filenames. They do not begin with a
* prefix. The matching rules for partial paths are subtle but designed to make
* specifying objects easy. At each level of the composition tree, the partial
* path is matched as an absolute path. The first match is not returned. At
* least two matches are searched for. A successful result is only returned if
* only one match is found. If more than one match is found, a flag is
* returned to indicate that the match was ambiguous.
*
* Returns: The matched object or NULL on path lookup failure.
*/
Object *object_resolve_path(const char *path, bool *ambiguous);
/**
* object_resolve_path_type:
* @path: the path to resolve
* @typename: the type to look for.
* @ambiguous: returns true if the path resolution failed because of an
* ambiguous match
*
* This is similar to object_resolve_path. However, when looking for a
* partial path only matches that implement the given type are considered.
* This restricts the search and avoids spuriously flagging matches as
* ambiguous.
*
* For both partial and absolute paths, the return value goes through
* a dynamic cast to @typename. This is important if either the link,
* or the typename itself are of interface types.
*
* Returns: The matched object or NULL on path lookup failure.
*/
Object *object_resolve_path_type(const char *path, const char *typename,
bool *ambiguous);
/**
* object_resolve_path_component:
* @parent: the object in which to resolve the path
* @part: the component to resolve.
*
* This is similar to object_resolve_path with an absolute path, but it
* only resolves one element (@part) and takes the others from @parent.
*
* Returns: The resolved object or NULL on path lookup failure.
*/
Object *object_resolve_path_component(Object *parent, gchar *part);
/**
* object_property_add_child:
* @obj: the object to add a property to
* @name: the name of the property
* @child: the child object
* @errp: if an error occurs, a pointer to an area to store the area
*
* Child properties form the composition tree. All objects need to be a child
* of another object. Objects can only be a child of one object.
*
* There is no way for a child to determine what its parent is. It is not
* a bidirectional relationship. This is by design.
*
* The value of a child property as a C string will be the child object's
* canonical path. It can be retrieved using object_property_get_str().
* The child object itself can be retrieved using object_property_get_link().
*/
void object_property_add_child(Object *obj, const char *name,
Object *child, struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_add_link:
* @obj: the object to add a property to
* @name: the name of the property
* @type: the qobj type of the link
* @child: a pointer to where the link object reference is stored
* @errp: if an error occurs, a pointer to an area to store the area
*
* Links establish relationships between objects. Links are unidirectional
* although two links can be combined to form a bidirectional relationship
* between objects.
*
* Links form the graph in the object model.
*/
void object_property_add_link(Object *obj, const char *name,
const char *type, Object **child,
struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_property_add_str:
* @obj: the object to add a property to
* @name: the name of the property
* @get: the getter or NULL if the property is write-only. This function must
* return a string to be freed by g_free().
* @set: the setter or NULL if the property is read-only
* @errp: if an error occurs, a pointer to an area to store the error
*
* Add a string property using getters/setters. This function will add a
* property of type 'string'.
*/
void object_property_add_str(Object *obj, const char *name,
char *(*get)(Object *, struct Error **),
void (*set)(Object *, const char *, struct Error **),
struct Error **errp);
/**
* object_child_foreach:
* @obj: the object whose children will be navigated
* @fn: the iterator function to be called
* @opaque: an opaque value that will be passed to the iterator
*
* Call @fn passing each child of @obj and @opaque to it, until @fn returns
* non-zero.
*
* Returns: The last value returned by @fn, or 0 if there is no child.
*/
int object_child_foreach(Object *obj, int (*fn)(Object *child, void *opaque),
void *opaque);
/**
* container_get:
* @root: root of the #path, e.g., object_get_root()
* @path: path to the container
*
* Return a container object whose path is @path. Create more containers
* along the path if necessary.
*
* Returns: the container object.
*/
Object *container_get(Object *root, const char *path);
#endif