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| 1 /* Copyright (c) 2012 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. |
| 2 * Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be |
| 3 * found in the LICENSE file. |
| 4 */ |
| 5 |
| 6 /** |
| 7 * PP_ArrayOutput_GetDataBuffer is a callback function to allocate plugin |
| 8 * memory for an array. It returns the allocated memory or null on failure. |
| 9 * |
| 10 * This function will be called reentrantly. This means that if you call a |
| 11 * function PPB_Foo.GetData(&array_output), GetData will call your |
| 12 * GetDataBuffer function before it returns. |
| 13 * |
| 14 * This function will be called even when returning 0-length arrays, so be sure |
| 15 * your implementation can support that. You can return NULL for 0 length |
| 16 * arrays and it will not be treated as a failure. |
| 17 |
| 18 * You should not perform any processing in this callback, including calling |
| 19 * other PPAPI functions, outside of allocating memory. You should not throw |
| 20 * any exceptions. In C++, this means using "new (nothrow)" or being sure to |
| 21 * catch any exceptions before returning. |
| 22 * |
| 23 * The C++ wrapper provides a convenient templatized implementation around |
| 24 * std::vector which you should generally use instead of coding this |
| 25 * specifically. |
| 26 * |
| 27 * @param user_data The pointer provided in the PP_ArrayOutput structure. This |
| 28 * has no meaning to the browser, it is intended to be used by the |
| 29 * implementation to figure out where to put the data. |
| 30 * |
| 31 * @param element_count The number of elements in the array. This will be 0 |
| 32 * if there is no data to return. |
| 33 * |
| 34 * @param element_size The size of each element in bytes. |
| 35 * |
| 36 * @return Returns a pointer to the allocated memory. On failure, returns null. |
| 37 * You can also return null if the element_count is 0. |
| 38 */ |
| 39 typedef mem_t PP_ArrayOutput_GetDataBuffer([inout] mem_t user_data, |
| 40 [in] uint32_t element_count, |
| 41 [in] uint32_t element_size); |
| 42 |
| 43 /** |
| 44 * A structure that defines a way for the browser to return arrays of data |
| 45 * to the plugin. The browser can not allocate memory on behalf of the plugin |
| 46 * becaues the plugin and browser may have different allocators. |
| 47 * |
| 48 * Array output works by having the browser call to the plugin to allocate a |
| 49 * buffer, and then the browser will copy the contents of the array into that |
| 50 * buffer. |
| 51 * |
| 52 * In C, you would typically implement this as follows: |
| 53 * |
| 54 * @code |
| 55 * struct MyArrayOutput { |
| 56 * void* data; |
| 57 * int element_count; |
| 58 * }; |
| 59 * void* MyGetDataBuffer(void* user_data, uint32_t count, uint32_t size) { |
| 60 * MyArrayOutput* output = (MyArrayOutput*)user_data; |
| 61 * output->element_count = count; |
| 62 * if (size) { |
| 63 * output->data = malloc(count * size); |
| 64 * if (!output->data) // Be careful to set size properly on malloc failure. |
| 65 * output->element_count = 0; |
| 66 * } else { |
| 67 * output->data = NULL; |
| 68 * } |
| 69 * return output->data; |
| 70 * } |
| 71 * void MyFunction() { |
| 72 * MyArrayOutput array = { NULL, 0 }; |
| 73 * PP_ArrayOutput output = { &MyGetDataBuffer, &array }; |
| 74 * ppb_foo->GetData(&output); |
| 75 * } |
| 76 * @endcode |
| 77 */ |
| 78 struct PP_ArrayOutput { |
| 79 /** |
| 80 * A pointer to the allocation function that the browser implements. |
| 81 */ |
| 82 PP_ArrayOutput_GetDataBuffer GetDataBuffer; |
| 83 |
| 84 /** |
| 85 * Data that is passed to the allocation function. Typically, this is used |
| 86 * to communicate how the data should be stored. |
| 87 */ |
| 88 mem_t user_data; |
| 89 }; |
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