Index: gecko-sdk/include/nscore.h |
=================================================================== |
--- gecko-sdk/include/nscore.h (revision 0) |
+++ gecko-sdk/include/nscore.h (revision 0) |
@@ -0,0 +1,455 @@ |
+/* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 2; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */ |
+/* ***** BEGIN LICENSE BLOCK ***** |
+ * Version: MPL 1.1/GPL 2.0/LGPL 2.1 |
+ * |
+ * The contents of this file are subject to the Mozilla Public License Version |
+ * 1.1 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with |
+ * the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at |
+ * http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/ |
+ * |
+ * Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, |
+ * WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License |
+ * for the specific language governing rights and limitations under the |
+ * License. |
+ * |
+ * The Original Code is mozilla.org code. |
+ * |
+ * The Initial Developer of the Original Code is |
+ * Netscape Communications Corporation. |
+ * Portions created by the Initial Developer are Copyright (C) 1998 |
+ * the Initial Developer. All Rights Reserved. |
+ * |
+ * Contributor(s): |
+ * |
+ * Alternatively, the contents of this file may be used under the terms of |
+ * either of the GNU General Public License Version 2 or later (the "GPL"), |
+ * or the GNU Lesser General Public License Version 2.1 or later (the "LGPL"), |
+ * in which case the provisions of the GPL or the LGPL are applicable instead |
+ * of those above. If you wish to allow use of your version of this file only |
+ * under the terms of either the GPL or the LGPL, and not to allow others to |
+ * use your version of this file under the terms of the MPL, indicate your |
+ * decision by deleting the provisions above and replace them with the notice |
+ * and other provisions required by the GPL or the LGPL. If you do not delete |
+ * the provisions above, a recipient may use your version of this file under |
+ * the terms of any one of the MPL, the GPL or the LGPL. |
+ * |
+ * ***** END LICENSE BLOCK ***** */ |
+#ifndef nscore_h___ |
+#define nscore_h___ |
+ |
+/** |
+ * Make sure that we have the proper platform specific |
+ * c++ definitions needed by nscore.h |
+ */ |
+#ifndef _XPCOM_CONFIG_H_ |
+#include "xpcom-config.h" |
+#endif |
+ |
+/** |
+ * Incorporate the core NSPR data types which XPCOM uses. |
+ */ |
+#include "prtypes.h" |
+ |
+/* Core XPCOM declarations. */ |
+ |
+/** |
+ * Macros defining the target platform... |
+ */ |
+#ifdef _WIN32 |
+#define NS_WIN32 1 |
+ |
+#elif defined(__unix) |
+#define NS_UNIX 1 |
+ |
+#elif defined(XP_OS2) |
+#define NS_OS2 1 |
+#endif |
+/*----------------------------------------------------------------------*/ |
+/* Import/export defines */ |
+ |
+/** |
+ * Using the visibility("hidden") attribute allows the compiler to use |
+ * PC-relative addressing to call this function. If a function does not |
+ * access any global data, and does not call any methods which are not either |
+ * file-local or hidden, then on ELF systems we avoid loading the address of |
+ * the PLT into a register at the start of the function, which reduces code |
+ * size and frees up a register for general use. |
+ * |
+ * As a general rule, this should be used for any non-exported symbol |
+ * (including virtual method implementations). NS_IMETHOD uses this by |
+ * default; if you need to have your NS_IMETHOD functions exported, you can |
+ * wrap your class as follows: |
+ * |
+ * #undef IMETHOD_VISIBILITY |
+ * #define IMETHOD_VISIBILITY NS_VISIBILITY_DEFAULT |
+ * |
+ * class Foo { |
+ * ... |
+ * }; |
+ * |
+ * #undef IMETHOD_VISIBILITY |
+ * #define IMETHOD_VISIBILITY NS_VISIBILITY_HIDDEN |
+ * |
+ * Don't forget to change the visibility back to hidden before the end |
+ * of a header! |
+ * |
+ * Other examples: |
+ * |
+ * NS_HIDDEN_(int) someMethod(); |
+ * SomeCtor() NS_HIDDEN; |
+ */ |
+ |
+#ifdef HAVE_VISIBILITY_HIDDEN_ATTRIBUTE |
+#define NS_VISIBILITY_HIDDEN __attribute__ ((visibility ("hidden"))) |
+#else |
+#define NS_VISIBILITY_HIDDEN |
+#endif |
+ |
+#if defined(HAVE_VISIBILITY_HIDDEN_ATTRIBUTE) && defined(HAVE_VISIBILITY_PRAGMA) |
+#define NS_VISIBILITY_DEFAULT __attribute__ ((visibility ("default"))) |
+#else |
+#define NS_VISIBILITY_DEFAULT |
+#endif |
+ |
+#define NS_HIDDEN_(type) NS_VISIBILITY_HIDDEN type |
+#define NS_EXTERNAL_VIS_(type) NS_VISIBILITY_DEFAULT type |
+ |
+#define NS_HIDDEN NS_VISIBILITY_HIDDEN |
+#define NS_EXTERNAL_VIS NS_VISIBILITY_DEFAULT |
+ |
+#undef IMETHOD_VISIBILITY |
+#define IMETHOD_VISIBILITY NS_VISIBILITY_HIDDEN |
+ |
+/** |
+ * Mark a function as using a potentially non-standard function calling |
+ * convention. This can be used on functions that are called very |
+ * frequently, to reduce the overhead of the function call. It is still worth |
+ * using the macro for C++ functions which take no parameters since it allows |
+ * passing |this| in a register. |
+ * |
+ * - Do not use this on any scriptable interface method since xptcall won't be |
+ * aware of the different calling convention. |
+ * - This must appear on the declaration, not the definition. |
+ * - Adding this to a public function _will_ break binary compatibility. |
+ * - This may be used on virtual functions but you must ensure it is applied |
+ * to all implementations - the compiler will _not_ warn but it will crash. |
+ * - This has no effect for inline functions or functions which take a |
+ * variable number of arguments. |
+ * |
+ * Examples: int NS_FASTCALL func1(char *foo); |
+ * NS_HIDDEN_(int) NS_FASTCALL func2(char *foo); |
+ */ |
+ |
+#if defined(__i386__) && defined(__GNUC__) && (__GNUC__ >= 3) && !defined(XP_OS2) |
+#define NS_FASTCALL __attribute__ ((regparm (3), stdcall)) |
+#else |
+#define NS_FASTCALL |
+#endif |
+ |
+/* |
+ * NS_DEFCALL undoes the effect of a global regparm/stdcall setting |
+ * so that xptcall works correctly. |
+ */ |
+#if defined(__i386__) && defined(__GNUC__) && (__GNUC__ >= 3) && !defined(XP_OS2) |
+#define NS_DEFCALL __attribute__ ((regparm (0), cdecl)) |
+#else |
+#define NS_DEFCALL |
+#endif |
+ |
+#ifdef NS_WIN32 |
+ |
+#define NS_IMPORT __declspec(dllimport) |
+#define NS_IMPORT_(type) type __declspec(dllimport) __stdcall |
+#define NS_EXPORT __declspec(dllexport) |
+#define NS_EXPORT_(type) type __declspec(dllexport) __stdcall |
+#define NS_IMETHOD_(type) virtual type __stdcall |
+#define NS_IMETHODIMP_(type) type __stdcall |
+#define NS_METHOD_(type) type __stdcall |
+#define NS_CALLBACK_(_type, _name) _type (__stdcall * _name) |
+#define NS_STDCALL __stdcall |
+ |
+/* |
+ These are needed to mark static members in exported classes, due to |
+ gcc bug XXX insert bug# here. |
+ */ |
+ |
+#define NS_EXPORT_STATIC_MEMBER_(type) type |
+#define NS_IMPORT_STATIC_MEMBER_(type) type |
+ |
+#else |
+ |
+#define NS_IMPORT NS_EXTERNAL_VIS |
+#define NS_IMPORT_(type) NS_EXTERNAL_VIS_(type) |
+#define NS_EXPORT NS_EXTERNAL_VIS |
+#define NS_EXPORT_(type) NS_EXTERNAL_VIS_(type) |
+#define NS_IMETHOD_(type) virtual IMETHOD_VISIBILITY type NS_DEFCALL |
+#define NS_IMETHODIMP_(type) type |
+#define NS_METHOD_(type) type |
+#define NS_CALLBACK_(_type, _name) _type (* _name) |
+#define NS_STDCALL |
+#define NS_EXPORT_STATIC_MEMBER_(type) NS_EXTERNAL_VIS_(type) |
+#define NS_IMPORT_STATIC_MEMBER_(type) NS_EXTERNAL_VIS_(type) |
+ |
+#endif |
+ |
+/** |
+ * Macro for creating typedefs for pointer-to-member types which are |
+ * declared with stdcall. It is important to use this for any type which is |
+ * declared as stdcall (i.e. NS_IMETHOD). For example, instead of writing: |
+ * |
+ * typedef nsresult (nsIFoo::*someType)(nsISupports* arg); |
+ * |
+ * you should write: |
+ * |
+ * typedef |
+ * NS_STDCALL_FUNCPROTO(nsresult, someType, nsIFoo, typeFunc, (nsISupports*)); |
+ * |
+ * where nsIFoo::typeFunc is any method declared as |
+ * NS_IMETHOD typeFunc(nsISupports*); |
+ * |
+ * XXX this can be simplified to always use the non-typeof implementation |
+ * when http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11893 is fixed. |
+ */ |
+ |
+#ifdef __GNUC__ |
+#define NS_STDCALL_FUNCPROTO(ret, name, class, func, args) \ |
+ typeof(&class::func) name |
+#else |
+#define NS_STDCALL_FUNCPROTO(ret, name, class, func, args) \ |
+ ret (NS_STDCALL class::*name) args |
+#endif |
+ |
+/** |
+ * Generic API modifiers which return the standard XPCOM nsresult type |
+ */ |
+#define NS_IMETHOD NS_IMETHOD_(nsresult) |
+#define NS_IMETHODIMP NS_IMETHODIMP_(nsresult) |
+#define NS_METHOD NS_METHOD_(nsresult) |
+#define NS_CALLBACK(_name) NS_CALLBACK_(nsresult, _name) |
+ |
+/** |
+ * Import/Export macros for XPCOM APIs |
+ */ |
+ |
+#ifdef _IMPL_NS_COM |
+#define NS_COM NS_EXPORT |
+#elif _IMPL_NS_COM_OFF |
+#define NS_COM |
+#elif XPCOM_GLUE |
+#define NS_COM |
+#else |
+#define NS_COM NS_IMPORT |
+#endif |
+ |
+#ifdef MOZILLA_INTERNAL_API |
+# define NS_COM_GLUE NS_COM |
+ /* |
+ The frozen string API has different definitions of nsAC?String |
+ classes than the internal API. On systems that explicitly declare |
+ dllexport symbols this is not a problem, but on ELF systems |
+ internal symbols can accidentally "shine through"; we rename the |
+ internal classes to avoid symbol conflicts. |
+ */ |
+# define nsAString nsAString_internal |
+# define nsACString nsACString_internal |
+#else |
+# define NS_COM_GLUE |
+#endif |
+ |
+ |
+/** |
+ * NS_NO_VTABLE is emitted by xpidl in interface declarations whenever |
+ * xpidl can determine that the interface can't contain a constructor. |
+ * This results in some space savings and possible runtime savings - |
+ * see bug 49416. We undefine it first, as xpidl-generated headers |
+ * define it for IDL uses that don't include this file. |
+ */ |
+#ifdef NS_NO_VTABLE |
+#undef NS_NO_VTABLE |
+#endif |
+#if defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER >= 1100 |
+#define NS_NO_VTABLE __declspec(novtable) |
+#else |
+#define NS_NO_VTABLE |
+#endif |
+ |
+ |
+/** |
+ * Generic XPCOM result data type |
+ */ |
+typedef PRUint32 nsresult; |
+ |
+/** |
+ * The preferred symbol for null. |
+ */ |
+#define nsnull 0 |
+ |
+#include "nsError.h" |
+ |
+/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------ */ |
+/* Casting macros for hiding C++ features from older compilers */ |
+ |
+ /* |
+ All our compiler support template specialization, but not all support the |
+ |template <>| notation. The compiler that don't understand this notation |
+ just omit it for specialization. |
+ |
+ Need to add an autoconf test for this. |
+ */ |
+ |
+ /* under Metrowerks (Mac), we don't have autoconf yet */ |
+#ifdef __MWERKS__ |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_PARTIAL_SPECIALIZATION |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_MODERN_SPECIALIZE_TEMPLATE_SYNTAX |
+ |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_ACCESS_CHANGING_USING |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_AMBIGUITY_RESOLVING_USING |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_EXPLICIT |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_TYPENAME |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_BOOL |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_NAMESPACE_STD |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_UNAMBIGUOUS_STD_NOTEQUAL |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_2BYTE_WCHAR_T |
+#endif |
+ |
+ /* under VC++ (Windows), we don't have autoconf yet */ |
+#if defined(_MSC_VER) && (_MSC_VER>=1100) |
+ /* VC++ 5.0 and greater implement template specialization, 4.2 is unknown */ |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_MODERN_SPECIALIZE_TEMPLATE_SYNTAX |
+ |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_EXPLICIT |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_TYPENAME |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_ACCESS_CHANGING_USING |
+ |
+ #if (_MSC_VER==1100) |
+ /* VC++5.0 has an internal compiler error (sometimes) without this */ |
+ #undef HAVE_CPP_ACCESS_CHANGING_USING |
+ #endif |
+ |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_NAMESPACE_STD |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_UNAMBIGUOUS_STD_NOTEQUAL |
+ #define HAVE_CPP_2BYTE_WCHAR_T |
+#endif |
+ |
+#ifndef __PRUNICHAR__ |
+#define __PRUNICHAR__ |
+ /* For now, don't use wchar_t on Unix because it breaks the Netscape |
+ * commercial build. When this is fixed there will be no need for the |
+ * |NS_REINTERPRET_CAST| in nsLiteralString.h either. |
+ */ |
+ #if defined(HAVE_CPP_2BYTE_WCHAR_T) && defined(NS_WIN32) |
+ typedef wchar_t PRUnichar; |
+ #else |
+ typedef PRUint16 PRUnichar; |
+ #endif |
+#endif |
+ |
+ /* |
+ If the compiler doesn't support |explicit|, we'll just make it go away, trusting |
+ that the builds under compilers that do have it will keep us on the straight and narrow. |
+ */ |
+#ifndef HAVE_CPP_EXPLICIT |
+ #define explicit |
+#endif |
+ |
+#ifndef HAVE_CPP_TYPENAME |
+ #define typename |
+#endif |
+ |
+#ifdef HAVE_CPP_MODERN_SPECIALIZE_TEMPLATE_SYNTAX |
+ #define NS_SPECIALIZE_TEMPLATE template <> |
+#else |
+ #define NS_SPECIALIZE_TEMPLATE |
+#endif |
+ |
+/* unix and beos now determine this automatically */ |
+#if ! defined XP_UNIX && ! defined XP_BEOS && !defined(XP_OS2) |
+#ifndef HAVE_CPP_NEW_CASTS |
+#define HAVE_CPP_NEW_CASTS 1 /* we'll be optimistic. */ |
+#endif |
+#endif |
+ |
+#if defined(HAVE_CPP_NEW_CASTS) |
+#define NS_STATIC_CAST(__type, __ptr) static_cast< __type >(__ptr) |
+#define NS_CONST_CAST(__type, __ptr) const_cast< __type >(__ptr) |
+ |
+#define NS_REINTERPRET_POINTER_CAST(__type, __ptr) reinterpret_cast< __type >(__ptr) |
+#define NS_REINTERPRET_NONPOINTER_CAST(__type, __obj) reinterpret_cast< __type >(__obj) |
+#define NS_REINTERPRET_CAST(__type, __expr) reinterpret_cast< __type >(__expr) |
+ |
+#else |
+#define NS_STATIC_CAST(__type, __ptr) ((__type)(__ptr)) |
+#define NS_CONST_CAST(__type, __ptr) ((__type)(__ptr)) |
+ |
+#define NS_REINTERPRET_POINTER_CAST(__type, __ptr) ((__type)((void*)(__ptr))) |
+#define NS_REINTERPRET_NONPOINTER_CAST(__type, __obj) ((__type)(__obj)) |
+ |
+ /* Note: the following is only appropriate for pointers. */ |
+#define NS_REINTERPRET_CAST(__type, __expr) NS_REINTERPRET_POINTER_CAST(__type, __expr) |
+ /* |
+ Why cast to a |void*| first? Well, when old-style casting from |
+ a pointer to a base to a pointer to a derived class, the cast will be |
+ ambiguous if the source pointer type appears multiple times in the |
+ destination, e.g., |
+ |
+ class Base {}; |
+ class Derived : public Base, public Base {}; |
+ |
+ void foo( Base* b ) |
+ { |
+ ((Derived*)b)->some_derived_member ... // Error: Ambiguous, expand from which |Base|? |
+ } |
+ |
+ an old-style cast (like |static_cast|) will change the pointer, but |
+ here, doesn't know how. The cast to |void*| prevents it from thinking |
+ it needs to expand the original pointer. |
+ |
+ The cost is, |NS_REINTERPRET_CAST| is no longer appropriate for non-pointer |
+ conversions. Also, mis-applying |NS_REINTERPRET_CAST| to cast |this| to something |
+ will still expand the pointer to the outer object in standards complying compilers. |
+ */ |
+ |
+ /* |
+ No sense in making an NS_DYNAMIC_CAST() macro: you can't duplicate |
+ the semantics. So if you want to dynamic_cast, then just use it |
+ "straight", no macro. |
+ */ |
+#endif |
+ |
+/* |
+ * Use these macros to do 64bit safe pointer conversions. |
+ */ |
+ |
+#define NS_PTR_TO_INT32(x) ((PRInt32) (PRWord) (x)) |
+#define NS_PTR_TO_UINT32(x) ((PRUint32) (PRWord) (x)) |
+#define NS_INT32_TO_PTR(x) ((void *) (PRWord) (x)) |
+ |
+/* |
+ * Use NS_STRINGIFY to form a string literal from the value of a macro. |
+ */ |
+#define NS_STRINGIFY_HELPER(x_) #x_ |
+#define NS_STRINGIFY(x_) NS_STRINGIFY_HELPER(x_) |
+ |
+/* |
+ * These macros allow you to give a hint to the compiler about branch |
+ * probability so that it can better optimize. Use them like this: |
+ * |
+ * if (NS_LIKELY(v == 1)) { |
+ * ... expected code path ... |
+ * } |
+ * |
+ * if (NS_UNLIKELY(v == 0)) { |
+ * ... non-expected code path ... |
+ * } |
+ * |
+ */ |
+ |
+#if defined(__GNUC__) && (__GNUC__ > 2) |
+#define NS_LIKELY(x) (__builtin_expect((x), 1)) |
+#define NS_UNLIKELY(x) (__builtin_expect((x), 0)) |
+#else |
+#define NS_LIKELY(x) (x) |
+#define NS_UNLIKELY(x) (x) |
+#endif |
+ |
+#endif /* nscore_h___ */ |
Property changes on: gecko-sdk\include\nscore.h |
___________________________________________________________________ |
Added: svn:eol-style |
+ LF |