diff options
author | Jelmer Vernooij <jelmer@samba.org> | 2008-04-02 16:22:57 +0200 |
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committer | Jelmer Vernooij <jelmer@samba.org> | 2008-04-02 16:22:57 +0200 |
commit | 85d7b857fb8ca8e3c03d4abb3368a0966760630c (patch) | |
tree | a16163e557bcae3af41bde7d2d771d64ca248a97 /set.h | |
parent | 875ad4201402b1a8f80ba22a6cdcdb152c6e5510 (diff) | |
parent | dd345753c1742905c9f81aa71d8b09109fbc5456 (diff) |
Merge trunk.
Diffstat (limited to 'set.h')
-rw-r--r-- | set.h | 82 |
1 files changed, 65 insertions, 17 deletions
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ /********************************************************************\ * BitlBee -- An IRC to other IM-networks gateway * * * - * Copyright 2002-2004 Wilmer van der Gaast and others * + * Copyright 2002-2006 Wilmer van der Gaast and others * \********************************************************************/ /* Some stuff to register, handle and save user preferences */ @@ -23,30 +23,78 @@ Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA */ +#ifndef __SET_H__ +#define __SET_H__ + +struct set; + +/* This used to be specific to irc_t structures, but it's more generic now + (so it can also be used for account_t structs). It's pretty simple, but + so far pretty useful. + + In short, it just keeps a linked list of settings/variables and it also + remembers a default value for every setting. And to prevent the user + from setting invalid values, you can write an evaluator function for + every setting, which can check a new value and block it by returning + NULL, or replace it by returning a new value. See struct set.eval. + One thing that is really missing here is additional data for the + evaluator. This could be useful to add minimum and maximum values for + integers, for example. */ + +typedef char *(*set_eval) ( struct set *set, char *value ); + typedef struct set { + void *data; /* Here you can save a pointer to the + object this settings belongs to. */ + char *key; char *value; - char *def; /* Default */ + char *def; /* Default value. If the set_setstr() function + notices a new value is exactly the same as + the default, value gets set to NULL. So when + you read a setting, don't forget about this! + In fact, you should only read values using + set_getstr/int(). */ - /* Eval: Returns NULL if the value is incorrect. Can return a - corrected value. set_setstr() should be able to free() the - returned string! */ - char *(*eval) ( irc_t *irc, struct set *set, char *value ); + int flags; /* See account.h, for example. set.c doesn't use + this (yet?). */ + + /* Eval: Returns NULL if the value is incorrect or exactly the + passed value variable. When returning a corrected value, + set_setstr() should be able to free() the returned string! */ + set_eval eval; struct set *next; } set_t; -set_t *set_add( irc_t *irc, char *key, char *def, void *eval ); -G_MODULE_EXPORT set_t *set_find( irc_t *irc, char *key ); -G_MODULE_EXPORT char *set_getstr( irc_t *irc, char *key ); -G_MODULE_EXPORT int set_getint( irc_t *irc, char *key ); -int set_setstr( irc_t *irc, char *key, char *value ); -int set_setint( irc_t *irc, char *key, int value ); -void set_del( irc_t *irc, char *key ); +/* Should be pretty clear. */ +set_t *set_add( set_t **head, char *key, char *def, set_eval eval, void *data ); + +/* Returns the raw set_t. Might be useful sometimes. */ +set_t *set_find( set_t **head, char *key ); + +/* Returns a pointer to the string value of this setting. Don't modify the + returned string, and don't free() it! */ +G_MODULE_EXPORT char *set_getstr( set_t **head, char *key ); + +/* Get an integer. In previous versions set_getint() was also used to read + boolean values, but this SHOULD be done with set_getbool() now! */ +G_MODULE_EXPORT int set_getint( set_t **head, char *key ); +G_MODULE_EXPORT int set_getbool( set_t **head, char *key ); + +/* set_setstr() strdup()s the given value, so after using this function + you can free() it, if you want. */ +int set_setstr( set_t **head, char *key, char *value ); +int set_setint( set_t **head, char *key, int value ); +void set_del( set_t **head, char *key ); +void set_reset( set_t **head, char *key ); -char *set_eval_int( irc_t *irc, set_t *set, char *value ); -char *set_eval_bool( irc_t *irc, set_t *set, char *value ); -char *set_eval_to_char( irc_t *irc, set_t *set, char *value ); -char *set_eval_ops( irc_t *irc, set_t *set, char *value ); +/* Two very useful generic evaluators. */ +char *set_eval_int( set_t *set, char *value ); +char *set_eval_bool( set_t *set, char *value ); +/* Some not very generic evaluators that really shouldn't be here... */ +char *set_eval_to_char( set_t *set, char *value ); +char *set_eval_ops( set_t *set, char *value ); +#endif /* __SET_H__ */ |