forked from openkylin/efl
183 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
183 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
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/**
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* @page eet_examples EET Examples
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*
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* Here is a page with examples.
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*
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* @ref Example_Eet_Data_Simple
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*
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* @ref Example_Eet_Data_Nested
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*
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* @ref Example_Eet_Data_File_Descriptor_01
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*
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* @ref Example_Eet_Data_File_Descriptor_02
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*
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* @ref Example_Eet_Data_Cipher_Decipher
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*/
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/**
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* @page Example_Eet_Basic Very basic Eet example
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*
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* @includelineno eet-basic.c
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* @example eet-basic.c
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*/
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/**
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* @page Example_Eet_File Example of the various ways to interface with an Eet File
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*
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* @includelineno eet-file.c
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* @example eet-file.c
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*/
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/**
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* @page Example_Eet_Data_Simple Simple data example
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*
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* @includelineno eet-data-simple.c
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* @example eet-data-simple.c
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*/
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/**
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* @page Example_Eet_Data_Nested Nested data example
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*
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* @includelineno eet-data-nested.c
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* @example eet-data-nested.c
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*/
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/**
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* @page Example_Eet_Data_File_Descriptor_01 File descriptor data example
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*
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* @includelineno eet-data-file_descriptor_01.c
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* @example eet-data-file_descriptor_01.c
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*/
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/**
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* @page Example_Eet_Data_File_Descriptor_02 File descriptor data example, with Eet unions and variants
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*
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* This is an example much like the one shown in @ref
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* eet_data_file_descriptor. The difference is that here we're
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* attaining ourselves to two new data types to store in an Eet file
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* -- @b unions and @b variants. We don't try to come with data
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* mapping to real world use cases, here. Instead, we're defining
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* 3 different simple structures to be used throughout the example:
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* @dontinclude eet-data-file_descriptor_02.c
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* @skip typedef struct _Example_Struct1
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* @until typedef struct _Example_Struct3
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* @skip struct _Example_Struct1
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* @until int body
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* @until };
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*
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* To identify, for both union and variant data cases, the type of
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* each chunk of data, we're defining types to point to each of those
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* structs:
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* @dontinclude eet-data-file_descriptor_02.c
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* @skip typedef enum _Example_Data_Type
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* @until ;
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* @skip enum _Example_Data_Type
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* @until };
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*
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* We have also a mapping from those types to name strings, to be used
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* in the Eet unions and variants @c type_get() and @c type_set() type
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* identifying callbacks:
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* @skip struct
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* @until };
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*
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* In this example, we have no fancy hash to store our data into
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* profiles/accounts, but just two lists for union and variant data
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* nodes:
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* @dontinclude eet-data-file_descriptor_02.c
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* @skip typedef struct _Example_Lists
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* @until typedef struct _Example_Lists
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* @skip struct _Example_Lists
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* @until };
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*
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* Let's begin with our unions, then, which look like:
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* @dontinclude eet-data-file_descriptor_02.c
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* @skip typedef struct _Example_Union
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* @until typedef struct _Example_Union
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* @skip struct _Example_Union
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* @until };
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*
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* The first interesting part of the code is where we define our data
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* descriptors for the main lists, the unions and all of structures
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* upon which those two depend.
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* @dontinclude eet-data-file_descriptor_02.c
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* @skip declaring types
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* @until _union_descriptor);
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* The code for descriptors on @c Example_Struct1, @c Example_Struct2
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* and @c Example_Struct3 is straightforward, a matter already covered
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* on @ref eet_data_file_descriptor. What is new, here, are the two
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* type matching functions for our unions. There, we must set the @c
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* data pointer to its matching type, on @c _union_type_set and return
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* the correct matching type, on @c _union_type_get:
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* @dontinclude eet-data-file_descriptor_02.c
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* @skip union type_get()
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* @until _union_type_set
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* @until _union_type_set
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*
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* With the #EET_DATA_DESCRIPTOR_ADD_MAPPING calls, which follow, we
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* make the the link between our type names and their respective
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* structs. The code handling actual data is pretty much the same as in
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* @ref eet_data_file_descriptor -- one uses command line arguments to
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* enter new data chunks (or just to visualize the contents of an Eet
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* file), signalling if they are unions or variants. One must also
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* pass the type of the data chuck to enter, with integers 1, 2 or
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* 3. Then, come the fields for each type:
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* @dontinclude eet-data-file_descriptor_02.c
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* @skip Usage
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* @until argv
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*
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* Variants are very similar to unions, except that data chunks need
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* @b not contain previously allocated space for each of the possible
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* types of data going in them:
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* @dontinclude eet-data-file_descriptor_02.c
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* @skip typedef struct _Example_Variant
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* @until typedef struct _Example_Variant
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* @skip struct _Example_Variant_Type
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* @until };
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* @until };
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*
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* The code declaring the data descriptors and handling the data is
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* very similar to the unions part, and is left for the reader to
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* check for him/herself. The complete code of the example follows.
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*
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* @includelineno eet-data-file_descriptor_02.c
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* @example eet-data-file_descriptor_02.c
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*/
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/**
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* @page Example_Eet_Data_Cipher_Decipher Eet data cipher/decipher example
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*
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* In this example, we exemplify the usage of eet_write_cipher() and
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* eet_read_cipher(). For it to work, <b>make sure</b> to have your
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* Eet installation with a ciphering backend enabled.
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*
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* We start by defining the information to record in an Eet file (@c
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* buffer), the key to cipher that (@c key) and a dummy wrong key to
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* try to access that information, later (@c key_bad).
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* @dontinclude eet-data-cipher_decipher.c
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* @skip buffer =
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* @until bad =
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*
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* After opening our file, we simply use the first cited function to
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* write our string ciphered:
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* @dontinclude eet-data-cipher_decipher.c
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* @skip eet_open
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* @until eet_close
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*
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* Then, after closing it on purpose, we open it again, to retrieve
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* the encrypted information back, in a readable format:
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* @skip eet_open
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* @until eet_close
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* @until eet_close
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*
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* Note that we do it twice, being the last time with the wrong
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* key. In this last case, if the information is read back and matches
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* the original @c buffer, something wrong is going on (we made it to
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* fail on purpose). The former access is OK, and must work.
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*
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* What we do in sequence is just to delete the file. The complete
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* code of the example follows.
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*
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* @includelineno eet-data-cipher_decipher.c
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* @example eet-data-cipher_decipher.c
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*/
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