13
0
livetrax/gtk2_ardour/system_exec.h

205 lines
6.6 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

/*
Copyright (C) 2010 Paul Davis
Author: Robin Gareus <robin@gareus.org>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
*/
#ifdef WITH_VIDEOTIMELINE
#ifndef __ardour_system_exec_h__
#define __ardour_system_exec_h__
#ifndef STDIN_FILENO
#define STDIN_FILENO 0
#endif
#ifndef STDOUT_FILENO
#define STDOUT_FILENO 1
#endif
#ifndef STDERR_FILENO
#define STDERR_FILENO 2
#endif
#include <string>
#include <pthread.h>
#include <signal.h>
#ifdef NOPBD /* outside ardour */
#include <sigc++/bind.h>
#include <sigc++/signal.h>
#else
#include <pbd/signals.h>
#endif
/** @class: SystemExec
* @brief execute an external command
*
* This class allows launche an external command-line application
* opening a full-duplex connection to its standard I/O.
*
* In Ardour context it is used to launch xjadeo and ffmpeg.
*
* The \ref write_to_stdin function provides for injecting data into STDIN
* of the child-application while output of the program to STDOUT/STDERR is
* forwarded using the \ref ReadStdout signal.
* \ref Terminated is sent if the child application exits.
*
*/
class SystemExec
{
public:
/** prepare execution of a program with 'execve'
*
* This function takes over the existing environment variable and provides
* an easy way to speciy command-line arguments for the new process.
*
* Note: The argument parser does not interpret quotation-marks and splits
* arugments on whitespace. The argument string can be empty.
* The alternative constructor below allows to specify quoted parameters
* incl. whitespace.
*
* @param c program pathname that identifies the new process image file.
* @param a string of commandline-arguments to be passed to the new program.
*/
SystemExec (std::string c, std::string a = "");
/** similar to \ref SystemExec but allows to specify custom arguments
*
* @param c program pathname that identifies the new process image file.
* @param a array of argument strings passed to the new program as 'argv'.
* it must be terminated by a null pointer (see the 'evecve'
* POSIX-C documentation for more information)
* The array must be dynamically allocated using malloc or strdup.
* Unless they're NULL, the array itself and each of its content
* memory is freed() in the destructor.
*
*/
SystemExec (std::string c, char ** a);
virtual ~SystemExec ();
/** fork and execute the given program
*
* @param stderr_mode select what to do with program's standard error
* output:
* '0': keep STDERR; mix it with parent-process' STDERR
* '1': ignore STDERR of child-program
* '2': merge STDERR into STDOUT and send it with the
* ReadStdout signal.
* @return If the process is already running or was launched successfully
* the function returns zero (0). A negative number indicates an error.
*/
int start (int stderr_mode = 1);
/** kill running child-process
*
* if a child process exists trt to shut it down by closing its STDIN.
* if the program dies not react try SIGTERM and eventually SIGKILL
*/
void terminate ();
/** check if the child programm is (still) running.
*
* This function calls waitpid(WNOHANG) to check the state of the
* child-process.
* @return true if the program is (still) running.
*/
bool is_running ();
/** call the waitpid system-call with the pid of the child-program
*
* Basically what \ref terminate uses internally.
*
* This function is only useful if you want to control application
* termination yourself (eg timeouts or progress-dialog).
* @param option flags - see waitpid manual
* @return status info from waitpid call (not waitpid's return value)
* or -1 if the child-program is not running.
*/
int wait (int options=0);
/** closes both STDIN and STDOUT connections to/from
* the child-program.
* With the output-interposer thread gone, the program
* should terminate.
* used by \ref terminate()
*/
void close_stdin ();
/** write into child-program's STDIN
* @param d data to write
* @param len length of data to write, if it is 0 (zero), d.length() is
* used to determine the number of bytes to transmit.
* @return number of bytes written.
*/
int write_to_stdin (std::string d, size_t len=0);
/** The ReadStdout signal is emitted when the application writes to STDOUT.
* it passes the written data and its length in bytes as arguments to the bound
* slot(s).
*/
#ifdef NOPBD /* outside ardour */
sigc::signal<void, std::string,size_t> ReadStdout;
#else
PBD::Signal2<void, std::string,size_t> ReadStdout;
#endif
/** The Terminated signal is emitted when application terminates. */
#ifdef NOPBD /* outside ardour */
sigc::signal<void> Terminated;
#else
PBD::Signal0<void> Terminated;
#endif
/** interposer to emit signal for writes to STDOUT/ERR.
*
* Thread that reads the stdout of the forked
* process and signal-sends it to the main thread.
* It also emits the Terminated() signal once
* the the forked process closes it's stdout.
*
* Note: it's actually 'private' function but used
* by the internal pthread, which only has a pointer
* to this instance and thus can only access public fn.
*/
void output_interposer ();
protected:
std::string cmd; ///< path to command - set when creating the class
int nicelevel; ///< process nice level - defaults to 0
void make_argp(std::string);
void make_envp();
char **argp;
char **envp;
private:
#ifdef __WIN32__
PROCESS_INFORMATION *pid;
HANDLE stdinP[2];
HANDLE stdoutP[2];
HANDLE stderrP[2];
char *w_args;
void make_wargs(char **);
#else
pid_t pid;
#endif
pthread_mutex_t write_lock;
int fdin; ///< file-descriptor for writing to child's STDIN. This variable is identical to pin[1] but also used as status check if the stdin pipe is open: <0 means closed.
int pok[2];
int pin[2];
int pout[2];
pthread_t thread_id_tt;
bool thread_active;
};
#endif /* __ardour_system_exec_h__ */
#endif /* WITH_VIDEOTIMELINE */