Commit graph

3420 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
eb42db537f implement opening the initial top level window 2017-02-08 04:08:55 +01:00
8a10862372 write the global menu definition as C++11 raw string 2017-02-08 04:08:15 +01:00
02ba010d2c UI-top-level: define the menu bindings by lambda
...allows us to get rid of a lot of sigc boilerplate syntax.
The downside is that the resulting functors are not sigc::trackable.
This seems adequate here, since the whole top-level UI backbone is
maintained by GtkLumiera, and thus ensured to exist as long as the
main GTK event loop is running.

WARNING: beware of creating "wild" background thrads in the UI, without
proper scheduling of any communication via the event loop!
2017-02-02 21:52:22 +01:00
0f2fa24a01 UI-top-level: turn Actions helper into header-only definition
no need for a further translation unit,
rather, definition of global menu now becomes part of the
ui-manager.cpp translation unit, which allows for some additional
inlining and simplifications by the compiler
2017-02-02 21:28:11 +01:00
52d2bad6db UI-top-level: turn Actions into a PImpl
it turns out to be essentially an implementation detail,
it is a builder class and it acts as closure for the bound
menu actions, but it is not accessed after initialisation.

This allows to reduce the header inclusion load significantly
2017-02-02 20:59:54 +01:00
f913f30499 UI-top-level: reshape Actions
start with drilling down unnecessary includes
2017-02-02 20:51:03 +01:00
fb8923036d reduce unnecessary header includes 2017-02-02 19:57:01 +01:00
04cb0790e8 fix missing initialisation 2017-02-02 19:41:58 +01:00
0f5280a4f0 UI-top-level: draft a concept how to attach actions to the current window (#1069)
This is a very pervasive change and basically turns the whole top-level
of the GTK-UI bottom-up. If this change turns out right, it would likely
solve #1048

WARNING: in parts not implemented, breaks UI
2017-02-01 03:55:20 +01:00
865ee11621 UI-top-level: push down Config access to actual usage site (#1067)
...allows us to get rid of the access key constants and the
accessor functions in GtkLumiera
2017-02-01 03:46:30 +01:00
4e1641f192 sketchy workaround for access to the PlayController (#1072)
...which itself is obsolete and needs to be redesigned from scratch.
For now we create a local instance of this obsolete PlaybackController
in each viewer panel and we use a static accessor function to just some
instance. Which would break if we start playback with multiple viewer
panels. But we can't anyway, since the Player itself is also a broken
leftover from an obsoleted design study from the early days.

so why care...
2017-01-28 01:11:04 +01:00
6aec1adb38 resolve ambiguity with std::ref vs boost::ref
unfortunately boost/program-options make the boost reference-wrapper visible
And it doesn't help to alias to std::ref at the definition site of the
problematic function (in TimeControl), because this itself is picked up
via ADL

So this is not really a solution, rather a workaround, in the hope
that boost will clean-up this ambiguity eventually
2017-01-28 01:09:16 +01:00
c09eb3e1ed remove the obsolete Project and Controler from ctor arguments
...this (finally) allows us to get rid of these elements within GtkLumiera.
Our Model will be represented in a quite different way (via UI-Bus).
2017-01-27 23:30:38 +01:00
0bdc4e1bb4 QA: mark all wildcard includes in the GUI code (#1071)
as a rule, one should not rely on "using namespace xyz",
since this makes organisation of minimal header includes near impossible.
You end up with mass includes in some "top level" headers, resulting
in painfully slow compilation turnaround times.

In exceptional cases, using namespace foo might be adequate though
2017-01-27 22:47:01 +01:00
d49983d4cb identify items which force GtkLumiera to be a singleton
- WindowList (ex WindowManager)
- Project & Controller

the latter ones are defunct and can be replicated down into each
of the old timeline pannel instances. They just serve the purpose
to keep this old code barely functional, so it can be used as reference
for building the new timeline
2017-01-27 22:17:58 +01:00
86d6e11505 demote the WindowManager to be a petty window list (#1964)
the only adequate thing you can do with managers is to demote them.
2017-01-27 20:48:01 +01:00
a6fb10b9e0 clean-up the WindowManager source (#1064)
in one of the preceding refactorings, I've extracted most of the
functionality from WindowManager, to make it more focussed
2017-01-27 20:22:52 +01:00
1cb2567557 Ui-top-level: use a sincle UiManager instance
instead of letting each window create its own "private interface"
2017-01-26 22:02:45 +01:00
43bd5c3f57 further decisions regarting the UI top-level 2017-01-26 20:51:43 +01:00
7a51a0bd18 split functionality according to concerns (#1067)
window handling -> WindowManager
styles, icons, themes  -> UiManager
2017-01-23 01:13:38 +01:00
735563ebc5 Rectify UI top-level -- introduce a global UiManager (#1067)
There seems to be a mismatch in the arrangement of the top-level entities
 * we support multiple windows, yet from reading the code, you'd ge the impression we aren't really aware we have multiple top-level windows
 * the `WindowManager` is the core UI manager, which feels like a mix-up in concerns
 * the `WorkspaceWindow::createUI()` does the global UI initialisation. Again, we have multiple workspace windows.
 * `GtkLumiera::main()` creates a `Model` and a `Controller` in local function scope, but stores the `WindowManager` in an object field.
 * it seems, for that very reason, `GtlLumiera` needed to be a singleton, to allow by-name access to "the" `WindowManager`
 * needless to say, this causes a host of problems when shutting down the UI.

The idea is to introduce a dedicated UiManager, to deal with the central
framework induced concerns solely, and to demote the WindowManager and the
WorkspaceWindows to care only for their local concerns
2017-01-23 00:40:17 +01:00
6baff38beb GuiNotification: actually pass the calls through the interface system 2017-01-20 04:23:00 +01:00
ffd2b079df GuiNotification: use placeholder for the yet unsolved diff passing problem
see Ticket #1066
2017-01-20 03:46:48 +01:00
0d5ca55019 GuiNotification: define outline of this service interface 2017-01-20 03:27:32 +01:00
8105be399e GuiNotification: demote this service to be just a BusTerm
in fact it just does not fulfil any of the behavioural properties
of a full-fledged UI-Element. All it needs is an uplink bus connection,
so let's just keep it as that

Sidenote: I've realised today that such a "free standing" BusTerm
without registration in Nexus is a good idea and acceptable solution.
2017-01-20 02:40:38 +01:00
8f2023dea3 Nexus/CoreService: verify shutdown cycle
yes, it's a cycle and indeed quite tricky.
Just verified it (again) with the debugger and saw all
dtor calls happening in the expected order. Also the number
of Nexus registration is sane
2017-01-20 02:23:24 +01:00
06a61773fa Nexus/CoreService: consider handling of bus connections.
Now I've realised that there are two degrees of connectedness.
It is very much possible to have a "free standing" BusTerm, which
only allows to send uplink messages. In fact, this is how CoreService
is implemented, and probably it should also the way how to connect
the GuiNotification service...
2017-01-20 01:54:49 +01:00
cb31b145c3 GuiStart: further streamlined the invocation code
due to investigating that Heisenbug, I understand the storage layout
more clearly. It occured to me that there is no reason to copy the
terminationHandler (functor) into an instance variable, since it is
easily possible to keep all of the invocation and error handling
confined within the scope of the run function, i.e. on stack.

So the effective memory layout does not change, but the legibility
of the code is improved, since we're able to remove the dtor and
simplyfy the ctor and avoid most of the member fields.
2017-01-19 23:52:30 +01:00
2354c53a50 GuiStart / Shutdown: nailed the Heisenbug
Reason was some insideous detail regarding Lambdas:
When a Lambda captures context, a *closure* is created.
And while the Lambda itself is generated code, pretty much
like an anonymous function, the closure depends on the context
that was captured. In our case here, the Lambda used to start
the thread was the problem: it captured the termCallback functor
from the argument of the enclosing function. In fact it did not
help or change anything if we successively package that lambda
into a function objet and store this by value, because the
lambda still refers to the transient function context present
on stack at the moment it was captured.

The solution is to revert back to a bind expression, since this
creates a dedicated storage for the bound function arguments
managed within the bind-functor. This makes us independent
from the call context
2017-01-19 23:41:32 +01:00
22be990631 GuiStart / shutdown: chasing a Heisenbug 2017-01-19 23:08:09 +01:00
4ba8032a60 Nexus/CoreService: fix sanity check on shutdown
...because some Bus connections stem from elements which are
member of CoreService, thus the'll still be connected when the
sanity check in the dtor runs

But even with this fix, we still get a SEGFAULT
2017-01-19 23:08:09 +01:00
aec700f1b1 GuiNotification: connect to UI-Bus by inheriting from Controller
TODO
 - is this actually a sensible idea, from a design viewpoint?
 - in which way to bind GuiNotification for receiving diff messages?
 - Problem with disconnnecting from Nexus on shutdown
2017-01-19 23:08:09 +01:00
1bd3eabe7d GUI-start: replace the chained termination functors with a lambda
This is the solution I found out when implementing the ProcDispatcher;
looks way more readable to me
2017-01-19 23:08:08 +01:00
df84de2e81 Library: remove the dispatchSequenced helper
...such can be done way more succinctly with Lambdas now
2017-01-19 23:08:08 +01:00
2045132d3e SessionCommand: multithreaded stress test PASS (closes #1046)
Writing and debugging such tests is always an interesting challenge...

Fortunately this exercise didn't unveil any problem in the newly written
code, only some insidious problems in the test fixture itself. Which
again highlights the necessity, that each *command instance* needs
to be an independent clone from the original *command prototype*,
since argument binding messages and trigger messages can appear
in arbitrary order.
2017-01-14 08:37:46 +01:00
1bebb0ef8d SessionCommand: draft a massive multithreaded stress test 2017-01-14 04:19:58 +01:00
3395d002bd Library: helper to produce threadsafe member-IDs for a family of objects
This is a little bit of functionality needed again and again;
first I thought to use the TypedCounter, but this would be overkill,
since we do not actually need different instances, and we do not need
to select by type when incrementing the counter. In fact, we do not
even need anything beyond just allocating a number.

So I made a new class, which can be used RAII style
2017-01-14 03:07:48 +01:00
0b0575050d SessionCommand: second function test PASS 2017-01-13 09:01:05 +01:00
b52ab62caf SessionCommand: define function test for message based invocation
the intention is to cover more of the full invocation path,
without running all of the application infrastructure. So this
second test cases simulates how messages are handled in CoreService,
where the CommandHandler (visitor) actually invokes the SessionCommand
facade
2017-01-13 08:26:41 +01:00
edcf503da1 Command-Framework: enable the use of immutable types as state memento 2017-01-13 01:10:05 +01:00
c799c7644c Library: finish adapter to snapshot non-assignable values
this was a spin-off activity from writing the SessionCommand
function(integration) test, where I noted that we can't just
capture "a time value" as command memento
2017-01-12 23:41:20 +01:00
963524254b better provide a dedicated equality operator
basically this is not necessary, since the compiler figures out
to use the conversion to target type when attempting to resolve
an equality comparison. But it helps to avoid ambiguities in cases
where several conversion paths do exist, e.g. when comparing string
with C-string
2017-01-12 20:09:09 +01:00
b6e0497f8b verify instance management
..including the singleton instance in NullValue<Tracker>
2017-01-12 08:02:55 +01:00
f4cd96428c verify a case with indeed non-assignable entities (lumiera Time)
explicitly observed with the debugger that the call path is sane;
the code looks innocuous, but it is quite magic how the compiler
picks precisely the right ctors and inserts conversions apropriately
2017-01-12 07:30:33 +01:00
e60abf66c0 get this wrapper basically to compile
the simple case of an embedded pointer actualy works already
2017-01-12 06:27:31 +01:00
9ba2618844 Library: draft a wrapper to snapshot a non assignable value 2017-01-12 05:21:29 +01:00
3a5790e422 add preliminary magic to dispatch test commands without much ado
command processing against the session is not yet implemented,
so to allow for unit testing, we magically recognise all commands
starting with "test." and invoke them directly within the Dispatcher.

With this addition, the basic functionality of the dispatcher works now
2017-01-11 06:09:34 +01:00
3cc3f69471 SessionCommand: draft the idea of a function(integration) test 2017-01-11 04:19:43 +01:00
104b71e8aa Timehandling: allow default initialisation for Offset values
From a purely logical viewpoint, it looked sensible to require an actual
value for an offset, especially since our time values are immutable.
But this has the unfortunate consequence that we'd be unable to use
an offset value as parameter for any command, since we store the arguments
as tuple and the tuple type has a default constructor. We might be able
to get around that problem, but such looks brittle to me; it is just
plain surprising for anyone not familiar with the internals of the
command system.

For that reason, I've now added a default ctor to the Offset type
2017-01-11 04:09:32 +01:00
2e9bd78791 consider to extend the command handling protocol on UI-Bus (#1058) 2017-01-09 03:24:17 +01:00
38b908d510 CoreService: simple (and obvious) implementation of command handling (#1046)
disregarding all doubts due to the massive indirection
and deferring the question where command-IDs are actually to be allocated....
2017-01-09 02:32:56 +01:00
cfbbb750f8 considerations regarding the integration of commmand invocations (#1046)
not quite sure how to get the design straight.
Also a bit concerned because we'll get this much indirections;
the approach to send invocations via the UI-Bus needs to prove its viability
2017-01-09 01:22:43 +01:00
c2c6262be6 mark where command handling needs to be integrated (#1046) 2017-01-07 03:18:39 +01:00
c0337abcaf Application: from now on start the »session subsystem« (closes #699) 2017-01-07 02:48:51 +01:00
2535e1b554 DispatcherLoop: no timeout turnaround necessary in idle state
...since the session loop will be notified on any change via the
interface, adding a command will activate the loop, and the builder
timeout is handled separately via the dirty state. So there is no
need to spin around the loop in idle state.

As a aside, timeout waiting on a condition variable can be intentional
and should thus not be logged as an error automatically. It is up to the
calling context to decide if a timeout constitutes an exceptional situation.

It is always a trade-off performance vs. readability.
Sometimes a single-threaded implementation of self-contained logic
is preferable to a slightly more performant yet obscure implementation
based on our threadpool and scheduler.
2017-01-07 02:46:34 +01:00
dd041ff80c Library: thread self recognition implemented and tested (closes #1054) 2017-01-07 01:01:39 +01:00
d74f1447f3 Library: thread self recognition feature defined (#1054) 2017-01-06 23:26:33 +01:00
458fda4058 DispatcherLoop implementation complete (closes #1049)
Did a full review of state and locking logic, seems airtight now.
- command processing itself is unimplemented, we log a TODO message for now
- likewise, builder is not implemented
- need to add the deadlock safeguard #1054
2017-01-05 23:36:42 +01:00
b0b662f200 DispatcherLoop: fix race on initialisation 2017-01-05 22:35:33 +01:00
3915e3230e DispatcherLoop: add wake-up notification on state change 2017-01-05 21:40:37 +01:00
f26ef5230c CommandQueue: finish integration into ProcDispatcher
...leaving out the *actual operations* of
- command dispatch
- builder run
2017-01-05 20:43:53 +01:00
1b970cd943 Session-Subsytem(#318): finish review of locking and lifecycle sanity
This subsystem as such can be considered as implemented now,
while several details still wait to be filled in.
2017-01-05 03:38:46 +01:00
3809240312 ProcDispatcher(#318): forgo joining the loop thread to avoid deadlock
Due to object scoping we can conclude reliably that the only one
ever to delete the DispacherLoop object will be the the loop thread
from within this object itself, when invoking the termination callback.

Btw, the lock on the inner object was insufficient and will be
replaced by taking the outer lock
2017-01-05 02:00:35 +01:00
567b00aa21 DOC: follow-up of removing boost::scoped_ptr 2017-01-05 01:20:34 +01:00
cd8844b409 clean-up: kill Boost scoped_ptr
std::unique_ptr is a drop-in replacement
2017-01-05 00:56:46 +01:00
77303ad007 Session-Subsystem(#318): investigation of locking sanity (ongoing...)
Found an inconsistency and a deadlock!
See proc-dispatcher.cpp, the lambda embedded into the start() operation!
2017-01-04 01:44:35 +01:00
34686713d4 Proc-Layer: Builder is not a subsystem (anymore)
We found out that it's best to run it single threaded
within the session loop thread. This does not mean the Builder
itself is necessarily single threaded, but the Builder's top level
will block any other session operation, and this is a good thing.
For this reason it makes more sense to have the Builder integrated
as a component into the session subsystem.
2017-01-03 21:10:27 +01:00
282829956b ProcDispatcher: integrate queue and finish preliminary implementation draft
TODO: the wakeup / notification on changes still needs to be done consistently
2016-12-25 22:26:16 +01:00
3010c87008 CommandQueue: basic queue behaviour implemented and tested 2016-12-25 21:52:52 +01:00
b58427e49f Command-Framework: mark anonymous commands
It turns out we *do* support the use of anonymous commands
(while it is not clear yet if we really need this feature).

Basically, client code may either create and register a new
instance from another command used as prototype, by invoking
Command::storeDef(ID). Or, alternatively it may just invoke
newInstance() on the command, which creates a new handle
and a valid new implementation (managed by the handle as
smart-ptr), but never stores this implementation into the
CommandRegistry. In that case, client code may use such a
command just fine, as long as it cares to hold onto that
handle; but it is not possible to retrieve this command
instance later by symbolic ID.

In the light of this (possible) usage pattern, it doesn't
make sense to throw when accessing a command-ID. Rather, we
now return a placeholder-Symbol ("_anonymous_")
2016-12-25 21:46:58 +01:00
387a553e98 Lib: fix warning regarding subobject-linkage
And yes, this warning is for real, while the compiler has no way
to decide if there is actual danger lurking. A type with internal
linkage (e.g. defined in an anonymous namespace) will be treated
by the linker as a separate entity on each encounter (i.e. in
each distinct compilation unit). When multiple translation units
start collaborating on such a type, they *might* be referring
to different memory locations, while semantically the intention
is to refer to the same location.

And since we're dealing with a library facility here, *we* have
likewise now power to ensure proper usage, so we better be cautious.
2016-12-25 20:09:24 +01:00
b5590fb22c CommandQueue: prepare for an unit test 2016-12-25 18:49:57 +01:00
b6d5cd1c76 SessionCommandService implemented by delegating to the ProcDispatcher 2016-12-23 23:42:27 +01:00
b3f0605b9b SessionCommand-facade: consider how to expose command invocation
after reading some related code, I am leaning towards a design
to mirror the way command messages are sent over the UI-Bus.

Unfortunately this pretty much abandons the possibility to
invoke these operations from a client written in C or any
other hand made language binding. Which pretty much confirms
my initial reservation towards such an excessively open
and generic interface system.
2016-12-23 07:26:00 +01:00
386c15f039 obviously a better name
...since it became customary to have make_tuple, make_shared, make_unique
2016-12-23 04:24:22 +01:00
1a4b6545a0 maximum munch
...feels like X-mas
2016-12-23 04:23:03 +01:00
39060297ee ProcDispatcher: solve the sync waiting for a "checkpoint"
...based on the logic of the whole loop
2016-12-22 21:36:03 +01:00
8bbc0fb97f more clean-up and comments 2016-12-22 19:35:42 +01:00
ad6a2ef090 ProcDispatcher: fix possible race at startup 2016-12-22 18:42:12 +01:00
0d436deb9e clean-up and comments for the implementation finished thus far 2016-12-22 04:04:41 +01:00
99b9af0a74 Looper: loop control logic unit test PASS 2016-12-22 03:28:41 +01:00
96def6b1ba Looper: elaborate implementation
looks doable indeed...
2016-12-22 03:12:14 +01:00
196696a8d0 Looper: draft possible implementation
seemingly a quite simple "trap door" mechanism is sufficient
2016-12-21 03:56:56 +01:00
ef6ecf3dd0 Looper: rework the spec for the builder triggereing behaviour
...still don't know how to implement it, but now it is at least
specified more correct, with respect to the implementation of the loop
2016-12-21 03:15:36 +01:00
6073df3554 Looper: other (better?) idea how to handle "builder dirty" automatically
...this means to turn Looper into a state machine.
Yet it seems more feasible, since the DispatcherLoop has a nice
checkpoint after each iteration through the while loop, and we'd
keep that whole builder-dirty business completely confined within
the Looper (with a little help of the DispatcherLoop)

Let's see if the state transition logic can actually be implemented
based just on such a checkpoint....?
2016-12-20 03:53:48 +01:00
bae3d4b96f mark a solution how to create a safeguard against deadlock on session shutdown
....if by some weird coincidence, a command dispatched into the session
happens to trigger session shutdown or re-loading, this will cause a deadlock,
since decommissioning of session data structures must wait for the
ProcDispatcher to disable command processing -- and this will obviously
never happen when in a callstack below some command execution!
2016-12-20 02:35:45 +01:00
b873f7025b ProcDispatcher: mark some next tasks to care for 2016-12-16 23:26:56 +01:00
53ed0e9aa3 ProcDispatcher: consider and document the fine points of operational semantics
there are some pitfalls related to timing and state,
especially since some state changes are triggered, but not immediately reached
2016-12-16 23:11:19 +01:00
8ee08905b3 Looper: extend test coverage 2016-12-16 20:38:00 +01:00
30254da95f Looper: implement core operation control logic 2016-12-16 19:21:06 +01:00
af92ed505b Looper: implementation 2016-12-16 18:34:04 +01:00
7b860947b1 ProcDispatcher: skeleton of the processing loop
including a draft of the Looper control component and the
invocation of the object monitor for waiting on condition var
2016-12-15 22:15:20 +01:00
00077d0431 ProcDispatcher: decide on requirements and implementation structure (#1049) 2016-12-15 20:48:35 +01:00
7e65dda771 draft request to halt the dispatcher loop 2016-12-15 06:21:59 +01:00
86f446c197 better control of the shutdown sequence
holding the SessionCommandService in a unique_ptr allows us to
close the Interface reliably *before* the Loop is halted.
2016-12-15 05:54:48 +01:00
a3c22b8aff SessionCommandService to be operated by the DispatcherLoop 2016-12-15 05:38:12 +01:00
715d3d2890 fix indentation 2016-12-15 05:31:56 +01:00
4d45dfd4be introduce CommandDispatch interface
this allows to let the DispatcherLoop actually serve
as implementation facility for the SessionCommandService
2016-12-15 05:21:03 +01:00
1ec883787a DOC: decision about where to home the SessionCommandService
After some consideration, it became clear that this service implementation
is closely tied to the DispatcherLoop -- which will consequently be
responsible to run and expose this service implementation
2016-12-15 05:07:40 +01:00
479f4170c2 implement activated state
need to keep state variables on both levels,
since the session manager (lifecycle) "opens" the session
for external access by starting the dispatcher; it may well happen
thus that the session starts up, while the *session subsystem*
is not(yet) started
2016-12-14 04:57:08 +01:00