mirror of https://github.com/ArduPilot/ardupilot
260 lines
10 KiB
C++
260 lines
10 KiB
C++
// -*- tab-width: 4; Mode: C++; c-basic-offset: 4; indent-tabs-mode: nil -*-
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//
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// This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
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// the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the
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// Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at
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// your option) any later version.
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//
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/// @file AP_Meta_class.h
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/// @brief An abstract base class from which other classes can inherit.
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///
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/// This abstract base class declares and implements functions that are
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/// useful to code that wants to know things about a class, or to operate
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/// on the class without knowing precisely what it is.
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///
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/// All classes that inherit from this class can be assumed to have these
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/// basic functions.
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///
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#ifndef AP_META_CLASS_H
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#define AP_META_CLASS_H
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#include <stddef.h> // for size_t
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#include <inttypes.h>
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#include <avr/io.h> // for RAMEND
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///
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/// Basic meta-class from which other AP_* classes can derive.
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///
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/// Functions that form the public API to the metaclass are prefixed meta_.
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///
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/// Note that classes inheriting from AP_Meta_class *must* have a default
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/// constructor and destructor in order for meta_cast to work.
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///
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class AP_Meta_class
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{
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public:
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/// Default constructor does nothing.
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AP_Meta_class(void);
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/// Default destructor is virtual, to ensure that all subclasses'
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/// destructors are virtual. This guarantees that all destructors
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/// in the inheritance chain are called at destruction time.
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///
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virtual ~AP_Meta_class();
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/// Typedef for the ID unique to all instances of a class.
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///
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/// See ::meta_type_id for a discussion of class type IDs.
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///
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typedef uint16_t Type_id;
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/// Obtain a value unique to all instances of a specific subclass.
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///
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/// The value can be used to determine whether two class pointers
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/// refer to the same exact class type. The value can also be cached
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/// and then used to detect objects of a given type at a later point.
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///
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/// This is similar to the basic functionality of the C++ typeid
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/// keyword, but does not depend on std::type_info or any compiler-
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/// generated RTTI.
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///
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/// The value is derived from the vtable address, so it is guaranteed
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/// to be unique but cannot be known until the program has been compiled
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/// and linked. Thus, the only way to know the type ID of a given
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/// type is to construct an object at runtime. To cache the type ID
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/// of a class Foo, see the templated version below:
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///
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/// @return A type-unique value for this.
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///
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Type_id meta_type_id(void) const {
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return *(Type_id *)this;
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}
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/// Obtain a value unique to all instances of a named subclass.
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///
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/// This is similar to ::meta_type_id, but is a template taking a class name.
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/// Use this function to cache the Type_id for a class when you don't need
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/// or cannot afford the constructor cost associated with meta_cast.
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///
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/// @tparam T A subclass of AP_Meta_class.
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/// @return The Type_id value for T.
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///
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template<typename T>
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static Type_id meta_type_id(void) {
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T tmp;
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return tmp.meta_type_id();
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}
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/// External handle for an instance of an AP_Meta_class subclass, contains
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/// enough information to construct and validate a pointer to the instance
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/// when passed back from an untrusted source.
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///
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/// Handles are useful when passing a reference to an object to a client outside
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/// the system, as they can be validated by the system when the client hands
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/// them back.
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///
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typedef uint32_t Meta_handle;
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/// Return a value that can be used as an external pointer to an instance
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/// of a subclass.
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///
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/// The value can be passed to an untrusted agent, and validated on its return.
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///
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/// The value contains the 16-bit type ID of the actual class and
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/// a pointer to the class instance.
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///
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/// @return An opaque handle
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///
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Meta_handle meta_get_handle(void) const {
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return ((Meta_handle)meta_type_id() << 16) | (uint16_t)this;
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}
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/// Validates an AP_Meta_class handle.
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///
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/// The value of the handle is not required to be valid; in particular the
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/// pointer encoded in the handle is validated before being dereferenced.
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///
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/// The handle is considered good if the pointer is valid and the object
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/// it points to has a type ID that matches the ID in the handle.
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///
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/// @param handle A possible AP_Meta_class handle
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/// @return The instance pointer if the handle is good,
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/// or NULL if it is bad.
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///
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static AP_Meta_class *meta_validate_handle(Meta_handle handle) {
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AP_Meta_class *candidate = (AP_Meta_class *)(handle & 0xffff); // extract object pointer
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uint16_t id = handle >> 16; // and claimed type
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// Sanity-check the pointer to ensure it lies within the device RAM, so that
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// a bad handle won't cause ::meta_type_id to read outside of SRAM.
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// Assume that RAM (or addressable storage of some sort, at least) starts at zero.
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//
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// Note that this implies that we cannot deal with objects in ROM or EEPROM,
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// but the constructor wouldn't be able to populate a vtable pointer there anyway...
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//
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if ((uint16_t)candidate >= (RAMEND - 2)) { // -2 to account for the type_id
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return NULL;
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}
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// Compare the typeid of the object that candidate points to with the typeid
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// from the handle. Note that it's safe to call meta_type_id() off the untrusted
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// candidate pointer because meta_type_id is non-virtual (and will in fact be
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// inlined here).
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//
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if (candidate->meta_type_id() == id) {
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return candidate;
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}
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return NULL;
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}
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/// Tests whether two objects are of precisely the same class.
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///
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/// Note that in the case where p2 inherits from p1, or vice-versa, this will return
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/// false as we cannot detect these inheritance relationships at runtime.
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///
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/// In the caller's context, p1 and p2 may be pointers to any type, but we require
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/// that they be passed as pointers to AP_Meta_class in order to make it clear that
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/// they should be pointers to classes derived from AP_Meta_class.
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///
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/// No attempt is made to validate whether p1 and p2 are actually derived from
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/// AP_Meta_class. If p1 and p2 are equal, or if they point to non-class objects with
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/// similar contents, or to non-AP_Meta_class derived classes with no virtual functions
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/// this function may return true.
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///
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/// @param p1 The first object to be compared.
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/// @param p2 The second object to be compared.
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/// @return True if the two objects are of the same class, false
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/// if they are not.
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///
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static bool meta_type_equivalent(AP_Meta_class *p1, AP_Meta_class *p2) {
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return p1->meta_type_id() == p2->meta_type_id();
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}
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/// Cast a pointer to an expected class type.
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///
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/// This function is used when a pointer is expected to be a pointer to a
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/// subclass of AP_Meta_class, but the caller is not certain. It will return the pointer
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/// if it is, or NULL if it is not a pointer to the expected class.
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///
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/// This should be used with caution, as T's default constructor and
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/// destructor will be run, possibly introducing undesired side-effects.
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///
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/// @todo Consider whether we should make it difficult to have a default constructor
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/// with appreciable side-effects.
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///
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/// @param p An AP_Meta_class subclass that may be of type T.
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/// @tparam T The name of a type to which p is to be cast.
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/// @return NULL if p is not of precisely type T, otherwise p cast to T.
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///
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template<typename T>
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static T *meta_cast(AP_Meta_class *p) {
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T tmp;
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if (meta_type_equivalent(p, &tmp)) {
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return (T *)p;
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}
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return NULL;
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}
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/// Cast this to an expected class type.
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///
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/// This is equivalent to meta_cast<T>(this)
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///
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/// @tparam T The name of a type to which this is to be cast.
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/// @return NULL if this is not of precisely type T, otherwise this cast to T.
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///
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template<typename T>
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T *meta_cast(void) {
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T tmp;
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if (meta_type_equivalent(this, &tmp)) {
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return (T*)this;
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}
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return NULL;
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}
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/// Serialize the class.
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///
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/// Serialization stores the state of the class in an external buffer in such a
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/// fashion that it can later be restored by unserialization.
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///
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/// AP_Meta_class subclasses should only implement these functions if saving and
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/// restoring their state makes sense.
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///
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/// Serialization provides a mechanism for exporting the state of the class to an
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/// external consumer, either for external introspection or for subsequent restoration.
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///
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/// Classes that wrap variables should define the format of their serialiaed data
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/// so that external consumers can reliably interpret it.
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///
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/// @param buf Buffer into which serialised data should be placed.
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/// @param bufSize The size of the buffer provided.
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/// @return The size of the serialised data, even if that data would
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/// have overflowed the buffer. If the return value is zero,
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/// the class does not support serialization.
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///
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virtual size_t serialize(void *buf, size_t bufSize) const;
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/// Unserialize the class.
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///
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/// Unserializing a class from a buffer into which the class previously serialized
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/// itself restores the instance to an identical state, where "identical" is left
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/// up to the class itself to define.
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///
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/// Classes that wrap variables should define the format of their serialized data so
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/// that external providers can reliably encode it.
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///
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/// @param buf Buffer containing serialized data.
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/// @param bufSize The size of the buffer.
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/// @return The number of bytes from the buffer that would be consumed
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/// unserializing the data. If the value is less than or equal
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/// to bufSize, unserialization was successful. If the return
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/// value is zero the class does not support unserialisation or
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/// the data in the buffer is invalid.
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///
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virtual size_t unserialize(void *buf, size_t bufSize);
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};
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#endif // AP_Meta_class_H
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