annotate src/flac-1.2.1/include/FLAC/callback.h @ 93:5fcdb63f4cc6

Add sord, serd
author Chris Cannam <cannam@all-day-breakfast.com>
date Wed, 20 Mar 2013 15:23:43 +0000
parents 98c1576536ae
children
rev   line source
cannam@86 1 /* libFLAC - Free Lossless Audio Codec library
cannam@86 2 * Copyright (C) 2004,2005,2006,2007 Josh Coalson
cannam@86 3 *
cannam@86 4 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
cannam@86 5 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
cannam@86 6 * are met:
cannam@86 7 *
cannam@86 8 * - Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
cannam@86 9 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
cannam@86 10 *
cannam@86 11 * - Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
cannam@86 12 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
cannam@86 13 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
cannam@86 14 *
cannam@86 15 * - Neither the name of the Xiph.org Foundation nor the names of its
cannam@86 16 * contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
cannam@86 17 * this software without specific prior written permission.
cannam@86 18 *
cannam@86 19 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
cannam@86 20 * ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
cannam@86 21 * LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
cannam@86 22 * A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE FOUNDATION OR
cannam@86 23 * CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL,
cannam@86 24 * EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
cannam@86 25 * PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
cannam@86 26 * PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF
cannam@86 27 * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING
cannam@86 28 * NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
cannam@86 29 * SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
cannam@86 30 */
cannam@86 31
cannam@86 32 #ifndef FLAC__CALLBACK_H
cannam@86 33 #define FLAC__CALLBACK_H
cannam@86 34
cannam@86 35 #include "ordinals.h"
cannam@86 36 #include <stdlib.h> /* for size_t */
cannam@86 37
cannam@86 38 /** \file include/FLAC/callback.h
cannam@86 39 *
cannam@86 40 * \brief
cannam@86 41 * This module defines the structures for describing I/O callbacks
cannam@86 42 * to the other FLAC interfaces.
cannam@86 43 *
cannam@86 44 * See the detailed documentation for callbacks in the
cannam@86 45 * \link flac_callbacks callbacks \endlink module.
cannam@86 46 */
cannam@86 47
cannam@86 48 /** \defgroup flac_callbacks FLAC/callback.h: I/O callback structures
cannam@86 49 * \ingroup flac
cannam@86 50 *
cannam@86 51 * \brief
cannam@86 52 * This module defines the structures for describing I/O callbacks
cannam@86 53 * to the other FLAC interfaces.
cannam@86 54 *
cannam@86 55 * The purpose of the I/O callback functions is to create a common way
cannam@86 56 * for the metadata interfaces to handle I/O.
cannam@86 57 *
cannam@86 58 * Originally the metadata interfaces required filenames as the way of
cannam@86 59 * specifying FLAC files to operate on. This is problematic in some
cannam@86 60 * environments so there is an additional option to specify a set of
cannam@86 61 * callbacks for doing I/O on the FLAC file, instead of the filename.
cannam@86 62 *
cannam@86 63 * In addition to the callbacks, a FLAC__IOHandle type is defined as an
cannam@86 64 * opaque structure for a data source.
cannam@86 65 *
cannam@86 66 * The callback function prototypes are similar (but not identical) to the
cannam@86 67 * stdio functions fread, fwrite, fseek, ftell, feof, and fclose. If you use
cannam@86 68 * stdio streams to implement the callbacks, you can pass fread, fwrite, and
cannam@86 69 * fclose anywhere a FLAC__IOCallback_Read, FLAC__IOCallback_Write, or
cannam@86 70 * FLAC__IOCallback_Close is required, and a FILE* anywhere a FLAC__IOHandle
cannam@86 71 * is required. \warning You generally CANNOT directly use fseek or ftell
cannam@86 72 * for FLAC__IOCallback_Seek or FLAC__IOCallback_Tell since on most systems
cannam@86 73 * these use 32-bit offsets and FLAC requires 64-bit offsets to deal with
cannam@86 74 * large files. You will have to find an equivalent function (e.g. ftello),
cannam@86 75 * or write a wrapper. The same is true for feof() since this is usually
cannam@86 76 * implemented as a macro, not as a function whose address can be taken.
cannam@86 77 *
cannam@86 78 * \{
cannam@86 79 */
cannam@86 80
cannam@86 81 #ifdef __cplusplus
cannam@86 82 extern "C" {
cannam@86 83 #endif
cannam@86 84
cannam@86 85 /** This is the opaque handle type used by the callbacks. Typically
cannam@86 86 * this is a \c FILE* or address of a file descriptor.
cannam@86 87 */
cannam@86 88 typedef void* FLAC__IOHandle;
cannam@86 89
cannam@86 90 /** Signature for the read callback.
cannam@86 91 * The signature and semantics match POSIX fread() implementations
cannam@86 92 * and can generally be used interchangeably.
cannam@86 93 *
cannam@86 94 * \param ptr The address of the read buffer.
cannam@86 95 * \param size The size of the records to be read.
cannam@86 96 * \param nmemb The number of records to be read.
cannam@86 97 * \param handle The handle to the data source.
cannam@86 98 * \retval size_t
cannam@86 99 * The number of records read.
cannam@86 100 */
cannam@86 101 typedef size_t (*FLAC__IOCallback_Read) (void *ptr, size_t size, size_t nmemb, FLAC__IOHandle handle);
cannam@86 102
cannam@86 103 /** Signature for the write callback.
cannam@86 104 * The signature and semantics match POSIX fwrite() implementations
cannam@86 105 * and can generally be used interchangeably.
cannam@86 106 *
cannam@86 107 * \param ptr The address of the write buffer.
cannam@86 108 * \param size The size of the records to be written.
cannam@86 109 * \param nmemb The number of records to be written.
cannam@86 110 * \param handle The handle to the data source.
cannam@86 111 * \retval size_t
cannam@86 112 * The number of records written.
cannam@86 113 */
cannam@86 114 typedef size_t (*FLAC__IOCallback_Write) (const void *ptr, size_t size, size_t nmemb, FLAC__IOHandle handle);
cannam@86 115
cannam@86 116 /** Signature for the seek callback.
cannam@86 117 * The signature and semantics mostly match POSIX fseek() WITH ONE IMPORTANT
cannam@86 118 * EXCEPTION: the offset is a 64-bit type whereas fseek() is generally 'long'
cannam@86 119 * and 32-bits wide.
cannam@86 120 *
cannam@86 121 * \param handle The handle to the data source.
cannam@86 122 * \param offset The new position, relative to \a whence
cannam@86 123 * \param whence \c SEEK_SET, \c SEEK_CUR, or \c SEEK_END
cannam@86 124 * \retval int
cannam@86 125 * \c 0 on success, \c -1 on error.
cannam@86 126 */
cannam@86 127 typedef int (*FLAC__IOCallback_Seek) (FLAC__IOHandle handle, FLAC__int64 offset, int whence);
cannam@86 128
cannam@86 129 /** Signature for the tell callback.
cannam@86 130 * The signature and semantics mostly match POSIX ftell() WITH ONE IMPORTANT
cannam@86 131 * EXCEPTION: the offset is a 64-bit type whereas ftell() is generally 'long'
cannam@86 132 * and 32-bits wide.
cannam@86 133 *
cannam@86 134 * \param handle The handle to the data source.
cannam@86 135 * \retval FLAC__int64
cannam@86 136 * The current position on success, \c -1 on error.
cannam@86 137 */
cannam@86 138 typedef FLAC__int64 (*FLAC__IOCallback_Tell) (FLAC__IOHandle handle);
cannam@86 139
cannam@86 140 /** Signature for the EOF callback.
cannam@86 141 * The signature and semantics mostly match POSIX feof() but WATCHOUT:
cannam@86 142 * on many systems, feof() is a macro, so in this case a wrapper function
cannam@86 143 * must be provided instead.
cannam@86 144 *
cannam@86 145 * \param handle The handle to the data source.
cannam@86 146 * \retval int
cannam@86 147 * \c 0 if not at end of file, nonzero if at end of file.
cannam@86 148 */
cannam@86 149 typedef int (*FLAC__IOCallback_Eof) (FLAC__IOHandle handle);
cannam@86 150
cannam@86 151 /** Signature for the close callback.
cannam@86 152 * The signature and semantics match POSIX fclose() implementations
cannam@86 153 * and can generally be used interchangeably.
cannam@86 154 *
cannam@86 155 * \param handle The handle to the data source.
cannam@86 156 * \retval int
cannam@86 157 * \c 0 on success, \c EOF on error.
cannam@86 158 */
cannam@86 159 typedef int (*FLAC__IOCallback_Close) (FLAC__IOHandle handle);
cannam@86 160
cannam@86 161 /** A structure for holding a set of callbacks.
cannam@86 162 * Each FLAC interface that requires a FLAC__IOCallbacks structure will
cannam@86 163 * describe which of the callbacks are required. The ones that are not
cannam@86 164 * required may be set to NULL.
cannam@86 165 *
cannam@86 166 * If the seek requirement for an interface is optional, you can signify that
cannam@86 167 * a data sorce is not seekable by setting the \a seek field to \c NULL.
cannam@86 168 */
cannam@86 169 typedef struct {
cannam@86 170 FLAC__IOCallback_Read read;
cannam@86 171 FLAC__IOCallback_Write write;
cannam@86 172 FLAC__IOCallback_Seek seek;
cannam@86 173 FLAC__IOCallback_Tell tell;
cannam@86 174 FLAC__IOCallback_Eof eof;
cannam@86 175 FLAC__IOCallback_Close close;
cannam@86 176 } FLAC__IOCallbacks;
cannam@86 177
cannam@86 178 /* \} */
cannam@86 179
cannam@86 180 #ifdef __cplusplus
cannam@86 181 }
cannam@86 182 #endif
cannam@86 183
cannam@86 184 #endif