Copyright | Will Thompson Iñaki García Etxebarria and Jonas Platte |
---|---|
License | LGPL-2.1 |
Maintainer | Iñaki García Etxebarria (garetxe@gmail.com) |
Safe Haskell | None |
Language | Haskell2010 |
Converter
is implemented by objects that convert
binary data in various ways. The conversion can be
stateful and may fail at any place.
Some example conversions are: character set conversion, compression, decompression and regular expression replace.
Since: 2.24
Synopsis
- newtype Converter = Converter (ManagedPtr Converter)
- noConverter :: Maybe Converter
- class GObject o => IsConverter o
- toConverter :: (MonadIO m, IsConverter o) => o -> m Converter
- converterConvert :: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsConverter a) => a -> Maybe ByteString -> Maybe ByteString -> [ConverterFlags] -> m (ConverterResult, Word64, Word64)
- converterReset :: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsConverter a) => a -> m ()
Exported types
Memory-managed wrapper type.
Instances
GObject Converter Source # | |
Defined in GI.Gio.Interfaces.Converter gobjectType :: Converter -> IO GType # | |
IsObject Converter Source # | |
Defined in GI.Gio.Interfaces.Converter | |
IsConverter Converter Source # | |
Defined in GI.Gio.Interfaces.Converter |
class GObject o => IsConverter o Source #
Type class for types which can be safely cast to Converter
, for instance with toConverter
.
Instances
(GObject a, (UnknownAncestorError Converter a :: Constraint)) => IsConverter a Source # | |
Defined in GI.Gio.Interfaces.Converter | |
IsConverter Converter Source # | |
Defined in GI.Gio.Interfaces.Converter | |
IsConverter CharsetConverter Source # | |
Defined in GI.Gio.Objects.CharsetConverter | |
IsConverter ZlibCompressor Source # | |
Defined in GI.Gio.Objects.ZlibCompressor | |
IsConverter ZlibDecompressor Source # | |
Defined in GI.Gio.Objects.ZlibDecompressor |
toConverter :: (MonadIO m, IsConverter o) => o -> m Converter Source #
Methods
convert
:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsConverter a) | |
=> a |
|
-> Maybe ByteString |
|
-> Maybe ByteString |
|
-> [ConverterFlags] |
|
-> m (ConverterResult, Word64, Word64) | Returns: a |
This is the main operation used when converting data. It is to be called
multiple times in a loop, and each time it will do some work, i.e.
producing some output (in outbuf
) or consuming some input (from inbuf
) or
both. If its not possible to do any work an error is returned.
Note that a single call may not consume all input (or any input at all). Also a call may produce output even if given no input, due to state stored in the converter producing output.
If any data was either produced or consumed, and then an error happens, then only the successful conversion is reported and the error is returned on the next call.
A full conversion loop involves calling this method repeatedly, each time
giving it new input and space output space. When there is no more input
data after the data in inbuf
, the flag ConverterFlagsInputAtEnd
must be set.
The loop will be (unless some error happens) returning ConverterResultConverted
each time until all data is consumed and all output is produced, then
ConverterResultFinished
is returned instead. Note, that ConverterResultFinished
may be returned even if ConverterFlagsInputAtEnd
is not set, for instance
in a decompression converter where the end of data is detectable from the
data (and there might even be other data after the end of the compressed data).
When some data has successfully been converted bytesRead
and is set to
the number of bytes read from inbuf
, and bytesWritten
is set to indicate
how many bytes was written to outbuf
. If there are more data to output
or consume (i.e. unless the ConverterFlagsInputAtEnd
is specified) then
ConverterResultConverted
is returned, and if no more data is to be output
then ConverterResultFinished
is returned.
On error ConverterResultError
is returned and error
is set accordingly.
Some errors need special handling:
IOErrorEnumNoSpace
is returned if there is not enough space
to write the resulting converted data, the application should
call the function again with a larger outbuf
to continue.
IOErrorEnumPartialInput
is returned if there is not enough
input to fully determine what the conversion should produce,
and the ConverterFlagsInputAtEnd
flag is not set. This happens for
example with an incomplete multibyte sequence when converting text,
or when a regexp matches up to the end of the input (and may match
further input). It may also happen when inbufSize
is zero and
there is no more data to produce.
When this happens the application should read more input and then
call the function again. If further input shows that there is no
more data call the function again with the same data but with
the ConverterFlagsInputAtEnd
flag set. This may cause the conversion
to finish as e.g. in the regexp match case (or, to fail again with
IOErrorEnumPartialInput
in e.g. a charset conversion where the
input is actually partial).
After converterConvert
has returned ConverterResultFinished
the
converter object is in an invalid state where its not allowed
to call converterConvert
anymore. At this time you can only
free the object or call converterReset
to reset it to the
initial state.
If the flag ConverterFlagsFlush
is set then conversion is modified
to try to write out all internal state to the output. The application
has to call the function multiple times with the flag set, and when
the available input has been consumed and all internal state has
been produced then ConverterResultFlushed
(or ConverterResultFinished
if
really at the end) is returned instead of ConverterResultConverted
.
This is somewhat similar to what happens at the end of the input stream,
but done in the middle of the data.
This has different meanings for different conversions. For instance in a compression converter it would mean that we flush all the compression state into output such that if you uncompress the compressed data you get back all the input data. Doing this may make the final file larger due to padding though. Another example is a regexp conversion, where if you at the end of the flushed data have a match, but there is also a potential longer match. In the non-flushed case we would ask for more input, but when flushing we treat this as the end of input and do the match.
Flushing is not always possible (like if a charset converter flushes
at a partial multibyte sequence). Converters are supposed to try
to produce as much output as possible and then return an error
(typically IOErrorEnumPartialInput
).
Since: 2.24
reset
:: (HasCallStack, MonadIO m, IsConverter a) | |
=> a |
|
-> m () |
Resets all internal state in the converter, making it behave as if it was just created. If the converter has any internal state that would produce output then that output is lost.
Since: 2.24