10524a6a8Smahlzeit/*! 26ac7032dSJohn Scipione \mainpage Welcome to the Haiku Book 36ac7032dSJohn Scipione 46ac7032dSJohn Scipione Below you will find documentation on the Application Programming 56ac7032dSJohn Scipione Interface (API) of the Haiku operating system. This API describes 66ac7032dSJohn Scipione the internals of the operating system allowing developers to write 76ac7032dSJohn Scipione native C++ applications and device drivers. See the 86ac7032dSJohn Scipione <a href="http://api.haiku-os.org">online version</a> for the most 96ac7032dSJohn Scipione updated version of this document. If you would like to help contribute 106ac7032dSJohn Scipione contact the <a href="http://www.freelists.org/list/haiku-doc">documentation 116ac7032dSJohn Scipione mailing list</a>. For guidelines on how to help document the API see 126ac7032dSJohn Scipione the \link apidoc Documenting the API\endlink page. A list of 136ac7032dSJohn Scipione contributors can be found \ref credits page. Documenting the API is 146ac7032dSJohn Scipione an ongoing process so contributions are greatly appreciated. 156ac7032dSJohn Scipione 166ac7032dSJohn Scipione The Haiku API is based on the BeOS R5 API but changes and additions have 176ac7032dSJohn Scipione been included where appropriate. Important compatibility differences are 186ac7032dSJohn Scipione detailed on the \ref compatibility page. New classes and methods 196ac7032dSJohn Scipione and incompatible API changes to the BeOS R5 API are noted in the 206ac7032dSJohn Scipione appropriate sections. 216ac7032dSJohn Scipione 226ac7032dSJohn Scipione A complete reference to the BeOS R5 API is available on the web in 236ac7032dSJohn Scipione <a href="http://haiku-os.org/legacy-docs/bebook/">The Be Book</a>. 246ac7032dSJohn Scipione The Be Book is used with permission from 256ac7032dSJohn Scipione <a href="http://www.access-company.com/">Access Co.</a>, the current 266ac7032dSJohn Scipione owners of Be's intellectual property. 270524a6a8Smahlzeit 280524a6a8Smahlzeit \section kits Kits and Servers 290524a6a8Smahlzeit 306ac7032dSJohn Scipione The API is split into several kits and servers each detailing a different 316ac7032dSJohn Scipione aspect of the operating system. 326ac7032dSJohn Scipione - The \ref app is the starting point for developing applications 336ac7032dSJohn Scipione and includes classes for messaging and for interacting with 346ac7032dSJohn Scipione the rest of the system. 358786818cSJohn Scipione - The \ref game provides classes for producing game sounds and 368786818cSJohn Scipione working with full screen apps. 376ac7032dSJohn Scipione - The \ref interface is used to create responsive and attractive 386ac7032dSJohn Scipione graphical user interfaces building on the messaging facilities 396ac7032dSJohn Scipione provided by the Application Kit. 406ac7032dSJohn Scipione - The \link layout_intro Layout API \endlink is a new addition 416ac7032dSJohn Scipione to the Interface Kit in Haiku which provides resources to 426ac7032dSJohn Scipione layout your application flexibly and easily. 436ac7032dSJohn Scipione - The \ref locale includes classes to localize your application to 446ac7032dSJohn Scipione different languages, timezones, number formatting conventions and 456ac7032dSJohn Scipione much more. 466ac7032dSJohn Scipione - The \ref media provides a unified and consistent interface for media 476ac7032dSJohn Scipione streams and applications to intercommunicate. 486ac7032dSJohn Scipione - The \ref midi2 describes an interface to generating, processing, 496ac7032dSJohn Scipione and playing music in MIDI format. For reference documentation on the 506ac7032dSJohn Scipione \ref midi1 is also included. 51*4cf62172SAdrien Destugues - The \ref network handles everything network related, from interface 52*4cf62172SAdrien Destugues IP address settings to HTTP connections. 536ac7032dSJohn Scipione - The \ref storage is a collection of classes that deal with storing and 546ac7032dSJohn Scipione retrieving information from disk. 556ac7032dSJohn Scipione - The \ref support contains support classes to use in your application 566ac7032dSJohn Scipione including resources for thread safety, IO, and serialization. 573528f5bbSJohn Scipione - The \ref translation provides a framework for converting data streams 583528f5bbSJohn Scipione between media formats. 5989e18a51SNiels Sascha Reedijk 606ac7032dSJohn Scipione \section special_topics Special Topics 616ac7032dSJohn Scipione 626ac7032dSJohn Scipione - \ref drivers 634466b89cSJohn Scipione - \ref keyboard 64d419ca3bSNiels Sascha Reedijk*/ 65d419ca3bSNiels Sascha Reedijk 669889ca4aSNiels Sascha Reedijk///// Define main kits ///// 6789e18a51SNiels Sascha Reedijk 68d419ca3bSNiels Sascha Reedijk/*! 69bef614efSNiels Sascha Reedijk \defgroup app Application Kit 706ac7032dSJohn Scipione \brief The Application Kit is the starting point for writing native Haiku 716ac7032dSJohn Scipione GUI applications. 726ac7032dSJohn Scipione 736ac7032dSJohn Scipione The application kit is exactly what its name suggests — it is the 746ac7032dSJohn Scipione basis of Haiku applications. You should first read through this document 756ac7032dSJohn Scipione and the references here before moving on to the other parts of the API. 766ac7032dSJohn Scipione 776ac7032dSJohn Scipione The Application Kit classes can be divided into two groups: the messaging 786ac7032dSJohn Scipione classes and the system interaction classes. The larger of the two groups is 796ac7032dSJohn Scipione the messaging classes. Since the Haiku API relies on pervasive 806ac7032dSJohn Scipione multithreading messaging is an essential topic for any application. Have a 816ac7032dSJohn Scipione look at the \link app_messaging Introduction to Messaging \endlink for more 826ac7032dSJohn Scipione information. 836ac7032dSJohn Scipione 846ac7032dSJohn Scipione The following messaging classes which allow you to easily and securely 856ac7032dSJohn Scipione communicate between threads. 866ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BHandler 876ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BInvoker 886ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BLooper 896ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BMessage 906ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BMessageFilter 916ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BMessageQueue 926ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BMessageRunner 936ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BMessenger 946ac7032dSJohn Scipione 956ac7032dSJohn Scipione The second group is the system interaction classes. These classes 966ac7032dSJohn Scipione provide hooks for your application to interact with the rest of the system. 976ac7032dSJohn Scipione The most important class in this group is BApplication. Below is a list of 986ac7032dSJohn Scipione all system interaction classes: 996ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BApplication 1006ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BClipboard 1016ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BCursor 1026ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BPropertyInfo 1036ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BRoster 1046ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1056ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1068786818cSJohn Scipione \defgroup game Game Kit 1078786818cSJohn Scipione \brief The Game Kit provides classes for producing game sounds and 1088786818cSJohn Scipione working with full screen apps. 1098786818cSJohn Scipione 1108786818cSJohn Scipione 111cc19e7c0SAlex Wilson \defgroup interface Interface Kit 112cc19e7c0SAlex Wilson \brief API for displaying a graphical user interface. 1136ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1146ac7032dSJohn Scipione The Interface Kit holds all the classes you'll need to develop a GUI. 1156ac7032dSJohn Scipione Building on the messaging facilities provided by the Application Kit, 1166ac7032dSJohn Scipione the Interface Kit can be used to create a responsive and attractive 1176ac7032dSJohn Scipione graphical user interface. 1186ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1196ac7032dSJohn Scipione The most important class in the Interface Kit is the BView class, which 1206ac7032dSJohn Scipione handles drawing and user interaction. Pointer and keyboard events are 1216ac7032dSJohn Scipione processed in this class. 1226ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1236ac7032dSJohn Scipione Another important class is the BWindow class, which holds BViews and makes 1246ac7032dSJohn Scipione them visible to the user. The BWindow class also handles BView focusing 1256ac7032dSJohn Scipione and BMessage dispatching, among other things. 1266ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1276ac7032dSJohn Scipione A new addition Haiku has added over the BeOS API is the Layout API, which 1286ac7032dSJohn Scipione is based around the BLayoutItem and BLayout classes. These classes will 1296ac7032dSJohn Scipione take care of making sure all your GUI widgets end up where you want them, 1306ac7032dSJohn Scipione with enough space to be useful. You can start learning the Layout API 1316ac7032dSJohn Scipione by reading the \link layout_intro introduction \endlink. 1326ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1336ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1340a4e27c5SAdrien Destugues \defgroup locale Locale Kit 135c6247544SAdrien Destugues \brief Collection of classes for localizing applications. 1366ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1376ac7032dSJohn Scipione The Locale Kit provides a set of tools for internationalizing, 1386ac7032dSJohn Scipione localizing and translating your software. This includes not only 1396ac7032dSJohn Scipione replacing string with their translations at runtime, but also more 1406ac7032dSJohn Scipione complex tasks such as formatting numbers, dates, and times in a way 1416ac7032dSJohn Scipione that match the locale preferences of the user. 1426ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1436ac7032dSJohn Scipione The main way to access locale data is through the be_locale_roster. 1446ac7032dSJohn Scipione This is a global instance of the BLocaleRoster class, storing the data 1456ac7032dSJohn Scipione for localizing an application according to the user's preferred settings. 1466ac7032dSJohn Scipione The locale roster also acts as a factory to instantiate most of the other 1476ac7032dSJohn Scipione classes. However, there are some cases where you will need to instantiate 1486ac7032dSJohn Scipione another class by yourself, to use it with custom settings. For example, you 1496ac7032dSJohn Scipione may need to format a date with a fixed format in english for including in an 1506ac7032dSJohn Scipione e-mail header, as it is the only format accepted there. 1516ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1526ac7032dSJohn Scipione Unlike the other kits in Haiku, the Locale kit does not live in libbe. 1536ac7032dSJohn Scipione When building a localized application, you have to link it to 1546ac7032dSJohn Scipione liblocale.so. If you want to use the catalog macros, you also have to 1556ac7032dSJohn Scipione link each of your images (that is, applications, libraries and add-ons) 1566ac7032dSJohn Scipione to liblocalestub.a. 1576ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1586ac7032dSJohn Scipione \defgroup media Media Kit 1596ac7032dSJohn Scipione \brief Collection of classes that deal with audio and video. 1606ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1616ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1626ac7032dSJohn Scipione \defgroup midi1 The old MIDI Kit (libmidi.so) 1636ac7032dSJohn Scipione \brief The old MIDI kit. 1646ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1656ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1666ac7032dSJohn Scipione \defgroup midi2 MIDI 2 Kit 1676ac7032dSJohn Scipione \brief The Midi Kit is the API that implements support for generating, 1686ac7032dSJohn Scipione processing, and playing music in MIDI format. 1696ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1706ac7032dSJohn Scipione <A HREF="http://www.midi.org/">MIDI</A>, which stands for 'Musical 1716ac7032dSJohn Scipione Instrument Digital Interface', is a well-established standard for 1726ac7032dSJohn Scipione representing and communicating musical data. This document serves as 1736ac7032dSJohn Scipione an overview. If you would like to see all the components, please look 1746ac7032dSJohn Scipione at \link midi2 the list with classes \endlink. 1756ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1766ac7032dSJohn Scipione \section midi2twokits A Tale of Two MIDI Kits 1776ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1786ac7032dSJohn Scipione BeOS comes with two different, but compatible Midi Kits. This 1796ac7032dSJohn Scipione documentation focuses on the "new" Midi Kit, or midi2 as we like to 1806ac7032dSJohn Scipione call it, that was introduced with BeOS R5. The old kit, which we'll 1816ac7032dSJohn Scipione refer to as midi1, is more complete than the new kit, but less powerful. 1826ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1836ac7032dSJohn Scipione Both kits let you create so-called MIDI endpoints, but the endpoints 1846ac7032dSJohn Scipione from midi1 cannot be shared between different applications. The midi2 1856ac7032dSJohn Scipione kit solves that problem, but unlike midi1 it does not include a General 1866ac7032dSJohn Scipione MIDI softsynth, nor does it have a facility for reading and playing 1876ac7032dSJohn Scipione Standard MIDI Files. Don't worry: both kits are compatible and you can 1886ac7032dSJohn Scipione mix-and-match them in your applications. 1896ac7032dSJohn Scipione 1906ac7032dSJohn Scipione The main differences between the two kits: 1916ac7032dSJohn Scipione - Instead of one BMidi object that both produces and consumes events, 1926ac7032dSJohn Scipione we have BMidiProducer and BMidiConsumer. 1936ac7032dSJohn Scipione - Applications are capable of sharing MIDI producers and consumers 1946ac7032dSJohn Scipione with other applications via the centralized Midi Roster. 1956ac7032dSJohn Scipione - Physical MIDI ports are now sharable without apps "stealing" events 1966ac7032dSJohn Scipione from each other. 1976ac7032dSJohn Scipione - Applications can now send/receive raw MIDI byte streams (useful if 1986ac7032dSJohn Scipione an application has its own MIDI parser/engine). 1996ac7032dSJohn Scipione - Channels are numbered 0–15, not 1–16 2006ac7032dSJohn Scipione - Timing is now specified in microseconds rather than milliseconds. 2016ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2026ac7032dSJohn Scipione \section midi2concepts Midi Kit Concepts 2036ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2046ac7032dSJohn Scipione A brief overview of the elements that comprise the Midi Kit: 2056ac7032dSJohn Scipione - \b Endpoints. This is what the Midi Kit is all about: sending MIDI 2066ac7032dSJohn Scipione messages between endpoints. An endpoint is like a MIDI In or MIDI 2076ac7032dSJohn Scipione Out socket on your equipment; it either receives information or it 2086ac7032dSJohn Scipione sends information. Endpoints that send MIDI events are called 2096ac7032dSJohn Scipione \b producers; the endpoints that receive those events are called 2106ac7032dSJohn Scipione \b consumers. An endpoint that is created by your own application 2116ac7032dSJohn Scipione is called \b local; endpoints from other applications are 2126ac7032dSJohn Scipione \b remote. You can access remote endpoints using \b proxies. 2136ac7032dSJohn Scipione - \b Filters. A filter is an object that has a consumer and a producer 2146ac7032dSJohn Scipione endpoint. It reads incoming events from its consumer, performs some 2156ac7032dSJohn Scipione operation, and tells its producer to send out the results. In its 2166ac7032dSJohn Scipione current form, the Midi Kit doesn't provide any special facilities 2176ac7032dSJohn Scipione for writing filters. 2186ac7032dSJohn Scipione - \b Midi \b Roster. The roster is the list of all published producers 2196ac7032dSJohn Scipione and consumers. By publishing an endpoint, you allow other 2206ac7032dSJohn Scipione applications to talk to it. You are not required to publish your 2216ac7032dSJohn Scipione endpoints, in which case only your own application can use them. 2226ac7032dSJohn Scipione - \b Midi \b Server. The Midi Server does the behind-the-scenes work. 2236ac7032dSJohn Scipione It manages the roster, it connects endpoints, it makes sure that 2246ac7032dSJohn Scipione endpoints can communicate, and so on. The Midi Server is started 2256ac7032dSJohn Scipione automatically when BeOS boots, and you never have to deal with it 2266ac7032dSJohn Scipione directly. Just remember that it runs the show. 2276ac7032dSJohn Scipione - \b libmidi. The BMidi* classes live inside two shared libraries: 2286ac7032dSJohn Scipione libmidi.so and libmidi2.so. If you write an application that uses 2296ac7032dSJohn Scipione old Midi Kit, you must link it to libmidi.so. Applications that use 2306ac7032dSJohn Scipione the new Midi Kit must link to libmidi2.so. If you want to 2316ac7032dSJohn Scipione mix-and-match both kits, you should also link to both libraries. 2326ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2336ac7032dSJohn Scipione Here is a pretty picture: 2346ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2356ac7032dSJohn Scipione \image html midi2concepts.png 2366ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2376ac7032dSJohn Scipione \section midi2mediakit Midi Kit != Media Kit 2386ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2396ac7032dSJohn Scipione Be chose not to integrate the Midi Kit into the Media Kit as another media 2406ac7032dSJohn Scipione type, mainly because MIDI doesn't require any of the format negotiation that 2416ac7032dSJohn Scipione other media types need. Although the two kits look similar -- both have a 2426ac7032dSJohn Scipione "roster" for finding or registering "consumers" and "producers" -- there are 2436ac7032dSJohn Scipione some very important differences. 2446ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2456ac7032dSJohn Scipione The first and most important point to note is that BMidiConsumer and 2466ac7032dSJohn Scipione BMidiProducer in the Midi Kit are \b NOT directly analogous to 2476ac7032dSJohn Scipione BBufferConsumer and BBufferProducer in the Media Kit! In the Media Kit, 2486ac7032dSJohn Scipione consumers and producers are the data consuming and producing properties 2496ac7032dSJohn Scipione of a media node. A filter in the Media Kit, therefore, inherits from both 2506ac7032dSJohn Scipione BBufferConsumer and BBufferProducer, and implements their virtual member 2516ac7032dSJohn Scipione functions to do its work. 2526ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2536ac7032dSJohn Scipione In the Midi Kit, consumers and producers act as endpoints of MIDI data 2546ac7032dSJohn Scipione connections, much as media_source and media_destination do in the Media Kit. 2556ac7032dSJohn Scipione Thus, a MIDI filter does not derive from BMidiConsumer and BMidiProducer; 2566ac7032dSJohn Scipione instead, it contains BMidiConsumer and BMidiProducer objects for each of its 2576ac7032dSJohn Scipione distinct endpoints that connect to other MIDI objects. The Midi Kit does not 2586ac7032dSJohn Scipione allow the use of multiple virtual inheritance, so you can't create an object 2596ac7032dSJohn Scipione that's both a BMidiConsumer and a BMidiProducer. 2606ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2616ac7032dSJohn Scipione This also contrasts with the old Midi Kit's conception of a BMidi object, 2626ac7032dSJohn Scipione which stood for an object that both received and sent MIDI data. In the new 2636ac7032dSJohn Scipione Midi Kit, the endpoints of MIDI connections are all that matters. What lies 2646ac7032dSJohn Scipione between the endpoints, i.e. how a MIDI filter is actually structured, is 2656ac7032dSJohn Scipione entirely at your discretion. 2666ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2676ac7032dSJohn Scipione Also, rather than use token structs like media_node to make connections 2686ac7032dSJohn Scipione via the MediaRoster, the new kit makes the connections directly via the 2696ac7032dSJohn Scipione BMidiProducer object. 2706ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2716ac7032dSJohn Scipione \section midi2remotelocal Remote vs. Local Objects 2726ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2736ac7032dSJohn Scipione The Midi Kit makes a distinction between remote and local MIDI objects. 2746ac7032dSJohn Scipione You can only create local MIDI endpoints, which derive from either 2756ac7032dSJohn Scipione BMidiLocalConsumer or BMidiLocalProducer. Remote endpoints are endpoints 2766ac7032dSJohn Scipione that live in other applications, and you access them through BMidiRoster. 2776ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2786ac7032dSJohn Scipione BMidiRoster only gives you access to BMidiEndpoints, BMidiConsumers, and 2796ac7032dSJohn Scipione BMidiProducers. When you want to talk to remote MIDI objects, you do so 2806ac7032dSJohn Scipione through the proxy objects that BMidiRoster provides. Unlike 2816ac7032dSJohn Scipione BMidiLocalConsumer and BMidiLocalProducer, these classes do not provide a 2826ac7032dSJohn Scipione lot of functions. That is intentional. In order to hide the details of 2836ac7032dSJohn Scipione communication with MIDI endpoints in other applications, the Midi Kit must 2846ac7032dSJohn Scipione hide the details of how a particular endpoint is implemented. 2856ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2866ac7032dSJohn Scipione So what can you do with remote objects? Only what BMidiConsumer, 2876ac7032dSJohn Scipione BMidiProducer, and BMidiEndpoint will let you do. You can connect 2886ac7032dSJohn Scipione objects, get the properties of these objects -- and that's about it. 2896ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2906ac7032dSJohn Scipione \section midi2lifespan Creating and Destroying Objects 2916ac7032dSJohn Scipione 2926ac7032dSJohn Scipione The constructors and destructors of most midi2 classes are private, 2936ac7032dSJohn Scipione which means that you cannot directly create them using the C++ 2946ac7032dSJohn Scipione <CODE>new</CODE> operator, on the stack, or as globals. Nor can you 2956ac7032dSJohn Scipione <CODE>delete</CODE> them. Instead, these objects are obtained through 2966ac7032dSJohn Scipione BMidiRoster. The only two exceptions to this rule are BMidiLocalConsumer 2976ac7032dSJohn Scipione and BMidiLocalProducer. These two objects may be directly created and 2986ac7032dSJohn Scipione subclassed by developers. 2996ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3006ac7032dSJohn Scipione \section midi2refcount Reference Counting 3016ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3026ac7032dSJohn Scipione Each MIDI endpoint has a reference count associated with it, so that 3036ac7032dSJohn Scipione the Midi Roster can do proper bookkeeping. When you construct a 3046ac7032dSJohn Scipione BMidiLocalProducer or BMidiLocalConsumer endpoint, it starts with a 3056ac7032dSJohn Scipione reference count of 1. In addition, BMidiRoster increments the reference 3066ac7032dSJohn Scipione count of any object it hands to you as a result of 3076ac7032dSJohn Scipione \link BMidiRoster::NextEndpoint() NextEndpoint() \endlink or 3086ac7032dSJohn Scipione \link BMidiRoster::FindEndpoint() FindEndpoint() \endlink. 3096ac7032dSJohn Scipione Once the count hits 0, the endpoint will be deleted. 3106ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3116ac7032dSJohn Scipione This means that, to delete an endpoint, you don't call the 3126ac7032dSJohn Scipione <CODE>delete</CODE> operator directly; instead, you call 3136ac7032dSJohn Scipione \link BMidiEndpoint::Release() Release() \endlink. 3146ac7032dSJohn Scipione To balance this call, there's also an 3156ac7032dSJohn Scipione \link BMidiEndpoint::Acquire() Acquire() \endlink, in case you have two 3166ac7032dSJohn Scipione disparate parts of your application working with the endpoint, and you 3176ac7032dSJohn Scipione don't want to have to keep track of who needs to Release() the endpoint. 3186ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3196ac7032dSJohn Scipione When you're done with any endpoint object, you must Release() it. 3206ac7032dSJohn Scipione This is true for both local and remote objects. Repeat after me: 3216ac7032dSJohn Scipione Release() when you're done. 3226ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3236ac7032dSJohn Scipione \section midi2events MIDI Events 3246ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3256ac7032dSJohn Scipione To make some actual music, you need to 3266ac7032dSJohn Scipione \link BMidiProducer::Connect() Connect() \endlink your consumers to 3276ac7032dSJohn Scipione your producers. Then you tell the producer to "spray" MIDI events to all 3286ac7032dSJohn Scipione the connected consumers. The consumers are notified of these incoming 3296ac7032dSJohn Scipione events through a set of hook functions. 3306ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3316ac7032dSJohn Scipione The Midi Kit already provides a set of commonly used spray functions, 3326ac7032dSJohn Scipione such as \link BMidiLocalProducer::SprayNoteOn() SprayNoteOn() \endlink, 3336ac7032dSJohn Scipione \link BMidiLocalProducer::SprayControlChange() SprayControlChange() 3346ac7032dSJohn Scipione \endlink, and so on. These correspond one-to-one with the message types 3356ac7032dSJohn Scipione from the MIDI spec. You don't need to be a MIDI expert to use the kit, but 3366ac7032dSJohn Scipione of course some knowledge of the protocol helps. If you are really hardcore, 3376ac7032dSJohn Scipione you can also use the 3386ac7032dSJohn Scipione \link BMidiLocalProducer::SprayData() SprayData() \endlink to send raw MIDI 3396ac7032dSJohn Scipione events to the consumers. 3406ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3416ac7032dSJohn Scipione At the consumer side, a dedicated thread invokes a hook function for every 3426ac7032dSJohn Scipione incoming MIDI event. For every spray function, there is a corresponding hook 3436ac7032dSJohn Scipione function, e.g. \link BMidiLocalConsumer::NoteOn() NoteOn() \endlink and 3446ac7032dSJohn Scipione \link BMidiLocalConsumer::ControlChange() ControlChange() \endlink. 3456ac7032dSJohn Scipione The hardcore MIDI fanatics among you will be pleased to know that you can 3466ac7032dSJohn Scipione also tap into the \link BMidiLocalConsumer::Data() Data() \endlink hook and 3476ac7032dSJohn Scipione get your hands dirty with the raw MIDI data. 3486ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3496ac7032dSJohn Scipione \section midi2time Time 3506ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3516ac7032dSJohn Scipione The spray and hook functions accept a bigtime_t parameter named "time". This 3526ac7032dSJohn Scipione indicates when the MIDI event should be performed. The time is given in 3536ac7032dSJohn Scipione microseconds since the computer booted. To get the current tick measurement, 3546ac7032dSJohn Scipione you call the system_time() function from the Kernel Kit. 3556ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3566ac7032dSJohn Scipione If you override a hook function in one of your consumer objects, it should 3576ac7032dSJohn Scipione look at the time argument, wait until the designated time, and then perform 3586ac7032dSJohn Scipione its action. The preferred method is to use the Kernel Kit's 3596ac7032dSJohn Scipione <CODE>snooze_until()</CODE> function, which sends the consumer thread to 3606ac7032dSJohn Scipione sleep until the requested time has come. (Or, if the time has already 3616ac7032dSJohn Scipione passed, returns immediately.) 3626ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3636ac7032dSJohn Scipione Like this: 3646ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3656ac7032dSJohn Scipione \code 3666ac7032dSJohn Scipionevoid MyConsumer::NoteOn( 3676ac7032dSJohn Scipione uchar channel, uchar note, uchar velocity, bigtime_t time) 3686ac7032dSJohn Scipione{ 3696ac7032dSJohn Scipione snooze_until(time, B_SYSTEM_TIMEBASE); 3706ac7032dSJohn Scipione ...do your thing... 3716ac7032dSJohn Scipione} 3726ac7032dSJohn Scipione \endcode 3736ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3746ac7032dSJohn Scipione If you want your producers to run in real time, i.e. they produce MIDI data 3756ac7032dSJohn Scipione that needs to be performed immediately, you should pass time 0 to the spray 3766ac7032dSJohn Scipione functions (which also happens to be the default value). Since time 0 has 3776ac7032dSJohn Scipione already passed, <CODE>snooze_until()</CODE> returns immediately, and the 3786ac7032dSJohn Scipione consumer will process the events as soon as they are received. 3796ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3806ac7032dSJohn Scipione To schedule MIDI events for a performance time that lies somewhere in the 3816ac7032dSJohn Scipione future, the producer must take into account the consumer's latency. 3826ac7032dSJohn Scipione Producers should attempt to get notes to the consumer by or before 3836ac7032dSJohn Scipione <I>(scheduled_performance_time - latency)</I>. The time argument is still 3846ac7032dSJohn Scipione the scheduled performance time, so if your consumer has latency, it should 3856ac7032dSJohn Scipione snooze like this before it starts to perform the events: 3866ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3876ac7032dSJohn Scipione \code 3886ac7032dSJohn Scipionesnooze_until(time - Latency(), B_SYSTEM_TIMEBASE); 3896ac7032dSJohn Scipione \endcode 3906ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3916ac7032dSJohn Scipione Note that a typical producer sends out its events as soon as it can; 3926ac7032dSJohn Scipione unlike a consumer, it does not have to snooze. 3936ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3946ac7032dSJohn Scipione \section midi2ports Other Timing Issues 3956ac7032dSJohn Scipione 3966ac7032dSJohn Scipione Each consumer object uses a Kernel Kit port to receive MIDI events from 3976ac7032dSJohn Scipione connected producers. The queue for this port is only 1 message deep. 3986ac7032dSJohn Scipione This means that if the consumer thread is asleep in a 3996ac7032dSJohn Scipione <CODE>snooze_until()</CODE>, it will not read its port. Consequently, 4006ac7032dSJohn Scipione any producer that tries to write a new event to this port will block until 4016ac7032dSJohn Scipione the consumer thread is ready to receive a new message. This is intentional, 4026ac7032dSJohn Scipione because it prevents producers from generating and queueing up thousands of 4036ac7032dSJohn Scipione events. 4046ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4056ac7032dSJohn Scipione This mechanism, while simple, puts on the producer the responsibility 4066ac7032dSJohn Scipione for sorting the events in time. Suppose your producer sends three Note 4076ac7032dSJohn Scipione On events, the first on t + 0, the second on t + 4, and the third on t + 2. 4086ac7032dSJohn Scipione This last event won't be received until after t + 4, so it will be two ticks 4096ac7032dSJohn Scipione too late. If this sort of thing can happen with your producer, you should 4106ac7032dSJohn Scipione somehow sort the events before you spray them. Of course, if you have two or 4116ac7032dSJohn Scipione more producers connected to the same consumer, it is nearly impossible to 4126ac7032dSJohn Scipione sort this all out (pardon the pun). So it is not wise to send the same kinds 4136ac7032dSJohn Scipione of events from more than one producer to one consumer at the same time. 4146ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4156ac7032dSJohn Scipione The article Introduction to MIDI, Part 2 in <A 4166ac7032dSJohn Scipione HREF="http://open-beos.sourceforge.net/nsl.php?mode=display&id=36">OpenBeOS 4176ac7032dSJohn Scipione Newsletter 36</A> describes this problem in more detail, and provides a 4186ac7032dSJohn Scipione solution. Go read it now! 4196ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4206ac7032dSJohn Scipione \section midi2filters Writing a Filter 4216ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4226ac7032dSJohn Scipione A typical filter contains a consumer and a producer endpoint. It receives 4236ac7032dSJohn Scipione events from the consumer, processes them, and sends them out again using the 4246ac7032dSJohn Scipione producer. The consumer endpoint is a subclass of BMidiLocalConsumer, whereas 4256ac7032dSJohn Scipione the producer is simply a BMidiLocalProducer, not a subclass. This is a 4266ac7032dSJohn Scipione common configuration, because consumers work by overriding the event hooks 4276ac7032dSJohn Scipione to do work when MIDI data arrives. Producers work by sending an event when 4286ac7032dSJohn Scipione you call their member functions. You should hardly ever need to derive from 4296ac7032dSJohn Scipione BMidiLocalProducer (unless you need to know when the producer gets connected 4306ac7032dSJohn Scipione or disconnected, perhaps), but you'll always have to override one or more of 4316ac7032dSJohn Scipione BMidiLocalConsumer's member functions to do something useful with incoming 4326ac7032dSJohn Scipione data. 4336ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4346ac7032dSJohn Scipione Filters should ignore the time argument from the spray and hook functions, 4356ac7032dSJohn Scipione and simply pass it on unchanged. Objects that only filter data should 4366ac7032dSJohn Scipione process the event as quickly as possible and be done with it. Do not 4376ac7032dSJohn Scipione <CODE>snooze_until()</CODE> in the consumer endpoint of a filter! 4386ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4396ac7032dSJohn Scipione \section midi2apidiffs API Differences 4406ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4416ac7032dSJohn Scipione As far as the end user is concerned, the Haiku Midi Kit is mostly the same 4426ac7032dSJohn Scipione as the BeOS R5 kits, although there are a few small differences in the API 4436ac7032dSJohn Scipione (mostly bug fixes): 4446ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BMidiEndpoint::IsPersistent() always returns false. 4456ac7032dSJohn Scipione - The B_MIDI_CHANGE_LATENCY notification is now properly sent. The Be 4466ac7032dSJohn Scipione kit incorrectly set be:op to B_MIDI_CHANGED_NAME, even though the 4476ac7032dSJohn Scipione rest of the message was properly structured. 4486ac7032dSJohn Scipione - If creating a local endpoint fails, you can still Release() the object 4496ac7032dSJohn Scipione without crashing into the debugger. 4506ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4516ac7032dSJohn Scipione \section midi2seealso See also 4526ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4536ac7032dSJohn Scipione More about the Midi Kit: 4546ac7032dSJohn Scipione - \ref Midi2Defs.h 4556ac7032dSJohn Scipione - Be Newsletter Volume 3, Issue 47 - Motor Mix sample code 4566ac7032dSJohn Scipione - Be Newsletter Volume 4, Issue 3 - Overview of the new kit 4576ac7032dSJohn Scipione - <A HREF="http://haiku-os.org/documents/dev/introduction_to_midi_part_1">Newsletter 4586ac7032dSJohn Scipione 33</A>, Introduction to MIDI, Part 1 4596ac7032dSJohn Scipione - <A HREF="http://haiku-os.org/documents/dev/introduction_to_midi_part_2">Newsletter 4606ac7032dSJohn Scipione 36</A>, Introduction to MIDI, Part 2 4616ac7032dSJohn Scipione - Sample code and other goodies at the 4626ac7032dSJohn Scipione <A HREF="http://haiku-os.org/about/teams/midi_kit">Haiku Midi Kit team page</A> 4636ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4646ac7032dSJohn Scipione Information about MIDI in general: 4656ac7032dSJohn Scipione - <A HREF="http://www.midi.org">MIDI Manufacturers Association</A> 4666ac7032dSJohn Scipione - <A HREF="http://www.borg.com/~jglatt/tutr/miditutr.htm">MIDI Tutorials</A> 4676ac7032dSJohn Scipione - <A HREF="http://www.borg.com/~jglatt/tech/midispec.htm">MIDI Specification</A> 4686ac7032dSJohn Scipione - <A HREF="http://www.borg.com/~jglatt/tech/midifile.htm">Standard MIDI File Format</A> 4696ac7032dSJohn Scipione - <A HREF="http://www.io.com/~jimm/midi_ref.html">Jim Menard's MIDI Reference</A> 4706ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4716ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4726ac7032dSJohn Scipione \defgroup libmidi2 (libmidi2.so) 4736ac7032dSJohn Scipione 474*4cf62172SAdrien Destugues \defgroup network Network Kit 475*4cf62172SAdrien Destugues \brief Classes that deal with all network connections and communications. 4766ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4776ac7032dSJohn Scipione \defgroup storage Storage Kit 4786ac7032dSJohn Scipione \brief Collection of classes that deal with storing and retrieving 4796ac7032dSJohn Scipione information from disk. 4806ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4816ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4826ac7032dSJohn Scipione \defgroup support Support Kit 4836ac7032dSJohn Scipione \brief Collection of utility classes that are used throughout the API. 4846ac7032dSJohn Scipione 4856ac7032dSJohn Scipione The Support Kit provides a handy set of classes that you can use in your 4866ac7032dSJohn Scipione applications. These classes provide: 4876ac7032dSJohn Scipione - \b Thread \b Safety. Haiku can execute multiple threads of an 4886ac7032dSJohn Scipione application in parallel, letting certain parts of an application 4896ac7032dSJohn Scipione continue when one part is stalled, as well as letting an application 4906ac7032dSJohn Scipione process multiple pieces of data at the same time on multicore or 4916ac7032dSJohn Scipione multiprocessor systems. However, there are times when multiple 4926ac7032dSJohn Scipione threads desire to work on the same piece of data at the same time, 4936ac7032dSJohn Scipione potentially causing a conflict where variables or pointers are 4946ac7032dSJohn Scipione changed by one thread causing another to execute incorrectly. To 4956ac7032dSJohn Scipione prevent this, Haiku implements a \"locking\" mechanism, allowing one 4966ac7032dSJohn Scipione thread to \"lock out\" other threads from executing code that might 4976ac7032dSJohn Scipione modify the same data. 4986ac7032dSJohn Scipione - \b Archiving \b and \b IO. These classes allow a programmer to 4996ac7032dSJohn Scipione convert objects into a form that can more easily be transferred to 5006ac7032dSJohn Scipione other applications or stored to disk, as well as performing basic 5016ac7032dSJohn Scipione input and output operations. 5026ac7032dSJohn Scipione - \b Memory \b Allocation. This class allows a programmer to hand off 5036ac7032dSJohn Scipione some of the duties of memory accounting and management. 5046ac7032dSJohn Scipione - \b Common \b Datatypes. To avoid unnecessary duplication of code 5056ac7032dSJohn Scipione and to make life easier for programmers, Haiku includes classes that 5066ac7032dSJohn Scipione handle management of ordered lists and strings. 5076ac7032dSJohn Scipione 5086ac7032dSJohn Scipione There are also a number of utility functions to time actions, play system 5096ac7032dSJohn Scipione alert sounds, compare strings, and atomically manipulate integers. Have a 5106ac7032dSJohn Scipione look at the overview, or go straight to the complete 5116ac7032dSJohn Scipione \link support list of components \endlink of this kit. 5126ac7032dSJohn Scipione 5136ac7032dSJohn Scipione \section Overview 5146ac7032dSJohn Scipione - Thread Safety: 5156ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BLocker provides a semaphore-like locking mechanism allowing for 5166ac7032dSJohn Scipione recursive locks. 5176ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BAutolock provides a simple method of automatically removing a 5186ac7032dSJohn Scipione lock when a function ends. 5196ac7032dSJohn Scipione - \ref TLS.h "Thread Local Storage" allows a global variable\'s 5206ac7032dSJohn Scipione content to be sensitive to thread context. 5216ac7032dSJohn Scipione - Archiving and IO: 5226ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BArchivable provides an interface for \"archiving\" objects so 5236ac7032dSJohn Scipione that they may be sent to other applications where an identical 5246ac7032dSJohn Scipione copy will be recreated. 5256ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BArchiver simplifies archiving of BArchivable hierarchies. 5266ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BUnarchiver simplifies unarchiving hierarchies that have been 5276ac7032dSJohn Scipione archived using BArchiver. 5286ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BFlattenable provides an interface for \"flattening\" objects so 5296ac7032dSJohn Scipione that they may be easily stored to disk. 5306ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BDataIO provides an interface for generalized read/write streams. 5316ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BPositionIO extends BDataIO to allow seeking within the data. 5326ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BBufferIO creates a buffer and attaches it to a BPositionIO 5336ac7032dSJohn Scipione stream, allowing for reduced load on the underlying stream. 5346ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BMemoryIO allows operation on an already-existing buffer. 5356ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BMallocIO creates and allows operation on a buffer. 5366ac7032dSJohn Scipione - Memory Allocation: 5376ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BBlockCache allows an application to allocate a \"pool\" of 5386ac7032dSJohn Scipione memory blocks that the application can fetch and dispose of as 5396ac7032dSJohn Scipione it pleases, letting the application make only a few large memory 5406ac7032dSJohn Scipione allocations, instead of many small expensive allocations. 5416ac7032dSJohn Scipione - Common Datatypes: 5426ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BList allows simple ordered lists and provides common access, 5436ac7032dSJohn Scipione modification, and comparison functions. 5446ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BString allows strings and provides common access, modification, 5456ac7032dSJohn Scipione and comparison functions. 5466ac7032dSJohn Scipione - BStopWatch allows an application to measure the time an action takes. 5476ac7032dSJohn Scipione - \ref support_globals "Global functions" 5486ac7032dSJohn Scipione - \ref TypeConstants.h "Common types and constants" 5496ac7032dSJohn Scipione - Error codes for all kits 5506ac7032dSJohn Scipione 5516ac7032dSJohn Scipione 5523528f5bbSJohn Scipione \defgroup translation Translation Kit 5533528f5bbSJohn Scipione \brief Provides a framework for converting data streams between media 5543528f5bbSJohn Scipione formats. 5553528f5bbSJohn Scipione 5563528f5bbSJohn Scipione 5576ac7032dSJohn Scipione \defgroup libbe (libbe.so) 5586ac7032dSJohn Scipione 5596ac7032dSJohn Scipione 5606ac7032dSJohn Scipione \defgroup libroot (libroot.so) 5610524a6a8Smahlzeit*/ 5629d54b143SNiels Sascha Reedijk 5639889ca4aSNiels Sascha Reedijk///// Subgroups ///// 5649d54b143SNiels Sascha Reedijk 5659d54b143SNiels Sascha Reedijk/*! 5669d54b143SNiels Sascha Reedijk \defgroup support_globals Global functions in the support kit 5679d54b143SNiels Sascha Reedijk \ingroup support 568cc19e7c0SAlex Wilson 569cc19e7c0SAlex Wilson \defgroup layout Layout classes in the Interface Kit 570cc19e7c0SAlex Wilson \ingroup interface 5719d54b143SNiels Sascha Reedijk*/ 5724466b89cSJohn Scipione 5734466b89cSJohn Scipione 5744466b89cSJohn Scipione///// Special Topics ///// 5754466b89cSJohn Scipione 5764466b89cSJohn Scipione\defgroup drivers Device Drivers 5774466b89cSJohn Scipione\defgroup keyboard Keyboard 578