winit-sonoma-fix/src/event_loop.rs
Kevin Reid f11270dac0
Reorganize EventLoopBuilder::build() platform documentation
Since there's a "Platform-specific" header, it makes sense to put the
Linux-specific part under it. On the other hand, "Can only be called on
the main thread." is true for all platforms, not just iOS, so there is
no reason to call it out for iOS specifically.
2022-05-29 14:51:27 +03:00

333 lines
12 KiB
Rust

//! The `EventLoop` struct and assorted supporting types, including `ControlFlow`.
//!
//! If you want to send custom events to the event loop, use [`EventLoop::create_proxy()`][create_proxy]
//! to acquire an [`EventLoopProxy`][event_loop_proxy] and call its [`send_event`][send_event] method.
//!
//! See the root-level documentation for information on how to create and use an event loop to
//! handle events.
//!
//! [create_proxy]: crate::event_loop::EventLoop::create_proxy
//! [event_loop_proxy]: crate::event_loop::EventLoopProxy
//! [send_event]: crate::event_loop::EventLoopProxy::send_event
use instant::Instant;
use std::marker::PhantomData;
use std::ops::Deref;
use std::{error, fmt};
use crate::{event::Event, monitor::MonitorHandle, platform_impl};
/// Provides a way to retrieve events from the system and from the windows that were registered to
/// the events loop.
///
/// An `EventLoop` can be seen more or less as a "context". Calling `EventLoop::new()`
/// initializes everything that will be required to create windows. For example on Linux creating
/// an event loop opens a connection to the X or Wayland server.
///
/// To wake up an `EventLoop` from a another thread, see the `EventLoopProxy` docs.
///
/// Note that the `EventLoop` cannot be shared across threads (due to platform-dependant logic
/// forbidding it), as such it is neither `Send` nor `Sync`. If you need cross-thread access, the
/// `Window` created from this `EventLoop` _can_ be sent to an other thread, and the
/// `EventLoopProxy` allows you to wake up an `EventLoop` from another thread.
///
pub struct EventLoop<T: 'static> {
pub(crate) event_loop: platform_impl::EventLoop<T>,
pub(crate) _marker: PhantomData<*mut ()>, // Not Send nor Sync
}
/// Target that associates windows with an `EventLoop`.
///
/// This type exists to allow you to create new windows while Winit executes
/// your callback. `EventLoop` will coerce into this type (`impl<T> Deref for
/// EventLoop<T>`), so functions that take this as a parameter can also take
/// `&EventLoop`.
pub struct EventLoopWindowTarget<T: 'static> {
pub(crate) p: platform_impl::EventLoopWindowTarget<T>,
pub(crate) _marker: PhantomData<*mut ()>, // Not Send nor Sync
}
/// Object that allows building the event loop.
///
/// This is used to make specifying options that affect the whole application
/// easier. But note that constructing multiple event loops is not supported.
#[derive(Default)]
pub struct EventLoopBuilder<T: 'static> {
pub(crate) platform_specific: platform_impl::PlatformSpecificEventLoopAttributes,
_p: PhantomData<T>,
}
impl EventLoopBuilder<()> {
/// Start building a new event loop.
#[inline]
pub fn new() -> Self {
Self::with_user_event()
}
}
impl<T> EventLoopBuilder<T> {
/// Start building a new event loop, with the given type as the user event
/// type.
#[inline]
pub fn with_user_event() -> Self {
Self {
platform_specific: Default::default(),
_p: PhantomData,
}
}
/// Builds a new event loop.
///
/// ***For cross-platform compatibility, the `EventLoop` must be created on the main thread.***
/// Attempting to create the event loop on a different thread will panic. This restriction isn't
/// strictly necessary on all platforms, but is imposed to eliminate any nasty surprises when
/// porting to platforms that require it. `EventLoopBuilderExt::any_thread` functions are exposed
/// in the relevant `platform` module if the target platform supports creating an event loop on
/// any thread.
///
/// Calling this function will result in display backend initialisation.
///
/// ## Platform-specific
///
/// - **Linux:** Backend type can be controlled using an environment variable
/// `WINIT_UNIX_BACKEND`. Legal values are `x11` and `wayland`.
/// If it is not set, winit will try to connect to a Wayland connection, and if that fails,
/// will fall back on X11. If this variable is set with any other value, winit will panic.
#[inline]
pub fn build(&mut self) -> EventLoop<T> {
EventLoop {
event_loop: platform_impl::EventLoop::new(&mut self.platform_specific),
_marker: PhantomData,
}
}
}
impl<T> fmt::Debug for EventLoop<T> {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.pad("EventLoop { .. }")
}
}
impl<T> fmt::Debug for EventLoopWindowTarget<T> {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.pad("EventLoopWindowTarget { .. }")
}
}
/// Set by the user callback given to the `EventLoop::run` method.
///
/// Indicates the desired behavior of the event loop after [`Event::RedrawEventsCleared`][events_cleared]
/// is emitted. Defaults to `Poll`.
///
/// ## Persistency
/// Almost every change is persistent between multiple calls to the event loop closure within a
/// given run loop. The only exception to this is `ExitWithCode` which, once set, cannot be unset.
/// Changes are **not** persistent between multiple calls to `run_return` - issuing a new call will
/// reset the control flow to `Poll`.
///
/// [events_cleared]: crate::event::Event::RedrawEventsCleared
#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq)]
pub enum ControlFlow {
/// When the current loop iteration finishes, immediately begin a new iteration regardless of
/// whether or not new events are available to process.
///
/// ## Platform-specific
/// - **Web:** Events are queued and usually sent when `requestAnimationFrame` fires but sometimes
/// the events in the queue may be sent before the next `requestAnimationFrame` callback, for
/// example when the scaling of the page has changed. This should be treated as an implementation
/// detail which should not be relied on.
Poll,
/// When the current loop iteration finishes, suspend the thread until another event arrives.
Wait,
/// When the current loop iteration finishes, suspend the thread until either another event
/// arrives or the given time is reached.
///
/// Useful for implementing efficient timers. Applications which want to render at the display's
/// native refresh rate should instead use `Poll` and the VSync functionality of a graphics API
/// to reduce odds of missed frames.
WaitUntil(Instant),
/// Send a `LoopDestroyed` event and stop the event loop. This variant is *sticky* - once set,
/// `control_flow` cannot be changed from `ExitWithCode`, and any future attempts to do so will
/// result in the `control_flow` parameter being reset to `ExitWithCode`.
///
/// The contained number will be used as exit code. The [`Exit`] constant is a shortcut for this
/// with exit code 0.
///
/// ## Platform-specific
///
/// - **Android / iOS / WASM**: The supplied exit code is unused.
/// - **Unix**: On most Unix-like platforms, only the 8 least significant bits will be used,
/// which can cause surprises with negative exit values (`-42` would end up as `214`). See
/// [`std::process::exit`].
///
/// [`Exit`]: ControlFlow::Exit
ExitWithCode(i32),
}
impl ControlFlow {
/// Alias for [`ExitWithCode`]`(0)`.
///
/// [`ExitWithCode`]: ControlFlow::ExitWithCode
#[allow(non_upper_case_globals)]
pub const Exit: Self = Self::ExitWithCode(0);
/// Sets this to [`Poll`].
///
/// [`Poll`]: ControlFlow::Poll
pub fn set_poll(&mut self) {
*self = Self::Poll;
}
/// Sets this to [`Wait`].
///
/// [`Wait`]: ControlFlow::Wait
pub fn set_wait(&mut self) {
*self = Self::Wait;
}
/// Sets this to [`WaitUntil`]`(instant)`.
///
/// [`WaitUntil`]: ControlFlow::WaitUntil
pub fn set_wait_until(&mut self, instant: Instant) {
*self = Self::WaitUntil(instant);
}
/// Sets this to [`ExitWithCode`]`(code)`.
///
/// [`ExitWithCode`]: ControlFlow::ExitWithCode
pub fn set_exit_with_code(&mut self, code: i32) {
*self = Self::ExitWithCode(code);
}
/// Sets this to [`Exit`].
///
/// [`Exit`]: ControlFlow::Exit
pub fn set_exit(&mut self) {
*self = Self::Exit;
}
}
impl Default for ControlFlow {
#[inline(always)]
fn default() -> ControlFlow {
ControlFlow::Poll
}
}
impl EventLoop<()> {
/// Alias for `EventLoopBuilder::new().build()`.
#[inline]
pub fn new() -> EventLoop<()> {
EventLoopBuilder::new().build()
}
}
impl<T> EventLoop<T> {
#[deprecated = "Use `EventLoopBuilder::<T>::with_user_event().build()` instead."]
pub fn with_user_event() -> EventLoop<T> {
EventLoopBuilder::<T>::with_user_event().build()
}
/// Hijacks the calling thread and initializes the winit event loop with the provided
/// closure. Since the closure is `'static`, it must be a `move` closure if it needs to
/// access any data from the calling context.
///
/// See the [`ControlFlow`] docs for information on how changes to `&mut ControlFlow` impact the
/// event loop's behavior.
///
/// Any values not passed to this function will *not* be dropped.
///
/// ## Platform-specific
///
/// - **X11 / Wayland**: The program terminates with exit code 1 if the display server
/// disconnects.
///
/// [`ControlFlow`]: crate::event_loop::ControlFlow
#[inline]
pub fn run<F>(self, event_handler: F) -> !
where
F: 'static + FnMut(Event<'_, T>, &EventLoopWindowTarget<T>, &mut ControlFlow),
{
self.event_loop.run(event_handler)
}
/// Creates an `EventLoopProxy` that can be used to dispatch user events to the main event loop.
pub fn create_proxy(&self) -> EventLoopProxy<T> {
EventLoopProxy {
event_loop_proxy: self.event_loop.create_proxy(),
}
}
}
impl<T> Deref for EventLoop<T> {
type Target = EventLoopWindowTarget<T>;
fn deref(&self) -> &EventLoopWindowTarget<T> {
self.event_loop.window_target()
}
}
impl<T> EventLoopWindowTarget<T> {
/// Returns the list of all the monitors available on the system.
#[inline]
pub fn available_monitors(&self) -> impl Iterator<Item = MonitorHandle> {
self.p
.available_monitors()
.into_iter()
.map(|inner| MonitorHandle { inner })
}
/// Returns the primary monitor of the system.
///
/// Returns `None` if it can't identify any monitor as a primary one.
///
/// ## Platform-specific
///
/// **Wayland:** Always returns `None`.
#[inline]
pub fn primary_monitor(&self) -> Option<MonitorHandle> {
self.p.primary_monitor()
}
}
/// Used to send custom events to `EventLoop`.
pub struct EventLoopProxy<T: 'static> {
event_loop_proxy: platform_impl::EventLoopProxy<T>,
}
impl<T: 'static> Clone for EventLoopProxy<T> {
fn clone(&self) -> Self {
Self {
event_loop_proxy: self.event_loop_proxy.clone(),
}
}
}
impl<T: 'static> EventLoopProxy<T> {
/// Send an event to the `EventLoop` from which this proxy was created. This emits a
/// `UserEvent(event)` event in the event loop, where `event` is the value passed to this
/// function.
///
/// Returns an `Err` if the associated `EventLoop` no longer exists.
pub fn send_event(&self, event: T) -> Result<(), EventLoopClosed<T>> {
self.event_loop_proxy.send_event(event)
}
}
impl<T: 'static> fmt::Debug for EventLoopProxy<T> {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.pad("EventLoopProxy { .. }")
}
}
/// The error that is returned when an `EventLoopProxy` attempts to wake up an `EventLoop` that
/// no longer exists. Contains the original event given to `send_event`.
#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq, Hash)]
pub struct EventLoopClosed<T>(pub T);
impl<T> fmt::Display for EventLoopClosed<T> {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.write_str("Tried to wake up a closed `EventLoop`")
}
}
impl<T: fmt::Debug> error::Error for EventLoopClosed<T> {}