Copyright © 2017 Pekka Paalanen pq@iki.fi
Copyright © 2018 Zodiac Inflight Innovations
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copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
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The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next
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This is a generic debugging interface for Weston internals, the global
object advertized through wl_registry.
WARNING: This interface by design allows a denial-of-service attack. It
should not be offered in production, or proper authorization mechanisms
must be enforced.
The idea is for a client to provide a file descriptor that the server
uses for printing debug information. The server uses the file
descriptor in blocking writes mode, which exposes the denial-of-service
risk. The blocking mode is necessary to ensure all debug messages can
be easily printed in place. It also ensures message ordering if a
client subscribes to more than one debug stream.
The available debugging features depend on the server.
A debug stream can be one-shot where the server prints the requested
information and then closes it, or continuous where server keeps on
printing until the client stops it. Or anything in between.
Destroys the factory object, but does not affect any other objects.
Advertises an available debug scope which the client may be able to
bind to. No information is provided by the server about the content
contained within the debug streams provided by the scope, once a
client has subscribed.
Subscribe to a named debug stream. The server will start printing
to the given file descriptor.
If the named debug stream is a one-shot dump, the server will send
weston_debug_stream_v1.complete event once all requested data has
been printed. Otherwise, the server will continue streaming debug
prints until the subscription object is destroyed.
If the debug stream name is unknown to the server, the server will
immediately respond with weston_debug_stream_v1.failure event.
Represents one subscribed debug stream, created with
weston_debug_v1.subscribe. When the object is created, it is associated
with a given file descriptor. The server will continue writing to the
file descriptor until the object is destroyed or the server sends an
event through the object.
Destroys the object, which causes the server to stop writing into
and closes the associated file descriptor if it was not closed
already.
Use a wl_display.sync if the clients needs to guarantee the file
descriptor is closed before continuing.
The server has successfully finished writing to and has closed the
associated file descriptor.
This event is delivered only for one-shot debug streams where the
server dumps some data and stop. This is never delivered for
continuous debbug streams because they by definition never complete.
The server has stopped writing to and has closed the
associated file descriptor. The data already written to the file
descriptor is correct, but it may be truncated.
This event may be delivered at any time and for any kind of debug
stream. It may be due to a failure in or shutdown of the server.
The message argument may provide a hint of the reason.