// Copyright (c) 2005-2023 Jay Berkenbilt // // This file is part of qpdf. // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. // You may obtain a copy of the License at // // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 // // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and // limitations under the License. // // Versions of qpdf prior to version 7 were released under the terms // of version 2.0 of the Artistic License. At your option, you may // continue to consider qpdf to be licensed under those terms. Please // see the manual for additional information. // Generalized Pipeline interface. By convention, subclasses of // Pipeline are called Pl_Something. // // When an instance of Pipeline is created with a pointer to a next // pipeline, that pipeline writes its data to the next one when it // finishes with it. In order to make possible a usage style in which // a pipeline may be passed to a function which may stick other // pipelines in front of it, the allocator of a pipeline is // responsible for its destruction. In other words, one pipeline // object does not attempt to manage the memory of its successor. // // The client is required to call finish() before destroying a // Pipeline in order to avoid loss of data. A Pipeline class should // not throw an exception in the destructor if this hasn't been done // though since doing so causes too much trouble when deleting // pipelines during error conditions. // // Some pipelines are reusable (i.e., you can call write() after // calling finish() and can call finish() multiple times) while others // are not. It is up to the caller to use a pipeline according to its // own restrictions. #ifndef PIPELINE_HH #define PIPELINE_HH #include #include // unused -- remove in qpdf 12 (see #785) #include #include // Remember to use QPDF_DLL_CLASS on anything derived from Pipeline so // it will work with dynamic_cast across the shared object boundary. class QPDF_DLL_CLASS Pipeline { public: QPDF_DLL Pipeline(char const* identifier, Pipeline* next); QPDF_DLL virtual ~Pipeline() = default; // Subclasses should implement write and finish to do their jobs // and then, if they are not end-of-line pipelines, call // getNext()->write or getNext()->finish. QPDF_DLL virtual void write(unsigned char const* data, size_t len) = 0; QPDF_DLL virtual void finish() = 0; QPDF_DLL std::string getIdentifier() const; // These are convenience methods for making it easier to write // certain other types of data to pipelines without having to // cast. The methods that take char const* expect null-terminated // C strings and do not write the null terminators. QPDF_DLL void writeCStr(char const* cstr); QPDF_DLL void writeString(std::string const&); // This allows *p << "x" << "y" but is not intended to be a // general purpose << compatible with ostream and does not have // local awareness or the ability to be "imbued" with properties. QPDF_DLL Pipeline& operator<<(char const* cstr); QPDF_DLL Pipeline& operator<<(std::string const&); QPDF_DLL Pipeline& operator<<(short); QPDF_DLL Pipeline& operator<<(int); QPDF_DLL Pipeline& operator<<(long); QPDF_DLL Pipeline& operator<<(long long); QPDF_DLL Pipeline& operator<<(unsigned short); QPDF_DLL Pipeline& operator<<(unsigned int); QPDF_DLL Pipeline& operator<<(unsigned long); QPDF_DLL Pipeline& operator<<(unsigned long long); // Overloaded write to reduce casting QPDF_DLL void write(char const* data, size_t len); protected: QPDF_DLL Pipeline* getNext(bool allow_null = false); std::string identifier; private: Pipeline(Pipeline const&) = delete; Pipeline& operator=(Pipeline const&) = delete; Pipeline* next; }; #endif // PIPELINE_HH