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author | Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io> | 2021-04-29 10:19:50 +0200 |
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committer | Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io> | 2021-06-03 09:24:02 +0200 |
commit | 303ae5eff179e79fd8542962ab61ddaffabd7635 (patch) | |
tree | ea9abd15deef468f9fca65fc3aa12a407e7c310b /examples | |
parent | b4282a4c54cef4873ec35da2706c7a0b0d843d1c (diff) | |
download | qtwayland-303ae5eff179e79fd8542962ab61ddaffabd7635.tar.gz |
doc: Expand ivi-compositor example documentation
The documentation of the ivi-compositor example was very
abbreviated. This adds pictures and code snippets, as well as explaining
context and use cases.
Task-number: QTBUG-91674
Change-Id: Iad62daf0864312d5e5a4caa3651752e5c9540097
Reviewed-by: Paul Wicking <paul.wicking@qt.io>
Diffstat (limited to 'examples')
-rw-r--r-- | examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/images/ivi-compositor-1.png | bin | 0 -> 12022 bytes | |||
-rw-r--r-- | examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/images/ivi-compositor-2.png | bin | 0 -> 15384 bytes | |||
-rw-r--r-- | examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/images/ivi-compositor-3.png | bin | 0 -> 14608 bytes | |||
-rw-r--r-- | examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/src/ivi-compositor.qdoc | 109 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/main.qml | 6 |
5 files changed, 106 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/images/ivi-compositor-1.png b/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/images/ivi-compositor-1.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 00000000..8ab6b0c9 --- /dev/null +++ b/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/images/ivi-compositor-1.png diff --git a/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/images/ivi-compositor-2.png b/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/images/ivi-compositor-2.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 00000000..02e1a2c9 --- /dev/null +++ b/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/images/ivi-compositor-2.png diff --git a/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/images/ivi-compositor-3.png b/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/images/ivi-compositor-3.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 00000000..5bde2c74 --- /dev/null +++ b/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/images/ivi-compositor-3.png diff --git a/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/src/ivi-compositor.qdoc b/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/src/ivi-compositor.qdoc index f25eb855..030101a6 100644 --- a/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/src/ivi-compositor.qdoc +++ b/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/doc/src/ivi-compositor.qdoc @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ /**************************************************************************** ** -** Copyright (C) 2017 The Qt Company Ltd. +** Copyright (C) 2021 The Qt Company Ltd. ** Contact: https://www.qt.io/licensing/ ** ** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit. @@ -31,14 +31,105 @@ * \brief IVI Compositor is an example that demonstrates how to use the IviApplication extension. * \ingroup qtwaylandcompositor-examples * - * IVI Compositor is a Wayland compositor example demonstrating how to create a - * compositor supporting the \c ivi-application protocol. + * \section1 Introduction * - * IVI application windows with the id 1337 will be resized to cover one half - * of the screen, while all other windows will be resized to cover the other - * half. + * This example demonstrates using the \l IviApplication shell extension in a Wayland display + * server (also known as a Wayland compositor). * - * To start a Qt application using the \c ivi-application protocol with the - * right id, you need to set QT_WAYLAND_SHELL_INTEGRATION to ivi-shell and - * QT_IVI_SURFACE_ID to 1337. + * For an introduction to the basic principles of creating a \l{Qt Wayland Compositor} with Qt, + * see the \l{Qt Wayland Compositor Examples - Minimal QML}{Minimal QML example}. + * + * \section1 The Protocol + * + * \l IviApplication is a \l{Shell Extensions - Qt Wayland Compositor}{shell extension} that was + * designed specifically for making In-vehice Infotainment systems. + * + * It is a minimalistic protocol, and only provides the following functionality: + * + * \list 1 + * \li The client can identify itself with an \e{IVI-id}. + * \li The server can request that the client resizes itself. + * \endlist + * + * \section2 The Identification Numbers + * + * In a typical \l IviApplication setup, you will have a predefined set of applications that can + * connect to the server. Since these applications are already known when the system is designed, + * they can be assigned hardcoded numbers that identify them. Given that the client and server + * agree on these numbers ahead of time, semantics can be built into the ID numbers. + * + * For instance, if a client identifies itself as the navigation application, the server can + * recognize this and allocate a large, centered part of the screen for its window. An application + * identifying itself as a clock, on the other hand, might be delegated to a smaller area in the + * margins of the screen. + * + * By default, Qt applications will advertise their system PIDs ("process IDs") as the \e{IVI-id}. + * The client can override this by setting \c{QT_IVI_SURFACE_ID} in its environment before + * connecting to the server. + * + * \section1 The Example + * + * A Qt Wayland Compositor may support multiple shell extensions at once, but the + * \e{IVICompositor example} only supports the \l IVIApplication protocol. This means that the + * clients have to also support this shell extension in order to connect to the server. + * + * The compositor window in the example is split into two horizontally: A left area which is + * designated for a specialized application with the id "1337", and a right area which is for all + * other applications. + * + * \image ivi-compositor-1.png + * + * \section2 Creating the Layout + * + * The layout of the window is created inside a \l WaylandOutput. This typically corresponds to + * a physical screen available to the compositor. If a single \l WaylandOutput is created, as in + * the \e{IVICompositor example}, it will usually correspond to the primary screen. + * + * \snippet ivi-compositor/main.qml wayland output + * + * The code creates a \l WaylandOutput for the screen and creates a \l Window on this as the top + * level container of all compositor contents. Inside this window, it creates two rectangles that + * will serve as containers for applications as they connect. + * + * \section2 Connecting Clients + * + * If no additional configuration has been done, a Qt application will connect with an \e{IVI-id} + * equal to its process ID. For instance, if we run the \l{Wiggly Example} with + * \c{-platform wayland}, it will be delegated to the right-hand side of the layout, granted that + * its ID is different from "1337". + * + * \image ivi-compositor-2.png + * + * However, if we set the \c{QT_IVI_SURFACE_ID} environment variable to "1337" before starting + * the example, it will be delegated to the left-hand side of the layout. + * + * \image ivi-compositor-3.png + * + * When a client connects to the \c IVIApplication interface, it will emit the \c{iviSurfaceCreated} + * signal. This is where the positioning of the application's surface is handled. + * + * \snippet ivi-compositor/main.qml connecting + * + * The \c{iviSurfaceCreated} signal receives an \l IviSurface argument which can be used to access + * the client's ID. The compositor then creates a \l ShellSurfaceItem for the surface (as defined by + * the \c chromeComponent). \c ShellSurfaceItem is the class used for placing shell surfaces into + * the Qt Quick scene, and you will see this same pattern in all the Qt Wayland Compositor examples. + * + * What makes the \e{IVICompositor example} special is that it checks the \c iviId property of the + * incoming shell surface and decides on a parent for the \l ShellSurfaceItem depending on what + * this is. If the ID is equal to "1337" it will be parented to the \c leftArea, and if not it will + * be in the \c rightArea. + * + * The implementation of the \l ShellSurfaceItem handles resizing by informing the client whenever + * the size changes (which can happen if the compositor is running inside a desktop-style windowing + * system and its window is resized). + * + * \snippet ivi-compositor/main.qml resizing + * + * The \c{sendConfigure()} method is defined in \l IviSurface and will send an event to the client. + * The client will receive a resize event with the new size, so it can relayout its contents. + * + * If multiple applications connect to the same area in the layout, they will simply be stacked + * according to normal Qt Quick ordering rules. There are no built-in mechanisms for closing + * applications or managing state, but this can easily be added as ordinary Qt Quick code. */ diff --git a/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/main.qml b/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/main.qml index 4383070a..954218d8 100644 --- a/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/main.qml +++ b/examples/wayland/ivi-compositor/main.qml @@ -54,6 +54,7 @@ import QtWayland.Compositor.IviApplication import QtQuick.Window WaylandCompositor { + //! [wayland output] WaylandOutput { sizeFollowsWindow: true window: Window { @@ -84,18 +85,22 @@ WaylandCompositor { } } } + //! [wayland output] Component { id: chromeComponent ShellSurfaceItem { anchors.fill: parent onSurfaceDestroyed: destroy() + //! [resizing] onWidthChanged: handleResized() onHeightChanged: handleResized() function handleResized() { shellSurface.sendConfigure(Qt.size(width, height)); } + //! [resizing] } } + //! [connecting] IviApplication { onIviSurfaceCreated: { var surfaceArea = iviSurface.iviId === 1337 ? leftArea : rightArea; @@ -103,4 +108,5 @@ WaylandCompositor { item.handleResized(); } } + //! [connecting] } |