/*========================================================================= Program: ParaView Module: vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer.h Copyright (c) Kitware, Inc. All rights reserved. See Copyright.txt or http://www.paraview.org/HTML/Copyright.html for details. This software is distributed WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the above copyright notice for more information. =========================================================================*/ // .NAME vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer // .SECTION Description // vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer initializes and maintains the global // vtkClientServerInterpreter instance for the processes. Use RegisterCallback() // to register initialization routines for the interpreter. Use GetInterpreter() // to access the interpreter. // // This class was originally designed to support and maintain multiple // interpreter instances. However ParaView no longer has need for that and hence // that functionality is no longer made public. #ifndef vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer_h #define vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer_h #include "vtkObject.h" #include "vtkPVCommonModule.h" // needed for export macro class vtkClientServerInterpreter; class VTKPVCOMMON_EXPORT vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer : public vtkObject { public: vtkTypeMacro(vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer, vtkObject); void PrintSelf(ostream& os, vtkIndent indent); // Description: // Creates (and registers) a new interpreter. vtkClientServerInterpreter* NewInterpreter(); // Description: // Get the interpreter for this process. Initializing a new interpreter is // expensive. So filters that need to use interpreter temporarily to call // methods on a vtkObject can simply use the global interpreter. As a rule, // if you need to assign ID's to objects, then you're probably better off // creating a new interpreter using NewInterpreter() and using it rather than // the global interpreter. static vtkClientServerInterpreter* GetGlobalInterpreter(); // Description // Provides access to the singleton. This will instantiate // vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer the first time it is called. static vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer* GetInitializer(); //BTX typedef void (*InterpreterInitializationCallback)(vtkClientServerInterpreter*); // Description: // Use this method register an interpreter initializer function. Registering // such a callback makes it possible to initialize interpreters created in the // lifetime of the application, including those that have already been // created (but not destroyed). One cannot unregister a callback. The only // reason for doing so would be un-loading a plugin, but that's not supported // and never will be :). void RegisterCallback(InterpreterInitializationCallback callback); protected: static vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer* New(); vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer(); ~vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer(); // Description: // Registers an interpreter. This DOES NOT affect the reference count of the // interpreter (hence there's no UnRegister). void RegisterInterpreter(vtkClientServerInterpreter*); private: vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer(const vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer&); // Not implemented void operator=(const vtkClientServerInterpreterInitializer&); // Not implemented class vtkInternals; vtkInternals *Internals; //ETX }; #endif