Mercurial > pidgin
view plugins/HOWTO @ 9584:fe35f55ee984
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" When joining a jabber conference many jabber servers
send a recap of the last 20 or so messages. If you
have sounds enabled, this will result in either 20
sounds in row, or worse if mixing is available, a
horrible mix of 20 overlapping sounds. These recap
messages can be identifed be the presence of the
"jabber:x:delay". This patch identifies delayed
messages, passes that information through flags from
the prpl to the core, and then on to the gui. Detailed
changes:
Add GAIM_MESSAGE_DELAYED to GaimMessageFlags to
indicate a delayed message.
Change gtkconv.c to not play sounds when either
GAIM_MESSAGE_DELAYED or GAIM_MESSAGE_SYSTEM are set.
Add GaimConvChatFlags, parallel to GaimConvImFlags, to
pass flags from protocols to core. Currently contains
two flags:
GAIM_CONV_CHAT_WHISPER
GAIM_CONV_CHAT_DELAYED
Change fourth arg of serv_got_chat_in() from "int
whisper" to "GaimConvChatFlags chatflags".
Change jabber prpl to set delayed flag when the
"jabber:x:delay" element is present. Change toc
protocol since it uses the whisper flag." --Nathan Fredrickson
Date: 2004-07-24 00:49
Sender: marv_sfAccepting Donations
Logged In: YES
user_id=790708
I'm not sure I like naming the flags "DELAYED". I mean
that's okay inside jabber since that's what the jabber
protocol refers to it as, but for the the GAIM_*_DELAYED
flags, I think they should be named something else.
I thought about NOSOUND, but I decided that was wrong,
because the flag should say what kind of message it is, not
what to do with it, that's up to the UI to decide.
What's up with not playing sounds on GAIM_MESSAGE_SYSTEM?
This sounds unrelated to this. Are there times when we want
to play sounds on system messages?
Date: 2004-07-24 09:13
Sender: noif
Logged In: YES
user_id=365548
I purposely did not use a name that implied what the UI
should do with the flag. The only characteristic that makes
these messages unique is that they've been stored in the
server for some period of time and are not current. I'm
open to a better flag name than "DELAYED"... I thought about
"RECAP", but that seemed less generalized than "DELAYED".
As for not playing sounds on GAIM_MESSAGE_SYSTEM, that can
be removed if it's controversial. I think I slipped that
in since the setting of the topic was still playing a sound
every time you joined a jabber conference.
I think we can change the flag name ourselves if something else is better.
committer: Tailor Script <tailor@pidgin.im>
| author | Luke Schierer <lschiere@pidgin.im> |
|---|---|
| date | Sat, 24 Jul 2004 15:18:32 +0000 |
| parents | 258c19be6d84 |
| children |
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Everything in this file should be considered old and potentially out of date. For more reliable information, install doxygen and graphiz dot, then run make docs in the gaim source tree. This will produce html docs in gaim/docs/html that will provide an api reference and in the related pages section, information on perl and c plugins. Ok, this howto is going to be really short and sweet and to the point. First off, before you do anything else, in all of the files for your plugin, put the lines #define GAIM_PLUGINS #include "gaim.h" I mean this. Without this, all kinds of things will not work correctly. If you really want to know exactly what this does, read ../src/gaim.h and learn. But if you don't want to do that, just know that it's important. Now that you've put that there, make sure gaim.h is in your include path. Ok, now you're ready to write the plugin. The only function that is required is gaim_plugin_init(GModule *). This gets called as soon as it gets loaded (sort of - man dlopen for more details). If your function never returns, it will crash gaim! If your plugin uses up all the memory in the system, it will crash gaim! Once your plugin gets loaded, it effectively becomes a part of gaim, and anything that goes wrong will look like it is a problem with gaim itself. I write bugfree code! :) Therefore, it is your problem, not mine. (I'm usually nice and willing to help you with your problems though.) The GModule* that gets passed to gaim_plugin_init is the handle for the plugin. DO NOT CHANGE THIS POINTER! Bad things will happen. You've been warned. It's needed for connecting to signals and things. It's a good idea to remember it somehow. gaim_plugin_init should return a char*. If the char* returned is not NULL, it is interpreted as an error, and used as an error message. See the ChangeLog file in this directory for more details. You can basically do anything you want in the plugin. You can make function calls, change public widgets, display new widgets, things like that. But the really neat thing is you can do things at events. For example, when one of your buddies signs on, you can instantly send them a message. You can modify the incoming and outgoing text. You can do all kinds of crazy things. Whatever you want. Check out SIGNALS for more information. Plugins can share globals with gaim, but will not share with other plugins. This is so if you have a global variable GtkWidget *window in your plugin and J. Random Hacker also has the same name on a global variable, you won't be constantly overwriting each others' variables. Unfortunately, this also means that plugins will have difficulty working together. But then again, that's what shared memory is for. Plugins can be configured. This makes it so they don't have to be recompiled in order to change things internal to them, and it's also just a cool feature to have :). It's optional; to allow your plugin to be configured, add a function called gaim_plugin_config(). The advised course of action is to have it pop up a dialog window; but it's your plugin. When your plugin gets unloaded, gaim will try to call gaim_plugin_remove(). It doesn't have to be there, but it's nice if, say, you create a window, and when the plugin gets unloaded, it removes the window. Also, all the callbacks you have attached to gaim signals will be removed. Plugins can also unload themselves. To do this, call gaim_plugin_unload(GModule *) (the GModule* is the handle passed to gaim_plugin_init). When your plugin gets unloaded, gaim will remove all of your callbacks. It will not call your gaim_plugin_remove function, however, since it will assume you have already done the necessary cleanup. Compilation of the plugins is fairly straight-forward; there is a Makefile in this directory that has a rule for making the .so file from a .c file. No modification of the Makefile should be necessary, unless if you simply want to type 'make' to have it made; otherwise, 'make filename.so' will take filename.c and make the .so plugin from it. If you need to link in with extra libraries, you can set the environment variable PLUGIN_LIBS to be the libraries you want to link with. There are a few examples in this directory. Enjoy.
