[glib] Move GModule docs inline



commit 127df9bd83d610cb989e63037f3e3a6b64c034e0
Author: Matthias Clasen <mclasen redhat com>
Date:   Mon Nov 14 21:06:30 2011 -0500

    Move GModule docs inline

 docs/reference/glib/tmpl/.gitignore   |    1 +
 docs/reference/glib/tmpl/modules.sgml |  291 ---------------------------------
 gmodule/gmodule.c                     |  258 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
 3 files changed, 250 insertions(+), 300 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/docs/reference/glib/tmpl/.gitignore b/docs/reference/glib/tmpl/.gitignore
index b6cee54..06e0652 100644
--- a/docs/reference/glib/tmpl/.gitignore
+++ b/docs/reference/glib/tmpl/.gitignore
@@ -38,6 +38,7 @@ memory_slices.sgml
 memory.sgml
 messages.sgml
 misc_utils.sgml
+modules.sgml
 option.sgml
 patterns.sgml
 quarks.sgml
diff --git a/gmodule/gmodule.c b/gmodule/gmodule.c
index e4ef3eb..388c6b5 100644
--- a/gmodule/gmodule.c
+++ b/gmodule/gmodule.c
@@ -48,6 +48,143 @@
 #include "gmoduleconf.h"
 #include "gstdio.h"
 
+/**
+ * SECTION:modules
+ * @title: Dynamic Loading of Modules
+ * @short_description: portable method for dynamically loading 'plug-ins'
+ *
+ * These functions provide a portable way to dynamically load object files
+ * (commonly known as 'plug-ins'). The current implementation supports all
+ * systems that provide an implementation of dlopen() (e.g. Linux/Sun), as
+ * well as HP-UX via its shl_load() mechanism, and Windows platforms via DLLs.
+ *
+ * A program which wants to use these functions must be linked to the
+ * libraries output by the command
+ * <command>pkg-config --libs gmodule-2.0</command>.
+ *
+ * To use them you must first determine whether dynamic loading
+ * is supported on the platform by calling g_module_supported().
+ * If it is, you can open a module with g_module_open(),
+ * find the module's symbols (e.g. function names) with g_module_symbol(),
+ * and later close the module with g_module_close().
+ * g_module_name() will return the file name of a currently opened module.
+ *
+ * If any of the above functions fail, the error status can be found with
+ * g_module_error().
+ *
+ * The #GModule implementation features reference counting for opened modules,
+ * and supports hook functions within a module which are called when the
+ * module is loaded and unloaded (see #GModuleCheckInit and #GModuleUnload).
+ *
+ * If your module introduces static data to common subsystems in the running
+ * program, e.g. through calling
+ * <literal>g_quark_from_static_string ("my-module-stuff")</literal>,
+ * it must ensure that it is never unloaded, by calling g_module_make_resident().
+ *
+ * <para>
+ * <example>
+ * <title>Calling a function defined in a <structname>GModule</structname></title>
+ * <programlisting>
+ * /&ast; the function signature for 'say_hello' &ast;/
+ * typedef void (* SayHelloFunc) (const char *message);
+ *
+ * gboolean
+ * just_say_hello (const char *filename, GError **error)
+ * {
+ *   SayHelloFunc  say_hello;
+ *   GModule      *module;
+ *
+ *   module = g_module_open (filename, G_MODULE_BIND_LAZY);
+ *   if (!module)
+ *     {
+ *       g_set_error (error, FOO_ERROR, FOO_ERROR_BLAH,
+ *                    "&percnt;s", g_module_error ());
+ *       return FALSE;
+ *     }
+ *
+ *   if (!g_module_symbol (module, "say_hello", (gpointer *)&amp;say_hello))
+ *     {
+ *       g_set_error (error, SAY_ERROR, SAY_ERROR_OPEN,
+ *                    "&percnt;s: &percnt;s", filename, g_module_error ());
+ *       if (!g_module_close (module))
+ *         g_warning ("&percnt;s: &percnt;s", filename, g_module_error ());
+ *       return FALSE;
+ *     }
+ *
+ *   if (say_hello == NULL)
+ *     {
+ *       g_set_error (error, SAY_ERROR, SAY_ERROR_OPEN,
+ *                    "symbol say_hello is NULL");
+ *       if (!g_module_close (module))
+ *         g_warning ("&percnt;s: &percnt;s", filename, g_module_error ());
+ *       return FALSE;
+ *     }
+ *
+ *   /&ast; call our function in the module &ast;/
+ *   say_hello ("Hello world!");
+ *
+ *   if (!g_module_close (module))
+ *     g_warning ("&percnt;s: &percnt;s", filename, g_module_error ());
+ *   return TRUE;
+ *  }
+ * </programlisting>
+ * </example>
+ */
+
+/**
+ * GModule:
+ * The #GModule struct is an opaque data structure to represent a
+ * <link linkend="glib-Dynamic-Loading-of-Modules">Dynamically-Loaded
+ * Module</link>. It should only be accessed via the following functions.
+ */
+
+/**
+ * GModuleCheckInit:
+ * @module: the #GModule corresponding to the module which has just been loaded
+ *
+ * Specifies the type of the module initialization function.
+ * <indexterm zone="g-module-check-init"><primary>g_module_check_init</primary></indexterm>
+ * If a module contains a function named g_module_check_init() it is called
+ * automatically when the module is loaded. It is passed the #GModule structure
+ * and should return %NULL on success or a string describing the initialization
+ * error.
+ *
+ * Returns: %NULL on success, or a string describing the initialization error
+ */
+
+/**
+ * GModuleUnload:
+ * @module: the #GModule about to be unloaded
+ *
+ * <indexterm zone="g-module-unload"><primary>g_module_unload</primary></indexterm>
+ * Specifies the type of the module function called when it is unloaded.
+ * If a module contains a function named g_module_unload() it is called
+ * automatically when the module is unloaded.
+ * It is passed the #GModule structure.
+ */
+
+/**
+ * G_MODULE_SUFFIX:
+ *
+ * Expands to the proper shared library suffix for the current platform
+ * without the leading dot. For the most Unices and Linux this is "so",
+ * for some HP-UX versions this is "sl" and for Windows this is "dll".
+ */
+
+/**
+ * G_MODULE_EXPORT:
+ *
+ * Used to declare functions exported by modules. This is a no-op on Linux
+ * and Unices, but when compiling for Windows, it marks a symbol to be
+ * exported from the library or executable being built.
+ */
+
+/**
+ * G_MODULE_IMPORT:
+ *
+ * Used to declare functions imported from modules.
+ */
+
 /* We maintain a list of modules, so we can reference count them.
  * That's needed because some platforms don't support references counts on
  * modules e.g. the shl_* implementation of HP-UX
@@ -194,6 +331,14 @@ _g_module_build_path (const gchar *directory,
 #endif	/* no implementation */
 
 /* --- functions --- */
+
+/**
+ * g_module_supported:
+ *
+ * Checks if modules are supported on the current platform.
+ *
+ * Returns: %TRUE if modules are supported
+ */
 gboolean
 g_module_supported (void)
 {
@@ -519,9 +664,46 @@ g_module_open (const gchar    *file_name,
 
 #undef g_module_open
 
-GModule*
-g_module_open (const gchar    *file_name,
-	       GModuleFlags    flags)
+/**
+ * GModuleFlags:
+ * @G_MODULE_BIND_LAZY: specifies that symbols are only resolved when
+ *     needed. The default action is to bind all symbols when the module
+ *     is loaded.
+ * @G_MODULE_BIND_LOCAL: specifies that symbols in the module should
+ *     not be added to the global name space. The default action on most
+ *     platforms is to place symbols in the module in the global name space,
+ *     which may cause conflicts with existing symbols.
+ * @G_MODULE_BIND_MASK: mask for all flags.
+ *
+ * Flags passed to g_module_open().
+ * Note that these flags are not supported on all platforms.
+ */
+
+/**
+ * g_module_open:
+ * @file_name: the name of the file containing the module, or %NULL
+ *     to obtain a #GModule representing the main program itself
+ * @flags: the flags used for opening the module. This can be the
+ *     logical OR of any of the #GModuleFlags
+ *
+ * Opens a module. If the module has already been opened,
+ * its reference count is incremented.
+ *
+ * First of all g_module_open() tries to open @file_name as a module.
+ * If that fails and @file_name has the ".la"-suffix (and is a libtool
+ * archive) it tries to open the corresponding module. If that fails
+ * and it doesn't have the proper module suffix for the platform
+ * (#G_MODULE_SUFFIX), this suffix will be appended and the corresponding
+ * module will be opended. If that fails and @file_name doesn't have the
+ * ".la"-suffix, this suffix is appended and g_module_open() tries to open
+ * the corresponding module. If eventually that fails as well, %NULL is
+ * returned.
+ *
+ * Returns: a #GModule on success, or %NULL on failure
+ */
+GModule *
+g_module_open (const gchar  *file_name,
+               GModuleFlags  flags)
 {
   gchar *utf8_file_name = g_locale_to_utf8 (file_name, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL);
   GModule *retval = g_module_open_utf8 (utf8_file_name, flags);
@@ -533,8 +715,16 @@ g_module_open (const gchar    *file_name,
 
 #endif
 
+/**
+ * g_module_close:
+ * @module: a #GModule to close
+ *
+ * Closes a module.
+ *
+ * Returns: %TRUE on success
+ */
 gboolean
-g_module_close (GModule	       *module)
+g_module_close (GModule *module)
 {
   SUPPORT_OR_RETURN (FALSE);
   
@@ -597,16 +787,34 @@ g_module_make_resident (GModule *module)
   module->is_resident = TRUE;
 }
 
+/**
+ * g_module_error:
+ *
+ * Gets a string describing the last module error.
+ *
+ * Returns: a string describing the last module error
+ */
 const gchar *
 g_module_error (void)
 {
   return g_private_get (&module_error_private);
 }
 
+/**
+ * g_module_symbol:
+ * @module: a #GModule
+ * @symbol_name: the name of the symbol to find
+ * @symbol: returns the pointer to the symbol value
+ *
+ * Gets a symbol pointer from a module, such as one exported
+ * by #G_MODULE_EXPORT. Note that a valid symbol can be %NULL.
+ *
+ * Returns: %TRUE on success
+ */
 gboolean
-g_module_symbol (GModule	*module,
-		 const gchar	*symbol_name,
-		 gpointer	*symbol)
+g_module_symbol (GModule     *module,
+                 const gchar *symbol_name,
+                 gpointer    *symbol)
 {
   const gchar *module_error;
 
@@ -647,6 +855,13 @@ g_module_symbol (GModule	*module,
   return !module_error;
 }
 
+/**
+ * g_module_name:
+ * @module: a #GModule to make permanently resident
+ *
+ * Ensures that a module will never be unloaded.
+ * Any future g_module_close() calls on the module will be ignored.
+ */
 const gchar *
 g_module_name (GModule *module)
 {
@@ -675,9 +890,34 @@ g_module_name (GModule *module)
 
 #endif
 
-gchar*
+/**
+ * g_module_build_path:
+ * @directory: the directory where the module is. This can be %NULL
+ *     or the empty string to indicate that the standard platform-specific
+ *     directories will be used, though that is not recommended
+ * @module_name: the name of the module
+ *
+ * A portable way to build the filename of a module. The platform-specific
+ * prefix and suffix are added to the filename, if needed, and the result
+ * is added to the directory, using the correct separator character.
+ *
+ * The directory should specify the directory where the module can be found.
+ * It can be %NULL or an empty string to indicate that the module is in a
+ * standard platform-specific directory, though this is not recommended
+ * since the wrong module may be found.
+ *
+ * For example, calling g_module_build_path() on a Linux system with a
+ * @directory of <filename>/lib</filename> and a @module_name of "mylibrary"
+ * will return <filename>/lib/libmylibrary.so</filename>. On a Windows system,
+ * using <filename>\Windows</filename> as the directory it will return
+ * <filename>\Windows\mylibrary.dll</filename>.
+ *
+ * Returns: the complete path of the module, including the standard library
+ *     prefix and suffix. This should be freed when no longer needed
+ */
+gchar *
 g_module_build_path (const gchar *directory,
-		     const gchar *module_name)
+                     const gchar *module_name)
 {
   g_return_val_if_fail (module_name != NULL, NULL);
   



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