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The network module offers classes to make network programming easier and portable. Essentially, there are three sets of classes, first low level classes like TQSocket, TQServerSocket, TQDns, etc. which allow you to work in a portable way with TCP/IP sockets. In addition, there are classes like TQNetworkProtocol, TQNetworkOperation in the TQt base library, which provide an abstract layer for implementing network protocols and TQUrlOperator which operates on such network protocols. Finally the third set of network classes are the passive ones, specifically TQUrl and TQUrlInfo which do URL parsing and similar.
The first set of classes (TQSocket, TQServerSocket, TQDns, TQFtp, etc.) are included in TQt's "network" module.
The TQSocket classes are not directly related to the TQNetwork classes, but TQSocket should and will be used for implementing network protocols, which are directly related to the TQNetwork classes. For example, the TQFtp class (which implements the FTP protocol) uses TQSockets. But TQSockets don't need to be used for protocol implementations, e.g. TQLocalFs (which is an implementation of the local filesystem as network protocol) uses TQDir and doesn't use TQSocket. Using TQNetworkProtocols you can implement everything which fits into a hierarchical structure and can be accessed using URLs. This could be, for example, a protocol which can read pictures from a digital camera using a serial connection.
It is quite easy to just use existing network protocol implementations and operate on URLs. For example, downloading a file from an FTP server to the local filesystem can be done with following code:
TQUrlOperator op; op.copy( "ftp://ftp.trolltech.com/qt/source/qt-2.1.0.tar.gz", "file:/tmp", FALSE );
And that's all! Of course an implementation of the FTP protocol has to be available and registered for doing that. More information on that later.
You can also do things like creating directories, removing files, renaming, etc. For example, to create a folder on a private FTP account do
TQUrlOperator op( "ftp://username:password@host.domain.no/home/username" ); op.mkdir( "New Directory" );
To see all available operations, look at the TQUrlOperator class documentation.
Since networking works asynchronously, the function call for an operation will normally return before the operation has been completed. This means that the function cannot return a value indicating failure or success. Instead, the return value always is a pointer to a TQNetworkOperation, and this object stores all the information about the operation.
For example, TQNetworkOperation has a method which returns the state of this operation. Using this you can find out the state of the operation at any time. The object also makes available the arguments you passed to the TQUrlOperator method, the type of the operation and some more information. For more details see the class documentation of TQNetworkOperation.
The TQUrlOperator emits signals to inform you about the progress of the operations. As you can call many methods which operate on a TQUrlOperator's URL, it queues up all the operations. So you can't know which operation the TQUrlOperator just processed. Clearly you will want to know which operation just took place, so each signal's last argument is a pointer to the TQNetworkOperation object which was just processed and which caused the signal to be emitted.
Some of these operations send a start() signal at the beginning (if this makes sense), and some of them send some signals during processing. All operations send a finished() signal after they are done. To find that out if an operation finished successfully you can use the TQNetworkOperation pointer you got with the finished() signal. If TQNetworkOperation::state() equals TQNetworkProtocol::StDone the operation finished successfully, if it is TQNetworkProtocol::StFailed the operation failed.
Example: A slot which you might connect to the TQUrlOperator::finished( TQNetworkOperation * )
void MyClass::slotOperationFinished( TQNetworkOperation *op ) { switch ( op->operation() ) { case TQNetworkProtocol::OpMkDir: if ( op->state() == TQNetworkProtocol::StFailed ) qDebug( "Couldn't create directory %s", op->arg( 0 ).latin1() ); else qDebug( "Successfully created directory %s", op->arg( 0 ).latin1() ); break; // ... and so on } }
As mentioned earlier, some operations send other signals too. Let's take the list children operation as an example (e.g. read a directory on a FTP server):
TQUrlOperator op; MyClass::MyClass() : TQObject(), op( "ftp://ftp.trolltech.com" ) { connect( &op, SIGNAL( newChildren( const TQValueList<TQUrlInfo> &, TQNetworkOperation * ) ), this, SLOT( slotInsertEntries( const TQValueList<TQUrlInfo> &, TQNetworkOperation * ) ) ); connect( &op, SIGNAL( start( TQNetworkOperation * ) ), this, SLOT( slotStart( TQNetworkOperation *) ) ); connect( &op, SIGNAL( finished( TQNetworkOperation * ) ), this, SLOT( slotFinished( TQNetworkOperation *) ) ); } void MyClass::slotInsertEntries( const TQValueList<TQUrlInfo> &info, TQNetworkOperation * ) { TQValueList<TQUrlInfo>::ConstIterator it = info.begin(); for ( ; it != info.end(); ++it ) { const TQUrlInfo &inf = *it; qDebug( "Name: %s, Size: %d, Last Modified: %s", inf.name().latin1(), inf.size(), inf.lastModified().toString().latin1() ); } } void MyClass::slotStart( TQNetworkOperation * ) { qDebug( "Start reading '%s'", op.toString().latin1() ); } void MyClass::slotFinished( TQNetworkOperation *operation ) { if ( operation->operation() == TQNetworkProtocol::OpListChildren ) { if ( operation->state() == TQNetworkProtocol::StFailed ) qDebug( "Couldn't read '%s'! Following error occurred: %s", op.toString().latin1(), operation->protocolDetail().latin1() ); else qDebug( "Finished reading '%s'!", op.toString().latin1() ); } }
These examples demonstrate now how to use the TQUrlOperator and TQNetworkOperations. The network extension also contains useful example code.
TQNetworkProtocol provides a base class for implementations of network protocols and an architecture for the a dynamic registration and de-registration of network protocols. If you use this architecture you don't need to care about asynchronous programming, as the architecture hides this and does all the work for you.
Note It is difficult to design a base class for network protocols which is useful for all network protocols. The architecture described here is designed to work with all kinds of hierarchical structures, like filesystems. So everything which can be interpreted as hierarchical structure and accessed via URLs, can be implemented as network protocol and easily used in TQt. This is not limited to filesystems only!
To implement a network protocol create a class derived from TQNetworkProtocol.
Other classes will use this network protocol implementation to operate on it. So you should reimplement following protected members
void TQNetworkProtocol::operationListChildren( TQNetworkOperation *op ); void TQNetworkProtocol::operationMkDir( TQNetworkOperation *op ); void TQNetworkProtocol::operationRemove( TQNetworkOperation *op ); void TQNetworkProtocol::operationRename( TQNetworkOperation *op ); void TQNetworkProtocol::operationGet( TQNetworkOperation *op ); void TQNetworkProtocol::operationPut( TQNetworkOperation *op );
Some notes on reimplementing these methods: You always get a pointer to a TQNetworkOperation as argument. This pointer holds all the information about the operation in the current state. If you start processing such an operation, set the state to TQNetworkProtocol::StInProgress. If you finished processing the operation, set the state to TQNetworkProtocol::StDone if it was successful or TQNetworkProtocol::StFailed if an error occurred. If an error occurred you must set an error code (see TQNetworkOperation::setErrorCode()) and if you know some details (e.g. an error message) you can also set this message to the operation pointer (see TQNetworkOperation::setProtocolDetail()). Also you get all the relevant information (type, arguments, etc.) about the operation from the TQNetworkOperation pointer. For details about which arguments you can get and set look at TQNetworkOperation's class documentation.
If you reimplement an operation function, it's very important to emit the correct signals at the correct time: In general always emit finished() at the end of an operation (when you either successfully finished processing the operation or an error occurred) with the network operation as argument. The whole network architecture relies on correctly emitted finished() signals! Then there are some more specialized signals which are specific to operations:
And remember, always emit the finished() signal at the end!
For more details about these signals' arguments look at the TQNetworkProtocol class documentation.
Here is a list of which TQNetworkOperation arguments you can get and which you must set in which function:
(To get the URL on which you should work, use the TQNetworkProtocol::url() method which returns a pointer to the URL operator. Using that you can get the path, host, name filter, etc.)
In summary: If you reimplement an operation function, you must emit some special signals and at the end you must always emit a finished() signal, regardless of success or failure. Also you must change the state of the TQNetworkOperation during processing. You can also get and set TQNetworkOperation arguments as the operation progresses.
It may occur that the network protocol you implement only retquires a subset of these operations. In such cases, simply reimplement the operations which are supported by the protocol. Additionally you must specify which operations you support. This is achieved by reimplementing
int TQNetworkProtocol::supportedOperations() const;
In your implementation of this method return an int value which is constructed by OR-ing together the correct values (supported operations) of the following enum (of TQNetworkProtocol):
For example, if your protocol supports listing children and renaming them, your implementation of supportedOperations() should do this:
return OpListChildren | OpRename;
The last method you must reimplement is
bool TQNetworkProtocol::checkConnection( TQNetworkOperation *op );
Here you must return TRUE, if the connection is up and okay (this means operations on the protocol can be done). If the connection is not okay, return FALSE and start to try opening it. If you cannot open the connection at all (e.g. because the host is not found), emit a finished() signal and set an error code and the TQNetworkProtocol::StFailed state to the TQNetworkOperation pointer you get here.
Now, you never need to check before doing an operation yourself, if the connection is okay. The network architecture does this, which means it uses checkConnection() to see if an operation can be done and if not, it tries it again and again for some time, only calling an operation function if the connection is okay.
To be able to use a network protocol with a TQUrlOperator (and so, for example, in the TQFileDialog), you must register the network protocol implementation. This can be done like this:
TQNetworkProtocol::registerNetworkProtocol( "myprot", new TQNetworkProtocolFactory<MyProtocol> );
In this case MyProtocol would be a class you implemented as described here (derived from TQNetworkProtocol) and the name of the protocol would be "myprot". So to use it, you would do something like
TQUrlOperator op( "myprot://host/path" ); op.listChildren();
Finally, as example of a network protocol implementation you could look at the implementation of TQLocalFs. The network extension also contains an example implementation of a network protocol.
Error handling is important for both implementing new network protocols for and using them (through TQUrlOperator).
After processing an operation has been finished the network operation the TQUrlOperator emits the finished() signal. This has as argument a pointer to the processed TQNetworkOperation. If the state of this operation is TQNetworkProtocol::StFailed, the operation contains some more information about this error. The following error codes are defined in TQNetworkProtocol:
Error | Meaning |
---|---|
TQNetworkProtocol::NoError | No error occurred |
TQNetworkProtocol::ErrValid | The URL you are operating on is not valid |
TQNetworkProtocol::ErrUnknownProtocol | There is no protocol implementation available for the protocol of the URL you are operating on (e.g. if the protocol is http and no http implementation has been registered) |
TQNetworkProtocol::ErrUnsupported | The operation is not supported by the protocol |
TQNetworkProtocol::ErrParse | Parse error of the URL |
TQNetworkProtocol::ErrLoginIncorrect | You needed to login but the username or password are wrong |
TQNetworkProtocol::ErrHostNotFound | The specified host (in the URL) couldn't be found |
TQNetworkProtocol::ErrListChildren | An error occurred while listing the children |
TQNetworkProtocol::ErrMkDir | An error occurred when creating a directory |
TQNetworkProtocol::ErrRemove | An error occurred while removing a child |
TQNetworkProtocol::ErrRename | An error occurred while renaming a child |
TQNetworkProtocol::ErrGet | An error occurred while getting (retrieving) data |
TQNetworkProtocol::ErrPut | An error occurred while putting (uploading) data |
TQNetworkProtocol::ErrFileNotExisting | A file which is needed by the operation doesn't exist |
TQNetworkProtocol::ErrPermissionDenied | The permission for doing the operation has been denied |
TQNetworkOperation::errorCode() returns one of these codes or perhaps a different one if you use your an own network protocol implementation which defines additional error codes.
TQNetworkOperation::protocolDetails() may also return a string which contains an error message then which might be suitable for display to the user.
If you implement your own network protocol, you must report any errors which occurred. First you always need to be able to access the TQNetworkOperation which is being processed at the moment. This is done using TQNetworkOperation::operationInProgress(), which returns a pointer to the current network operation or 0 if no operation is processed at the moment.
Now if an error occurred and you need to handle it, do this:
if ( operationInProgress() ) { operationInProgress()->setErrorCode( error_code_of_your_error ); operationInProgress()->setProtocolDetails( detail ); // optional emit finished( operationInProgress() ); return; }
That's all. The connection to the TQUrlOperator and so on is done automatically. Additionally, if the error was really bad so that no more operations can be done in the current state (e.g. if the host couldn't be found), call TQNetworkProtocol::clearOperationStack() before emitting finished().
Ideally you should use one of the predefined error codes of TQNetworkProtocol. If this is not possible, you can add own error codes - they are just normal ints. Just be careful that the value of the error code doesn't conflict with an existing one.
An example to look at is in qt/examples/network/ftpclient. This is the implementation of a fairly complete FTP client, which supports uploading and downloading files, making directories, etc., all done using TQUrlOperators.
You might also like to look at TQFtp (in qt/src/network/qftp.cpp) or at the example in qt/examples/network/networkprotocol/nntp.cpp.
Copyright © 2007 Trolltech | Trademarks | TQt 3.3.8
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