DOM code generator: Difference between revisions
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* <code>daeTypes.h</code>, the DOM's basic types | * <code>daeTypes.h</code>, the DOM's basic types | ||
* <code>daeDomTypes.h</code>, mappings from XML Schema basic types to DOM types | * <code>daeDomTypes.h</code>, mappings from XML Schema basic types to DOM types | ||
* <code>domTypes.h</code> types generated by the | * <code>domTypes.h</code> types generated by the code generator | ||
Any other new types defined in the COLLADA schema document generate new atomic types or add name bindings to existing atomic types in the DOM. All types defined in the COLLADA schema are restrictions, extensions, unions, or lists of existing types. | Any other new types defined in the COLLADA schema document generate new atomic types or add name bindings to existing atomic types in the DOM. All types defined in the COLLADA schema are restrictions, extensions, unions, or lists of existing types. |
Latest revision as of 13:17, 12 November 2012
Summary: The COLLADA DOM code generator is an external application that is used to generate the C++ classes that are used in the COLLADA DOM.
Obtaining the code generator
The code generator comes with the DOM itself, in the codeGen folder. A readme is provided that explains how to run the code generator.
DOM generated types
DOM type information is stored in:
daeTypes.h
, the DOM's basic typesdaeDomTypes.h
, mappings from XML Schema basic types to DOM typesdomTypes.h
types generated by the code generator
Any other new types defined in the COLLADA schema document generate new atomic types or add name bindings to existing atomic types in the DOM. All types defined in the COLLADA schema are restrictions, extensions, unions, or lists of existing types.
Type declaration formats
For what | Format |
---|---|
most type declarations |
typedef base_type_name domNew_type_name |
list types |
typedef daeTArray< base_type_name > domNew_type_name |
enum types |
enum domNew_type_name Each enum value is then created as |
union types | Supported only for unions of enums. A new enum is generated for that union type containing the symbols and values of all enums contained in the union. |
Code for registered types
All generated types are registered in the registerDomTypes
function found in domTypes.cpp
. For all types except enums, code is generated that looks like
type = daeAtomicType::get("base_type_name"); if ( type == NULL ) { //register as a raw type type = new daeRawRefType; type->_nameBindings.append("new_type_name"); daeAtomicType::append( type ); } else { //add binding to existing type type->_nameBindings.append("new_type_name "); }
This code searches for a type for the base_type_name
. If it finds one, it adds new_type_name
as a name binding for that type. If the base type does not exist then a new rawRefType
is created.
Enumerated types
A new type is always generated for enums. The arrays _strings
and _values
are populated with the enum values. In the schema, if an enumeration has an <xs:annotation> with an <xs:appinfo> value=value, the enum created will have a value value.
DOM-generated classes
Interface
Each <xs:element>, <xs:group>, and <xs:complexType> generates a new daeElement
subclass name domElement_name
.
Each attribute and child element and a value (if it has one) gets its data storage and accessor and mutators. Array types and URIs are returned by reference. All other types are returned by value.
If an element has an <xs:choice> content model group and more than a single child element, it will have _contents
, _contentsOrder
, and _CMData
arrays to store the data needed to represent the ordering of children in the content model.
An <xs:complexType> generates two classes:
- The class description/interface.
- A
daeElement
subclass that inherits from bothdaeElement
and the new class interface.
Any class defined in XMLSchema global scope (not defined as a child of another element) generates a new daeElement
subclass. This new element, if the type attribute is a complex type, also inherits from the complex type interface and daeElement
.
An element that is part of a substitution group inherits from the element it is substitutable for. Then the DOM uses polymorphism and stores a pointer to the base class, which could be an object of any of the substitutable classes.
The code generator allows for schema type inheritance by either extension or restriction. In either case, the new class inherits from the base class. Restriction is handled with the DOM meta information because C++ can do inheritance only by extension. The current (COLLADA 1.4.1) schema does not take advantage of this feature.
The code generator allows for scoped type definitions. This happens when a simple type is created anonymously in the schema document instead of creating a global simple type and referencing it. The current (COLLADA 1.4.1) schema does not take advantage of this feature.
When generating mutators for string data attributes or values, the generator creates code:
*(daeStringRef*)&attrAttribute_name = atAttribute_name
which lets the DOM create memory to store its string data.
The xmlns attribute is created only for elements that have an <xs:annotation> <xs:appinfo> that contains enable-xmlns.
Meta generation
Each element that is generated has a function registerElement
. This is the function that is called to create the meta information that describes the new element.
Every element’s _Meta
descriptor has a name and a pointer to the element’s creation function create(daeInt bytes)
.
If the new element is created from an <xs:group> then the meta is tagged as transparent. Transparent means that the IOplugin
will not create an XML tag or any attributes for this element when it is saved. Essentially, the transparent flag means that the element exists in the COLLADA DOM content but doesn’t really exist in the XML content.
If the new element is abstract, the abstract
flag is set for the meta. Abstract elements cannot be placed in the DOM.
If the element is not declared in the schema’s global scope then the isInnerClass
flag is set to true. This flag is used by the metaAny
content model group. Any globally declared elements can be created as part of the “any” content model, but elements declared as inner classes can not. Any other children of an “any” group become the weakly typed domAny
elements.
Each attribute has a new metaAttribute
or metaArrayAttribute
created to describe it. This metaAttribute
is given a name, a type, and the pointer offset into the class where the data can be found. If the attribute is marked required or given a default value, that is also set on the metaAttribute
.
When a COLLADA element can have character content, the content is usually stored in a variable called _value
in the corresponding DOM class. This value is treated the same as a normal attribute.
The metaCMPolicy
object tree is generated to match the content model specified in the schema. Only the xs:any content model group is not supported.
Any content model that contains either an element that is the base for a substitution group or both a choice and more than one child element will have contents
and contentsOrder
metaAttribute
s added.
If the element’s content model contains an xs:choice group then the meta will have a CMData
metaAttribute
created.
Code generator program flow and systems
The code generator is run by starting gen.php
with a php interpreter. Arguments include:
schema_name | The schema to use for code generation. Required. |
min (after the schema) |
Generate the minimal integration classes. By default, the generator creates the full integration classes. |
cprt |
Use the SCEA Shared Source License copyright as the header. This is the way the generated classes should be created. By default, the generator puts the SCEA SNIP copyright as the header of all of the files. |
So, for example, you might run
gen.php colladaSchema14.xsd cprt
The generator does the following:
- Parses the schema document and creates its own DOM-like structure to store the info from the schema.
- For each schema element that might be encountered, there needs to be a source file
xsElementName.php
. This class is used to store the data related to that element. The source file needs to be included (require_once in PHP) in theobject-model.php
file.
((EDITOR: This page needs the following improvement: the preceding isn't really a step...need to convert ))
- Each of the object model classes has a constructor that registers what elements and attributes (along with their min and maxOccurs) are valid for that element.
((EDITOR: This page needs the following improvement: ditto ))
- The
SchemaParser
class uses the default PHP SAX XML parser to parse the schema document and create the custom DOM used for code generation. - Gets all elements that are xs:simpleType and calls
generate
on them, which in turn creates aTypeMeta
object that contains the data needed to generate the COLLADA simple types. - Does the same for <xs:complexType>, <xs:group>, and <xs:element>.
The template-engine
source file contains the logic on how to apply a template. Templates suffixed with –file
, contain the logic for creating a new C++ source or header file and applying another template to actually write the C++ code.
The most significant templates are:
tpl-types-header.php
for generated type definitionstpl-types-cpp.php
for type registrationtpl-class-def.php
for generated class interfacestpl-cpp-methods
for the generation of the meta for each class.
COLLADA DOM - Version 2.4 Historical Reference |
---|
List of main articles under the DOM portal. |
User Guide chapters: • Intro • Architecture • Setting up • Working with documents • Creating docs • Importing docs • Representing elements • Working with elements • Resolving URIs • Resolving SIDs • Using custom COLLADA data • Integration templates • Error handling Systems: • URI resolver • Meta • Load/save flow • Runtime database • Memory • StringRef • Code generator |