Re: [g-a-devel] Not so easy: About pyatspi2 deprecationg and the merge of ATK and AT-SPI
- From: Mike Gorse <mgorse alum wpi edu>
- To: gnome-accessibility-devel gnome org
- Subject: Re: [g-a-devel] Not so easy: About pyatspi2 deprecationg and the merge of ATK and AT-SPI
- Date: Thu, 31 Oct 2013 17:11:37 -0400 (EDT)
Hi all,
On Tue, 29 Oct 2013, Piñeiro wrote:
Because although they are really similar, they are not equal. There are
several differences between atk and libatspi API. On the case of the
client/server different functionality, it is as easy as having different
headers for each (and properly document the purpose of them). But there
are cases not so easy to solve. For example, one tricky one is how
polymorphims are implemented on both. atk uses inheritance. libatspi
uses composition.
What that means? Lets use as example the Text interface:
* On atk there are some objects that are text objects. Those objects
implement a specific interface, AtkText. And those objects know that
implement that interface when they are created. In order to know if a
object is a text object, you just need to use glib macros like this:
ATK_IS_TEXT(object). And then in order to use it you just call atktext
methods, because they are of the right type.
* On libatspi there are some objects that are text objects. But to know
if it is a text object, you don't use glib macros. You use a libatspi
method. And in order to use it, you ask for an atspi-text object. So the
API exposes the text interface as a separate component. In the practice,
it is returning the same object, and atspi-accessible objects just
implement all the interfaces, but the API exposes the functionality as
composition, so it is not really "pure composition", but is a
composition API after all. That is slightly less type safe, because you
can call libatspi-text methods on a object that doesn't implement that
interface.
libatspi approach has an obvious advantage. When you create the object,
you don't need to worry about which speficic interfaces it implements,
it is an almost empty object. And which interfaces implement are
requested only if needed, with a new DBUS call (GetInterfaces).
And as we want to merge both, the question is, which approach do we want?
* atk approach:
+ more type safe
+ after creation doesn't need a new DBUS call to know which
interfaces implement.
- bigger creation overhead: it would be needed to know which
interfaces the object implements when it is created. That means sending
more info for each object created
* libatspi approach:
- less type safe.
- after creation needs a new DBUS call to know which interfaces
implement
+ smaller overhead on object creation, as it only request which
interfaces needs if needed. One could argue that most of the objects
will need this call. But this doesn't need to be true. Applications
creates tons of accessible objects, and just some of them are
interesting to the AT.
The reason that AtspiAccessible implements all interfaces is that AT-SPI
cannot know at compile time which interfaces that particular accessibles
will implement. I'm not sure how difficult/possible it would be to
dynamically create gtypes implementing particular interfaces, or if glib
has a mechanism to allow an object to indicate which interfaces it
supports at runtime. That being said, I don't see a good reason not to
send the list of interfaces that an object supports when the object is
created.
5. Why not autogenerate the headers for this just one library using the
xml spec?
I think that this was suggested by Benjamin some time ago. The
explanation: at-spi2 provides all their funcitonality as a DBUS service.
As with most of dbus programs all the functionality are defined on some
xml files. This is really similar to what happened in the past with the
idl files (CORBA/orbit related) at at-spi1. So one idea would be a step
forward, and create most of the headers of this new library from those
xml files. That would mean that most of the functionality would be added
to those xml files, and then the headers (and probably more stuff),
would be generated from them. I say "most functionality" because likely
we would still need to maintain some of it. In any case, I have the
feeling that current libatspi has as starting point those xml files.
Mike, could you confirm that?.
That might be worth looking into, for the functions that are exposed over
D-Bus (probably not all atk functions will be). The xml files are used for
D-Bus introspection; they currently need to be maintained in parallel with
the headers when libatspi API is changed in a way that affects the IPC.
Reducing the amount of places to update each time the GNOME
accessibility spec changes makes sense, would be a good idea, and it is
worth investigate it. But taking into account all the still not answered
questions, the amount of work that would need, and all the priorities we
have right now (like Wayland), probably this is not the best moment to
focus on this.
I think that this makes sense, at least in terms of what I should be
spending time working on for the time being.
Thanks,
-Mike
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