/* * Copyright (C) 2006 The Android Open Source Project * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ #ifndef SkFontHost_DEFINED #define SkFontHost_DEFINED #include "SkScalerContext.h" #include "SkTypeface.h" class SkDescriptor; class SkStream; class SkWStream; typedef uint32_t SkFontID; typedef uint32_t SkFontTableTag; /** \class SkFontHost This class is ported to each environment. It is responsible for bridging the gap between the (sort of) abstract class SkTypeface and the platform-specific implementation that provides access to font files. One basic task is for each create (subclass of) SkTypeface, the FontHost is resonsible for assigning a uniqueID. The ID should be unique for the underlying font file/data, not unique per typeface instance. Thus it is possible/common to request a typeface for the same font more than once (e.g. asking for the same font by name several times). The FontHost may return seperate typeface instances in that case, or it may choose to use a cache and return the same instance (but calling typeface->ref(), since the caller is always responsible for calling unref() on each instance that is returned). Either way, the fontID for those instance(s) will be the same. In addition, the fontID should never be set to 0. That value is used as a sentinel to indicate no-font-id. The major aspects are: 1) Given either a name/style, return a subclass of SkTypeface that references the closest matching font available on the host system. 2) Given the data for a font (either in a stream or a file name), return a typeface that allows access to that data. 3) Each typeface instance carries a 32bit ID for its corresponding font. SkFontHost turns that ID into a stream to access the font's data. 4) Given a font ID, return a subclass of SkScalerContext, which connects a font scaler (e.g. freetype or other) to the font's data. 5) Utilites to manage the font cache (budgeting) and gamma correction */ class SkFontHost { public: /** Return a new, closest matching typeface given either an existing family (specified by a typeface in that family) or by a familyName, and a requested style. 1) If familyFace is null, use famillyName. 2) If famillyName is null, use familyFace. 3) If both are null, return the default font that best matches style */ static SkTypeface* CreateTypeface(const SkTypeface* familyFace, const char famillyName[], SkTypeface::Style style); /** Return a new typeface given the data buffer. If the data does not represent a valid font, returns null. If a typeface instance is returned, the caller is responsible for calling unref() on the typeface when they are finished with it. The returned typeface may or may not have called ref() on the stream parameter. If the typeface has not called ref(), then it may have made a copy of the releveant data. In either case, the caller is still responsible for its refcnt ownership of the stream. */ static SkTypeface* CreateTypefaceFromStream(SkStream*); /** Return a new typeface from the specified file path. If the file does not represent a valid font, this returns null. If a typeface is returned, the caller is responsible for calling unref() when it is no longer used. */ static SkTypeface* CreateTypefaceFromFile(const char path[]); /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// /** Returns true if the specified unique ID matches an existing font. Returning false is similar to calling OpenStream with an invalid ID, which will return NULL in that case. */ static bool ValidFontID(SkFontID uniqueID); /** Return a new stream to read the font data, or null if the uniqueID does not match an existing typeface. .The caller must call stream->unref() when it is finished reading the data. */ static SkStream* OpenStream(SkFontID uniqueID); /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// /** Write a unique identifier to the stream, so that the same typeface can be retrieved with Deserialize(). */ static void Serialize(const SkTypeface*, SkWStream*); /** Given a stream created by Serialize(), return a new typeface (like CreateTypeface) or return NULL if no match is found. */ static SkTypeface* Deserialize(SkStream*); /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// /** Return a subclass of SkScalarContext */ static SkScalerContext* CreateScalerContext(const SkDescriptor* desc); /** Given a "current" fontID, return the next logical fontID to use when searching fonts for a given unicode value. Typically the caller will query a given font, and if a unicode value is not supported, they will call this, and if 0 is not returned, will search that font, and so on. This process must be finite, and when the fonthost sees a font with no logical successor, it must return 0. */ static uint32_t NextLogicalFont(SkFontID fontID); /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// /** Return the number of tables in the font */ static int CountTables(SkFontID); /** Copy into tags[] (allocated by the caller) the list of table tags in the font, and return the number. This will be the same as CountTables() or 0 if an error occured. */ static int GetTableTags(SkFontID, SkFontTableTag[]); /** Given a table tag, return the size of its contents, or 0 if not present */ static size_t GetTableSize(SkFontID, SkFontTableTag); /** Copy the contents of a table into data (allocated by the caller). Note that the contents of the table will be in their native endian order (which for most truetype tables is big endian). If the table tag is not found, or there is an error copying the data, then 0 is returned. If this happens, it is possible that some or all of the memory pointed to by data may have been written to, even though an error has occured. @param fontID the font to copy the table from @param tag The table tag whose contents are to be copied @param offset The offset in bytes into the table's contents where the copy should start from. @param length The number of bytes, starting at offset, of table data to copy. @param data storage address where the table contents are copied to @return the number of bytes actually copied into data. If offset+length exceeds the table's size, then only the bytes up to the table's size are actually copied, and this is the value returned. If offset > the table's size, or tag is not a valid table, then 0 is returned. */ static size_t GetTableData(SkFontID fontID, SkFontTableTag tag, size_t offset, size_t length, void* data); /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// /** Return the number of bytes (approx) that should be purged from the font cache. The input parameter is the cache's estimate of how much as been allocated by the cache so far. To purge (basically) everything, return the input parameter. To purge nothing, return 0 */ static size_t ShouldPurgeFontCache(size_t sizeAllocatedSoFar); /** Return SkScalerContext gamma flag, or 0, based on the paint that will be used to draw something with antialiasing. */ static int ComputeGammaFlag(const SkPaint& paint); /** Return NULL or a pointer to 256 bytes for the black (table[0]) and white (table[1]) gamma tables. */ static void GetGammaTables(const uint8_t* tables[2]); /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// /** LCDs either have their color elements arranged horizontally or vertically. When rendering subpixel glyphs we need to know which way round they are. Note, if you change this after startup, you'll need to flush the glyph cache because it'll have the wrong type of masks cached. */ enum LCDOrientation { kHorizontal_LCDOrientation = 0, //!< this is the default kVertical_LCDOrientation = 1, }; static void SetSubpixelOrientation(LCDOrientation orientation); static LCDOrientation GetSubpixelOrientation(); /** LCD color elements can vary in order. For subpixel text we need to know the order which the LCDs uses so that the color fringes are in the correct place. Note, if you change this after startup, you'll need to flush the glyph cache because it'll have the wrong type of masks cached. */ enum LCDOrder { kRGB_LCDOrder = 0, //!< this is the default kBGR_LCDOrder = 1, }; static void SetSubpixelOrder(LCDOrder order); static LCDOrder GetSubpixelOrder(); }; #endif