./0000755000015600001650000000000012677635535011120 5ustar jenkinsjenkins./doc/0000755000015600001650000000000012677635530011660 5ustar jenkinsjenkins./doc/Doxyfile-scopes-qt.in0000644000015600001650000022601512677635517015722 0ustar jenkinsjenkins# Doxyfile 1.8.1.2 # This file describes the settings to be used by the documentation system # doxygen (www.doxygen.org) for a project # # All text after a hash (#) is considered a comment and will be ignored # The format is: # TAG = value [value, ...] # For lists items can also be appended using: # TAG += value [value, ...] # Values that contain spaces should be placed between quotes (" ") #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Project related configuration options #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # This tag specifies the encoding used for all characters in the config file # that follow. The default is UTF-8 which is also the encoding used for all # text before the first occurrence of this tag. Doxygen uses libiconv (or the # iconv built into libc) for the transcoding. See # http://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv for the list of possible encodings. DOXYFILE_ENCODING = UTF-8 # The PROJECT_NAME tag is a single word (or sequence of words) that should # identify the project. Note that if you do not use Doxywizard you need # to put quotes around the project name if it contains spaces. PROJECT_NAME = "Unity Scopes Qt library" # The PROJECT_NUMBER tag can be used to enter a project or revision number. # This could be handy for archiving the generated documentation or # if some version control system is used. PROJECT_NUMBER = # Using the PROJECT_BRIEF tag one can provide an optional one line description # for a project that appears at the top of each page and should give viewer # a quick idea about the purpose of the project. Keep the description short. PROJECT_BRIEF = # With the PROJECT_LOGO tag one can specify an logo or icon that is # included in the documentation. The maximum height of the logo should not # exceed 55 pixels and the maximum width should not exceed 200 pixels. # Doxygen will copy the logo to the output directory. PROJECT_LOGO = # The OUTPUT_DIRECTORY tag is used to specify the (relative or absolute) # base path where the generated documentation will be put. # If a relative path is entered, it will be relative to the location # where doxygen was started. If left blank the current directory will be used. OUTPUT_DIRECTORY = @PROJECT_BINARY_DIR@/doc-scopes-qt # If the CREATE_SUBDIRS tag is set to YES, then doxygen will create # 4096 sub-directories (in 2 levels) under the output directory of each output # format and will distribute the generated files over these directories. # Enabling this option can be useful when feeding doxygen a huge amount of # source files, where putting all generated files in the same directory would # otherwise cause performance problems for the file system. CREATE_SUBDIRS = NO # The OUTPUT_LANGUAGE tag is used to specify the language in which all # documentation generated by doxygen is written. Doxygen will use this # information to generate all constant output in the proper language. # The default language is English, other supported languages are: # Afrikaans, Arabic, Brazilian, Catalan, Chinese, Chinese-Traditional, # Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Esperanto, Farsi, Finnish, French, German, # Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Japanese-en (Japanese with English # messages), Korean, Korean-en, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Macedonian, Persian, # Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Serbian-Cyrillic, Slovak, # Slovene, Spanish, Swedish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese. OUTPUT_LANGUAGE = English # If the BRIEF_MEMBER_DESC tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # include brief member descriptions after the members that are listed in # the file and class documentation (similar to JavaDoc). # Set to NO to disable this. BRIEF_MEMBER_DESC = YES # If the REPEAT_BRIEF tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will prepend # the brief description of a member or function before the detailed description. # Note: if both HIDE_UNDOC_MEMBERS and BRIEF_MEMBER_DESC are set to NO, the # brief descriptions will be completely suppressed. REPEAT_BRIEF = YES # This tag implements a quasi-intelligent brief description abbreviator # that is used to form the text in various listings. Each string # in this list, if found as the leading text of the brief description, will be # stripped from the text and the result after processing the whole list, is # used as the annotated text. Otherwise, the brief description is used as-is. # If left blank, the following values are used ("$name" is automatically # replaced with the name of the entity): "The $name class" "The $name widget" # "The $name file" "is" "provides" "specifies" "contains" # "represents" "a" "an" "the" ABBREVIATE_BRIEF = "The $name class" \ "The $name widget" \ "The $name file" \ is \ provides \ specifies \ contains \ represents \ a \ an \ the # If the ALWAYS_DETAILED_SEC and REPEAT_BRIEF tags are both set to YES then # Doxygen will generate a detailed section even if there is only a brief # description. ALWAYS_DETAILED_SEC = NO # If the INLINE_INHERITED_MEMB tag is set to YES, doxygen will show all # inherited members of a class in the documentation of that class as if those # members were ordinary class members. Constructors, destructors and assignment # operators of the base classes will not be shown. INLINE_INHERITED_MEMB = NO # If the FULL_PATH_NAMES tag is set to YES then Doxygen will prepend the full # path before files name in the file list and in the header files. If set # to NO the shortest path that makes the file name unique will be used. FULL_PATH_NAMES = YES # If the FULL_PATH_NAMES tag is set to YES then the STRIP_FROM_PATH tag # can be used to strip a user-defined part of the path. Stripping is # only done if one of the specified strings matches the left-hand part of # the path. The tag can be used to show relative paths in the file list. # If left blank the directory from which doxygen is run is used as the # path to strip. STRIP_FROM_PATH = @PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR@ @PROJECT_BINARY_DIR@ # The STRIP_FROM_INC_PATH tag can be used to strip a user-defined part of # the path mentioned in the documentation of a class, which tells # the reader which header file to include in order to use a class. # If left blank only the name of the header file containing the class # definition is used. Otherwise one should specify the include paths that # are normally passed to the compiler using the -I flag. STRIP_FROM_INC_PATH = @PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR@/include @PROJECT_BINARY_DIR@/include # If the SHORT_NAMES tag is set to YES, doxygen will generate much shorter # (but less readable) file names. This can be useful if your file system # doesn't support long names like on DOS, Mac, or CD-ROM. SHORT_NAMES = NO # If the JAVADOC_AUTOBRIEF tag is set to YES then Doxygen # will interpret the first line (until the first dot) of a JavaDoc-style # comment as the brief description. If set to NO, the JavaDoc # comments will behave just like regular Qt-style comments # (thus requiring an explicit @brief command for a brief description.) JAVADOC_AUTOBRIEF = NO # If the QT_AUTOBRIEF tag is set to YES then Doxygen will # interpret the first line (until the first dot) of a Qt-style # comment as the brief description. If set to NO, the comments # will behave just like regular Qt-style comments (thus requiring # an explicit \brief command for a brief description.) QT_AUTOBRIEF = NO # The MULTILINE_CPP_IS_BRIEF tag can be set to YES to make Doxygen # treat a multi-line C++ special comment block (i.e. a block of //! or /// # comments) as a brief description. This used to be the default behaviour. # The new default is to treat a multi-line C++ comment block as a detailed # description. Set this tag to YES if you prefer the old behaviour instead. MULTILINE_CPP_IS_BRIEF = NO # If the INHERIT_DOCS tag is set to YES (the default) then an undocumented # member inherits the documentation from any documented member that it # re-implements. INHERIT_DOCS = YES # If the SEPARATE_MEMBER_PAGES tag is set to YES, then doxygen will produce # a new page for each member. If set to NO, the documentation of a member will # be part of the file/class/namespace that contains it. SEPARATE_MEMBER_PAGES = NO # The TAB_SIZE tag can be used to set the number of spaces in a tab. # Doxygen uses this value to replace tabs by spaces in code fragments. TAB_SIZE = 8 # This tag can be used to specify a number of aliases that acts # as commands in the documentation. An alias has the form "name=value". # For example adding "sideeffect=\par Side Effects:\n" will allow you to # put the command \sideeffect (or @sideeffect) in the documentation, which # will result in a user-defined paragraph with heading "Side Effects:". # You can put \n's in the value part of an alias to insert newlines. ALIASES = # This tag can be used to specify a number of word-keyword mappings (TCL only). # A mapping has the form "name=value". For example adding # "class=itcl::class" will allow you to use the command class in the # itcl::class meaning. TCL_SUBST = # Set the OPTIMIZE_OUTPUT_FOR_C tag to YES if your project consists of C # sources only. Doxygen will then generate output that is more tailored for C. # For instance, some of the names that are used will be different. The list # of all members will be omitted, etc. OPTIMIZE_OUTPUT_FOR_C = NO # Set the OPTIMIZE_OUTPUT_JAVA tag to YES if your project consists of Java # sources only. Doxygen will then generate output that is more tailored for # Java. For instance, namespaces will be presented as packages, qualified # scopes will look different, etc. OPTIMIZE_OUTPUT_JAVA = NO # Set the OPTIMIZE_FOR_FORTRAN tag to YES if your project consists of Fortran # sources only. Doxygen will then generate output that is more tailored for # Fortran. OPTIMIZE_FOR_FORTRAN = NO # Set the OPTIMIZE_OUTPUT_VHDL tag to YES if your project consists of VHDL # sources. Doxygen will then generate output that is tailored for # VHDL. OPTIMIZE_OUTPUT_VHDL = NO # Doxygen selects the parser to use depending on the extension of the files it # parses. With this tag you can assign which parser to use for a given extension. # Doxygen has a built-in mapping, but you can override or extend it using this # tag. The format is ext=language, where ext is a file extension, and language # is one of the parsers supported by doxygen: IDL, Java, Javascript, CSharp, C, # C++, D, PHP, Objective-C, Python, Fortran, VHDL, C, C++. For instance to make # doxygen treat .inc files as Fortran files (default is PHP), and .f files as C # (default is Fortran), use: inc=Fortran f=C. Note that for custom extensions # you also need to set FILE_PATTERNS otherwise the files are not read by doxygen. EXTENSION_MAPPING = # If MARKDOWN_SUPPORT is enabled (the default) then doxygen pre-processes all # comments according to the Markdown format, which allows for more readable # documentation. See http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/ for details. # The output of markdown processing is further processed by doxygen, so you # can mix doxygen, HTML, and XML commands with Markdown formatting. # Disable only in case of backward compatibilities issues. MARKDOWN_SUPPORT = YES # If you use STL classes (i.e. std::string, std::vector, etc.) but do not want # to include (a tag file for) the STL sources as input, then you should # set this tag to YES in order to let doxygen match functions declarations and # definitions whose arguments contain STL classes (e.g. func(std::string); v.s. # func(std::string) {}). This also makes the inheritance and collaboration # diagrams that involve STL classes more complete and accurate. BUILTIN_STL_SUPPORT = YES # If you use Microsoft's C++/CLI language, you should set this option to YES to # enable parsing support. CPP_CLI_SUPPORT = NO # Set the SIP_SUPPORT tag to YES if your project consists of sip sources only. # Doxygen will parse them like normal C++ but will assume all classes use public # instead of private inheritance when no explicit protection keyword is present. SIP_SUPPORT = NO # For Microsoft's IDL there are propget and propput attributes to indicate getter # and setter methods for a property. Setting this option to YES (the default) # will make doxygen replace the get and set methods by a property in the # documentation. This will only work if the methods are indeed getting or # setting a simple type. If this is not the case, or you want to show the # methods anyway, you should set this option to NO. IDL_PROPERTY_SUPPORT = YES # If member grouping is used in the documentation and the DISTRIBUTE_GROUP_DOC # tag is set to YES, then doxygen will reuse the documentation of the first # member in the group (if any) for the other members of the group. By default # all members of a group must be documented explicitly. DISTRIBUTE_GROUP_DOC = NO # Set the SUBGROUPING tag to YES (the default) to allow class member groups of # the same type (for instance a group of public functions) to be put as a # subgroup of that type (e.g. under the Public Functions section). Set it to # NO to prevent subgrouping. Alternatively, this can be done per class using # the \nosubgrouping command. SUBGROUPING = YES # When the INLINE_GROUPED_CLASSES tag is set to YES, classes, structs and # unions are shown inside the group in which they are included (e.g. using # @ingroup) instead of on a separate page (for HTML and Man pages) or # section (for LaTeX and RTF). INLINE_GROUPED_CLASSES = NO # When the INLINE_SIMPLE_STRUCTS tag is set to YES, structs, classes, and # unions with only public data fields will be shown inline in the documentation # of the scope in which they are defined (i.e. file, namespace, or group # documentation), provided this scope is documented. If set to NO (the default), # structs, classes, and unions are shown on a separate page (for HTML and Man # pages) or section (for LaTeX and RTF). INLINE_SIMPLE_STRUCTS = NO # When TYPEDEF_HIDES_STRUCT is enabled, a typedef of a struct, union, or enum # is documented as struct, union, or enum with the name of the typedef. So # typedef struct TypeS {} TypeT, will appear in the documentation as a struct # with name TypeT. When disabled the typedef will appear as a member of a file, # namespace, or class. And the struct will be named TypeS. This can typically # be useful for C code in case the coding convention dictates that all compound # types are typedef'ed and only the typedef is referenced, never the tag name. TYPEDEF_HIDES_STRUCT = NO # Similar to the SYMBOL_CACHE_SIZE the size of the symbol lookup cache can be # set using LOOKUP_CACHE_SIZE. This cache is used to resolve symbols given # their name and scope. Since this can be an expensive process and often the # same symbol appear multiple times in the code, doxygen keeps a cache of # pre-resolved symbols. If the cache is too small doxygen will become slower. # If the cache is too large, memory is wasted. The cache size is given by this # formula: 2^(16+LOOKUP_CACHE_SIZE). The valid range is 0..9, the default is 0, # corresponding to a cache size of 2^16 = 65536 symbols. LOOKUP_CACHE_SIZE = 0 #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Build related configuration options #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the EXTRACT_ALL tag is set to YES doxygen will assume all entities in # documentation are documented, even if no documentation was available. # Private class members and static file members will be hidden unless # the EXTRACT_PRIVATE and EXTRACT_STATIC tags are set to YES EXTRACT_ALL = NO # If the EXTRACT_PRIVATE tag is set to YES all private members of a class # will be included in the documentation. EXTRACT_PRIVATE = NO # If the EXTRACT_PACKAGE tag is set to YES all members with package or internal # scope will be included in the documentation. EXTRACT_PACKAGE = NO # If the EXTRACT_STATIC tag is set to YES all static members of a file # will be included in the documentation. EXTRACT_STATIC = NO # If the EXTRACT_LOCAL_CLASSES tag is set to YES classes (and structs) # defined locally in source files will be included in the documentation. # If set to NO only classes defined in header files are included. EXTRACT_LOCAL_CLASSES = YES # This flag is only useful for Objective-C code. When set to YES local # methods, which are defined in the implementation section but not in # the interface are included in the documentation. # If set to NO (the default) only methods in the interface are included. EXTRACT_LOCAL_METHODS = NO # If this flag is set to YES, the members of anonymous namespaces will be # extracted and appear in the documentation as a namespace called # 'anonymous_namespace{file}', where file will be replaced with the base # name of the file that contains the anonymous namespace. By default # anonymous namespaces are hidden. EXTRACT_ANON_NSPACES = NO # If the HIDE_UNDOC_MEMBERS tag is set to YES, Doxygen will hide all # undocumented members of documented classes, files or namespaces. # If set to NO (the default) these members will be included in the # various overviews, but no documentation section is generated. # This option has no effect if EXTRACT_ALL is enabled. HIDE_UNDOC_MEMBERS = NO # If the HIDE_UNDOC_CLASSES tag is set to YES, Doxygen will hide all # undocumented classes that are normally visible in the class hierarchy. # If set to NO (the default) these classes will be included in the various # overviews. This option has no effect if EXTRACT_ALL is enabled. HIDE_UNDOC_CLASSES = NO # If the HIDE_FRIEND_COMPOUNDS tag is set to YES, Doxygen will hide all # friend (class|struct|union) declarations. # If set to NO (the default) these declarations will be included in the # documentation. HIDE_FRIEND_COMPOUNDS = YES # If the HIDE_IN_BODY_DOCS tag is set to YES, Doxygen will hide any # documentation blocks found inside the body of a function. # If set to NO (the default) these blocks will be appended to the # function's detailed documentation block. HIDE_IN_BODY_DOCS = NO # The INTERNAL_DOCS tag determines if documentation # that is typed after a \internal command is included. If the tag is set # to NO (the default) then the documentation will be excluded. # Set it to YES to include the internal documentation. INTERNAL_DOCS = NO # If the CASE_SENSE_NAMES tag is set to NO then Doxygen will only generate # file names in lower-case letters. If set to YES upper-case letters are also # allowed. This is useful if you have classes or files whose names only differ # in case and if your file system supports case sensitive file names. Windows # and Mac users are advised to set this option to NO. CASE_SENSE_NAMES = NO # If the HIDE_SCOPE_NAMES tag is set to NO (the default) then Doxygen # will show members with their full class and namespace scopes in the # documentation. If set to YES the scope will be hidden. HIDE_SCOPE_NAMES = NO # If the SHOW_INCLUDE_FILES tag is set to YES (the default) then Doxygen # will put a list of the files that are included by a file in the documentation # of that file. SHOW_INCLUDE_FILES = YES # If the FORCE_LOCAL_INCLUDES tag is set to YES then Doxygen # will list include files with double quotes in the documentation # rather than with sharp brackets. FORCE_LOCAL_INCLUDES = NO # If the INLINE_INFO tag is set to YES (the default) then a tag [inline] # is inserted in the documentation for inline members. INLINE_INFO = YES # If the SORT_MEMBER_DOCS tag is set to YES (the default) then doxygen # will sort the (detailed) documentation of file and class members # alphabetically by member name. If set to NO the members will appear in # declaration order. SORT_MEMBER_DOCS = YES # If the SORT_BRIEF_DOCS tag is set to YES then doxygen will sort the # brief documentation of file, namespace and class members alphabetically # by member name. If set to NO (the default) the members will appear in # declaration order. SORT_BRIEF_DOCS = NO # If the SORT_MEMBERS_CTORS_1ST tag is set to YES then doxygen # will sort the (brief and detailed) documentation of class members so that # constructors and destructors are listed first. If set to NO (the default) # the constructors will appear in the respective orders defined by # SORT_MEMBER_DOCS and SORT_BRIEF_DOCS. # This tag will be ignored for brief docs if SORT_BRIEF_DOCS is set to NO # and ignored for detailed docs if SORT_MEMBER_DOCS is set to NO. SORT_MEMBERS_CTORS_1ST = NO # If the SORT_GROUP_NAMES tag is set to YES then doxygen will sort the # hierarchy of group names into alphabetical order. If set to NO (the default) # the group names will appear in their defined order. SORT_GROUP_NAMES = NO # If the SORT_BY_SCOPE_NAME tag is set to YES, the class list will be # sorted by fully-qualified names, including namespaces. If set to # NO (the default), the class list will be sorted only by class name, # not including the namespace part. # Note: This option is not very useful if HIDE_SCOPE_NAMES is set to YES. # Note: This option applies only to the class list, not to the # alphabetical list. SORT_BY_SCOPE_NAME = NO # If the STRICT_PROTO_MATCHING option is enabled and doxygen fails to # do proper type resolution of all parameters of a function it will reject a # match between the prototype and the implementation of a member function even # if there is only one candidate or it is obvious which candidate to choose # by doing a simple string match. By disabling STRICT_PROTO_MATCHING doxygen # will still accept a match between prototype and implementation in such cases. STRICT_PROTO_MATCHING = NO # The GENERATE_TODOLIST tag can be used to enable (YES) or # disable (NO) the todo list. This list is created by putting \todo # commands in the documentation. GENERATE_TODOLIST = YES # The GENERATE_TESTLIST tag can be used to enable (YES) or # disable (NO) the test list. This list is created by putting \test # commands in the documentation. GENERATE_TESTLIST = YES # The GENERATE_BUGLIST tag can be used to enable (YES) or # disable (NO) the bug list. This list is created by putting \bug # commands in the documentation. GENERATE_BUGLIST = YES # The GENERATE_DEPRECATEDLIST tag can be used to enable (YES) or # disable (NO) the deprecated list. This list is created by putting # \deprecated commands in the documentation. GENERATE_DEPRECATEDLIST= YES # The ENABLED_SECTIONS tag can be used to enable conditional # documentation sections, marked by \if sectionname ... \endif. ENABLED_SECTIONS = # The MAX_INITIALIZER_LINES tag determines the maximum number of lines # the initial value of a variable or macro consists of for it to appear in # the documentation. If the initializer consists of more lines than specified # here it will be hidden. Use a value of 0 to hide initializers completely. # The appearance of the initializer of individual variables and macros in the # documentation can be controlled using \showinitializer or \hideinitializer # command in the documentation regardless of this setting. MAX_INITIALIZER_LINES = 30 # Set the SHOW_USED_FILES tag to NO to disable the list of files generated # at the bottom of the documentation of classes and structs. If set to YES the # list will mention the files that were used to generate the documentation. SHOW_USED_FILES = YES # Set the SHOW_FILES tag to NO to disable the generation of the Files page. # This will remove the Files entry from the Quick Index and from the # Folder Tree View (if specified). The default is YES. SHOW_FILES = YES # Set the SHOW_NAMESPACES tag to NO to disable the generation of the # Namespaces page. This will remove the Namespaces entry from the Quick Index # and from the Folder Tree View (if specified). The default is YES. SHOW_NAMESPACES = YES # The FILE_VERSION_FILTER tag can be used to specify a program or script that # doxygen should invoke to get the current version for each file (typically from # the version control system). Doxygen will invoke the program by executing (via # popen()) the command , where is the value of # the FILE_VERSION_FILTER tag, and is the name of an input file # provided by doxygen. Whatever the program writes to standard output # is used as the file version. See the manual for examples. FILE_VERSION_FILTER = # The LAYOUT_FILE tag can be used to specify a layout file which will be parsed # by doxygen. The layout file controls the global structure of the generated # output files in an output format independent way. To create the layout file # that represents doxygen's defaults, run doxygen with the -l option. # You can optionally specify a file name after the option, if omitted # DoxygenLayout.xml will be used as the name of the layout file. LAYOUT_FILE = # The CITE_BIB_FILES tag can be used to specify one or more bib files # containing the references data. This must be a list of .bib files. The # .bib extension is automatically appended if omitted. Using this command # requires the bibtex tool to be installed. See also # http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BibTeX for more info. For LaTeX the style # of the bibliography can be controlled using LATEX_BIB_STYLE. To use this # feature you need bibtex and perl available in the search path. CITE_BIB_FILES = #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to warning and progress messages #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # The QUIET tag can be used to turn on/off the messages that are generated # by doxygen. Possible values are YES and NO. If left blank NO is used. QUIET = YES # The WARNINGS tag can be used to turn on/off the warning messages that are # generated by doxygen. Possible values are YES and NO. If left blank # NO is used. WARNINGS = YES # If WARN_IF_UNDOCUMENTED is set to YES, then doxygen will generate warnings # for undocumented members. If EXTRACT_ALL is set to YES then this flag will # automatically be disabled. WARN_IF_UNDOCUMENTED = YES # If WARN_IF_DOC_ERROR is set to YES, doxygen will generate warnings for # potential errors in the documentation, such as not documenting some # parameters in a documented function, or documenting parameters that # don't exist or using markup commands wrongly. WARN_IF_DOC_ERROR = YES # The WARN_NO_PARAMDOC option can be enabled to get warnings for # functions that are documented, but have no documentation for their parameters # or return value. If set to NO (the default) doxygen will only warn about # wrong or incomplete parameter documentation, but not about the absence of # documentation. WARN_NO_PARAMDOC = NO # The WARN_FORMAT tag determines the format of the warning messages that # doxygen can produce. The string should contain the $file, $line, and $text # tags, which will be replaced by the file and line number from which the # warning originated and the warning text. Optionally the format may contain # $version, which will be replaced by the version of the file (if it could # be obtained via FILE_VERSION_FILTER) WARN_FORMAT = "$file:$line: $text" # The WARN_LOGFILE tag can be used to specify a file to which warning # and error messages should be written. If left blank the output is written # to stderr. #WARN_LOGFILE = @CMAKE_BINARY_DIR@/doxygen-warnings.txt #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the input files #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # The INPUT tag can be used to specify the files and/or directories that contain # documented source files. You may enter file names like "myfile.cpp" or # directories like "/usr/src/myproject". Separate the files or directories # with spaces. INPUT = @PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR@/include/unity/scopes/qt # This tag can be used to specify the character encoding of the source files # that doxygen parses. Internally doxygen uses the UTF-8 encoding, which is # also the default input encoding. Doxygen uses libiconv (or the iconv built # into libc) for the transcoding. See http://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv for # the list of possible encodings. INPUT_ENCODING = UTF-8 # If the value of the INPUT tag contains directories, you can use the # FILE_PATTERNS tag to specify one or more wildcard pattern (like *.cpp # and *.h) to filter out the source-files in the directories. If left # blank the following patterns are tested: # *.c *.cc *.cxx *.cpp *.c++ *.d *.java *.ii *.ixx *.ipp *.i++ *.inl *.h *.hh # *.hxx *.hpp *.h++ *.idl *.odl *.cs *.php *.php3 *.inc *.m *.mm *.dox *.py # *.f90 *.f *.for *.vhd *.vhdl FILE_PATTERNS = *.c \ *.cc \ *.cxx \ *.cpp \ *.c++ \ *.d \ *.java \ *.ii \ *.ixx \ *.ipp \ *.i++ \ *.inl \ *.h \ *.hh \ *.hxx \ *.hpp \ *.h++ \ *.idl \ *.odl \ *.cs \ *.php \ *.php3 \ *.inc \ *.m \ *.markdown \ *.md \ *.mm \ *.dox \ *.py \ *.f90 \ *.f \ *.for \ *.vhd \ *.vhdl # The RECURSIVE tag can be used to turn specify whether or not subdirectories # should be searched for input files as well. Possible values are YES and NO. # If left blank NO is used. RECURSIVE = YES # The EXCLUDE tag can be used to specify files and/or directories that should be # excluded from the INPUT source files. This way you can easily exclude a # subdirectory from a directory tree whose root is specified with the INPUT tag. # Note that relative paths are relative to the directory from which doxygen is # run. EXCLUDE = # The EXCLUDE_SYMLINKS tag can be used to select whether or not files or # directories that are symbolic links (a Unix file system feature) are excluded # from the input. EXCLUDE_SYMLINKS = NO # If the value of the INPUT tag contains directories, you can use the # EXCLUDE_PATTERNS tag to specify one or more wildcard patterns to exclude # certain files from those directories. Note that the wildcards are matched # against the file with absolute path, so to exclude all test directories # for example use the pattern */test/* EXCLUDE_PATTERNS = */internal/* # The EXCLUDE_SYMBOLS tag can be used to specify one or more symbol names # (namespaces, classes, functions, etc.) that should be excluded from the # output. The symbol name can be a fully qualified name, a word, or if the # wildcard * is used, a substring. Examples: ANamespace, AClass, # AClass::ANamespace, ANamespace::*Test EXCLUDE_SYMBOLS = *::internal::* *::experimental::* # The EXAMPLE_PATH tag can be used to specify one or more files or # directories that contain example code fragments that are included (see # the \include command). EXAMPLE_PATH = # If the value of the EXAMPLE_PATH tag contains directories, you can use the # EXAMPLE_PATTERNS tag to specify one or more wildcard pattern (like *.cpp # and *.h) to filter out the source-files in the directories. If left # blank all files are included. EXAMPLE_PATTERNS = * # If the EXAMPLE_RECURSIVE tag is set to YES then subdirectories will be # searched for input files to be used with the \include or \dontinclude # commands irrespective of the value of the RECURSIVE tag. # Possible values are YES and NO. If left blank NO is used. EXAMPLE_RECURSIVE = NO # The IMAGE_PATH tag can be used to specify one or more files or # directories that contain image that are included in the documentation (see # the \image command). IMAGE_PATH = # The INPUT_FILTER tag can be used to specify a program that doxygen should # invoke to filter for each input file. Doxygen will invoke the filter program # by executing (via popen()) the command , where # is the value of the INPUT_FILTER tag, and is the name of an # input file. Doxygen will then use the output that the filter program writes # to standard output. If FILTER_PATTERNS is specified, this tag will be # ignored. INPUT_FILTER = # The FILTER_PATTERNS tag can be used to specify filters on a per file pattern # basis. Doxygen will compare the file name with each pattern and apply the # filter if there is a match. The filters are a list of the form: # pattern=filter (like *.cpp=my_cpp_filter). See INPUT_FILTER for further # info on how filters are used. If FILTER_PATTERNS is empty or if # non of the patterns match the file name, INPUT_FILTER is applied. FILTER_PATTERNS = # If the FILTER_SOURCE_FILES tag is set to YES, the input filter (if set using # INPUT_FILTER) will be used to filter the input files when producing source # files to browse (i.e. when SOURCE_BROWSER is set to YES). FILTER_SOURCE_FILES = NO # The FILTER_SOURCE_PATTERNS tag can be used to specify source filters per file # pattern. A pattern will override the setting for FILTER_PATTERN (if any) # and it is also possible to disable source filtering for a specific pattern # using *.ext= (so without naming a filter). This option only has effect when # FILTER_SOURCE_FILES is enabled. FILTER_SOURCE_PATTERNS = #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to source browsing #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the SOURCE_BROWSER tag is set to YES then a list of source files will # be generated. Documented entities will be cross-referenced with these sources. # Note: To get rid of all source code in the generated output, make sure also # VERBATIM_HEADERS is set to NO. SOURCE_BROWSER = NO # Setting the INLINE_SOURCES tag to YES will include the body # of functions and classes directly in the documentation. INLINE_SOURCES = NO # Setting the STRIP_CODE_COMMENTS tag to YES (the default) will instruct # doxygen to hide any special comment blocks from generated source code # fragments. Normal C, C++ and Fortran comments will always remain visible. STRIP_CODE_COMMENTS = YES # If the REFERENCED_BY_RELATION tag is set to YES # then for each documented function all documented # functions referencing it will be listed. REFERENCED_BY_RELATION = NO # If the REFERENCES_RELATION tag is set to YES # then for each documented function all documented entities # called/used by that function will be listed. REFERENCES_RELATION = NO # If the REFERENCES_LINK_SOURCE tag is set to YES (the default) # and SOURCE_BROWSER tag is set to YES, then the hyperlinks from # functions in REFERENCES_RELATION and REFERENCED_BY_RELATION lists will # link to the source code. Otherwise they will link to the documentation. REFERENCES_LINK_SOURCE = YES # If the USE_HTAGS tag is set to YES then the references to source code # will point to the HTML generated by the htags(1) tool instead of doxygen # built-in source browser. The htags tool is part of GNU's global source # tagging system (see http://www.gnu.org/software/global/global.html). You # will need version 4.8.6 or higher. USE_HTAGS = NO # If the VERBATIM_HEADERS tag is set to YES (the default) then Doxygen # will generate a verbatim copy of the header file for each class for # which an include is specified. Set to NO to disable this. VERBATIM_HEADERS = YES #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the alphabetical class index #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the ALPHABETICAL_INDEX tag is set to YES, an alphabetical index # of all compounds will be generated. Enable this if the project # contains a lot of classes, structs, unions or interfaces. ALPHABETICAL_INDEX = YES # If the alphabetical index is enabled (see ALPHABETICAL_INDEX) then # the COLS_IN_ALPHA_INDEX tag can be used to specify the number of columns # in which this list will be split (can be a number in the range [1..20]) COLS_IN_ALPHA_INDEX = 5 # In case all classes in a project start with a common prefix, all # classes will be put under the same header in the alphabetical index. # The IGNORE_PREFIX tag can be used to specify one or more prefixes that # should be ignored while generating the index headers. IGNORE_PREFIX = #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the HTML output #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the GENERATE_HTML tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # generate HTML output. GENERATE_HTML = YES # The HTML_OUTPUT tag is used to specify where the HTML docs will be put. # If a relative path is entered the value of OUTPUT_DIRECTORY will be # put in front of it. If left blank `html' will be used as the default path. HTML_OUTPUT = unity-scopes-qt # The HTML_FILE_EXTENSION tag can be used to specify the file extension for # each generated HTML page (for example: .htm,.php,.asp). If it is left blank # doxygen will generate files with .html extension. HTML_FILE_EXTENSION = .html # The HTML_HEADER tag can be used to specify a personal HTML header for # each generated HTML page. If it is left blank doxygen will generate a # standard header. Note that when using a custom header you are responsible # for the proper inclusion of any scripts and style sheets that doxygen # needs, which is dependent on the configuration options used. # It is advised to generate a default header using "doxygen -w html # header.html footer.html stylesheet.css YourConfigFile" and then modify # that header. Note that the header is subject to change so you typically # have to redo this when upgrading to a newer version of doxygen or when # changing the value of configuration settings such as GENERATE_TREEVIEW! HTML_HEADER = # The HTML_FOOTER tag can be used to specify a personal HTML footer for # each generated HTML page. If it is left blank doxygen will generate a # standard footer. HTML_FOOTER = # The HTML_STYLESHEET tag can be used to specify a user-defined cascading # style sheet that is used by each HTML page. It can be used to # fine-tune the look of the HTML output. If the tag is left blank doxygen # will generate a default style sheet. Note that doxygen will try to copy # the style sheet file to the HTML output directory, so don't put your own # style sheet in the HTML output directory as well, or it will be erased! HTML_STYLESHEET = # The HTML_EXTRA_FILES tag can be used to specify one or more extra images or # other source files which should be copied to the HTML output directory. Note # that these files will be copied to the base HTML output directory. Use the # $relpath$ marker in the HTML_HEADER and/or HTML_FOOTER files to load these # files. In the HTML_STYLESHEET file, use the file name only. Also note that # the files will be copied as-is; there are no commands or markers available. HTML_EXTRA_FILES = # The HTML_COLORSTYLE_HUE tag controls the color of the HTML output. # Doxygen will adjust the colors in the style sheet and background images # according to this color. Hue is specified as an angle on a colorwheel, # see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hue for more information. # For instance the value 0 represents red, 60 is yellow, 120 is green, # 180 is cyan, 240 is blue, 300 purple, and 360 is red again. # The allowed range is 0 to 359. HTML_COLORSTYLE_HUE = 220 # The HTML_COLORSTYLE_SAT tag controls the purity (or saturation) of # the colors in the HTML output. For a value of 0 the output will use # grayscales only. A value of 255 will produce the most vivid colors. HTML_COLORSTYLE_SAT = 100 # The HTML_COLORSTYLE_GAMMA tag controls the gamma correction applied to # the luminance component of the colors in the HTML output. Values below # 100 gradually make the output lighter, whereas values above 100 make # the output darker. The value divided by 100 is the actual gamma applied, # so 80 represents a gamma of 0.8, The value 220 represents a gamma of 2.2, # and 100 does not change the gamma. HTML_COLORSTYLE_GAMMA = 80 # If the HTML_TIMESTAMP tag is set to YES then the footer of each generated HTML # page will contain the date and time when the page was generated. Setting # this to NO can help when comparing the output of multiple runs. HTML_TIMESTAMP = YES # If the HTML_DYNAMIC_SECTIONS tag is set to YES then the generated HTML # documentation will contain sections that can be hidden and shown after the # page has loaded. HTML_DYNAMIC_SECTIONS = NO # With HTML_INDEX_NUM_ENTRIES one can control the preferred number of # entries shown in the various tree structured indices initially; the user # can expand and collapse entries dynamically later on. Doxygen will expand # the tree to such a level that at most the specified number of entries are # visible (unless a fully collapsed tree already exceeds this amount). # So setting the number of entries 1 will produce a full collapsed tree by # default. 0 is a special value representing an infinite number of entries # and will result in a full expanded tree by default. HTML_INDEX_NUM_ENTRIES = 100 # If the GENERATE_DOCSET tag is set to YES, additional index files # will be generated that can be used as input for Apple's Xcode 3 # integrated development environment, introduced with OSX 10.5 (Leopard). # To create a documentation set, doxygen will generate a Makefile in the # HTML output directory. Running make will produce the docset in that # directory and running "make install" will install the docset in # ~/Library/Developer/Shared/Documentation/DocSets so that Xcode will find # it at startup. # See http://developer.apple.com/tools/creatingdocsetswithdoxygen.html # for more information. GENERATE_DOCSET = NO # When GENERATE_DOCSET tag is set to YES, this tag determines the name of the # feed. A documentation feed provides an umbrella under which multiple # documentation sets from a single provider (such as a company or product suite) # can be grouped. DOCSET_FEEDNAME = "Doxygen generated docs" # When GENERATE_DOCSET tag is set to YES, this tag specifies a string that # should uniquely identify the documentation set bundle. This should be a # reverse domain-name style string, e.g. com.mycompany.MyDocSet. Doxygen # will append .docset to the name. DOCSET_BUNDLE_ID = org.doxygen.Project # When GENERATE_PUBLISHER_ID tag specifies a string that should uniquely identify # the documentation publisher. This should be a reverse domain-name style # string, e.g. com.mycompany.MyDocSet.documentation. DOCSET_PUBLISHER_ID = org.doxygen.Publisher # The GENERATE_PUBLISHER_NAME tag identifies the documentation publisher. DOCSET_PUBLISHER_NAME = Publisher # If the GENERATE_HTMLHELP tag is set to YES, additional index files # will be generated that can be used as input for tools like the # Microsoft HTML help workshop to generate a compiled HTML help file (.chm) # of the generated HTML documentation. GENERATE_HTMLHELP = NO # If the GENERATE_HTMLHELP tag is set to YES, the CHM_FILE tag can # be used to specify the file name of the resulting .chm file. You # can add a path in front of the file if the result should not be # written to the html output directory. CHM_FILE = # If the GENERATE_HTMLHELP tag is set to YES, the HHC_LOCATION tag can # be used to specify the location (absolute path including file name) of # the HTML help compiler (hhc.exe). If non-empty doxygen will try to run # the HTML help compiler on the generated index.hhp. HHC_LOCATION = # If the GENERATE_HTMLHELP tag is set to YES, the GENERATE_CHI flag # controls if a separate .chi index file is generated (YES) or that # it should be included in the master .chm file (NO). GENERATE_CHI = NO # If the GENERATE_HTMLHELP tag is set to YES, the CHM_INDEX_ENCODING # is used to encode HtmlHelp index (hhk), content (hhc) and project file # content. CHM_INDEX_ENCODING = # If the GENERATE_HTMLHELP tag is set to YES, the BINARY_TOC flag # controls whether a binary table of contents is generated (YES) or a # normal table of contents (NO) in the .chm file. BINARY_TOC = NO # The TOC_EXPAND flag can be set to YES to add extra items for group members # to the contents of the HTML help documentation and to the tree view. TOC_EXPAND = NO # If the GENERATE_QHP tag is set to YES and both QHP_NAMESPACE and # QHP_VIRTUAL_FOLDER are set, an additional index file will be generated # that can be used as input for Qt's qhelpgenerator to generate a # Qt Compressed Help (.qch) of the generated HTML documentation. GENERATE_QHP = NO # If the QHG_LOCATION tag is specified, the QCH_FILE tag can # be used to specify the file name of the resulting .qch file. # The path specified is relative to the HTML output folder. QCH_FILE = # The QHP_NAMESPACE tag specifies the namespace to use when generating # Qt Help Project output. For more information please see # http://doc.trolltech.com/qthelpproject.html#namespace QHP_NAMESPACE = org.doxygen.Project # The QHP_VIRTUAL_FOLDER tag specifies the namespace to use when generating # Qt Help Project output. For more information please see # http://doc.trolltech.com/qthelpproject.html#virtual-folders QHP_VIRTUAL_FOLDER = doc # If QHP_CUST_FILTER_NAME is set, it specifies the name of a custom filter to # add. For more information please see # http://doc.trolltech.com/qthelpproject.html#custom-filters QHP_CUST_FILTER_NAME = # The QHP_CUST_FILT_ATTRS tag specifies the list of the attributes of the # custom filter to add. For more information please see # # Qt Help Project / Custom Filters. QHP_CUST_FILTER_ATTRS = # The QHP_SECT_FILTER_ATTRS tag specifies the list of the attributes this # project's # filter section matches. # # Qt Help Project / Filter Attributes. QHP_SECT_FILTER_ATTRS = # If the GENERATE_QHP tag is set to YES, the QHG_LOCATION tag can # be used to specify the location of Qt's qhelpgenerator. # If non-empty doxygen will try to run qhelpgenerator on the generated # .qhp file. QHG_LOCATION = # If the GENERATE_ECLIPSEHELP tag is set to YES, additional index files # will be generated, which together with the HTML files, form an Eclipse help # plugin. To install this plugin and make it available under the help contents # menu in Eclipse, the contents of the directory containing the HTML and XML # files needs to be copied into the plugins directory of eclipse. The name of # the directory within the plugins directory should be the same as # the ECLIPSE_DOC_ID value. After copying Eclipse needs to be restarted before # the help appears. GENERATE_ECLIPSEHELP = NO # A unique identifier for the eclipse help plugin. When installing the plugin # the directory name containing the HTML and XML files should also have # this name. ECLIPSE_DOC_ID = org.doxygen.Project # The DISABLE_INDEX tag can be used to turn on/off the condensed index (tabs) # at top of each HTML page. The value NO (the default) enables the index and # the value YES disables it. Since the tabs have the same information as the # navigation tree you can set this option to NO if you already set # GENERATE_TREEVIEW to YES. DISABLE_INDEX = NO # The GENERATE_TREEVIEW tag is used to specify whether a tree-like index # structure should be generated to display hierarchical information. # If the tag value is set to YES, a side panel will be generated # containing a tree-like index structure (just like the one that # is generated for HTML Help). For this to work a browser that supports # JavaScript, DHTML, CSS and frames is required (i.e. any modern browser). # Windows users are probably better off using the HTML help feature. # Since the tree basically has the same information as the tab index you # could consider to set DISABLE_INDEX to NO when enabling this option. GENERATE_TREEVIEW = YES # The ENUM_VALUES_PER_LINE tag can be used to set the number of enum values # (range [0,1..20]) that doxygen will group on one line in the generated HTML # documentation. Note that a value of 0 will completely suppress the enum # values from appearing in the overview section. ENUM_VALUES_PER_LINE = 4 # If the treeview is enabled (see GENERATE_TREEVIEW) then this tag can be # used to set the initial width (in pixels) of the frame in which the tree # is shown. TREEVIEW_WIDTH = 250 # When the EXT_LINKS_IN_WINDOW option is set to YES doxygen will open # links to external symbols imported via tag files in a separate window. EXT_LINKS_IN_WINDOW = NO # Use this tag to change the font size of Latex formulas included # as images in the HTML documentation. The default is 10. Note that # when you change the font size after a successful doxygen run you need # to manually remove any form_*.png images from the HTML output directory # to force them to be regenerated. FORMULA_FONTSIZE = 10 # Use the FORMULA_TRANPARENT tag to determine whether or not the images # generated for formulas are transparent PNGs. Transparent PNGs are # not supported properly for IE 6.0, but are supported on all modern browsers. # Note that when changing this option you need to delete any form_*.png files # in the HTML output before the changes have effect. FORMULA_TRANSPARENT = YES # Enable the USE_MATHJAX option to render LaTeX formulas using MathJax # (see http://www.mathjax.org) which uses client side Javascript for the # rendering instead of using prerendered bitmaps. Use this if you do not # have LaTeX installed or if you want to formulas look prettier in the HTML # output. When enabled you may also need to install MathJax separately and # configure the path to it using the MATHJAX_RELPATH option. USE_MATHJAX = NO # When MathJax is enabled you need to specify the location relative to the # HTML output directory using the MATHJAX_RELPATH option. The destination # directory should contain the MathJax.js script. For instance, if the mathjax # directory is located at the same level as the HTML output directory, then # MATHJAX_RELPATH should be ../mathjax. The default value points to # the MathJax Content Delivery Network so you can quickly see the result without # installing MathJax. However, it is strongly recommended to install a local # copy of MathJax from http://www.mathjax.org before deployment. MATHJAX_RELPATH = http://cdn.mathjax.org/mathjax/latest # The MATHJAX_EXTENSIONS tag can be used to specify one or MathJax extension # names that should be enabled during MathJax rendering. MATHJAX_EXTENSIONS = # When the SEARCHENGINE tag is enabled doxygen will generate a search box # for the HTML output. The underlying search engine uses javascript # and DHTML and should work on any modern browser. Note that when using # HTML help (GENERATE_HTMLHELP), Qt help (GENERATE_QHP), or docsets # (GENERATE_DOCSET) there is already a search function so this one should # typically be disabled. For large projects the javascript based search engine # can be slow, then enabling SERVER_BASED_SEARCH may provide a better solution. SEARCHENGINE = YES # When the SERVER_BASED_SEARCH tag is enabled the search engine will be # implemented using a PHP enabled web server instead of at the web client # using Javascript. Doxygen will generate the search PHP script and index # file to put on the web server. The advantage of the server # based approach is that it scales better to large projects and allows # full text search. The disadvantages are that it is more difficult to setup # and does not have live searching capabilities. SERVER_BASED_SEARCH = NO #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the LaTeX output #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the GENERATE_LATEX tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # generate Latex output. GENERATE_LATEX = NO # The LATEX_OUTPUT tag is used to specify where the LaTeX docs will be put. # If a relative path is entered the value of OUTPUT_DIRECTORY will be # put in front of it. If left blank `latex' will be used as the default path. LATEX_OUTPUT = latex # The LATEX_CMD_NAME tag can be used to specify the LaTeX command name to be # invoked. If left blank `latex' will be used as the default command name. # Note that when enabling USE_PDFLATEX this option is only used for # generating bitmaps for formulas in the HTML output, but not in the # Makefile that is written to the output directory. LATEX_CMD_NAME = latex # The MAKEINDEX_CMD_NAME tag can be used to specify the command name to # generate index for LaTeX. If left blank `makeindex' will be used as the # default command name. MAKEINDEX_CMD_NAME = makeindex # If the COMPACT_LATEX tag is set to YES Doxygen generates more compact # LaTeX documents. This may be useful for small projects and may help to # save some trees in general. COMPACT_LATEX = NO # The PAPER_TYPE tag can be used to set the paper type that is used # by the printer. Possible values are: a4, letter, legal and # executive. If left blank a4wide will be used. PAPER_TYPE = a4 # The EXTRA_PACKAGES tag can be to specify one or more names of LaTeX # packages that should be included in the LaTeX output. EXTRA_PACKAGES = # The LATEX_HEADER tag can be used to specify a personal LaTeX header for # the generated latex document. The header should contain everything until # the first chapter. If it is left blank doxygen will generate a # standard header. Notice: only use this tag if you know what you are doing! LATEX_HEADER = # The LATEX_FOOTER tag can be used to specify a personal LaTeX footer for # the generated latex document. The footer should contain everything after # the last chapter. If it is left blank doxygen will generate a # standard footer. Notice: only use this tag if you know what you are doing! LATEX_FOOTER = # If the PDF_HYPERLINKS tag is set to YES, the LaTeX that is generated # is prepared for conversion to pdf (using ps2pdf). The pdf file will # contain links (just like the HTML output) instead of page references # This makes the output suitable for online browsing using a pdf viewer. PDF_HYPERLINKS = YES # If the USE_PDFLATEX tag is set to YES, pdflatex will be used instead of # plain latex in the generated Makefile. Set this option to YES to get a # higher quality PDF documentation. USE_PDFLATEX = YES # If the LATEX_BATCHMODE tag is set to YES, doxygen will add the \\batchmode. # command to the generated LaTeX files. This will instruct LaTeX to keep # running if errors occur, instead of asking the user for help. # This option is also used when generating formulas in HTML. LATEX_BATCHMODE = NO # If LATEX_HIDE_INDICES is set to YES then doxygen will not # include the index chapters (such as File Index, Compound Index, etc.) # in the output. LATEX_HIDE_INDICES = NO # If LATEX_SOURCE_CODE is set to YES then doxygen will include # source code with syntax highlighting in the LaTeX output. # Note that which sources are shown also depends on other settings # such as SOURCE_BROWSER. LATEX_SOURCE_CODE = NO # The LATEX_BIB_STYLE tag can be used to specify the style to use for the # bibliography, e.g. plainnat, or ieeetr. The default style is "plain". See # http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BibTeX for more info. LATEX_BIB_STYLE = plain #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the RTF output #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the GENERATE_RTF tag is set to YES Doxygen will generate RTF output # The RTF output is optimized for Word 97 and may not look very pretty with # other RTF readers or editors. GENERATE_RTF = NO # The RTF_OUTPUT tag is used to specify where the RTF docs will be put. # If a relative path is entered the value of OUTPUT_DIRECTORY will be # put in front of it. If left blank `rtf' will be used as the default path. RTF_OUTPUT = rtf # If the COMPACT_RTF tag is set to YES Doxygen generates more compact # RTF documents. This may be useful for small projects and may help to # save some trees in general. COMPACT_RTF = NO # If the RTF_HYPERLINKS tag is set to YES, the RTF that is generated # will contain hyperlink fields. The RTF file will # contain links (just like the HTML output) instead of page references. # This makes the output suitable for online browsing using WORD or other # programs which support those fields. # Note: wordpad (write) and others do not support links. RTF_HYPERLINKS = NO # Load style sheet definitions from file. Syntax is similar to doxygen's # config file, i.e. a series of assignments. You only have to provide # replacements, missing definitions are set to their default value. RTF_STYLESHEET_FILE = # Set optional variables used in the generation of an rtf document. # Syntax is similar to doxygen's config file. RTF_EXTENSIONS_FILE = #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the man page output #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the GENERATE_MAN tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # generate man pages GENERATE_MAN = NO # The MAN_OUTPUT tag is used to specify where the man pages will be put. # If a relative path is entered the value of OUTPUT_DIRECTORY will be # put in front of it. If left blank `man' will be used as the default path. MAN_OUTPUT = man # The MAN_EXTENSION tag determines the extension that is added to # the generated man pages (default is the subroutine's section .3) MAN_EXTENSION = .3 # If the MAN_LINKS tag is set to YES and Doxygen generates man output, # then it will generate one additional man file for each entity # documented in the real man page(s). These additional files # only source the real man page, but without them the man command # would be unable to find the correct page. The default is NO. MAN_LINKS = NO #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the XML output #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the GENERATE_XML tag is set to YES Doxygen will # generate an XML file that captures the structure of # the code including all documentation. GENERATE_XML = NO # The XML_OUTPUT tag is used to specify where the XML pages will be put. # If a relative path is entered the value of OUTPUT_DIRECTORY will be # put in front of it. If left blank `xml' will be used as the default path. XML_OUTPUT = xml # If the XML_PROGRAMLISTING tag is set to YES Doxygen will # dump the program listings (including syntax highlighting # and cross-referencing information) to the XML output. Note that # enabling this will significantly increase the size of the XML output. XML_PROGRAMLISTING = YES #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options for the AutoGen Definitions output #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the GENERATE_AUTOGEN_DEF tag is set to YES Doxygen will # generate an AutoGen Definitions (see autogen.sf.net) file # that captures the structure of the code including all # documentation. Note that this feature is still experimental # and incomplete at the moment. GENERATE_AUTOGEN_DEF = NO #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the Perl module output #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the GENERATE_PERLMOD tag is set to YES Doxygen will # generate a Perl module file that captures the structure of # the code including all documentation. Note that this # feature is still experimental and incomplete at the # moment. GENERATE_PERLMOD = NO # If the PERLMOD_LATEX tag is set to YES Doxygen will generate # the necessary Makefile rules, Perl scripts and LaTeX code to be able # to generate PDF and DVI output from the Perl module output. PERLMOD_LATEX = NO # If the PERLMOD_PRETTY tag is set to YES the Perl module output will be # nicely formatted so it can be parsed by a human reader. This is useful # if you want to understand what is going on. On the other hand, if this # tag is set to NO the size of the Perl module output will be much smaller # and Perl will parse it just the same. PERLMOD_PRETTY = YES # The names of the make variables in the generated doxyrules.make file # are prefixed with the string contained in PERLMOD_MAKEVAR_PREFIX. # This is useful so different doxyrules.make files included by the same # Makefile don't overwrite each other's variables. PERLMOD_MAKEVAR_PREFIX = #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Configuration options related to the preprocessor #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the ENABLE_PREPROCESSING tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # evaluate all C-preprocessor directives found in the sources and include # files. ENABLE_PREPROCESSING = YES # If the MACRO_EXPANSION tag is set to YES Doxygen will expand all macro # names in the source code. If set to NO (the default) only conditional # compilation will be performed. Macro expansion can be done in a controlled # way by setting EXPAND_ONLY_PREDEF to YES. MACRO_EXPANSION = NO # If the EXPAND_ONLY_PREDEF and MACRO_EXPANSION tags are both set to YES # then the macro expansion is limited to the macros specified with the # PREDEFINED and EXPAND_AS_DEFINED tags. EXPAND_ONLY_PREDEF = NO # If the SEARCH_INCLUDES tag is set to YES (the default) the includes files # pointed to by INCLUDE_PATH will be searched when a #include is found. SEARCH_INCLUDES = YES # The INCLUDE_PATH tag can be used to specify one or more directories that # contain include files that are not input files but should be processed by # the preprocessor. INCLUDE_PATH = # You can use the INCLUDE_FILE_PATTERNS tag to specify one or more wildcard # patterns (like *.h and *.hpp) to filter out the header-files in the # directories. If left blank, the patterns specified with FILE_PATTERNS will # be used. INCLUDE_FILE_PATTERNS = # The PREDEFINED tag can be used to specify one or more macro names that # are defined before the preprocessor is started (similar to the -D option of # gcc). The argument of the tag is a list of macros of the form: name # or name=definition (no spaces). If the definition and the = are # omitted =1 is assumed. To prevent a macro definition from being # undefined via #undef or recursively expanded use the := operator # instead of the = operator. PREDEFINED = DOXYGEN_SKIP # If the MACRO_EXPANSION and EXPAND_ONLY_PREDEF tags are set to YES then # this tag can be used to specify a list of macro names that should be expanded. # The macro definition that is found in the sources will be used. # Use the PREDEFINED tag if you want to use a different macro definition that # overrules the definition found in the source code. EXPAND_AS_DEFINED = # If the SKIP_FUNCTION_MACROS tag is set to YES (the default) then # doxygen's preprocessor will remove all references to function-like macros # that are alone on a line, have an all uppercase name, and do not end with a # semicolon, because these will confuse the parser if not removed. SKIP_FUNCTION_MACROS = YES #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Configuration::additions related to external references #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # The TAGFILES option can be used to specify one or more tagfiles. For each # tag file the location of the external documentation should be added. The # format of a tag file without this location is as follows: # TAGFILES = file1 file2 ... # Adding location for the tag files is done as follows: # TAGFILES = file1=loc1 "file2 = loc2" ... # where "loc1" and "loc2" can be relative or absolute paths # or URLs. Note that each tag file must have a unique name (where the name does # NOT include the path). If a tag file is not located in the directory in which # doxygen is run, you must also specify the path to the tagfile here. TAGFILES = # When a file name is specified after GENERATE_TAGFILE, doxygen will create # a tag file that is based on the input files it reads. GENERATE_TAGFILE = # If the ALLEXTERNALS tag is set to YES all external classes will be listed # in the class index. If set to NO only the inherited external classes # will be listed. ALLEXTERNALS = NO # If the EXTERNAL_GROUPS tag is set to YES all external groups will be listed # in the modules index. If set to NO, only the current project's groups will # be listed. EXTERNAL_GROUPS = YES # The PERL_PATH should be the absolute path and name of the perl script # interpreter (i.e. the result of `which perl'). PERL_PATH = /usr/bin/perl #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Configuration options related to the dot tool #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the CLASS_DIAGRAMS tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # generate a inheritance diagram (in HTML, RTF and LaTeX) for classes with base # or super classes. Setting the tag to NO turns the diagrams off. Note that # this option also works with HAVE_DOT disabled, but it is recommended to # install and use dot, since it yields more powerful graphs. CLASS_DIAGRAMS = YES # You can define message sequence charts within doxygen comments using the \msc # command. Doxygen will then run the mscgen tool (see # http://www.mcternan.me.uk/mscgen/) to produce the chart and insert it in the # documentation. The MSCGEN_PATH tag allows you to specify the directory where # the mscgen tool resides. If left empty the tool is assumed to be found in the # default search path. DOT_PATH = @DOXYGEN_DOT_PATH@ # If set to YES, the inheritance and collaboration graphs will hide # inheritance and usage relations if the target is undocumented # or is not a class. HIDE_UNDOC_RELATIONS = YES # If you set the HAVE_DOT tag to YES then doxygen will assume the dot tool is # available from the path. This tool is part of Graphviz, a graph visualization # toolkit from AT&T and Lucent Bell Labs. The other options in this section # have no effect if this option is set to NO (the default) HAVE_DOT = YES # The DOT_NUM_THREADS specifies the number of dot invocations doxygen is # allowed to run in parallel. When set to 0 (the default) doxygen will # base this on the number of processors available in the system. You can set it # explicitly to a value larger than 0 to get control over the balance # between CPU load and processing speed. DOT_NUM_THREADS = 0 # By default doxygen will use the Helvetica font for all dot files that # doxygen generates. When you want a differently looking font you can specify # the font name using DOT_FONTNAME. You need to make sure dot is able to find # the font, which can be done by putting it in a standard location or by setting # the DOTFONTPATH environment variable or by setting DOT_FONTPATH to the # directory containing the font. DOT_FONTNAME = Helvetica # The DOT_FONTSIZE tag can be used to set the size of the font of dot graphs. # The default size is 10pt. DOT_FONTSIZE = 10 # By default doxygen will tell dot to use the Helvetica font. # If you specify a different font using DOT_FONTNAME you can use DOT_FONTPATH to # set the path where dot can find it. DOT_FONTPATH = # If the CLASS_GRAPH and HAVE_DOT tags are set to YES then doxygen # will generate a graph for each documented class showing the direct and # indirect inheritance relations. Setting this tag to YES will force the # CLASS_DIAGRAMS tag to NO. CLASS_GRAPH = YES # If the COLLABORATION_GRAPH and HAVE_DOT tags are set to YES then doxygen # will generate a graph for each documented class showing the direct and # indirect implementation dependencies (inheritance, containment, and # class references variables) of the class with other documented classes. COLLABORATION_GRAPH = NO # If the GROUP_GRAPHS and HAVE_DOT tags are set to YES then doxygen # will generate a graph for groups, showing the direct groups dependencies GROUP_GRAPHS = YES # If the UML_LOOK tag is set to YES doxygen will generate inheritance and # collaboration diagrams in a style similar to the OMG's Unified Modeling # Language. UML_LOOK = NO # If the UML_LOOK tag is enabled, the fields and methods are shown inside # the class node. If there are many fields or methods and many nodes the # graph may become too big to be useful. The UML_LIMIT_NUM_FIELDS # threshold limits the number of items for each type to make the size more # managable. Set this to 0 for no limit. Note that the threshold may be # exceeded by 50% before the limit is enforced. UML_LIMIT_NUM_FIELDS = 10 # If set to YES, the inheritance and collaboration graphs will show the # relations between templates and their instances. TEMPLATE_RELATIONS = NO # If the ENABLE_PREPROCESSING, SEARCH_INCLUDES, INCLUDE_GRAPH, and HAVE_DOT # tags are set to YES then doxygen will generate a graph for each documented # file showing the direct and indirect include dependencies of the file with # other documented files. INCLUDE_GRAPH = YES # If the ENABLE_PREPROCESSING, SEARCH_INCLUDES, INCLUDED_BY_GRAPH, and # HAVE_DOT tags are set to YES then doxygen will generate a graph for each # documented header file showing the documented files that directly or # indirectly include this file. INCLUDED_BY_GRAPH = YES # If the CALL_GRAPH and HAVE_DOT options are set to YES then # doxygen will generate a call dependency graph for every global function # or class method. Note that enabling this option will significantly increase # the time of a run. So in most cases it will be better to enable call graphs # for selected functions only using the \callgraph command. CALL_GRAPH = NO # If the CALLER_GRAPH and HAVE_DOT tags are set to YES then # doxygen will generate a caller dependency graph for every global function # or class method. Note that enabling this option will significantly increase # the time of a run. So in most cases it will be better to enable caller # graphs for selected functions only using the \callergraph command. CALLER_GRAPH = NO # If the GRAPHICAL_HIERARCHY and HAVE_DOT tags are set to YES then doxygen # will generate a graphical hierarchy of all classes instead of a textual one. GRAPHICAL_HIERARCHY = YES # If the DIRECTORY_GRAPH and HAVE_DOT tags are set to YES # then doxygen will show the dependencies a directory has on other directories # in a graphical way. The dependency relations are determined by the #include # relations between the files in the directories. DIRECTORY_GRAPH = YES # The DOT_IMAGE_FORMAT tag can be used to set the image format of the images # generated by dot. Possible values are svg, png, jpg, or gif. # If left blank png will be used. If you choose svg you need to set # HTML_FILE_EXTENSION to xhtml in order to make the SVG files # visible in IE 9+ (other browsers do not have this requirement). DOT_IMAGE_FORMAT = png # If DOT_IMAGE_FORMAT is set to svg, then this option can be set to YES to # enable generation of interactive SVG images that allow zooming and panning. # Note that this requires a modern browser other than Internet Explorer. # Tested and working are Firefox, Chrome, Safari, and Opera. For IE 9+ you # need to set HTML_FILE_EXTENSION to xhtml in order to make the SVG files # visible. Older versions of IE do not have SVG support. INTERACTIVE_SVG = NO # The tag DOT_PATH can be used to specify the path where the dot tool can be # found. If left blank, it is assumed the dot tool can be found in the path. DOT_PATH = # The DOTFILE_DIRS tag can be used to specify one or more directories that # contain dot files that are included in the documentation (see the # \dotfile command). DOTFILE_DIRS = # The MSCFILE_DIRS tag can be used to specify one or more directories that # contain msc files that are included in the documentation (see the # \mscfile command). MSCFILE_DIRS = # The DOT_GRAPH_MAX_NODES tag can be used to set the maximum number of # nodes that will be shown in the graph. If the number of nodes in a graph # becomes larger than this value, doxygen will truncate the graph, which is # visualized by representing a node as a red box. Note that doxygen if the # number of direct children of the root node in a graph is already larger than # DOT_GRAPH_MAX_NODES then the graph will not be shown at all. Also note # that the size of a graph can be further restricted by MAX_DOT_GRAPH_DEPTH. DOT_GRAPH_MAX_NODES = 50 # The MAX_DOT_GRAPH_DEPTH tag can be used to set the maximum depth of the # graphs generated by dot. A depth value of 3 means that only nodes reachable # from the root by following a path via at most 3 edges will be shown. Nodes # that lay further from the root node will be omitted. Note that setting this # option to 1 or 2 may greatly reduce the computation time needed for large # code bases. Also note that the size of a graph can be further restricted by # DOT_GRAPH_MAX_NODES. Using a depth of 0 means no depth restriction. MAX_DOT_GRAPH_DEPTH = 0 # Set the DOT_TRANSPARENT tag to YES to generate images with a transparent # background. This is disabled by default, because dot on Windows does not # seem to support this out of the box. Warning: Depending on the platform used, # enabling this option may lead to badly anti-aliased labels on the edges of # a graph (i.e. they become hard to read). DOT_TRANSPARENT = NO # Set the DOT_MULTI_TARGETS tag to YES allow dot to generate multiple output # files in one run (i.e. multiple -o and -T options on the command line). This # makes dot run faster, but since only newer versions of dot (>1.8.10) # support this, this feature is disabled by default. DOT_MULTI_TARGETS = NO # If the GENERATE_LEGEND tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # generate a legend page explaining the meaning of the various boxes and # arrows in the dot generated graphs. GENERATE_LEGEND = YES # If the DOT_CLEANUP tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # remove the intermediate dot files that are used to generate # the various graphs. DOT_CLEANUP = YES ./doc/Doxyfile-devel.in0000644000015600001650000022605612677635517015110 0ustar jenkinsjenkins# Doxyfile 1.8.1.2 # This file describes the settings to be used by the documentation system # doxygen (www.doxygen.org) for a project # # All text after a hash (#) is considered a comment and will be ignored # The format is: # TAG = value [value, ...] # For lists items can also be appended using: # TAG += value [value, ...] # Values that contain spaces should be placed between quotes (" ") #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Project related configuration options #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # This tag specifies the encoding used for all characters in the config file # that follow. The default is UTF-8 which is also the encoding used for all # text before the first occurrence of this tag. Doxygen uses libiconv (or the # iconv built into libc) for the transcoding. See # http://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv for the list of possible encodings. DOXYFILE_ENCODING = UTF-8 # The PROJECT_NAME tag is a single word (or sequence of words) that should # identify the project. Note that if you do not use Doxywizard you need # to put quotes around the project name if it contains spaces. PROJECT_NAME = "Unity Scopes API (internal)" # The PROJECT_NUMBER tag can be used to enter a project or revision number. # This could be handy for archiving the generated documentation or # if some version control system is used. PROJECT_NUMBER = # Using the PROJECT_BRIEF tag one can provide an optional one line description # for a project that appears at the top of each page and should give viewer # a quick idea about the purpose of the project. Keep the description short. PROJECT_BRIEF = # With the PROJECT_LOGO tag one can specify an logo or icon that is # included in the documentation. The maximum height of the logo should not # exceed 55 pixels and the maximum width should not exceed 200 pixels. # Doxygen will copy the logo to the output directory. PROJECT_LOGO = # The OUTPUT_DIRECTORY tag is used to specify the (relative or absolute) # base path where the generated documentation will be put. # If a relative path is entered, it will be relative to the location # where doxygen was started. If left blank the current directory will be used. OUTPUT_DIRECTORY = @PROJECT_BINARY_DIR@/doc # If the CREATE_SUBDIRS tag is set to YES, then doxygen will create # 4096 sub-directories (in 2 levels) under the output directory of each output # format and will distribute the generated files over these directories. # Enabling this option can be useful when feeding doxygen a huge amount of # source files, where putting all generated files in the same directory would # otherwise cause performance problems for the file system. CREATE_SUBDIRS = NO # The OUTPUT_LANGUAGE tag is used to specify the language in which all # documentation generated by doxygen is written. Doxygen will use this # information to generate all constant output in the proper language. # The default language is English, other supported languages are: # Afrikaans, Arabic, Brazilian, Catalan, Chinese, Chinese-Traditional, # Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Esperanto, Farsi, Finnish, French, German, # Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Japanese-en (Japanese with English # messages), Korean, Korean-en, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Macedonian, Persian, # Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Serbian-Cyrillic, Slovak, # Slovene, Spanish, Swedish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese. OUTPUT_LANGUAGE = English # If the BRIEF_MEMBER_DESC tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # include brief member descriptions after the members that are listed in # the file and class documentation (similar to JavaDoc). # Set to NO to disable this. BRIEF_MEMBER_DESC = YES # If the REPEAT_BRIEF tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will prepend # the brief description of a member or function before the detailed description. # Note: if both HIDE_UNDOC_MEMBERS and BRIEF_MEMBER_DESC are set to NO, the # brief descriptions will be completely suppressed. REPEAT_BRIEF = YES # This tag implements a quasi-intelligent brief description abbreviator # that is used to form the text in various listings. Each string # in this list, if found as the leading text of the brief description, will be # stripped from the text and the result after processing the whole list, is # used as the annotated text. Otherwise, the brief description is used as-is. # If left blank, the following values are used ("$name" is automatically # replaced with the name of the entity): "The $name class" "The $name widget" # "The $name file" "is" "provides" "specifies" "contains" # "represents" "a" "an" "the" ABBREVIATE_BRIEF = "The $name class" \ "The $name widget" \ "The $name file" \ is \ provides \ specifies \ contains \ represents \ a \ an \ the # If the ALWAYS_DETAILED_SEC and REPEAT_BRIEF tags are both set to YES then # Doxygen will generate a detailed section even if there is only a brief # description. ALWAYS_DETAILED_SEC = NO # If the INLINE_INHERITED_MEMB tag is set to YES, doxygen will show all # inherited members of a class in the documentation of that class as if those # members were ordinary class members. Constructors, destructors and assignment # operators of the base classes will not be shown. INLINE_INHERITED_MEMB = NO # If the FULL_PATH_NAMES tag is set to YES then Doxygen will prepend the full # path before files name in the file list and in the header files. If set # to NO the shortest path that makes the file name unique will be used. FULL_PATH_NAMES = YES # If the FULL_PATH_NAMES tag is set to YES then the STRIP_FROM_PATH tag # can be used to strip a user-defined part of the path. Stripping is # only done if one of the specified strings matches the left-hand part of # the path. The tag can be used to show relative paths in the file list. # If left blank the directory from which doxygen is run is used as the # path to strip. STRIP_FROM_PATH = @PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR@ @PROJECT_BINARY_DIR@ # The STRIP_FROM_INC_PATH tag can be used to strip a user-defined part of # the path mentioned in the documentation of a class, which tells # the reader which header file to include in order to use a class. # If left blank only the name of the header file containing the class # definition is used. Otherwise one should specify the include paths that # are normally passed to the compiler using the -I flag. STRIP_FROM_INC_PATH = @PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR@/include @PROJECT_BINARY_DIR@/include # If the SHORT_NAMES tag is set to YES, doxygen will generate much shorter # (but less readable) file names. This can be useful if your file system # doesn't support long names like on DOS, Mac, or CD-ROM. SHORT_NAMES = NO # If the JAVADOC_AUTOBRIEF tag is set to YES then Doxygen # will interpret the first line (until the first dot) of a JavaDoc-style # comment as the brief description. If set to NO, the JavaDoc # comments will behave just like regular Qt-style comments # (thus requiring an explicit @brief command for a brief description.) JAVADOC_AUTOBRIEF = NO # If the QT_AUTOBRIEF tag is set to YES then Doxygen will # interpret the first line (until the first dot) of a Qt-style # comment as the brief description. If set to NO, the comments # will behave just like regular Qt-style comments (thus requiring # an explicit \brief command for a brief description.) QT_AUTOBRIEF = NO # The MULTILINE_CPP_IS_BRIEF tag can be set to YES to make Doxygen # treat a multi-line C++ special comment block (i.e. a block of //! or /// # comments) as a brief description. This used to be the default behaviour. # The new default is to treat a multi-line C++ comment block as a detailed # description. Set this tag to YES if you prefer the old behaviour instead. MULTILINE_CPP_IS_BRIEF = NO # If the INHERIT_DOCS tag is set to YES (the default) then an undocumented # member inherits the documentation from any documented member that it # re-implements. INHERIT_DOCS = YES # If the SEPARATE_MEMBER_PAGES tag is set to YES, then doxygen will produce # a new page for each member. If set to NO, the documentation of a member will # be part of the file/class/namespace that contains it. SEPARATE_MEMBER_PAGES = NO # The TAB_SIZE tag can be used to set the number of spaces in a tab. # Doxygen uses this value to replace tabs by spaces in code fragments. TAB_SIZE = 8 # This tag can be used to specify a number of aliases that acts # as commands in the documentation. An alias has the form "name=value". # For example adding "sideeffect=\par Side Effects:\n" will allow you to # put the command \sideeffect (or @sideeffect) in the documentation, which # will result in a user-defined paragraph with heading "Side Effects:". # You can put \n's in the value part of an alias to insert newlines. ALIASES = # This tag can be used to specify a number of word-keyword mappings (TCL only). # A mapping has the form "name=value". For example adding # "class=itcl::class" will allow you to use the command class in the # itcl::class meaning. TCL_SUBST = # Set the OPTIMIZE_OUTPUT_FOR_C tag to YES if your project consists of C # sources only. Doxygen will then generate output that is more tailored for C. # For instance, some of the names that are used will be different. The list # of all members will be omitted, etc. OPTIMIZE_OUTPUT_FOR_C = NO # Set the OPTIMIZE_OUTPUT_JAVA tag to YES if your project consists of Java # sources only. Doxygen will then generate output that is more tailored for # Java. For instance, namespaces will be presented as packages, qualified # scopes will look different, etc. OPTIMIZE_OUTPUT_JAVA = NO # Set the OPTIMIZE_FOR_FORTRAN tag to YES if your project consists of Fortran # sources only. Doxygen will then generate output that is more tailored for # Fortran. OPTIMIZE_FOR_FORTRAN = NO # Set the OPTIMIZE_OUTPUT_VHDL tag to YES if your project consists of VHDL # sources. Doxygen will then generate output that is tailored for # VHDL. OPTIMIZE_OUTPUT_VHDL = NO # Doxygen selects the parser to use depending on the extension of the files it # parses. With this tag you can assign which parser to use for a given extension. # Doxygen has a built-in mapping, but you can override or extend it using this # tag. The format is ext=language, where ext is a file extension, and language # is one of the parsers supported by doxygen: IDL, Java, Javascript, CSharp, C, # C++, D, PHP, Objective-C, Python, Fortran, VHDL, C, C++. For instance to make # doxygen treat .inc files as Fortran files (default is PHP), and .f files as C # (default is Fortran), use: inc=Fortran f=C. Note that for custom extensions # you also need to set FILE_PATTERNS otherwise the files are not read by doxygen. EXTENSION_MAPPING = # If MARKDOWN_SUPPORT is enabled (the default) then doxygen pre-processes all # comments according to the Markdown format, which allows for more readable # documentation. See http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/ for details. # The output of markdown processing is further processed by doxygen, so you # can mix doxygen, HTML, and XML commands with Markdown formatting. # Disable only in case of backward compatibilities issues. MARKDOWN_SUPPORT = YES # If you use STL classes (i.e. std::string, std::vector, etc.) but do not want # to include (a tag file for) the STL sources as input, then you should # set this tag to YES in order to let doxygen match functions declarations and # definitions whose arguments contain STL classes (e.g. func(std::string); v.s. # func(std::string) {}). This also makes the inheritance and collaboration # diagrams that involve STL classes more complete and accurate. BUILTIN_STL_SUPPORT = YES # If you use Microsoft's C++/CLI language, you should set this option to YES to # enable parsing support. CPP_CLI_SUPPORT = NO # Set the SIP_SUPPORT tag to YES if your project consists of sip sources only. # Doxygen will parse them like normal C++ but will assume all classes use public # instead of private inheritance when no explicit protection keyword is present. SIP_SUPPORT = NO # For Microsoft's IDL there are propget and propput attributes to indicate getter # and setter methods for a property. Setting this option to YES (the default) # will make doxygen replace the get and set methods by a property in the # documentation. This will only work if the methods are indeed getting or # setting a simple type. If this is not the case, or you want to show the # methods anyway, you should set this option to NO. IDL_PROPERTY_SUPPORT = YES # If member grouping is used in the documentation and the DISTRIBUTE_GROUP_DOC # tag is set to YES, then doxygen will reuse the documentation of the first # member in the group (if any) for the other members of the group. By default # all members of a group must be documented explicitly. DISTRIBUTE_GROUP_DOC = NO # Set the SUBGROUPING tag to YES (the default) to allow class member groups of # the same type (for instance a group of public functions) to be put as a # subgroup of that type (e.g. under the Public Functions section). Set it to # NO to prevent subgrouping. Alternatively, this can be done per class using # the \nosubgrouping command. SUBGROUPING = YES # When the INLINE_GROUPED_CLASSES tag is set to YES, classes, structs and # unions are shown inside the group in which they are included (e.g. using # @ingroup) instead of on a separate page (for HTML and Man pages) or # section (for LaTeX and RTF). INLINE_GROUPED_CLASSES = NO # When the INLINE_SIMPLE_STRUCTS tag is set to YES, structs, classes, and # unions with only public data fields will be shown inline in the documentation # of the scope in which they are defined (i.e. file, namespace, or group # documentation), provided this scope is documented. If set to NO (the default), # structs, classes, and unions are shown on a separate page (for HTML and Man # pages) or section (for LaTeX and RTF). INLINE_SIMPLE_STRUCTS = NO # When TYPEDEF_HIDES_STRUCT is enabled, a typedef of a struct, union, or enum # is documented as struct, union, or enum with the name of the typedef. So # typedef struct TypeS {} TypeT, will appear in the documentation as a struct # with name TypeT. When disabled the typedef will appear as a member of a file, # namespace, or class. And the struct will be named TypeS. This can typically # be useful for C code in case the coding convention dictates that all compound # types are typedef'ed and only the typedef is referenced, never the tag name. TYPEDEF_HIDES_STRUCT = NO # Similar to the SYMBOL_CACHE_SIZE the size of the symbol lookup cache can be # set using LOOKUP_CACHE_SIZE. This cache is used to resolve symbols given # their name and scope. Since this can be an expensive process and often the # same symbol appear multiple times in the code, doxygen keeps a cache of # pre-resolved symbols. If the cache is too small doxygen will become slower. # If the cache is too large, memory is wasted. The cache size is given by this # formula: 2^(16+LOOKUP_CACHE_SIZE). The valid range is 0..9, the default is 0, # corresponding to a cache size of 2^16 = 65536 symbols. LOOKUP_CACHE_SIZE = 0 #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Build related configuration options #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the EXTRACT_ALL tag is set to YES doxygen will assume all entities in # documentation are documented, even if no documentation was available. # Private class members and static file members will be hidden unless # the EXTRACT_PRIVATE and EXTRACT_STATIC tags are set to YES EXTRACT_ALL = YES # If the EXTRACT_PRIVATE tag is set to YES all private members of a class # will be included in the documentation. EXTRACT_PRIVATE =YES # If the EXTRACT_PACKAGE tag is set to YES all members with package or internal # scope will be included in the documentation. EXTRACT_PACKAGE = YES # If the EXTRACT_STATIC tag is set to YES all static members of a file # will be included in the documentation. EXTRACT_STATIC = YES # If the EXTRACT_LOCAL_CLASSES tag is set to YES classes (and structs) # defined locally in source files will be included in the documentation. # If set to NO only classes defined in header files are included. EXTRACT_LOCAL_CLASSES = YES # This flag is only useful for Objective-C code. When set to YES local # methods, which are defined in the implementation section but not in # the interface are included in the documentation. # If set to NO (the default) only methods in the interface are included. EXTRACT_LOCAL_METHODS = NO # If this flag is set to YES, the members of anonymous namespaces will be # extracted and appear in the documentation as a namespace called # 'anonymous_namespace{file}', where file will be replaced with the base # name of the file that contains the anonymous namespace. By default # anonymous namespaces are hidden. EXTRACT_ANON_NSPACES = NO # If the HIDE_UNDOC_MEMBERS tag is set to YES, Doxygen will hide all # undocumented members of documented classes, files or namespaces. # If set to NO (the default) these members will be included in the # various overviews, but no documentation section is generated. # This option has no effect if EXTRACT_ALL is enabled. HIDE_UNDOC_MEMBERS = NO # If the HIDE_UNDOC_CLASSES tag is set to YES, Doxygen will hide all # undocumented classes that are normally visible in the class hierarchy. # If set to NO (the default) these classes will be included in the various # overviews. This option has no effect if EXTRACT_ALL is enabled. HIDE_UNDOC_CLASSES = NO # If the HIDE_FRIEND_COMPOUNDS tag is set to YES, Doxygen will hide all # friend (class|struct|union) declarations. # If set to NO (the default) these declarations will be included in the # documentation. HIDE_FRIEND_COMPOUNDS = NO # If the HIDE_IN_BODY_DOCS tag is set to YES, Doxygen will hide any # documentation blocks found inside the body of a function. # If set to NO (the default) these blocks will be appended to the # function's detailed documentation block. HIDE_IN_BODY_DOCS = NO # The INTERNAL_DOCS tag determines if documentation # that is typed after a \internal command is included. If the tag is set # to NO (the default) then the documentation will be excluded. # Set it to YES to include the internal documentation. INTERNAL_DOCS = YES # If the CASE_SENSE_NAMES tag is set to NO then Doxygen will only generate # file names in lower-case letters. If set to YES upper-case letters are also # allowed. This is useful if you have classes or files whose names only differ # in case and if your file system supports case sensitive file names. Windows # and Mac users are advised to set this option to NO. CASE_SENSE_NAMES = NO # If the HIDE_SCOPE_NAMES tag is set to NO (the default) then Doxygen # will show members with their full class and namespace scopes in the # documentation. If set to YES the scope will be hidden. HIDE_SCOPE_NAMES = NO # If the SHOW_INCLUDE_FILES tag is set to YES (the default) then Doxygen # will put a list of the files that are included by a file in the documentation # of that file. SHOW_INCLUDE_FILES = YES # If the FORCE_LOCAL_INCLUDES tag is set to YES then Doxygen # will list include files with double quotes in the documentation # rather than with sharp brackets. FORCE_LOCAL_INCLUDES = NO # If the INLINE_INFO tag is set to YES (the default) then a tag [inline] # is inserted in the documentation for inline members. INLINE_INFO = YES # If the SORT_MEMBER_DOCS tag is set to YES (the default) then doxygen # will sort the (detailed) documentation of file and class members # alphabetically by member name. If set to NO the members will appear in # declaration order. SORT_MEMBER_DOCS = YES # If the SORT_BRIEF_DOCS tag is set to YES then doxygen will sort the # brief documentation of file, namespace and class members alphabetically # by member name. If set to NO (the default) the members will appear in # declaration order. SORT_BRIEF_DOCS = NO # If the SORT_MEMBERS_CTORS_1ST tag is set to YES then doxygen # will sort the (brief and detailed) documentation of class members so that # constructors and destructors are listed first. If set to NO (the default) # the constructors will appear in the respective orders defined by # SORT_MEMBER_DOCS and SORT_BRIEF_DOCS. # This tag will be ignored for brief docs if SORT_BRIEF_DOCS is set to NO # and ignored for detailed docs if SORT_MEMBER_DOCS is set to NO. SORT_MEMBERS_CTORS_1ST = NO # If the SORT_GROUP_NAMES tag is set to YES then doxygen will sort the # hierarchy of group names into alphabetical order. If set to NO (the default) # the group names will appear in their defined order. SORT_GROUP_NAMES = NO # If the SORT_BY_SCOPE_NAME tag is set to YES, the class list will be # sorted by fully-qualified names, including namespaces. If set to # NO (the default), the class list will be sorted only by class name, # not including the namespace part. # Note: This option is not very useful if HIDE_SCOPE_NAMES is set to YES. # Note: This option applies only to the class list, not to the # alphabetical list. SORT_BY_SCOPE_NAME = NO # If the STRICT_PROTO_MATCHING option is enabled and doxygen fails to # do proper type resolution of all parameters of a function it will reject a # match between the prototype and the implementation of a member function even # if there is only one candidate or it is obvious which candidate to choose # by doing a simple string match. By disabling STRICT_PROTO_MATCHING doxygen # will still accept a match between prototype and implementation in such cases. STRICT_PROTO_MATCHING = NO # The GENERATE_TODOLIST tag can be used to enable (YES) or # disable (NO) the todo list. This list is created by putting \todo # commands in the documentation. GENERATE_TODOLIST = YES # The GENERATE_TESTLIST tag can be used to enable (YES) or # disable (NO) the test list. This list is created by putting \test # commands in the documentation. GENERATE_TESTLIST = YES # The GENERATE_BUGLIST tag can be used to enable (YES) or # disable (NO) the bug list. This list is created by putting \bug # commands in the documentation. GENERATE_BUGLIST = YES # The GENERATE_DEPRECATEDLIST tag can be used to enable (YES) or # disable (NO) the deprecated list. This list is created by putting # \deprecated commands in the documentation. GENERATE_DEPRECATEDLIST= YES # The ENABLED_SECTIONS tag can be used to enable conditional # documentation sections, marked by \if sectionname ... \endif. ENABLED_SECTIONS = # The MAX_INITIALIZER_LINES tag determines the maximum number of lines # the initial value of a variable or macro consists of for it to appear in # the documentation. If the initializer consists of more lines than specified # here it will be hidden. Use a value of 0 to hide initializers completely. # The appearance of the initializer of individual variables and macros in the # documentation can be controlled using \showinitializer or \hideinitializer # command in the documentation regardless of this setting. MAX_INITIALIZER_LINES = 30 # Set the SHOW_USED_FILES tag to NO to disable the list of files generated # at the bottom of the documentation of classes and structs. If set to YES the # list will mention the files that were used to generate the documentation. SHOW_USED_FILES = YES # Set the SHOW_FILES tag to NO to disable the generation of the Files page. # This will remove the Files entry from the Quick Index and from the # Folder Tree View (if specified). The default is YES. SHOW_FILES = YES # Set the SHOW_NAMESPACES tag to NO to disable the generation of the # Namespaces page. This will remove the Namespaces entry from the Quick Index # and from the Folder Tree View (if specified). The default is YES. SHOW_NAMESPACES = YES # The FILE_VERSION_FILTER tag can be used to specify a program or script that # doxygen should invoke to get the current version for each file (typically from # the version control system). Doxygen will invoke the program by executing (via # popen()) the command , where is the value of # the FILE_VERSION_FILTER tag, and is the name of an input file # provided by doxygen. Whatever the program writes to standard output # is used as the file version. See the manual for examples. FILE_VERSION_FILTER = # The LAYOUT_FILE tag can be used to specify a layout file which will be parsed # by doxygen. The layout file controls the global structure of the generated # output files in an output format independent way. To create the layout file # that represents doxygen's defaults, run doxygen with the -l option. # You can optionally specify a file name after the option, if omitted # DoxygenLayout.xml will be used as the name of the layout file. LAYOUT_FILE = # The CITE_BIB_FILES tag can be used to specify one or more bib files # containing the references data. This must be a list of .bib files. The # .bib extension is automatically appended if omitted. Using this command # requires the bibtex tool to be installed. See also # http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BibTeX for more info. For LaTeX the style # of the bibliography can be controlled using LATEX_BIB_STYLE. To use this # feature you need bibtex and perl available in the search path. CITE_BIB_FILES = #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to warning and progress messages #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # The QUIET tag can be used to turn on/off the messages that are generated # by doxygen. Possible values are YES and NO. If left blank NO is used. QUIET = YES # The WARNINGS tag can be used to turn on/off the warning messages that are # generated by doxygen. Possible values are YES and NO. If left blank # NO is used. WARNINGS = YES # If WARN_IF_UNDOCUMENTED is set to YES, then doxygen will generate warnings # for undocumented members. If EXTRACT_ALL is set to YES then this flag will # automatically be disabled. WARN_IF_UNDOCUMENTED = YES # If WARN_IF_DOC_ERROR is set to YES, doxygen will generate warnings for # potential errors in the documentation, such as not documenting some # parameters in a documented function, or documenting parameters that # don't exist or using markup commands wrongly. WARN_IF_DOC_ERROR = YES # The WARN_NO_PARAMDOC option can be enabled to get warnings for # functions that are documented, but have no documentation for their parameters # or return value. If set to NO (the default) doxygen will only warn about # wrong or incomplete parameter documentation, but not about the absence of # documentation. WARN_NO_PARAMDOC = NO # The WARN_FORMAT tag determines the format of the warning messages that # doxygen can produce. The string should contain the $file, $line, and $text # tags, which will be replaced by the file and line number from which the # warning originated and the warning text. Optionally the format may contain # $version, which will be replaced by the version of the file (if it could # be obtained via FILE_VERSION_FILTER) WARN_FORMAT = "$file:$line: $text" # The WARN_LOGFILE tag can be used to specify a file to which warning # and error messages should be written. If left blank the output is written # to stderr. #WARN_LOGFILE = @CMAKE_BINARY_DIR@/doxygen-warnings.txt #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the input files #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # The INPUT tag can be used to specify the files and/or directories that contain # documented source files. You may enter file names like "myfile.cpp" or # directories like "/usr/src/myproject". Separate the files or directories # with spaces. INPUT = @PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR@/doc/tutorial.dox @PROJECT_BINARY_DIR@/include @PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR@/include @PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR@/src # This tag can be used to specify the character encoding of the source files # that doxygen parses. Internally doxygen uses the UTF-8 encoding, which is # also the default input encoding. Doxygen uses libiconv (or the iconv built # into libc) for the transcoding. See http://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv for # the list of possible encodings. INPUT_ENCODING = UTF-8 # If the value of the INPUT tag contains directories, you can use the # FILE_PATTERNS tag to specify one or more wildcard pattern (like *.cpp # and *.h) to filter out the source-files in the directories. If left # blank the following patterns are tested: # *.c *.cc *.cxx *.cpp *.c++ *.d *.java *.ii *.ixx *.ipp *.i++ *.inl *.h *.hh # *.hxx *.hpp *.h++ *.idl *.odl *.cs *.php *.php3 *.inc *.m *.mm *.dox *.py # *.f90 *.f *.for *.vhd *.vhdl FILE_PATTERNS = *.c \ *.cc \ *.cxx \ *.cpp \ *.c++ \ *.d \ *.java \ *.ii \ *.ixx \ *.ipp \ *.i++ \ *.inl \ *.h \ *.hh \ *.hxx \ *.hpp \ *.h++ \ *.idl \ *.odl \ *.cs \ *.php \ *.php3 \ *.inc \ *.m \ *.markdown \ *.md \ *.mm \ *.dox \ *.py \ *.f90 \ *.f \ *.for \ *.vhd \ *.vhdl # The RECURSIVE tag can be used to turn specify whether or not subdirectories # should be searched for input files as well. Possible values are YES and NO. # If left blank NO is used. RECURSIVE = YES # The EXCLUDE tag can be used to specify files and/or directories that should be # excluded from the INPUT source files. This way you can easily exclude a # subdirectory from a directory tree whose root is specified with the INPUT tag. # Note that relative paths are relative to the directory from which doxygen is # run. EXCLUDE = # The EXCLUDE_SYMLINKS tag can be used to select whether or not files or # directories that are symbolic links (a Unix file system feature) are excluded # from the input. EXCLUDE_SYMLINKS = NO # If the value of the INPUT tag contains directories, you can use the # EXCLUDE_PATTERNS tag to specify one or more wildcard patterns to exclude # certain files from those directories. Note that the wildcards are matched # against the file with absolute path, so to exclude all test directories # for example use the pattern */test/* EXCLUDE_PATTERNS = # The EXCLUDE_SYMBOLS tag can be used to specify one or more symbol names # (namespaces, classes, functions, etc.) that should be excluded from the # output. The symbol name can be a fully qualified name, a word, or if the # wildcard * is used, a substring. Examples: ANamespace, AClass, # AClass::ANamespace, ANamespace::*Test EXCLUDE_SYMBOLS = # The EXAMPLE_PATH tag can be used to specify one or more files or # directories that contain example code fragments that are included (see # the \include command). EXAMPLE_PATH = # If the value of the EXAMPLE_PATH tag contains directories, you can use the # EXAMPLE_PATTERNS tag to specify one or more wildcard pattern (like *.cpp # and *.h) to filter out the source-files in the directories. If left # blank all files are included. EXAMPLE_PATTERNS = * # If the EXAMPLE_RECURSIVE tag is set to YES then subdirectories will be # searched for input files to be used with the \include or \dontinclude # commands irrespective of the value of the RECURSIVE tag. # Possible values are YES and NO. If left blank NO is used. EXAMPLE_RECURSIVE = NO # The IMAGE_PATH tag can be used to specify one or more files or # directories that contain image that are included in the documentation (see # the \image command). IMAGE_PATH = # The INPUT_FILTER tag can be used to specify a program that doxygen should # invoke to filter for each input file. Doxygen will invoke the filter program # by executing (via popen()) the command , where # is the value of the INPUT_FILTER tag, and is the name of an # input file. Doxygen will then use the output that the filter program writes # to standard output. If FILTER_PATTERNS is specified, this tag will be # ignored. INPUT_FILTER = # The FILTER_PATTERNS tag can be used to specify filters on a per file pattern # basis. Doxygen will compare the file name with each pattern and apply the # filter if there is a match. The filters are a list of the form: # pattern=filter (like *.cpp=my_cpp_filter). See INPUT_FILTER for further # info on how filters are used. If FILTER_PATTERNS is empty or if # non of the patterns match the file name, INPUT_FILTER is applied. FILTER_PATTERNS = # If the FILTER_SOURCE_FILES tag is set to YES, the input filter (if set using # INPUT_FILTER) will be used to filter the input files when producing source # files to browse (i.e. when SOURCE_BROWSER is set to YES). FILTER_SOURCE_FILES = NO # The FILTER_SOURCE_PATTERNS tag can be used to specify source filters per file # pattern. A pattern will override the setting for FILTER_PATTERN (if any) # and it is also possible to disable source filtering for a specific pattern # using *.ext= (so without naming a filter). This option only has effect when # FILTER_SOURCE_FILES is enabled. FILTER_SOURCE_PATTERNS = #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to source browsing #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the SOURCE_BROWSER tag is set to YES then a list of source files will # be generated. Documented entities will be cross-referenced with these sources. # Note: To get rid of all source code in the generated output, make sure also # VERBATIM_HEADERS is set to NO. SOURCE_BROWSER = YES # Setting the INLINE_SOURCES tag to YES will include the body # of functions and classes directly in the documentation. INLINE_SOURCES = NO # Setting the STRIP_CODE_COMMENTS tag to YES (the default) will instruct # doxygen to hide any special comment blocks from generated source code # fragments. Normal C, C++ and Fortran comments will always remain visible. STRIP_CODE_COMMENTS = YES # If the REFERENCED_BY_RELATION tag is set to YES # then for each documented function all documented # functions referencing it will be listed. REFERENCED_BY_RELATION = YES # If the REFERENCES_RELATION tag is set to YES # then for each documented function all documented entities # called/used by that function will be listed. REFERENCES_RELATION = YES # If the REFERENCES_LINK_SOURCE tag is set to YES (the default) # and SOURCE_BROWSER tag is set to YES, then the hyperlinks from # functions in REFERENCES_RELATION and REFERENCED_BY_RELATION lists will # link to the source code. Otherwise they will link to the documentation. REFERENCES_LINK_SOURCE = YES # If the USE_HTAGS tag is set to YES then the references to source code # will point to the HTML generated by the htags(1) tool instead of doxygen # built-in source browser. The htags tool is part of GNU's global source # tagging system (see http://www.gnu.org/software/global/global.html). You # will need version 4.8.6 or higher. USE_HTAGS = NO # If the VERBATIM_HEADERS tag is set to YES (the default) then Doxygen # will generate a verbatim copy of the header file for each class for # which an include is specified. Set to NO to disable this. VERBATIM_HEADERS = YES #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the alphabetical class index #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the ALPHABETICAL_INDEX tag is set to YES, an alphabetical index # of all compounds will be generated. Enable this if the project # contains a lot of classes, structs, unions or interfaces. ALPHABETICAL_INDEX = YES # If the alphabetical index is enabled (see ALPHABETICAL_INDEX) then # the COLS_IN_ALPHA_INDEX tag can be used to specify the number of columns # in which this list will be split (can be a number in the range [1..20]) COLS_IN_ALPHA_INDEX = 5 # In case all classes in a project start with a common prefix, all # classes will be put under the same header in the alphabetical index. # The IGNORE_PREFIX tag can be used to specify one or more prefixes that # should be ignored while generating the index headers. IGNORE_PREFIX = #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the HTML output #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the GENERATE_HTML tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # generate HTML output. GENERATE_HTML = YES # The HTML_OUTPUT tag is used to specify where the HTML docs will be put. # If a relative path is entered the value of OUTPUT_DIRECTORY will be # put in front of it. If left blank `html' will be used as the default path. HTML_OUTPUT = @UNITY_SCOPES_LIB@ # The HTML_FILE_EXTENSION tag can be used to specify the file extension for # each generated HTML page (for example: .htm,.php,.asp). If it is left blank # doxygen will generate files with .html extension. HTML_FILE_EXTENSION = .html # The HTML_HEADER tag can be used to specify a personal HTML header for # each generated HTML page. If it is left blank doxygen will generate a # standard header. Note that when using a custom header you are responsible # for the proper inclusion of any scripts and style sheets that doxygen # needs, which is dependent on the configuration options used. # It is advised to generate a default header using "doxygen -w html # header.html footer.html stylesheet.css YourConfigFile" and then modify # that header. Note that the header is subject to change so you typically # have to redo this when upgrading to a newer version of doxygen or when # changing the value of configuration settings such as GENERATE_TREEVIEW! HTML_HEADER = # The HTML_FOOTER tag can be used to specify a personal HTML footer for # each generated HTML page. If it is left blank doxygen will generate a # standard footer. HTML_FOOTER = # The HTML_STYLESHEET tag can be used to specify a user-defined cascading # style sheet that is used by each HTML page. It can be used to # fine-tune the look of the HTML output. If the tag is left blank doxygen # will generate a default style sheet. Note that doxygen will try to copy # the style sheet file to the HTML output directory, so don't put your own # style sheet in the HTML output directory as well, or it will be erased! HTML_STYLESHEET = # The HTML_EXTRA_FILES tag can be used to specify one or more extra images or # other source files which should be copied to the HTML output directory. Note # that these files will be copied to the base HTML output directory. Use the # $relpath$ marker in the HTML_HEADER and/or HTML_FOOTER files to load these # files. In the HTML_STYLESHEET file, use the file name only. Also note that # the files will be copied as-is; there are no commands or markers available. HTML_EXTRA_FILES = # The HTML_COLORSTYLE_HUE tag controls the color of the HTML output. # Doxygen will adjust the colors in the style sheet and background images # according to this color. Hue is specified as an angle on a colorwheel, # see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hue for more information. # For instance the value 0 represents red, 60 is yellow, 120 is green, # 180 is cyan, 240 is blue, 300 purple, and 360 is red again. # The allowed range is 0 to 359. HTML_COLORSTYLE_HUE = 220 # The HTML_COLORSTYLE_SAT tag controls the purity (or saturation) of # the colors in the HTML output. For a value of 0 the output will use # grayscales only. A value of 255 will produce the most vivid colors. HTML_COLORSTYLE_SAT = 100 # The HTML_COLORSTYLE_GAMMA tag controls the gamma correction applied to # the luminance component of the colors in the HTML output. Values below # 100 gradually make the output lighter, whereas values above 100 make # the output darker. The value divided by 100 is the actual gamma applied, # so 80 represents a gamma of 0.8, The value 220 represents a gamma of 2.2, # and 100 does not change the gamma. HTML_COLORSTYLE_GAMMA = 80 # If the HTML_TIMESTAMP tag is set to YES then the footer of each generated HTML # page will contain the date and time when the page was generated. Setting # this to NO can help when comparing the output of multiple runs. HTML_TIMESTAMP = YES # If the HTML_DYNAMIC_SECTIONS tag is set to YES then the generated HTML # documentation will contain sections that can be hidden and shown after the # page has loaded. HTML_DYNAMIC_SECTIONS = NO # With HTML_INDEX_NUM_ENTRIES one can control the preferred number of # entries shown in the various tree structured indices initially; the user # can expand and collapse entries dynamically later on. Doxygen will expand # the tree to such a level that at most the specified number of entries are # visible (unless a fully collapsed tree already exceeds this amount). # So setting the number of entries 1 will produce a full collapsed tree by # default. 0 is a special value representing an infinite number of entries # and will result in a full expanded tree by default. HTML_INDEX_NUM_ENTRIES = 100 # If the GENERATE_DOCSET tag is set to YES, additional index files # will be generated that can be used as input for Apple's Xcode 3 # integrated development environment, introduced with OSX 10.5 (Leopard). # To create a documentation set, doxygen will generate a Makefile in the # HTML output directory. Running make will produce the docset in that # directory and running "make install" will install the docset in # ~/Library/Developer/Shared/Documentation/DocSets so that Xcode will find # it at startup. # See http://developer.apple.com/tools/creatingdocsetswithdoxygen.html # for more information. GENERATE_DOCSET = NO # When GENERATE_DOCSET tag is set to YES, this tag determines the name of the # feed. A documentation feed provides an umbrella under which multiple # documentation sets from a single provider (such as a company or product suite) # can be grouped. DOCSET_FEEDNAME = "Doxygen generated docs" # When GENERATE_DOCSET tag is set to YES, this tag specifies a string that # should uniquely identify the documentation set bundle. This should be a # reverse domain-name style string, e.g. com.mycompany.MyDocSet. Doxygen # will append .docset to the name. DOCSET_BUNDLE_ID = org.doxygen.Project # When GENERATE_PUBLISHER_ID tag specifies a string that should uniquely identify # the documentation publisher. This should be a reverse domain-name style # string, e.g. com.mycompany.MyDocSet.documentation. DOCSET_PUBLISHER_ID = org.doxygen.Publisher # The GENERATE_PUBLISHER_NAME tag identifies the documentation publisher. DOCSET_PUBLISHER_NAME = Publisher # If the GENERATE_HTMLHELP tag is set to YES, additional index files # will be generated that can be used as input for tools like the # Microsoft HTML help workshop to generate a compiled HTML help file (.chm) # of the generated HTML documentation. GENERATE_HTMLHELP = NO # If the GENERATE_HTMLHELP tag is set to YES, the CHM_FILE tag can # be used to specify the file name of the resulting .chm file. You # can add a path in front of the file if the result should not be # written to the html output directory. CHM_FILE = # If the GENERATE_HTMLHELP tag is set to YES, the HHC_LOCATION tag can # be used to specify the location (absolute path including file name) of # the HTML help compiler (hhc.exe). If non-empty doxygen will try to run # the HTML help compiler on the generated index.hhp. HHC_LOCATION = # If the GENERATE_HTMLHELP tag is set to YES, the GENERATE_CHI flag # controls if a separate .chi index file is generated (YES) or that # it should be included in the master .chm file (NO). GENERATE_CHI = NO # If the GENERATE_HTMLHELP tag is set to YES, the CHM_INDEX_ENCODING # is used to encode HtmlHelp index (hhk), content (hhc) and project file # content. CHM_INDEX_ENCODING = # If the GENERATE_HTMLHELP tag is set to YES, the BINARY_TOC flag # controls whether a binary table of contents is generated (YES) or a # normal table of contents (NO) in the .chm file. BINARY_TOC = NO # The TOC_EXPAND flag can be set to YES to add extra items for group members # to the contents of the HTML help documentation and to the tree view. TOC_EXPAND = NO # If the GENERATE_QHP tag is set to YES and both QHP_NAMESPACE and # QHP_VIRTUAL_FOLDER are set, an additional index file will be generated # that can be used as input for Qt's qhelpgenerator to generate a # Qt Compressed Help (.qch) of the generated HTML documentation. GENERATE_QHP = NO # If the QHG_LOCATION tag is specified, the QCH_FILE tag can # be used to specify the file name of the resulting .qch file. # The path specified is relative to the HTML output folder. QCH_FILE = # The QHP_NAMESPACE tag specifies the namespace to use when generating # Qt Help Project output. For more information please see # http://doc.trolltech.com/qthelpproject.html#namespace QHP_NAMESPACE = org.doxygen.Project # The QHP_VIRTUAL_FOLDER tag specifies the namespace to use when generating # Qt Help Project output. For more information please see # http://doc.trolltech.com/qthelpproject.html#virtual-folders QHP_VIRTUAL_FOLDER = doc # If QHP_CUST_FILTER_NAME is set, it specifies the name of a custom filter to # add. For more information please see # http://doc.trolltech.com/qthelpproject.html#custom-filters QHP_CUST_FILTER_NAME = # The QHP_CUST_FILT_ATTRS tag specifies the list of the attributes of the # custom filter to add. For more information please see # # Qt Help Project / Custom Filters. QHP_CUST_FILTER_ATTRS = # The QHP_SECT_FILTER_ATTRS tag specifies the list of the attributes this # project's # filter section matches. # # Qt Help Project / Filter Attributes. QHP_SECT_FILTER_ATTRS = # If the GENERATE_QHP tag is set to YES, the QHG_LOCATION tag can # be used to specify the location of Qt's qhelpgenerator. # If non-empty doxygen will try to run qhelpgenerator on the generated # .qhp file. QHG_LOCATION = # If the GENERATE_ECLIPSEHELP tag is set to YES, additional index files # will be generated, which together with the HTML files, form an Eclipse help # plugin. To install this plugin and make it available under the help contents # menu in Eclipse, the contents of the directory containing the HTML and XML # files needs to be copied into the plugins directory of eclipse. The name of # the directory within the plugins directory should be the same as # the ECLIPSE_DOC_ID value. After copying Eclipse needs to be restarted before # the help appears. GENERATE_ECLIPSEHELP = NO # A unique identifier for the eclipse help plugin. When installing the plugin # the directory name containing the HTML and XML files should also have # this name. ECLIPSE_DOC_ID = org.doxygen.Project # The DISABLE_INDEX tag can be used to turn on/off the condensed index (tabs) # at top of each HTML page. The value NO (the default) enables the index and # the value YES disables it. Since the tabs have the same information as the # navigation tree you can set this option to NO if you already set # GENERATE_TREEVIEW to YES. DISABLE_INDEX = NO # The GENERATE_TREEVIEW tag is used to specify whether a tree-like index # structure should be generated to display hierarchical information. # If the tag value is set to YES, a side panel will be generated # containing a tree-like index structure (just like the one that # is generated for HTML Help). For this to work a browser that supports # JavaScript, DHTML, CSS and frames is required (i.e. any modern browser). # Windows users are probably better off using the HTML help feature. # Since the tree basically has the same information as the tab index you # could consider to set DISABLE_INDEX to NO when enabling this option. GENERATE_TREEVIEW = YES # The ENUM_VALUES_PER_LINE tag can be used to set the number of enum values # (range [0,1..20]) that doxygen will group on one line in the generated HTML # documentation. Note that a value of 0 will completely suppress the enum # values from appearing in the overview section. ENUM_VALUES_PER_LINE = 4 # If the treeview is enabled (see GENERATE_TREEVIEW) then this tag can be # used to set the initial width (in pixels) of the frame in which the tree # is shown. TREEVIEW_WIDTH = 250 # When the EXT_LINKS_IN_WINDOW option is set to YES doxygen will open # links to external symbols imported via tag files in a separate window. EXT_LINKS_IN_WINDOW = NO # Use this tag to change the font size of Latex formulas included # as images in the HTML documentation. The default is 10. Note that # when you change the font size after a successful doxygen run you need # to manually remove any form_*.png images from the HTML output directory # to force them to be regenerated. FORMULA_FONTSIZE = 10 # Use the FORMULA_TRANPARENT tag to determine whether or not the images # generated for formulas are transparent PNGs. Transparent PNGs are # not supported properly for IE 6.0, but are supported on all modern browsers. # Note that when changing this option you need to delete any form_*.png files # in the HTML output before the changes have effect. FORMULA_TRANSPARENT = YES # Enable the USE_MATHJAX option to render LaTeX formulas using MathJax # (see http://www.mathjax.org) which uses client side Javascript for the # rendering instead of using prerendered bitmaps. Use this if you do not # have LaTeX installed or if you want to formulas look prettier in the HTML # output. When enabled you may also need to install MathJax separately and # configure the path to it using the MATHJAX_RELPATH option. USE_MATHJAX = NO # When MathJax is enabled you need to specify the location relative to the # HTML output directory using the MATHJAX_RELPATH option. The destination # directory should contain the MathJax.js script. For instance, if the mathjax # directory is located at the same level as the HTML output directory, then # MATHJAX_RELPATH should be ../mathjax. The default value points to # the MathJax Content Delivery Network so you can quickly see the result without # installing MathJax. However, it is strongly recommended to install a local # copy of MathJax from http://www.mathjax.org before deployment. MATHJAX_RELPATH = http://cdn.mathjax.org/mathjax/latest # The MATHJAX_EXTENSIONS tag can be used to specify one or MathJax extension # names that should be enabled during MathJax rendering. MATHJAX_EXTENSIONS = # When the SEARCHENGINE tag is enabled doxygen will generate a search box # for the HTML output. The underlying search engine uses javascript # and DHTML and should work on any modern browser. Note that when using # HTML help (GENERATE_HTMLHELP), Qt help (GENERATE_QHP), or docsets # (GENERATE_DOCSET) there is already a search function so this one should # typically be disabled. For large projects the javascript based search engine # can be slow, then enabling SERVER_BASED_SEARCH may provide a better solution. SEARCHENGINE = YES # When the SERVER_BASED_SEARCH tag is enabled the search engine will be # implemented using a PHP enabled web server instead of at the web client # using Javascript. Doxygen will generate the search PHP script and index # file to put on the web server. The advantage of the server # based approach is that it scales better to large projects and allows # full text search. The disadvantages are that it is more difficult to setup # and does not have live searching capabilities. SERVER_BASED_SEARCH = NO #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the LaTeX output #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the GENERATE_LATEX tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # generate Latex output. GENERATE_LATEX = NO # The LATEX_OUTPUT tag is used to specify where the LaTeX docs will be put. # If a relative path is entered the value of OUTPUT_DIRECTORY will be # put in front of it. If left blank `latex' will be used as the default path. LATEX_OUTPUT = latex # The LATEX_CMD_NAME tag can be used to specify the LaTeX command name to be # invoked. If left blank `latex' will be used as the default command name. # Note that when enabling USE_PDFLATEX this option is only used for # generating bitmaps for formulas in the HTML output, but not in the # Makefile that is written to the output directory. LATEX_CMD_NAME = latex # The MAKEINDEX_CMD_NAME tag can be used to specify the command name to # generate index for LaTeX. If left blank `makeindex' will be used as the # default command name. MAKEINDEX_CMD_NAME = makeindex # If the COMPACT_LATEX tag is set to YES Doxygen generates more compact # LaTeX documents. This may be useful for small projects and may help to # save some trees in general. COMPACT_LATEX = NO # The PAPER_TYPE tag can be used to set the paper type that is used # by the printer. Possible values are: a4, letter, legal and # executive. If left blank a4wide will be used. PAPER_TYPE = a4 # The EXTRA_PACKAGES tag can be to specify one or more names of LaTeX # packages that should be included in the LaTeX output. EXTRA_PACKAGES = # The LATEX_HEADER tag can be used to specify a personal LaTeX header for # the generated latex document. The header should contain everything until # the first chapter. If it is left blank doxygen will generate a # standard header. Notice: only use this tag if you know what you are doing! LATEX_HEADER = # The LATEX_FOOTER tag can be used to specify a personal LaTeX footer for # the generated latex document. The footer should contain everything after # the last chapter. If it is left blank doxygen will generate a # standard footer. Notice: only use this tag if you know what you are doing! LATEX_FOOTER = # If the PDF_HYPERLINKS tag is set to YES, the LaTeX that is generated # is prepared for conversion to pdf (using ps2pdf). The pdf file will # contain links (just like the HTML output) instead of page references # This makes the output suitable for online browsing using a pdf viewer. PDF_HYPERLINKS = YES # If the USE_PDFLATEX tag is set to YES, pdflatex will be used instead of # plain latex in the generated Makefile. Set this option to YES to get a # higher quality PDF documentation. USE_PDFLATEX = YES # If the LATEX_BATCHMODE tag is set to YES, doxygen will add the \\batchmode. # command to the generated LaTeX files. This will instruct LaTeX to keep # running if errors occur, instead of asking the user for help. # This option is also used when generating formulas in HTML. LATEX_BATCHMODE = NO # If LATEX_HIDE_INDICES is set to YES then doxygen will not # include the index chapters (such as File Index, Compound Index, etc.) # in the output. LATEX_HIDE_INDICES = NO # If LATEX_SOURCE_CODE is set to YES then doxygen will include # source code with syntax highlighting in the LaTeX output. # Note that which sources are shown also depends on other settings # such as SOURCE_BROWSER. LATEX_SOURCE_CODE = NO # The LATEX_BIB_STYLE tag can be used to specify the style to use for the # bibliography, e.g. plainnat, or ieeetr. The default style is "plain". See # http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BibTeX for more info. LATEX_BIB_STYLE = plain #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the RTF output #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the GENERATE_RTF tag is set to YES Doxygen will generate RTF output # The RTF output is optimized for Word 97 and may not look very pretty with # other RTF readers or editors. GENERATE_RTF = NO # The RTF_OUTPUT tag is used to specify where the RTF docs will be put. # If a relative path is entered the value of OUTPUT_DIRECTORY will be # put in front of it. If left blank `rtf' will be used as the default path. RTF_OUTPUT = rtf # If the COMPACT_RTF tag is set to YES Doxygen generates more compact # RTF documents. This may be useful for small projects and may help to # save some trees in general. COMPACT_RTF = NO # If the RTF_HYPERLINKS tag is set to YES, the RTF that is generated # will contain hyperlink fields. The RTF file will # contain links (just like the HTML output) instead of page references. # This makes the output suitable for online browsing using WORD or other # programs which support those fields. # Note: wordpad (write) and others do not support links. RTF_HYPERLINKS = NO # Load style sheet definitions from file. Syntax is similar to doxygen's # config file, i.e. a series of assignments. You only have to provide # replacements, missing definitions are set to their default value. RTF_STYLESHEET_FILE = # Set optional variables used in the generation of an rtf document. # Syntax is similar to doxygen's config file. RTF_EXTENSIONS_FILE = #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the man page output #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the GENERATE_MAN tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # generate man pages GENERATE_MAN = NO # The MAN_OUTPUT tag is used to specify where the man pages will be put. # If a relative path is entered the value of OUTPUT_DIRECTORY will be # put in front of it. If left blank `man' will be used as the default path. MAN_OUTPUT = man # The MAN_EXTENSION tag determines the extension that is added to # the generated man pages (default is the subroutine's section .3) MAN_EXTENSION = .3 # If the MAN_LINKS tag is set to YES and Doxygen generates man output, # then it will generate one additional man file for each entity # documented in the real man page(s). These additional files # only source the real man page, but without them the man command # would be unable to find the correct page. The default is NO. MAN_LINKS = NO #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the XML output #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the GENERATE_XML tag is set to YES Doxygen will # generate an XML file that captures the structure of # the code including all documentation. GENERATE_XML = NO # The XML_OUTPUT tag is used to specify where the XML pages will be put. # If a relative path is entered the value of OUTPUT_DIRECTORY will be # put in front of it. If left blank `xml' will be used as the default path. XML_OUTPUT = xml # If the XML_PROGRAMLISTING tag is set to YES Doxygen will # dump the program listings (including syntax highlighting # and cross-referencing information) to the XML output. Note that # enabling this will significantly increase the size of the XML output. XML_PROGRAMLISTING = YES #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options for the AutoGen Definitions output #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the GENERATE_AUTOGEN_DEF tag is set to YES Doxygen will # generate an AutoGen Definitions (see autogen.sf.net) file # that captures the structure of the code including all # documentation. Note that this feature is still experimental # and incomplete at the moment. GENERATE_AUTOGEN_DEF = NO #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # configuration options related to the Perl module output #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the GENERATE_PERLMOD tag is set to YES Doxygen will # generate a Perl module file that captures the structure of # the code including all documentation. Note that this # feature is still experimental and incomplete at the # moment. GENERATE_PERLMOD = NO # If the PERLMOD_LATEX tag is set to YES Doxygen will generate # the necessary Makefile rules, Perl scripts and LaTeX code to be able # to generate PDF and DVI output from the Perl module output. PERLMOD_LATEX = NO # If the PERLMOD_PRETTY tag is set to YES the Perl module output will be # nicely formatted so it can be parsed by a human reader. This is useful # if you want to understand what is going on. On the other hand, if this # tag is set to NO the size of the Perl module output will be much smaller # and Perl will parse it just the same. PERLMOD_PRETTY = YES # The names of the make variables in the generated doxyrules.make file # are prefixed with the string contained in PERLMOD_MAKEVAR_PREFIX. # This is useful so different doxyrules.make files included by the same # Makefile don't overwrite each other's variables. PERLMOD_MAKEVAR_PREFIX = #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Configuration options related to the preprocessor #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the ENABLE_PREPROCESSING tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # evaluate all C-preprocessor directives found in the sources and include # files. ENABLE_PREPROCESSING = YES # If the MACRO_EXPANSION tag is set to YES Doxygen will expand all macro # names in the source code. If set to NO (the default) only conditional # compilation will be performed. Macro expansion can be done in a controlled # way by setting EXPAND_ONLY_PREDEF to YES. MACRO_EXPANSION = NO # If the EXPAND_ONLY_PREDEF and MACRO_EXPANSION tags are both set to YES # then the macro expansion is limited to the macros specified with the # PREDEFINED and EXPAND_AS_DEFINED tags. EXPAND_ONLY_PREDEF = NO # If the SEARCH_INCLUDES tag is set to YES (the default) the includes files # pointed to by INCLUDE_PATH will be searched when a #include is found. SEARCH_INCLUDES = YES # The INCLUDE_PATH tag can be used to specify one or more directories that # contain include files that are not input files but should be processed by # the preprocessor. INCLUDE_PATH = # You can use the INCLUDE_FILE_PATTERNS tag to specify one or more wildcard # patterns (like *.h and *.hpp) to filter out the header-files in the # directories. If left blank, the patterns specified with FILE_PATTERNS will # be used. INCLUDE_FILE_PATTERNS = # The PREDEFINED tag can be used to specify one or more macro names that # are defined before the preprocessor is started (similar to the -D option of # gcc). The argument of the tag is a list of macros of the form: name # or name=definition (no spaces). If the definition and the = are # omitted =1 is assumed. To prevent a macro definition from being # undefined via #undef or recursively expanded use the := operator # instead of the = operator. PREDEFINED = DOXYGEN_SKIP # If the MACRO_EXPANSION and EXPAND_ONLY_PREDEF tags are set to YES then # this tag can be used to specify a list of macro names that should be expanded. # The macro definition that is found in the sources will be used. # Use the PREDEFINED tag if you want to use a different macro definition that # overrules the definition found in the source code. EXPAND_AS_DEFINED = # If the SKIP_FUNCTION_MACROS tag is set to YES (the default) then # doxygen's preprocessor will remove all references to function-like macros # that are alone on a line, have an all uppercase name, and do not end with a # semicolon, because these will confuse the parser if not removed. SKIP_FUNCTION_MACROS = YES #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Configuration::additions related to external references #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # The TAGFILES option can be used to specify one or more tagfiles. For each # tag file the location of the external documentation should be added. The # format of a tag file without this location is as follows: # TAGFILES = file1 file2 ... # Adding location for the tag files is done as follows: # TAGFILES = file1=loc1 "file2 = loc2" ... # where "loc1" and "loc2" can be relative or absolute paths # or URLs. Note that each tag file must have a unique name (where the name does # NOT include the path). If a tag file is not located in the directory in which # doxygen is run, you must also specify the path to the tagfile here. TAGFILES = # When a file name is specified after GENERATE_TAGFILE, doxygen will create # a tag file that is based on the input files it reads. GENERATE_TAGFILE = # If the ALLEXTERNALS tag is set to YES all external classes will be listed # in the class index. If set to NO only the inherited external classes # will be listed. ALLEXTERNALS = NO # If the EXTERNAL_GROUPS tag is set to YES all external groups will be listed # in the modules index. If set to NO, only the current project's groups will # be listed. EXTERNAL_GROUPS = YES # The PERL_PATH should be the absolute path and name of the perl script # interpreter (i.e. the result of `which perl'). PERL_PATH = /usr/bin/perl #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Configuration options related to the dot tool #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the CLASS_DIAGRAMS tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # generate a inheritance diagram (in HTML, RTF and LaTeX) for classes with base # or super classes. Setting the tag to NO turns the diagrams off. Note that # this option also works with HAVE_DOT disabled, but it is recommended to # install and use dot, since it yields more powerful graphs. CLASS_DIAGRAMS = YES # You can define message sequence charts within doxygen comments using the \msc # command. Doxygen will then run the mscgen tool (see # http://www.mcternan.me.uk/mscgen/) to produce the chart and insert it in the # documentation. The MSCGEN_PATH tag allows you to specify the directory where # the mscgen tool resides. If left empty the tool is assumed to be found in the # default search path. DOT_PATH = @DOXYGEN_DOT_PATH@ # If set to YES, the inheritance and collaboration graphs will hide # inheritance and usage relations if the target is undocumented # or is not a class. HIDE_UNDOC_RELATIONS = YES # If you set the HAVE_DOT tag to YES then doxygen will assume the dot tool is # available from the path. This tool is part of Graphviz, a graph visualization # toolkit from AT&T and Lucent Bell Labs. The other options in this section # have no effect if this option is set to NO (the default) HAVE_DOT = YES # The DOT_NUM_THREADS specifies the number of dot invocations doxygen is # allowed to run in parallel. When set to 0 (the default) doxygen will # base this on the number of processors available in the system. You can set it # explicitly to a value larger than 0 to get control over the balance # between CPU load and processing speed. DOT_NUM_THREADS = 0 # By default doxygen will use the Helvetica font for all dot files that # doxygen generates. When you want a differently looking font you can specify # the font name using DOT_FONTNAME. You need to make sure dot is able to find # the font, which can be done by putting it in a standard location or by setting # the DOTFONTPATH environment variable or by setting DOT_FONTPATH to the # directory containing the font. DOT_FONTNAME = Helvetica # The DOT_FONTSIZE tag can be used to set the size of the font of dot graphs. # The default size is 10pt. DOT_FONTSIZE = 10 # By default doxygen will tell dot to use the Helvetica font. # If you specify a different font using DOT_FONTNAME you can use DOT_FONTPATH to # set the path where dot can find it. DOT_FONTPATH = # If the CLASS_GRAPH and HAVE_DOT tags are set to YES then doxygen # will generate a graph for each documented class showing the direct and # indirect inheritance relations. Setting this tag to YES will force the # CLASS_DIAGRAMS tag to NO. CLASS_GRAPH = YES # If the COLLABORATION_GRAPH and HAVE_DOT tags are set to YES then doxygen # will generate a graph for each documented class showing the direct and # indirect implementation dependencies (inheritance, containment, and # class references variables) of the class with other documented classes. COLLABORATION_GRAPH = NO # If the GROUP_GRAPHS and HAVE_DOT tags are set to YES then doxygen # will generate a graph for groups, showing the direct groups dependencies GROUP_GRAPHS = YES # If the UML_LOOK tag is set to YES doxygen will generate inheritance and # collaboration diagrams in a style similar to the OMG's Unified Modeling # Language. UML_LOOK = NO # If the UML_LOOK tag is enabled, the fields and methods are shown inside # the class node. If there are many fields or methods and many nodes the # graph may become too big to be useful. The UML_LIMIT_NUM_FIELDS # threshold limits the number of items for each type to make the size more # managable. Set this to 0 for no limit. Note that the threshold may be # exceeded by 50% before the limit is enforced. UML_LIMIT_NUM_FIELDS = 10 # If set to YES, the inheritance and collaboration graphs will show the # relations between templates and their instances. TEMPLATE_RELATIONS = NO # If the ENABLE_PREPROCESSING, SEARCH_INCLUDES, INCLUDE_GRAPH, and HAVE_DOT # tags are set to YES then doxygen will generate a graph for each documented # file showing the direct and indirect include dependencies of the file with # other documented files. INCLUDE_GRAPH = YES # If the ENABLE_PREPROCESSING, SEARCH_INCLUDES, INCLUDED_BY_GRAPH, and # HAVE_DOT tags are set to YES then doxygen will generate a graph for each # documented header file showing the documented files that directly or # indirectly include this file. INCLUDED_BY_GRAPH = YES # If the CALL_GRAPH and HAVE_DOT options are set to YES then # doxygen will generate a call dependency graph for every global function # or class method. Note that enabling this option will significantly increase # the time of a run. So in most cases it will be better to enable call graphs # for selected functions only using the \callgraph command. CALL_GRAPH = NO # If the CALLER_GRAPH and HAVE_DOT tags are set to YES then # doxygen will generate a caller dependency graph for every global function # or class method. Note that enabling this option will significantly increase # the time of a run. So in most cases it will be better to enable caller # graphs for selected functions only using the \callergraph command. CALLER_GRAPH = NO # If the GRAPHICAL_HIERARCHY and HAVE_DOT tags are set to YES then doxygen # will generate a graphical hierarchy of all classes instead of a textual one. GRAPHICAL_HIERARCHY = YES # If the DIRECTORY_GRAPH and HAVE_DOT tags are set to YES # then doxygen will show the dependencies a directory has on other directories # in a graphical way. The dependency relations are determined by the #include # relations between the files in the directories. DIRECTORY_GRAPH = YES # The DOT_IMAGE_FORMAT tag can be used to set the image format of the images # generated by dot. Possible values are svg, png, jpg, or gif. # If left blank png will be used. If you choose svg you need to set # HTML_FILE_EXTENSION to xhtml in order to make the SVG files # visible in IE 9+ (other browsers do not have this requirement). DOT_IMAGE_FORMAT = png # If DOT_IMAGE_FORMAT is set to svg, then this option can be set to YES to # enable generation of interactive SVG images that allow zooming and panning. # Note that this requires a modern browser other than Internet Explorer. # Tested and working are Firefox, Chrome, Safari, and Opera. For IE 9+ you # need to set HTML_FILE_EXTENSION to xhtml in order to make the SVG files # visible. Older versions of IE do not have SVG support. INTERACTIVE_SVG = NO # The tag DOT_PATH can be used to specify the path where the dot tool can be # found. If left blank, it is assumed the dot tool can be found in the path. DOT_PATH = # The DOTFILE_DIRS tag can be used to specify one or more directories that # contain dot files that are included in the documentation (see the # \dotfile command). DOTFILE_DIRS = # The MSCFILE_DIRS tag can be used to specify one or more directories that # contain msc files that are included in the documentation (see the # \mscfile command). MSCFILE_DIRS = # The DOT_GRAPH_MAX_NODES tag can be used to set the maximum number of # nodes that will be shown in the graph. If the number of nodes in a graph # becomes larger than this value, doxygen will truncate the graph, which is # visualized by representing a node as a red box. Note that doxygen if the # number of direct children of the root node in a graph is already larger than # DOT_GRAPH_MAX_NODES then the graph will not be shown at all. Also note # that the size of a graph can be further restricted by MAX_DOT_GRAPH_DEPTH. DOT_GRAPH_MAX_NODES = 100 # The MAX_DOT_GRAPH_DEPTH tag can be used to set the maximum depth of the # graphs generated by dot. A depth value of 3 means that only nodes reachable # from the root by following a path via at most 3 edges will be shown. Nodes # that lay further from the root node will be omitted. Note that setting this # option to 1 or 2 may greatly reduce the computation time needed for large # code bases. Also note that the size of a graph can be further restricted by # DOT_GRAPH_MAX_NODES. Using a depth of 0 means no depth restriction. MAX_DOT_GRAPH_DEPTH = 0 # Set the DOT_TRANSPARENT tag to YES to generate images with a transparent # background. This is disabled by default, because dot on Windows does not # seem to support this out of the box. Warning: Depending on the platform used, # enabling this option may lead to badly anti-aliased labels on the edges of # a graph (i.e. they become hard to read). DOT_TRANSPARENT = NO # Set the DOT_MULTI_TARGETS tag to YES allow dot to generate multiple output # files in one run (i.e. multiple -o and -T options on the command line). This # makes dot run faster, but since only newer versions of dot (>1.8.10) # support this, this feature is disabled by default. DOT_MULTI_TARGETS = NO # If the GENERATE_LEGEND tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # generate a legend page explaining the meaning of the various boxes and # arrows in the dot generated graphs. GENERATE_LEGEND = YES # If the DOT_CLEANUP tag is set to YES (the default) Doxygen will # remove the intermediate dot files that are used to generate # the various graphs. DOT_CLEANUP = YES ./doc/tutorial.dox0000644000015600001650000022025012677635530014240 0ustar jenkinsjenkins/*! \mainpage notitle \section overview What are scopes \subsection intro Introduction One of Unity’s core features on the desktop is the Dash. The Dash allows users to search for and discover virtually anything, from local files and applications to web content and other online data. The Dash achieves this by interfacing with one or more search plug-ins called “scopesâ€, such as “Appsâ€, “Musicâ€, “Videosâ€, “Amazonâ€, “Wikipediaâ€, and “Youtubeâ€. On the phone and tablet, scopes make up the central user interface, as they provide everything a user needs from an operating system. Scopes enable users to locate and launch applications, access local files, play music and videos, search the web, manage their favourite social network, keep up with the latest news, and much more. Each scope is a dedicated search engine for the category of data it represents. The data source could be a local database, a web service, or even an aggregation of other scopes. (For example, the “Music†scope aggregates “Local Music†and “Online Music†scopes). A scope is responsible for performing the actual search and returning the best possible results for each query it receives. This document describes how to implement, test, and package your own scope using the Unity Scopes C++ API (unity-scopes-api). \if RemoteScopes \subsection LvsR Local vs remote scopes Local scopes are scopes that are located and run on the user’s device, while remote scopes (or “Smart Scopesâ€) are scopes that are located and run remotely on the Ubuntu Smart Scopes Server (or “SSSâ€). (Note: Although local scopes execute as local processes, they may still query online services in order to retrieve search results). A local scope usually requires local data, and therefore, can only be run locally, while a remote scope can effectively be run both locally and remotely. When deciding on whether to write a local or remote scope, keep the user’s privacy in mind. For security reasons, a scope should not access the user’s personal data unless absolutely necessary (i.e. The scope requires account information or local data to perform searches). It is only in these situations that a scope should be written to run locally. By default, a scope should be written with the intention of running remotely on the Smart Scopes Server. (For more information on how to deploy your scope to the Smart Scopes Server, or how to implement a native remote scope using the SSS REST API see: link_not_yet_available) \endif \section develop Developing scopes \subsection starting Getting started A simple C++ scope template with a cmake build system is currently available as part of the Ubuntu SDK IDE. To use it, install the packages required for scope development: \verbatim sudo apt-get install libunity-scopes-dev \endverbatim Now you are ready to explore and modify the sample code in the src/ directory. \subsection click Click packaging To register your scope, you must use the "scope" click hook, and point it to a directory containing your .ini file and .so file. In the template, a manifest such as the following is used: \code { "description": "Net scope description", "framework": "ubuntu-sdk-14.10-dev1", "hooks": { "myscope": { "scope": "myscope", <-- Point to directory in build tree with .ini and .so "apparmor": "scope-security.json" <-- Point to AppArmor manifest in build tree } } "maintainer": "Some Guy ", "name": "com.ubuntu.developer.username.net-scope", "title": "Some scope", "version": "0.1" } \endcode \subsubsection multiarch_click Multi-arch click packages The search path for the shared library inside a click package is as follows:
  • ${SCOPE_DIRECTORY}/${DEB_HOST_MULTIARCH}/lib${SCOPE_NAME}.so
  • ${SCOPE_DIRECTORY}/${DEB_HOST_MULTIARCH}/${SCOPE_NAME}.so
  • ${SCOPE_DIRECTORY}/${DEB_HOST_MULTIARCH}/scope.so
  • ${SCOPE_DIRECTORY}/lib${SCOPE_NAME}.so
  • ${SCOPE_DIRECTORY}/${SCOPE_NAME}.so
  • ${SCOPE_DIRECTORY}/scope.so
Therefore click packges can be made multi-arch aware by compiling your targets for multiple architectures, and creating, e.g. the following directory structure: \code ├── testscopeA.ini ├── testscopeA-settings.ini ├── x86_64-linux-gnu | └── libtestscopeA.so └── arm-linux-gnueabihf └── libtestscopeA.so \endcode You must also update the manifest file 'architecture' property to enumerate the included architectures, as follows: \code "architecture": ["armhf", "amd64"] \endcode \subsubsection multiarch-scoperunner Multi-arch scope runner Similarly to the shared libraries, when a relative path is provided the search path for custom scope runners is as follows:
  • ${SCOPE_DIRECTORY}/${DEB_HOST_MULTIARCH}/${CUSTOM_SCOPERUNNER}
  • ${SCOPE_DIRECTORY}/${CUSTOM_SCOPERUNNER}
\subsubsection apparmor Apparmor manifest Scopes that are packaged using click are inherently untrusted and must be confined. At present, there is only a single type of scope that can be defined:
  • Network scope - can access the network / internet, but is not allowed to use APIs that provide access to the user's data.
The security manifest for this type of scope should be as follows: \code { "template": "ubuntu-scope-network", "policy_groups": [], "policy_version": 1.2 } \endcode \subsection impl Implementing a scope This short tutorial covers the basic steps and building blocks needed to implement a scope in C++ with unity-scopes-api. For complete examples of various scopes, see the `demo/scopes` subdirectory of the unity-scopes-api source project. A typical scope implementation needs to implement interfaces of the following classes from the Scopes API:
  • unity::scopes::ScopeBase - the main scope class and entry point for all incoming requests
  • unity::scopes::SearchQueryBase - the handler for search requests
  • unity::scopes::PreviewQueryBase - the handler for preview requests (only if handling previews)
  • unity::scopes::ActivationQueryBase - the handler for activation and preview action requests (only if handling previews and activation)
  • unity::scopes::SearchListenerBase - the handler for search replies (only in aggreagator scopes, to pull results from other scopes)
The following sections show explaing these in more detail. \subsubsection simplescope Case 1: A simple (non-aggregating) scope This is the typical case: a scope that connects to a remote or local backend, such as a database, and provides results in response to search queries coming from a client (that is, the Unity Dash or another scope). \paragraph scopebase Implementing ScopeBase You must create a class that derives from \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase ScopeBase\endlink and implement a few methods. As a minimum, you must provide implementations of the \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::search search()\endlink and \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::preview preview()\endlink methods. \code{.cpp} using unity::scopes; class MyScope : public ScopeBase { public: virtual void start(std::string const& scope_id) override; // optional, dflt impl does nothing virtual void stop() override; // optional, dflt impl does nothing virtual void run() override; // optional, dflt impl does nothing virtual SearchQueryBase::UPtr search(CannedQuery const& query, SearchMetadata const& metadata) override; virtual PreviewQueryBase::UPtr preview(Result const& result, ActionMetadata const& metadata) override; } \endcode The scopes runtime calls \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::start() start()\endlink once prior to sending any queries. You can use it to perform one-time initialization for your scope. Note that you should not perform any lengthy operations in `start()`. Your implementation must return as quickly as possible (in a fraction of the second), so do not, for example, make synchronous network requests as part of `start()`. The scope ID passed to `start()` is taken from the name your scope's `.ini` configuration file. The scopes runtime calls \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::stop() stop()\endlink to inform your scope that it should shut down. You can use this method to perform any one-time clean-up. Prior to sending any queries, the scopes runtime calls \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::run() run()\endlink if your `start()` method completed successfully (did not throw an exception). The `run()` method is called by a separate thread that you can use for your own purposes, for example, to run an event loop. The scopes runtime has no further interest in this thread, but you must ensure that, if you do not return from `run()`, you must return from `run()` in response to a call to `stop()`. For typical and simple cases, you can ignore `run()`. \paragraph handlingsearch Handling search The unity::scopes::ScopeBase::search() method is called once for each query. Its purpose is to instantiate and return a new C++ instance that encapsulates the query, that is, `search()` is a factory method. (Do not start execution of the query as part of `search()`; the query object has a separate method for this.) `search()` must return an instance of an object that implements the unity::scopes::SearchQueryBase interface, for example: \code{.cpp} class MyQuery : public SearchQueryBase { ... }; SearchQueryBase::UPtr MyScope::search(CannedQuery const& query, SearchMetadata const& metadata) { SearchQueryBase::UPtr q(new MyQuery(query, metadata)); return q; } \endcode The search() method receives two arguments: a unity::scopes::CannedQuery query object that (among other information) carries the actual query string, and additional parameters for the search request, passed as unity::scopes::SearchMetadata. The metadata includes information such as the current locale string, the form factor, and the query cardinality. Cardinality is the maximum number of results expected from a query (a value of 0 indicates no limit). For optimal performance, do not return more results than indicated by the cardinality. If you more than the requested number of results, you are wasting resources. (The scopes runtime ignores the additional results.) \paragraph handlingaggregation Handling aggregation As previously stated, SearchMetadata contains additional information about the search requests you receive, including the methods:
  • \link unity::scopes::SearchMetadata::is_aggregated is_aggregated()\endlink - true if the request was initiated by an aggregator,
  • and \link unity::scopes::SearchMetadata::aggregated_keywords aggregated_keywords()\endlink - the list of keywords used by the aggregator to find your scope.
\note Please refer to the Scope Keywords tutorial document for more detail on using keywords in your scope. You can use the is_aggregated() method from within \link unity::scopes::SearchQueryBase::run SearchQueryBase::run()\endlink in order to ensure that an appropriate set of results are returned when queried by an aggregator: \code{.cpp} void MyQuery::run(SearchReplyProxy const& reply) { if (metadata_.is_aggregated()) { auto category = reply->register_category("agg_cat", "MyScope Featured", agg_icon); do_aggregated_search(reply, category); } else { do_normal_search(reply); } } \endcode You may notice in the code snippet above that for each aggregated search we receive, we register a specific results category. Although aggregators may be willing to accept more than one category from its child scopes, they are only required to accept the first. Thereafter, an aggregator may choose to ignore any additional categories the child scope registers. It is therefore recommended that scope authors follow the above method of handling aggregated searches. It is also recommended that your scope provide a decent category title (e.g. "MyScope Featured"). An aggregator is likely to display this category title as is within its result set, so try to keep it clean and descriptive. \paragraph surfacingmode Surfacing mode The query string may be the empty string. If so, the UI is asking your scope to produce default results that are shown in what is known as _surfacing mode_. These are the results the UI displays if the user navigates to your scope, but has not entered a query yet. What results to show here depends on how your scope works. For example, for a music scope, the default results could be something like "Most Popular" and "Recently Played"; similarly, for a weather scope, the default results could be for the weather report for the current location. As the scope author, you need to decide what is most appropriate to show in surfacing mode. In the interests of a good user experience, it is important to show _something_ here (if at all possible), so the user gets to see at least some results (instead of being confronted with a blank screen). The runtime automatically saves the results of the most recent surfacing query. If a scope cannot produce a result for a surfacing query (presumably, due to connectivity problems), calling \link unity::scopes::SearchReply::push_surfacing_results_from_cache() push_surfacing_results_from_cache()\endlink pushes the results that were produced by the most recent successful surfacing query from the cache. If your scope cannot produce surfacing results, you can call this method to "replay" the results of the previous surfacing query. In turn, this avoids the user being presented with an empty screen if he/she swipes to the scope while the device does not have connectivity. `push_surfacing_results_from_cache()` has an effect only if called for a surfacing query (that is, a query with an empty query string). If called for a non-empty query, it does nothing. You must call this method before calling \link unity::scopes::Reply::finished finished()\endlink, otherwise no cached results will be pushed. (`push_surfacing_results_from_cache() implicitly calls `finished()`); \paragraph querybase Implementing QueryBase You must implement a class that derives from \link unity::scopes::SearchQueryBase SearchQueryBase\endlink and return an instance of this class from `search()`. Your class must implement a \link unity::scopes::SearchQueryBase::run run()\endlink method. The scopes runtime calls `run()` to execute the query. The \link unity::scopes::SearchReplyProxy SearchReplyProxy\endlink that is passed to `run()` is an invocation handle that allows you to push results for the query back towards the client. (`SearchReplyProxy` is a `shared_ptr` to a \link unity::scopes::SearchReply SearchReply\endlink object.) Two important methods of `SerchReply` are \link unity::scopes::SearchReply::register_category register_category()\endlink and \link unity::scopes::SearchReply::push push()\endlink. `register_category()` is a factory method that registers new categories for the results of this query (see \link unity::scopes::Category\endlink). You can create new categories at any point during query processing. Categories serve to visually group query results in some way; when you push results for a query, you indicate which category each particular result belongs to, and the UI renders that result in the corresponding visual group. Categories are rendered in the order in which they are encountered by the UI as you push your results. If you want to control the order in which categories are rendered (for examples, such that a "Breaking News" category always appears first), you may need to buffer the results you receive from your back-end data source until you get a result for that category, and then push that result, plus any other buffered results. Pre-registering categories is the preferred approach because it allows the UI to reserve space and perform layout chores before any query results arrive. (In turn, this permits the UI to optimize its operation.) However, for some data sources, it may not be possible to determine all of the possible categories in advance, in which case you have no choice but to create new categories as they arrive in the data from your scope's data source. Do _not_ wait for all results for a query to arrive in an attempt to buffer them and order them by category. If you do, this prevents incremental rendering, and the user sees nothing until your scope has processed _all_ results. To create a positive user experience, your scope should push results as soon as possible. The UI uses categories to incrementally render the display after a refresh of search results. This relies on categories staying the same from query to query. If your scope has, say, a "News" category, you need to make sure that the category ID and name stay the same from query to query. In particular, do _not_ create category IDs that are artificially unique per query (such as by appending a sequence number). When you create a category, you can provide a \link unity::scopes::CategoryRenderer \endlink instance. The category renderer determines the visual appearance of the results in that category (such as display in a grid or in a carousel layout). You must wrap each actual search result inside a \link unity::scopes::CategorisedResult CategorisedResult\endlink object and pass the result instance to \link unity::scopes::SearchReply::push push\endlink. A typical implementation of `run()` might look like this: \code{.cpp} void MyQuery::run(SearchReplyProxy const& reply) { if (!valid()) { return; // Query was cancelled } auto category = reply->register_category("recommended", "Recommended", icon); //... query a local or remote backend for (auto res : backend.get_results(query().query_string())) // for every result returned by a backend { ... CategorisedResult result(category); // create a result item in "recommended" category result.set_uri(...); result.set_title(...); result.set_art(...); result.set_dnd_uri(...); result["my-custom-attribute"] = Variant(...); // add arbitrary data as needed if (!reply->push(result)) // send result to the client { break; // false from push() means that the search was cancelled } } } \endcode As far as the UI is concerned, the query is complete when `run()` returns. (While the query can potentially return more results, the UI shows a spinner or similar, to indicate that the query is not complete yet.) It is possible for you to return from `run()` _without_ having the query complete automatically. The life time of the query is controlled not only by `run()`, but also by the life time of the `SearchReplyProxy` that is passed to `run()`. The scopes runtime monitors the reply proxy and informs the UI that the query is complete when _either_ `run()` returns _or_ the last reply proxy for the query goes out of scope. This allows you to, for example, pass the reply proxy to a different thread that pushes results (as you might want to do if you need to run a separate event loop). That thread can then also react to query cancellation. The important point is that, if you keep copies of the reply proxy, the query will remain alive until you destroy all copies of the reply proxy for that query (or explicitly call `finished()` on the reply proxy yourself, which explicitly ends the query). \paragraph cancellation Query cancellation It is possible for the UI to cancel a query before the query has completed and is still running in your scope, potentially producing additional results. Typically, this happens because the user has typed a few characters as the search term (which creates a query for the string up to that point); shortly after this, the user might type another character or two, extending the search string. After a short idle period, the UI cancels the original query and creates a new query for the extended search string. However, the second query will not start until _after_ the previous query has completed. \note _Query cancellation happens frequently, and it is important for your scope to react quickly to cancellation!_ The scopes runtime provides several ways for your implementation to react to cancellation:
  • A `false` return value from `SearchReply::push`. If `push` returns `false`, there is no point in continuing to provide more results.
  • You can poll for cancellation by calling \link unity::scopes::QueryBase::valid QueryBase::valid()\endlink. `valid()` returns `false` once a query is cancelled or has exceeded its cardinality limit.
  • Your query implementation class must override the \link unity::scopes::QueryBase::cancelled QueryBase::cancelled()\endlink method. The scopes runtime calls `cancelled()` if the UI has cancelled the query. (Note that calls to `cancelled()` are made by a separate thread.)
Testing the return value from `push()` is reasonable only if you know that results for your scope will arrive quickly (no more than 0.1 seconds apart). Otherwise, you should push results asynchronously from a separate thread and arrange for the query to complete (return from `run()`) in response to the scopes runtime calling `cancelled()`. Note that it is possible for a call to `cancelled()` to arrive before the scopes runtime has called `run()` (because `cancelled()` and `run()` are called by different threads and, therefore, can be dispatched out of order). \paragraph filters Filters Scopes API offers support for filter widgets, which provide means for filtering search results based on user input other than search query string alone. Filter widgets need to be defined by creating appropriate filters inside the overriden SearchQueryBase::run() method, and then pushed to the UI. It is recommended to push filters early before search results are pushed for best user experience. Here is an example of how filters can be created: \code{.cpp} void run(SearchReplyProxy const& reply) { OptionSelectorFilter::UPtr filter1 = OptionSelectorFilter::create("brand", "Brand"); filter1->add_option("audi", "Audi"); filter1->add_option("bmw", "BMW"); RangeInputFilter::SPtr filter2 = RangeInputFilter::create("price", Variant(0.0f), Variant::null(), "Min", "", "", "Max", ""); ValueSliderFilter::SPtr filter3 = ValueSliderFilter::create("horsepower", 1, 135, 50, ValueSliderLabels("Min", "Max")); Filters filters; filters.push_back(filter1); filters.push_back(filter2); filters.push_back(filter3); reply->push(filters, query().filter_state()); // push search results here \endcode Scopes are free to change filters at any time - with every execution of search the scope can omit any of the previously visible filters or add new ones, if that makes sense for particular use cases. Filters act only as UI widgets - it is the responsibility of the scope to check their state and actually apply them to search results. The current value of a filter becomes just another parameter of the search query that needs to be taken into account in the implementation of search handling inside run(). To examine current state of the filters, pass the instance of unity::scopes::FilterState received with search query to respective methods of the filters. For example: \code{.cpp} void run(SearchReplyProxy const& reply) { // filter creation code omitted here auto state = query().filter_state(); int search_start = 0; int search_end = 1000; if (rangefilter->has_start_value(state)) { search_start = rangefilter->start_value(state); } if (rangefilter->has_end_value(state)) { search_end = rangefilter->end_value(state); } // apply search_start and search_end to search logic \endcode The scope may nominate a single filter to act as "primary navigation". This is only possible if departments are not used at the same time (in which case departments become a primary navigation tool). An attempt to nominate a filter to be a "primary navigation" while departments are present is ignored by the UI and the filter acts as a regular filter. Also, only a single-selection OptionSelectorFilter can currently be promoted to be primary navigation. To do this, set the display hints to FilterBase::DisplayHints::Primary: \code{.cpp} OptionSelectorFilter::UPtr filter1 = OptionSelectorFilter::create("brand", "Brand"); filter1->set_display_hints(FilterBase::DisplayHints::Primary); filter1->add_option("audi", "Audi"); \endcode When a filter becomes a primary navigation filter, it gets displayed in the search box drop-down, below recent searches, so it's readily available for quick access. Also, currently selected option is displayed as a "brick" in the search box, hinting the user about the context of current search. All the other filters can be revealed via the filters panel icon. \paragraph handlingpreview Handling previews Your scope is responsible for handling preview requests for results it has returned; you implement this by overriding the unity::scopes::ScopeBase::preview() method: \code{.cpp} class MyScope : public unity::scopes::ScopeBase { public: ... virtual PreviewQueryBase::UPtr preview(Result const& result, ActionMetadata const& metadata) override; ... } \endcode This method must return an instance derived from unity::scopes::PreviewQueryBase. Like `search()`, `preview()` is a factory method; the scopes runtime initiates the actual preview by calling \link unity::scopes::PreviewQueryBase::run run()\endlink on the instance you return. Your `run()` method is responsible for gathering preview data (from local or remote sources) and passing it to the UI along with the definition of the visual appearance of the preview by calling \link unity::scopes::PreviewReply::push push()\endlink on the reply proxy that is passed to `run()`. (This is analogous to returning results from `search()`.) A preview consists of one or more preview widgets. Preview widgets are the basic building blocks for previews, such as a header with a title and subtitle, an image, a gallery with multiple images, a list of audio tracks, and so on.(See unity::scopes::PreviewWidget for a list of supported widget types.) Your implementation of \link unity::scopes::PreviewQueryBase::run run()\endlink must create and populate one or more preview widgets and push them to the UI. Each preview widget has a unique identifier, a type name, and a set of attributes determined by the widget's type. For example, a widget of "image" type expects two attributes: "source" (a URI that should point at an image), and a "zoomable" flag that determines if the image should be zoomable. You can specify the values of these attributes explicitly, or you can arrange for the values to be taken from a result that the corresponding query returned earlier, by referencing the corresponding \link unity::scopes::Result Result\endlink instance. You can also push the value for a referenced attribute separately as part of your implementation of `run()`. You provide attributes explicitly by calling \link unity::scopes::PreviewWidget::add_attribute_value PreviewWidget::add_attribute_value()\endlink: \code{.cpp} PreviewWidget image_widget("myimage", "image"); image_widget.add_attribute_value("source", Variant("file:///tmp/image.jpg")); image_widget.add_attribute_value("zoomable", Variant(false)); \endcode To reference values from results or arbitrary values that you push separately, use \link unity::scopes::PreviewWidget::add_attribute_mapping PreviewWidget::add_attribute_mapping()\endlink: \code{.cpp} PreviewWidget image_widget("myimage", "image"); image_widget.add_attribute_mapping("source", "art"); // use 'art' attribute from the result image_widget.add_attribute_mapping("zoomable", "myzoomable"); // 'myzoomable' not specified, but pushed below reply->push("myzoomable", Variant(true)); \endcode To push preview widgets to the client, use \link unity::scopes::PreviewReply::push PreviewReply::push()\endlink: \code{.cpp} PreviewWidget image_widget("myimage", "image"); PreviewWidget header_widget("myheader", "header"); // fill in widget attributes ... PreviewWidgetList widgets { image_widget, header_widget }; reply->push(widgets); \endcode \paragraph previewactions Preview actions Previews can have actions, such as buttons that the user can press. Actions are supported by a preview widget of type "actions". An actions widget holds one or more action button definitions, where each definition has a unique identifier, a label, and an optional icon. For example, a widget with two buttons, "Open" and "Download", can be defined as follows (using the \link unity::scopes::VariantBuilder VariantBuilder\endlink helper class): \code{.cpp} PreviewWidget buttons("mybuttons", "actions"); VariantBuilder builder; builder.add_tuple({ {"id", Variant("open")}, {"label", Variant("Open")} }); builder.add_tuple({ {"id", Variant("download")}, {"label", Variant("Download")} }); buttons.add_attribute_value("actions", builder.end()); \endcode To respond to activation of preview actions, your scope must implement \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::perform_action ScopeBase::perform_action\endlink: \code{.cpp} class MyScope : public ScopeBase { ... virtual ActivationQueryBase::UPtr perform_action(Result const& result, ActionMetadata const& metadata, std::string const& widget_id, std::string const& action_id) override ... } \endcode Like `search()` and `preview()`, `perform_action()` is a factory method. It must return an instance that derives from \link unity::scopes::ActivationQueryBase ActivationQueryBase\endlink. Your derived class must implement the \link unity::scopes::ActivationQueryBase::activate activate()\endlink method, whose job it is to respond to the activation (that is, the user pressing a button). `activate` must return an \link unity::scopes::ActivationResponse ActivationResponse\endlink, which tells the UI how it should behave in response to the activation. For example, your `activate()` could direct the UI to run a new search as follows: \code{.cpp} class MyActivation : public ActivationQueryBase { MyActivation(Result const& result, unity::scopes::ActionMetadata const& metadata) : ActivationQueryBase(result, metadata) { } virtual ActivationResponse activate() override { ... if (action_id() == "search-grooveshark") { CannedQuery query("com.canonical.scopes.grooveshark"); query.set_query_string("metal"); return ActivationResponse(query); } ... } }; \endcode \paragraph handlingactivation Handling result activation In many cases, the user can activate search results directly, by tapping on them, provided the result's schema (such as "http://") has a handler in the system. If this is the case, you need not do anything for activation. However, if your scope uses schemas without a handler, the shell will ignore the activation. (Nothing happens in response to a tap by the user.) If you want to intercept such activations (either for schemas without a handler, or to generally intercept result activation), you must implement the \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::activate ScopeBase::activate()\endlink method: \code{.cpp} class MyScope : public ScopeBase { virtual ActivationQueryBase::UPtr activate(Result const& result, ActionMetadata const& metadata) override; ... } \endcode In addition, you must call \link unity::scopes::Result::set_intercept_activation Result::set_intercept_activation()\endlink for all results that should trigger a call to your `activate()` method. Your implementation of `activate()` should follow the same guidelines as for `perform_action()` (except that widget and action identifiers do not apply to result activation). \paragraph export Exporting a scope Your scope must be compiled into a `.so` shared library and, to be successfully loaded at runtime, it must provide two C functions to create and destroy it. A typical code snippet to do this looks as follows: \code{.cpp} extern "C" { unity::scopes::ScopeBase* UNITY_SCOPE_CREATE_FUNCTION() { return new MyScope(); } void UNITY_SCOPE_DESTROY_FUNCTION(unity::scopes::ScopeBase* scope_base) { delete scope_base; } } \endcode \paragraph inlineplayback Inline music playback Results which represent music (songs, albums etc.) can contain an extra data about audio content and can then be played directly from the Dash. Such results have a "play" button overlaid on them. To create results that support this functionality two conditions must be met:
  • Category renderer definition must contain the "quick-preview-type" key with the value of "audio" in the "template" section;
  • Results in the respective category must contain a "quick-preview-data" attribute, each of them is a dictionary with the extra playback data described below.
The data assigned to "quick-preview-data" attribute of a Result needs to contain the following keys:
  • uri - a playable uri of a media file (path of a local file, or http uri).
  • duration - the duration of the media file, in seconds.
  • playlist - an array of uris of additional songs, e.g. songs from same album; they will be played in sequence when the main song denoted by 'uri' finishes.
Here is an example of a category renderer for inline playback, which uses component mapping to map quick-preview-data to audio-data attribute of a result: \code{.cpp} static const char CATEGORY_RENDERER[] = R"( { "schema-version": 1, "template": { "category-layout": "grid", "card-size": "large", "card-layout" : "horizontal", "quick-preview-type" : "audio" }, "components": { "title": "title", "art": { "field": "art" }, "subtitle": "artist", "quick-preview-data": { "field": "audio-data" } } } )"; \endcode A sample code that creates a result card representing a song and all songs from same album in a background playlist may look this way: \code{.cpp} CategorisedResult res(category); res.set_uri(uri); res.set_title(media.getTitle()); ... VariantMap inline_playback_data; inline_playback_data["uri"] = uri; inline_playback_data["duration"] = song_duration_in_seconds; VariantArray playlist; for (const std::string& song: album_songs) { playlist.push_back(Variant(song.getUri())); } inline_playback_data["playlist"] = playlist; res["audio-data"] = inline_playback_data; \endcode \subsubsection aggscope Case 2: An aggregating scope Aggregating scopes are scopes that collect results from other scopes and possibly consolidate, modify, or re-categorise the results in some way. In other words, for an aggregating scope, the data source(s) are other scopes rather than, say, a remote web service. To receive results from its child scopes, your scope must implement a class that derives from \link unity::scopes::SearchListenerBase SearchListenerBase\endlink. You provide an instance of this class to each sub-query; the scopes runtime invokes callback methods on this class to let you know when a new result or status update arrives, and when a query completes. \paragraph childscopes Finding child scopes To send queries to its child scopes, your scope must obtain a proxy for each child scope. The scopes runtime runs a registry process. The job of the registry (among other things) is to provide information about available scopes (whether they are local scopes or remote scopes in the Smartscopes server). You can obtain the proxy for a child scope by calling \link unity::scopes::Registry::get_metadata get_metadata()\endlink on the registry, supplying the ID of the child scope. The return value is an instance of type \link unity::scopes::ScopeMetadata ScopeMetadata\endlink that describes the scope and also provides access to the proxy for the scope. You can also aggregate scopes indirectly via keyword(s). Keywords describe the type of content a scope provides (e.g. a scope with the keyword "music" will return music results, the "video" keyword indicates video content, and so on). You can obtain child scopes via keywords by calling \link unity::scopes::Registry::list_if list_if()\endlink on the registry, supplying a predicate function. The return value is a map containing only those scopes for which the predicate returns true. Therefore, your predicate function should return true for all scopes matching the keyword(s) you wish to aggregate. \note Please refer to the Scope Keywords tutorial document for a list of recommended keywords to use. As an aggregator scope author you must provide an implementation of the virtual \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::find_child_scopes ScopeBase::find_child_scopes()\endlink method. All logic for finding your aggregator's child scopes should be implemented within this method. The return value is of type \link unity::scopes::ChildScopeList ChildScopeList\endlink and must contain an instance of \link unity::scopes::ChildScope ChildScope\endlink for each scope your aggregator may collect results from. Here is how you could implement find_child_scopes() to return all scopes in the registry that contain the keywords "sports" and "news": \code{.cpp} ChildScopeList MyScope::find_child_scopes() const override { auto sportsnews_scopes = registry()->list_if([](ScopeMetadata const& item) { auto keywords = item.keywords(); return (keywords.find("sports") != keywords.end()) && (keywords.find("news") != keywords.end()); }); ChildScopeList list; for (auto const& sportsnews_scope : sportsnews_scopes) { list.emplace_back(ChildScope{sportsnews_scope.first, // Child scope ID sportsnews_scope.second, // Child scope metadata true, // Default enabled state (when first discovered) {"sports", "news"}}); // Keywords used to aggregate this scope } return list; } \endcode \paragraph subquery Sub-queries To send a query to another scope, use one of the `subsearch()` overloads of \link unity::scopes::SearchQueryBase\endlink inside your implementation of \link unity::scopes::SearchQueryBase::run SearchQueryBase::run()\endlink. This method requires a handle to the child scope to query (either via proxy or ChildScope handle), the query details (\link unity::scopes::CannedQuery CannedQuery\endlink), plus an instance of your `SearchListenerBase` implementation that will receive the query results. \note `subsearch()` is identical to \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::search search()\endlink but, for `subsearch()`, the scopes runtime transparently forwards query cancellation to child scopes, so your implementation of \link unity::scopes::QueryBase::cancelled QueryBase::cancelled()\endlink does not need to forward cancellation to its children. (However, your query class still needs to react to cancellation and should terminate the current query is quickly as possible in response to a cancelled message.) You should always call \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::child_scopes ScopeBase::child_scopes()\endlink from within your aggregator's \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::search search()\endlink method in order to retrieve the latest child scopes list containing the most recent "enabled" states. You can then pass this list into your instantiation of SearchQueryBase for later use. \note An aggregator must respect the "enabled" states of its child scopes, querying only the child scopes that are enabled. Here is how you could implement an aggregating scope that passes a query to a single child scope "scope-A": \code{.cpp} ChildScopeList MyScope::find_child_scopes() const override { auto reg = registry(); // Up-call into base class if (!reg) { throw ConfigException(scope_id + ": No registry available, cannot locate child scopes"); } ChildScopeList list; try { auto meta = reg->get_metadata("scope-A"); list.emplace_back(ChildScope{"scope-A", meta}); } catch (NotFoundException const& e) { ... } return list; } QueryBase::UPtr MyScope::search(CannedQuery const& query, SearchMetadata const& metadata) { SearchQueryBase::UPtr q(new MyQuery(query, metadata, child_scopes())); return q; } ... void MyQuery::run(SearchReplyProxy const& upstream_reply) { // Continue only if our child scope is installed AND enabled if (!child_scopes_.empty() && child_scopes_.front().enabled) { auto category = reply->register_category("recommended", "Recommended", icon, ""); SearchListenerBase::SPtr reply(new MyReceiver(upstream_reply, category)); subsearch(child_scopes_.front(), query_, reply); } } \endcode Note that the `subsearch()` call is asynchronous and returns immediately. Despite this, your `MyQuery` instance is kept alive because the scopes runtime does not delete it until the child query has completed. (The runtime tracks the `reply` proxy for the query and holds the query alive until it receives a finished message from the child scope.) \paragraph receiver Receiving sub-query results Here is a simple implementation of a receiver that passes all child categories and results through to its parent without change. Of course, a more realistic aggregating scope will typically aggregate from more than one child and probably de-duplicate, collate, or otherwise modify child results before passing them upstream. \code{.cpp} class MyReceiver: public SearchListenerBase { public: virtual void push(Category::SCPtr const& category) override { upstream_reply_->register_category(category); } virtual void push(CategorisedResult result) override { upstream_reply_->push(std::move(result)); } MyReceiver(SearchReplyProxy const& upstream_reply) : upstream_reply_(upstream_reply) { } private: SearchReplyProxy upstream_reply_; }; \endcode \paragraph aggbuffering Controlling category order Categories are displayed in the order their results are pushed. This can pose a challenge for aggregator scopes because results from child scopes often arrive in random order. To control the order in which categories are rendered, the aggregator must buffer and potentially re-order results by category before pushing them. \link unity::scopes::utility::BufferedResultForwarder BufferedResultForwarder\endlink makes it easier to do this. To use the class, you create one instance for each child scope and chain the instances together in the desired order of categories. Each forwarder buffers results until its predecessor in the chain indicates that it has completed its category ordering, at which point it itself pushes any results it has buffered so far and indicates to its follower that it is ready. By default, a forwarder indicates that it it is ready (has completed ordering) as soon as it has received a single result. This is useful if an aggregator has child scopes that produce results for a single category each. In this case, the order of the forwarders determines which category (the one used by child A or by child B) appears first when the results are rendered. If an aggregator collates results from children that each produce results for more than one category, you can override the default implementation of \link unity::scopes::utility::BufferedResultForwarder::push push()\endlink to change categories for results from its child, and/or indicate that it is ready only once the child has provided results for all expected categories. (See \link unity::scopes::utility::BufferedResultForwarder BufferedResultForwarder\endlink for more details.) \paragraph aggactiv Activation and preview If an aggregator scope simply forwards the results it receives from other scopes (possibly changing their category), the aggregator need not do anything special for previews, preview actions, or result activation. In this case, previews, preview actions, and result activation are sent to the scope that produced the corresponding result. If, however, an aggregator scope changes attributes of results (or creates completely new results that "replace" received results), you must take extra care:
  • If the original original scope should still handle preview (and activation) requests for a modified result, you must store a copy of the original result in the modified (or new) result by calling \link unity::scopes::Result::store Result::store()\endlink. Preview requests for such a result will automatically trigger the scope that created the innermost stored result. \note Making changes to a receive result but failing to store the original result with the change can cause in unexpected behavior: a scope could receive a modified result and, depending the exact changes, may not be able to correctly deal with the result.
  • If an aggregator creates a completely new result that replaces the original result but does not also store a copy of the original result, the aggregator _must_ handle preview and activation requests (if the intercept flag is set). The actions to take are the same as for a non-aggregating scope (see \ref handlingpreview and \ref handlingactivation).
Here is an example `push()` implementation that modifies a result and stores a copy, so the original scope can handle preview and activation: \code{.cpp} void MyReceiver::push(CategorisedResult original_result) { // agg_category is a category that aggregates all results from other scopes CategorisedResult result(agg_category); result.set_uri(original_result.uri()); result.set_title(original_result.title() + " (aggregated)"); result.set_art(original_result.art()); result.store(original_result); upstream_->push(std::move(result)); } \endcode \subsection threading Threading model It is important to understand how the runtime uses threads to call methods on scopes and clients. The runtime maintains a number of threads that each call one or more methods. Methods in the same group are always called by the same thread. This means that methods in the same group do not run concurrently, but methods in different groups _do_ run concurrently. If you share state between methods in different groups, you _must_ synchronize access to that state, otherwise your code will suffer from race conditions. The following lists shows how methods are grouped. Each group has a single dedicated dispatch thread.
  • \link UNITY_SCOPE_CREATE_FUNCTION()\endlink, \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::start() ScopeBase::start()\endlink, \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::stop() ScopeBase::stop()\endlink, and \link UNITY_SCOPE_DESTROY_FUNCTION()\endlink.
  • \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::search() ScopeBase::search()\endlink, \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::preview() ScopeBase::preview()\endlink, and \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::perform_action() ScopeBase::perform_action()\endlink.
  • \link unity::scopes::SearchQueryBase::run() SearchQueryBase::run()\endlink, \link unity::scopes::PreviewQueryBase::run() PreviewQueryBase::run()\endlink, and \link unity::scopes::ActivationQueryBase::activate() ActivationQueryBase::activate()\endlink.
  • \link unity::scopes::QueryBase::cancelled() QueryBase::cancelled()\endlink.
  • \link unity::scopes::SearchListenerBase::push() SearchListenerBase::push()\endlink, \link unity::scopes::PreviewListenerBase::push() PreviewListenerBase::push()\endlink, \link unity::scopes::ActivationListenerBase::activated() ActivationListenerBase::activated()\endlink, \link unity::scopes::ListenerBase::finished() ListenerBase::finished()\endlink, \link unity::scopes::ListenerBase::info() ListenerBase::info()\endlink.
For your scope implementation, keep in mind that `cancelled()` is _not_ called by the same thread that called, for example, `search()` or `run()`. This means that any state you established in `search()` or `run()` must be synchronized if you use that state in `cancelled()`. Similar considerations apply for aggregating scopes, which act as both client and server: you must synchronize any state that is shared between the client side and the server side. For example, you must synchronize state established in `search()` and accessed from `push()` or `finished()`. \subsection scopesettings Settings A scope can provide for simple customizations, such as allowing the user to configure an email address or select a distance unit as metric or imperial. \subsubsection settings_definitions Defining settings You can define such settings in a configuration file. The file must be placed into the same directory as the scope's normal configuration file, with the name `-settings.ini`. For example, for a scope with ID `com.acme.myscope`, the normal configuration file is `com.acme.myscope.ini`, and the settings definition file is `com.acme.myscope-settings.ini`. Both files must be installed in the same directory (together with the scope's `.so` file). The shell constructs a user interface from the settings definitions. The user can change settings via that UI. The scope can retrieve the actual setting values at run time (see \ref read_settings). The following types are supported for settings:
  • `string` - a string value
  • `number` - a numeric value (integer or floating point)
  • `boolean` - `true` or `false`
  • `list` - a list of alternatives to choose from (single-choice)
It is possible to optionally define a default value for each setting. Here are the contents of an example definition file: ~~~ [location] type = string defaultValue = London displayName = Location [distanceUnit] type = list defaultValue = 1 displayName = Distance Unit displayName[de] = Entfernungseinheit displayValues = Kilometers;Miles displayValues[de] = Kilometer;Meilen [age] type = number defaultValue = 23 displayName = Age [enabled] type = boolean defaultValue = true displayName = Enabled # Setting without a default value [color] type = string displayName = Color ~~~ The file must contain a group for each setting. The order of the groups determines the display order for the user interface that is constructed by the shell. The group name is the ID of the corresponding setting. Each setting definition must contain at least the following mandatory definitions:
  • `type` - Defines the type of the setting (`string`, `number`, `boolean`, or `list`).
  • `displayName` - Defines a display name that is shown for this setting by the shell.
The defaultValue field is optional. If present, it defines a default value that is provided to the scope if the user has not changed anything (or has never used the settings UI before using the scope). It is possible to test for settings that do not have a default value and were never set by the user (see \ref read_settings). For settings of type `list`, the `displayValues` field is mandatory. It must contain an array that lists the available choices. If you provide a default value, it must be in the range `0..max-1` (where `max` is the number of choices). The `displayName` and `displayValues` fields can be localized by appending a locale identifier in square brackets. If no entry can be found that matches the current locale, the non-localized value is used. \subsubsection read_settings Accessing settings The settings that are currently in effect are available to a scope via the unity::scopes::ScopeBase::settings() and unity::scopes::QueryBase::settings() methods. These methods return a unity::scopes::VariantMap with one entry per setting. The map contains an entry for each setting (using the group name as the key). The lookup value is a unity::scopes::Variant that holds the current value of the setting. If a setting has a value, the corresponding entry in the map contains a string (for settings of type `string`, a boolean (for settings of type `boolean`), or an integer (for settings of type `number` and `list`). (If the user did not provide a particular value, but the settings definition provided a default value, the `Variant` contains the default value. If a setting does not have a default value, and the user did not establish a value for the setting, the corresponding entry is absent from the map. When you use settings in your scope implementation, do not cache the values and re-use them for a different query. If you do, any setting changes made by the user will not take effect until your scope is re-started by the runtime. (Because the user cannot know when that happens, this can be highly confusing.) Instead, call `settings()` each time you need to use the value of a setting. That way, your scope will react to any change made by the user as soon as it receives another query. Here is an example of how to read the current settings values for the definition in \ref settings_definitions : ~~~ // In your `ScopeBase` or `QueryBase` implementation: unity::scopes::VariantMap s = settings(); // The settings method is provided by the base class cout << s["location"].get_string(); // Prints "London" unless the user changed the value auto it = s.find("color"); if (it != s.end()) // Setting does not have a default value, need to test { cout << it->second.get_string(); // Prints the user-established value } ~~~ \subsection directories File system access Scopes that are installed from click packages are subject to confinement and are not allowed to access most parts of the file system. However, a few locations are available to a scope. You can access these paths by calling methods on \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase ScopeBase\endlink. \note Do not call these methods from the constructor of your `ScopeBase` implementation. If you do, these methods throw `LogicException`. Instead, call them from \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::start() start()\endlink or any time thereafter. \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::scope_directory() scope_directory()\endlink returns the path of the installation directory of the scope. This directory contains the scope's `.so` and `.ini` files, plus whatever other files you decide to package with your scope. The scope has read-only permission for this directory. \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::cache_directory() cache_directory()\endlink returns the path of a directory that is (exclusively) writable for the scope. You can use this directory to store persistent information, such as a cache of results. \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::app_directory() app_directory()\endlink returns the path of a read-only directory. If the scope is packaged together with an app, the app has permission to write files in this location, that is, this directory can be used make information provided by the app available to the scope (but not vice versa). \link unity::scopes::ScopeBase::tmp_directory() tmp_directory()\endlink returns the path of a read-only directory that is (exclusively) writable for the scope. This directory is periodically cleaned of unused files. The exact amount of time may vary, but is on the order of a few hours. The directory is also cleaned during reboot. \subsection online_accounts Online Accounts A scope may require access to an online account in order to evaluate particular results, perform certain actions, or perhaps even operate at all. The following section describes how to use online account services from your scope. \subsubsection oa_step1 Step 1: Update Apparmor manifest. Firstly, in order for your scope to be granted access to the online accounts backend, the "accounts" policy group needs to be added to your Apparmor manifest file, as follows: \paragraph oa_apparmor Example Apparmor manifest file: \code { "template": "ubuntu-scope-network", "policy_groups": [ "accounts" ], "policy_version": 1.2 } \endcode \subsubsection oa_step2 Step 2: Account service configuration. Scopes access accounts at a service level (E.g. YouTube service under a Google account, Ubuntu Store service under an Ubuntu One account, etc.), therefore each scope must provide some config to specify its account service requirements. There are 2 additional files that a scope must supply: 1. A .service file to specify a method of accessing its particular account provider. 2. A .application file to link one or more services to your scope. \paragraph oa_service Example .service file: \code sharing youtube YouTube google unity-scope-youtube \endcode \paragraph oa_application Example .application file: \code YouTube com.ubuntu.scopes.youtube_youtube.desktop Watch your favorite YouTube videos \endcode \subsubsection oa_step3 Step 3: Update Click manifest. Now that we have added the new files from the previous step to our project, we need to update our click manifest file to include them: \paragraph oa_click Example Click manifest file: \code { "description": "YouTube scope", "framework": "ubuntu-sdk-14.10-dev2", "architecture": "armhf", "hooks": { "youtube": { "scope": "youtube", "apparmor": "apparmor.json", "account-application": "youtube.application", "account-service": "youtube.service" } }, "icon": "youtube/icon.png", "maintainer": "Ubuntu Developers ", "name": "com.ubuntu.scopes.youtube", "title": "YouTube scope", "version": "1.0.12" } \endcode \subsubsection oa_step4 Step 4: Utilize the OnlineAccountClient class. Finally, we can access online account services from within our scope implementation. The first thing we need to do is instantiate a unity::scopes::OnlineAccountClient object. On construction we must specify our account service name, service type, and provider name (These correspond to the values of the "service_id", "type", and "provider" entries in your .service file). The constructor accepts a fourth optional parameter which can be used to specify a dictionary of authentication data, whose contents will complement (or override) those authentication parameters specified in the `