diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'lv2/lv2plug.in/ns/ext')
| -rw-r--r-- | lv2/lv2plug.in/ns/ext/atom/atom.ttl | 193 | 
1 files changed, 150 insertions, 43 deletions
| diff --git a/lv2/lv2plug.in/ns/ext/atom/atom.ttl b/lv2/lv2plug.in/ns/ext/atom/atom.ttl index d2ac20c..a614a7d 100644 --- a/lv2/lv2plug.in/ns/ext/atom/atom.ttl +++ b/lv2/lv2plug.in/ns/ext/atom/atom.ttl @@ -26,22 +26,23 @@  		dcs:blame <http://drobilla.net/drobilla#me>  	] ;  	lv2:documentation """ -<p>This extension defines a generic container for data, called an <q>Atom</q>, -and several basic Atom types which can be used to express structured data. -Atoms are (with one exception) Plain Old Data (POD), which means they can be -easily copied generically (e.g. using <code>memcpy</code>), and are suitable -for use in high-performance and real-time code.</p> - -<p>Since Atom communication can be implemented generically, plugins that -understand some type can be used together in a host that does not understand -that type.  Similarly, plugins (such as routers, delays, or data stores) can +<p>This specification defines a generic container for data, called an +<q>Atom</q>, and several basic Atom types which can be used to express +structured data.  An atom:Atom is (with one exception) Plain Old Data (POD), +which means it can be copied generically (e.g. using a simple +<code>memcpy</code>), and is suitable for use in real-time code.</p> + +<p>The purpose of Atoms is to allow implementations that process and/or +transmit data to be independent of that data's type.  For example, plugins that +mutually understand a type can be used together in a host that does not +understand that type, because the host's required facilities are generic. +Similarly, plugins (such as routers, delays, or data structures) can  meaningfully process atoms of a type unknown to them.</p>  <p>Atoms can and should be used anywhere values of various types must be stored -or transmitted.  This extension defines a port type, atom:AtomPort, for -transmitting atoms via ports.  The atom:Sequence type in an atom:AtomPort -replaces the <a href="http://lv2plug.in/ns/ext/event">LV2 event</a> -extension.</p> +or transmitted.  The port type atom:AtomPort can be used to transmit atoms via +ports.  The atom:Sequence type in an atom:AtomPort replaces the <a +href="http://lv2plug.in/ns/ext/event">LV2 event</a> extension.</p>  <p>The types defined in this extension should be powerful enough to express  almost any structure.  Implementations SHOULD build structures out of the types @@ -53,6 +54,16 @@ where absolutely necessary.</p>  <p>Implementing this extension requires a facility for mapping URIs to  integers, such as the <a href="http://lv2plug.in/ns/ext/urid">LV2 URID</a>  extension.</p> + +<h3>Serialisation</h3> + +<p>An Atom type primarily defines a binary format (i.e. a C data type) for use +at runtime.  However, each Atom type also has a standard serialisation format +which SHOULD be used wherever an atom needs to be expressed as a string or in +Turtle.  Thus, this specification not only defines binary data types for +plugins to use, but a complete data model with a portable RDF-compatible +serialisation.  This is useful for inter-process communication as well as +saving state.</p>  """ .  atom:cType @@ -61,10 +72,23 @@ atom:cType  		owl:FunctionalProperty ;  	rdfs:label "C type" ;  	rdfs:domain rdfs:Class ; -	rdfs:range xsd:string ; +	rdfs:range lv2:Symbol ;  	rdfs:comment """ -The identifier for a C type describing the in-memory representation of -an instance of this class. +The identifier for a C type describing the binary representation of an Atom of +this type. +""" . + +atom:stringType +	a rdf:Property , +		owl:ObjectProperty , +		owl:FunctionalProperty ; +	rdfs:label "String type" ; +	rdfs:domain rdfs:Class ; +	rdfs:range rdfs:Datatype ; +	lv2:documentation """ +<p>The type to be used when representing an Atom of this type as a string +(e.g. in XML or RDF).  Typically an <a +href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-2/">XML Schema Datatype</a> URI.</p>  """ .  atom:Atom @@ -73,14 +97,14 @@ atom:Atom  	atom:cType "LV2_Atom" ;  	lv2:documentation """  <p>Abstract base class for all atoms.  An LV2_Atom has a 32-bit -<code>type</code> and <code>size</code> followed by a body of <code>size</code> +<code>size</code> and <code>type</code> followed by a body of <code>size</code>  bytes.  Atoms MUST be 64-bit aligned.</p>  <p>All concrete Atom types (subclasses of this class) MUST define a precise  binary layout for their body.</p>  <p>The <code>type</code> field is the URI of an Atom type mapped to an integer. -Implementations SHOULD gracefully ignore, or pass through, atoms with unknown +Implementations SHOULD gracefully pass through, or ignore, atoms with unknown  types.</p>  <p>All atoms are POD by definition except references, which as a special case @@ -91,8 +115,9 @@ reserves the type 0 for references, the details of reference handling are  currently unspecified.  A future revision of this extension, or a different  extension, may define how to use non-POD data and references.  Implementations  MUST NOT send references to another implementation unless the receiver is -explicitly known to support references (e.g. by supporting a feature).  The -atom with both <code>type</code> <em>and</em> <code>size</code> 0 is +explicitly known to support references (e.g. by supporting a feature).</p> + +<p>The atom with both <code>type</code> <em>and</em> <code>size</code> 0 is  <q>null</q>, which is not considered a Reference.</p>  """ . @@ -100,11 +125,20 @@ atom:Chunk  	a rdfs:Class ;  	rdfs:subClassOf atom:Atom ;  	rdfs:label "Chunk of memory" ; +	atom:stringType xsd:base64Binary ;  	lv2:documentation """  <p>A chunk of memory with undefined contents.  This type is used to indicate a  certain amount of space is available.  For example, output ports with a  variably sized type are connected to a Chunk so the plugin knows the size of  the buffer available for writing.</p> + +<p>The use of a Chunk should be constrained to a local scope, since +interpreting it is impossible without context.  However, if serialised to RDF, +a Chunk may be represented directly as an xsd:base64Binary string, e.g.:</p> + +<pre class="turtle-code"> +[] eg:someChunk "vu/erQ=="^^xsd:base64Binary . +</pre>  """ .  atom:Number @@ -116,31 +150,36 @@ atom:Int  	a rdfs:Class ;  	rdfs:subClassOf atom:Number ;  	rdfs:label "Signed 32-bit integer" ; -	atom:cType "LV2_Atom_Int" . +	atom:cType "LV2_Atom_Int" ; +	atom:stringType xsd:int .  atom:Long  	a rdfs:Class ;  	rdfs:subClassOf atom:Number ;  	rdfs:label "Signed 64-bit integer" ; -	atom:cType "LV2_Atom_Long" . +	atom:cType "LV2_Atom_Long" ; +	atom:stringType xsd:long .  atom:Float  	a rdfs:Class ;  	rdfs:subClassOf atom:Number ;  	rdfs:label "32-bit IEEE-754 floating point number" ; -	atom:cType "LV2_Atom_Float" . +	atom:cType "LV2_Atom_Float" ; +	atom:stringType xsd:float .  atom:Double  	a rdfs:Class ;  	rdfs:subClassOf atom:Number ;  	rdfs:label "64-bit IEEE-754 floating point number" ; -	atom:cType "LV2_Atom_Double" . +	atom:cType "LV2_Atom_Double" ; +	atom:stringType xsd:double .  atom:Bool  	a rdfs:Class ;  	rdfs:subClassOf atom:Atom ;  	rdfs:label "Boolean" ;  	atom:cType "LV2_Atom_Bool" ; +	atom:stringType xsd:boolean ;  	rdfs:comment "An Int where 0 is false and any other value is true." .  atom:String @@ -148,6 +187,7 @@ atom:String  	rdfs:subClassOf atom:Atom ;  	rdfs:label "String" ;  	atom:cType "LV2_Atom_String" ; +	atom:stringType xsd:string ;  	lv2:documentation """  <p>A UTF-8 encoded string.</p> @@ -155,10 +195,9 @@ atom:String  array of bytes (<code>uint8_t</code>) terminated with a NULL byte  (<code>'\\0'</code>).</p> -<p>This type can be used for free-form strings, but in most cases it is better to -use atom:Literal since this supports a language tag or datatype.  Implementations -SHOULD NOT use atom:String unless translating the string does not make sense and -the string has no meaningful datatype.</p> +<p>This type is for free-form strings, but SHOULD NOT be used for typed data or +text in any language.  Use atom:Literal unless translating the string does not +make sense and the string has no meaningful datatype.</p>  """ .  atom:Literal @@ -169,7 +208,7 @@ atom:Literal  	lv2:documentation """  <p>A UTF-8 encoded string literal, with an optional datatype or language.</p> -<p>This type is compatible with rdf:Literal and is capable of expressing a +<p>This type is compatible with rdfs:Literal and is capable of expressing a  string in any language or a value of any type.  A Literal has a  <code>datatype</code> and <code>lang</code> followed by string data in UTF-8  encoding.  The length of the string data in bytes is <code>size - @@ -185,10 +224,10 @@ both.</p>  <p>For example, a Literal can be "Hello" in English:</p>  <pre class="c-code">  void set_to_hello_in_english(LV2_Atom_Literal* lit) { -     lit->atom.type = map(expand("atom:Literal")); -     lit->atom.size = 14; -     lit->datatype  = 0; -     lit->lang      = map("http://lexvo.org/id/iso639-1/en"); +     lit->atom.type     = map(expand("atom:Literal")); +     lit->atom.size     = 14; +     lit->body.datatype = 0; +     lit->body.lang     = map("http://lexvo.org/id/iso639-1/en");       memcpy(LV2_ATOM_CONTENTS(LV2_Atom_Literal, lit),              "Hello",              sizeof("Hello"));  // Assumes enough space @@ -198,10 +237,10 @@ void set_to_hello_in_english(LV2_Atom_Literal* lit) {  <p>or a Turtle string:</p>  <pre class="c-code">  void set_to_turtle_string(LV2_Atom_Literal* lit, const char* ttl) { -     lit->atom.type = map(expand("atom:Literal")); -     lit->atom.size = 64; -     lit->datatype  = map("http://www.w3.org/2008/turtle#turtle"); -     lit->lang      = 0; +     lit->atom.type     = map(expand("atom:Literal")); +     lit->atom.size     = 64; +     lit->body.datatype = map("http://www.w3.org/2008/turtle#turtle"); +     lit->body.lang     = 0;       memcpy(LV2_ATOM_CONTENTS(LV2_Atom_Literal, lit),              ttl,              strlen(ttl) + 1);  // Assumes enough space @@ -223,6 +262,7 @@ atom:URI  	a rdfs:Class ;  	rdfs:subClassOf atom:String ;  	rdfs:label "URI string" ; +	atom:stringType xsd:anyURI ;  	lv2:documentation """  <p>A URI string.  This is identical in format to atom:String, except the string  is a URI.  This is useful when a URI is needed but mapping is inappropriate, @@ -269,6 +309,20 @@ struct VectorOf42Floats {  <p>Note that it is possible to construct a valid Atom for each element  of the vector, even by an implementation which does not understand  <code>child_type</code>.</p> + +<p>If serialised to RDF, a Vector SHOULD have the form:</p> + +<pre class="turtle-code"> +eg:someVector +     a atom:Vector ; +     atom:childType atom:Int ; +     rdf:value ( +         "1"^^xsd:int +         "2"^^xsd:int +         "3"^^xsd:int +         "4"^^xsd:int +     ) . +</pre>  """ .  atom:Tuple @@ -280,6 +334,19 @@ atom:Tuple  <p>The body of a Tuple is simply a series of complete atoms, each aligned to  64 bits.</p> + +<p>If serialised to RDF, a Tuple SHOULD have the form:</p> + +<pre class="turtle-code"> +eg:someVector +     a atom:Tuple ; +     rdf:value ( +         "1"^^xsd:int +         "3.5"^^xsd:float +         "etc" +     ) . +</pre> +  """ .  atom:Property @@ -295,6 +362,17 @@ and the <q>value</q> is the object.</p>  <p>The <code>context</code> field can be used to specify a different context  for each property, where this is useful.  Otherwise, it may be 0.</p> + +<p>Properties generally only exist as part of an atom:Object.  Accordingly, +they will typically be represented directly as properties in RDF (see +atom:Object).  If this is not possible, they may be expressed as partial +reified statements, e.g.:</p> + +<pre class="turtle-code"> +eg:someProperty +    rdf:predicate eg:theKey ; +    rdf:object eg:theValue . +</pre>  """ .  atom:Object @@ -314,6 +392,16 @@ structure to allow for fast dispatch.</p>  <p>This is an abstract Atom type, an Object is always either a atom:Resource  or a atom:Blank.</p> + +<p>If serialised to RDF, an Object SHOULD be represented directly as a +resource, e.g.:</p> + +<pre class="turtle-code"> +eg:someObject +    eg:firstPropertyKey "first property value" ; +    eg:secondPropertyKey "first loser" ; +    eg:andSoOn "and so on" . +</pre>  """ .  atom:Resource @@ -348,7 +436,8 @@ atom:Sound  <p>An atom:Vector of atom:Float which represents an audio waveform.  The format  is the same as the buffer format for lv2:AudioPort (except the size may be  arbitrary).  An atom:Sound inherently depends on the sample rate, which is -assumed to be known.</p> +assumed to be known from context.  Because of this, directly serialising an +atom:Sound is probably a bad idea, use a standard format like WAV instead.</p>  """ .  atom:TimeUnit @@ -383,7 +472,7 @@ atom:Frames  	lv2:documentation """  <p>Time in audio frames.  Converting this to absolute time depends on the  sample rate.  When this is the stamp unit for an atom:Sequence, its events have -int64_t time stamps (<code>event.time.frames</code>)</p> +int64_t time stamps (<code>LV2_Atom_Event.time.frames</code>)</p>  """ .  atom:Beats @@ -393,15 +482,16 @@ atom:Beats  	lv2:documentation """  <p>Time in beats.  Converting this to absolute time depends on the tempo.  When  this is the stamp unit for an atom:Sequence, the events in that sequence have a -<code>double</code> stamp (<code>event.time.beats</code>).</p>""" . +<code>double</code> stamp (<code>LV2_Atom_Event.time.beats</code>).</p> +""" .  atom:Event  	a rdfs:Class ;  	rdfs:label "Event" ;  	atom:cType "LV2_Atom_Event" ;  	lv2:documentation """ -<p>An atom with a time stamp header prepended, typically an element of an -atom:Sequence.  Note this is not an Atom type.</p> +<p>An atom with a time stamp prefix, typically an element of an atom:Sequence. +Note this is not an Atom type.</p>  """ .  atom:Sequence @@ -411,6 +501,23 @@ atom:Sequence  	atom:cType "LV2_Atom_Sequence" ;  	lv2:documentation """  <p>A sequence of atom:Event, i.e. a series of time-stamped Atoms.</p> + +<p>If serialised to RDF, a Sequence has a similar form to atom:Vector, but for +brevity the elements may be assumed to be atom:Event, e.g.:</p> + +<pre class="turtle-code"> +eg:someSequence +    a atom:Sequence ; +    rdf:value ( +        [ +            atom:frameTime 1 ; +            rdf:value "901A01"^^midi:MidiEvent +        ] [ +            atom:frameTime 3 ; +            rdf:value "902B02"^^midi:MidiEvent +        ] +    ) . +</pre>  """ .  atom:AtomPort @@ -418,7 +525,7 @@ atom:AtomPort  	rdfs:subClassOf lv2:Port ;  	rdfs:label "Atom Port" ;  	lv2:documentation """ -<p>A port which contains an lv2:Atom.  Ports of this type are connected to an +<p>A port which contains an atom:Atom.  Ports of this type are connected to an  LV2_Atom with a type specified by atom:bufferType.</p>  <p>Output ports with a variably sized type MUST be initialised by the host |