diff -r 5d007b20cfd0 -r cd2778e5acfe qtmobility/src/bearer/qnetworkconfiguration.cpp --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/qtmobility/src/bearer/qnetworkconfiguration.cpp Wed Sep 01 12:15:07 2010 +0100 @@ -0,0 +1,401 @@ +/**************************************************************************** +** +** Copyright (C) 2010 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). +** All rights reserved. +** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com) +** +** This file is part of the Qt Mobility Components. +** +** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$ +** No Commercial Usage +** This file contains pre-release code and may not be distributed. +** You may use this file in accordance with the terms and conditions +** contained in the Technology Preview License Agreement accompanying +** this package. +** +** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage +** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser +** General Public License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software +** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the +** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to +** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements +** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html. +** +** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain additional +** rights. These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL Exception +** version 1.1, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this package. +** +** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact +** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com. +** +** +** +** +** +** +** +** +** $QT_END_LICENSE$ +** +****************************************************************************/ + +#include "qnetworkconfiguration.h" + +#ifdef Q_OS_SYMBIAN +#include "qnetworkconfiguration_s60_p.h" +#elif defined(Q_WS_MAEMO_6) || defined(Q_WS_MAEMO_5) +#include "qnetworkconfiguration_maemo_p.h" +#else +#include "qnetworkconfiguration_p.h" +#endif + +QTM_BEGIN_NAMESPACE + +/*! + \class QNetworkConfiguration + + \brief The QNetworkConfiguration class provides an abstraction of one or more access point configurations. + + \inmodule QtNetwork + \ingroup bearer + + QNetworkConfiguration encapsulates a single access point or service network. + In most cases a single access point configuration can be mapped to one network + interface. However a single network interface may not always map to only one + access point configuration. Multiple configurations for the same + network device may enable multiple access points. An example + device that could exhibit such a configuration might be a + Smartphone which allows the user to manage multiple WLAN + configurations while the device itself has only one WLAN network device. + + The QNetworkConfiguration also supports the concept of service networks. + This concept allows the grouping of multiple access point configurations + into one entity. Such a group is called service network and can be + beneficial in cases whereby a network session to a + particular destination network is required (e.g. a company network). + When using a service network the user doesn't usually care which one of the + connectivity options is chosen (e.g. corporate WLAN or VPN via GPRS) + as long as he can reach the company's target server. Depending + on the current position and time some of the access points that make + up the service network may not even be available. Furthermore + automated access point roaming can be enabled which enables the device + to change the network interface configuration dynamically while maintaining + the applications connection to the target network. It allows adaption + to the changing environment and may enable optimization with regards to + cost, speed or other network parameters. + + Special configurations of type UserChoice provide a placeholder configuration which is + resolved to an actual network configuration by the platform when a + \l {QNetworkSession}{session} is \l {QNetworkSession::open()}{opened}. Not all platforms + support the concept of a user choice configuration. + + \section1 Configuration states + + The list of available configurations can be obtained via + QNetworkConfigurationManager::allConfigurations(). A configuration can have + multiple states. The \l Defined configuration state indicates that the configuration + is stored on the device. However the configuration is not yet ready to be activated + as e.g. a WLAN may not be available at the current time. + + The \l Discovered state implies that the configuration is \l Defined and + the outside conditions are such that the configuration can be used immediately + to open a new network session. An example of such an outside condition may be + that the Ethernet cable is actually connected to the device or that the WLAN + with the specified SSID is in range. + + The \l Active state implies that the configuration is \l Discovered. A configuration + in this state is currently being used by an application. The underlying network + interface has a valid IP configuration and can transfer IP packets between the + device and the target network. + + The \l Undefined state indicates that the system has knowledge of possible target + networks but cannot actually use that knowledge to connect to it. An example + for such a state could be an encrypted WLAN that has been discovered + but the user hasn't actually saved a configuration including the required password + which would allow the device to connect to it. + + Depending on the type of configuration some states are transient in nature. A GPRS/UMTS + connection may almost always be \l Discovered if the GSM/UMTS network is available. + However if the GSM/UMTS network looses the connection the associated configuration may change its state + from \l Discovered to \l Defined as well. A similar use case might be triggered by + WLAN availability. QNetworkConfigurationManager::updateConfigurations() can be used to + manually trigger updates of states. Note that some platforms do not require such updates + as they implicitly change the state once it has been discovered. If the state of a + configuration changes all related QNetworkConfiguration instances change their state automatically. + + \sa QNetworkSession, QNetworkConfigurationManager +*/ + +/*! + \enum QNetworkConfiguration::Type + + This enum describes the type of configuration. + + \value InternetAccessPoint The configuration specifies the details for a single access point. + Note that configurations of type InternetAccessPoint may be part + of other QNetworkConfigurations of type ServiceNetwork. + \value ServiceNetwork The configuration is based on a group of QNetworkConfigurations of + type InternetAccessPoint. All group members can reach the same + target network. This type of configuration is a mandatory + requirement for roaming enabled network sessions. On some + platforms this form of configuration may also be called Service + Network Access Point (SNAP). + \value UserChoice The configuration is a placeholder which will be resolved to an + actual configuration by the platform when a session is opened. Depending + on the platform the selection may generate a popup dialog asking the user + for his preferred choice. + \value Invalid The configuration is invalid. +*/ + +/*! + \enum QNetworkConfiguration::StateFlag + + Specifies the configuration states. + + \value Undefined This state is used for transient configurations such as newly discovered + WLANs for which the user has not actually created a configuration yet. + \value Defined Defined configurations are known to the system but are not immediately + usable (e.g. a configured WLAN is not within range or the Ethernet cable + is currently not plugged into the machine). + \value Discovered A discovered configuration can be immediately used to create a new + QNetworkSession. An example of a discovered configuration could be a WLAN + which is within in range. If the device moves out of range the discovered + flag is dropped. A second example is a GPRS configuration which generally + remains discovered for as long as the phone has network coverage. A + configuration that has this state is also in state + QNetworkConfiguration::Defined. If the configuration is a service network + this flag is set if at least one of the underlying access points + configurations has the Discovered state. + \value Active The configuration is currently used by an open network session + (see \l QNetworkSession::isOpen()). However this does not mean that the + current process is the entity that created the open session. It merely + indicates that if a new QNetworkSession were to be constructed based on + this configuration \l QNetworkSession::state() would return + \l QNetworkSession::Connected. This state implies the + QNetworkConfiguration::Discovered state. +*/ + +/*! + \enum QNetworkConfiguration::Purpose + + Specifies the purpose of the configuration. + + \value UnknownPurpose The configuration doesn't specify any purpose. This is the default value. + \value PublicPurpose The configuration can be used for general purpose internet access. + \value PrivatePurpose The configuration is suitable to access a private network such as an office Intranet. + \value ServiceSpecificPurpose The configuration can be used for operator specific services (e.g. + receiving MMS messages or content streaming). +*/ + +/*! + Constructs an invalid configuration object. + + \sa isValid() +*/ +QNetworkConfiguration::QNetworkConfiguration() + : d(0) +{ +} + +/*! + Creates a copy of the QNetworkConfiguration object contained in \a other. +*/ +QNetworkConfiguration::QNetworkConfiguration(const QNetworkConfiguration& other) + : d(other.d) +{ +} + +/*! + Copies the content of the QNetworkConfiguration object contained in \a other into this one. +*/ +QNetworkConfiguration& QNetworkConfiguration::operator=(const QNetworkConfiguration& other) +{ + d = other.d; + return *this; +} + +/*! + Frees the resources associated with the QNetworkConfiguration object. +*/ +QNetworkConfiguration::~QNetworkConfiguration() +{ +} + +/*! + Returns true, if this configuration is the same as the \a other + configuration given; otherwise returns false. +*/ +bool QNetworkConfiguration::operator==(const QNetworkConfiguration& other) const +{ + if (!d) + return !other.d; + + if (!other.d) + return false; + + return (d == other.d); +} + +/*! + \fn bool QNetworkConfiguration::operator!=(const QNetworkConfiguration& other) const + + Returns true if this configuration is not the same as the \a other + configuration given; otherwise returns false. +*/ + +/*! + Returns the user visible name of this configuration. + + The name may either be the name of the underlying access point or the + name for service network that this configuration represents. +*/ +QString QNetworkConfiguration::name() const +{ + return d ? d->name : QString(); +} + +/*! + Returns the unique and platform specific identifier for this network configuration; + otherwise an empty string. +*/ +QString QNetworkConfiguration::identifier() const +{ + return d ? d->id : QString(); +} + +/*! + Returns the type of the configuration. + + A configuration can represent a single access point configuration or + a set of access point configurations. Such a set is called service network. + A configuration that is based on a service network can potentially support + roaming of network sessions. +*/ +QNetworkConfiguration::Type QNetworkConfiguration::type() const +{ + return d ? d->type : QNetworkConfiguration::Invalid; +} + +/*! + Returns true if this QNetworkConfiguration object is valid. + A configuration may become invalid if the user deletes the configuration or + the configuration was default-constructed. + + The addition and removal of configurations can be monitored via the + QNetworkConfigurationManager. + + \sa QNetworkConfigurationManager +*/ +bool QNetworkConfiguration::isValid() const +{ + return d ? d->isValid : false; +} + +/*! + Returns the current state of the configuration. +*/ +QNetworkConfiguration::StateFlags QNetworkConfiguration::state() const +{ + return d ? d->state : QNetworkConfiguration::Undefined; +} + +/*! + Returns the purpose of this configuration. + + The purpose field may be used to programmatically determine the + purpose of a configuration. Such information is usually part of the + access point or service network meta data. +*/ +QNetworkConfiguration::Purpose QNetworkConfiguration::purpose() const +{ + return d ? d->purpose : QNetworkConfiguration::UnknownPurpose; +} + +/*! + Returns true if this configuration supports roaming; otherwise false. +*/ +bool QNetworkConfiguration::isRoamingAvailable() const +{ + return d ? d->roamingSupported : false; +} + +/*! + Returns all sub configurations of this network configuration. + Only network configurations of type \l ServiceNetwork can have children. Otherwise + this function returns an empty list. +*/ +QList QNetworkConfiguration::children() const +{ + QList results; + if (type() != QNetworkConfiguration::ServiceNetwork || !isValid() ) + return results; + + QMutableListIterator > iter(d->serviceNetworkMembers); + QExplicitlySharedDataPointer p(0); + while(iter.hasNext()) { + p = iter.next(); + //if we have an invalid member get rid of it -> was deleted earlier on + if (!p->isValid) + iter.remove(); + + QNetworkConfiguration item; + item.d = p; + results << item; + } + + return results; +} + +/*! + Returns the type of bearer. The string is not translated and + therefore can not be shown to the user. The subsequent table presents the currently known + bearer types: + + \table + \header + \o Value + \o Description + \row + \o Unknown + \o The session is based on an unknown or unspecified bearer type. + \row + \o Ethernet + \o The session is based on Ethernet. + \row + \o WLAN + \o The session is based on Wireless LAN. + \row + \o 2G + \o The session uses CSD, GPRS, HSCSD, EDGE or cdmaOne. + \row + \o CDMA2000 + \o The session uses CDMA. + \row + \o WCDMA + \o The session uses W-CDMA/UMTS. + \row + \o HSPA + \o The session uses High Speed Packet Access. + \row + \o Bluetooth + \o The session uses Bluetooth. + \row + \o WiMAX + \o The session uses WiMAX. + \endtable + + This function returns an empty string if this is an invalid configuration, + a network configuration of type \l QNetworkConfiguration::ServiceNetwork or + \l QNetworkConfiguration::UserChoice. +*/ +QString QNetworkConfiguration::bearerName() const +{ + if (!isValid()) + return QString(); + + return d->bearerName(); +} + + +QTM_END_NAMESPACE +