PipeWire
0.3.33
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Plugins are dynamically loadable objects that contain objects and interfaces that can be introspected and used at runtime in any application.
This document introduces the basic concepts of SPA plugins. It first covers using the API and then talks about implementing new Plugins.
To use a plugin, the following steps are required:
In pseudo-code, loading a logger interface looks like this:
SPA does not specify where plugins need to live, although plugins are normally installed in /usr/lib64/spa-0.2/
or equivalent. Plugins and API are versioned and many versions can live on the same system.
pkg-config --variable plugindir libspa-0.2
The spa-inspect
tool provides a CLI interface to inspect SPA plugins:
$ export SPA_PLUGIN_PATH=$(pkg-config --variable plugindir libspa-0.2) $ spa-inspect ${SPA_PLUGIN_PATH}/support/libspa-support.so ... factory version: 1 factory name: 'support.cpu' factory info: none factory interfaces: interface: 'Spa:Pointer:Interface:CPU' factory instance: interface: 'Spa:Pointer:Interface:CPU' skipping unknown interface factory version: 1 factory name: 'support.loop' factory info: none factory interfaces: interface: 'Spa:Pointer:Interface:Loop' interface: 'Spa:Pointer:Interface:LoopControl' interface: 'Spa:Pointer:Interface:LoopUtils' ...
A plugin is opened with a platform specific API. In this example we use dlopen()
as the method used on Linux.
A plugin always consists of 2 parts, the vendor path and then the .so file.
As an example we will load the "support/libspa-support.so" plugin. You will usually use some mapping between functionality and plugin path, as we'll see later, instead of hardcoding the plugin name.
To dlopen a plugin we then need to prefix the plugin path like this:
The environment variable SPA_PLUGIN_PATH
and pkg-config
variable plugindir
are usually used to find the location of the plugins. You will have to do some more work to construct the shared object path.
The plugin must have exactly one public symbol, called spa_handle_factory_enum
, which is defined with the macro SPA_HANDLE_FACTORY_ENUM_FUNC_NAME
to get some compile time checks and avoid typos in the symbol name. We can get the symbol like so:
If this symbol is not available, the library is not a valid SPA plugin.
With the enum_func
we can now enumerate all the factories in the plugin:
A factory has a version, a name, some properties and a couple of functions that we can check and use. The main use of a factory is to create an actual new object from it.
We can enumerate the interfaces that we will find on this new object with the spa_handle_factory_enum_interface_info()
method. Interface types are simple strings that uniquely define the interface (See also the type system).
The name of the factory is a well-known name that describes the functionality of the objects created from the factory. <spa/utils/names.h>
contains definitions for common functionality, for example:
Usually the name will be mapped to a specific plugin. This way an alternative compatible implementation can be made in a different library.
Once we have a suitable factory, we need to allocate memory for the object it can create. SPA usually does not allocate memory itself but relies on the application and the stack for storage.
First get the size of the required memory:
Sometimes the memory can depend on the extra parameters given in _get_size()
. Next we need to allocate the memory and initialize the object in it:
The info parameter should contain the same extra properties given in spa_handle_factory_get_size()
.
The support parameter is an array of struct spa_support
items. They contain a string type and a pointer to extra support objects. This can be a logging API or a main loop API, for example. Some plugins require certain support libraries to function.
When a SPA handle is made, you can retrieve any of the interfaces that it provides:
If this method succeeds, you can cast the iface
variable to struct spa_log *
and start using the log interface methods.
After you are done with a handle you can clear it with spa_handle_clear()
and you can unload the library with dlclose()
.
We briefly talked about retrieving an interface from a plugin in the previous section. Now we will explore what an interface actually is and how to use it.
When you retrieve an interface from a handle, you get a reference to a small structure that contains the type (string) of the interface, a version and a structure with a set of methods (and data) that are the implementation of the interface. Calling a method on the interface will just call the appropriate method in the implementation.
Interfaces are defined in a header file (for example see <spa/support/log.h>
for the logger API). It is a self contained definition that you can just use in your application after you dlopen() the plugin.
Some interfaces also provide extra fields in the interface, like the log interface above that has the log level as a read/write parameter.
See spa_interface for some implementation details on interfaces.
Some interfaces will also allow you to register a callback (a hook or listener) to be notified of events. This is usually when something changed internally in the interface and it wants to notify the registered listeners about this.
For example, the struct spa_node
interface has a method to register such an event handler like this:
You make a structure with pointers to the events you are interested in and then use spa_node_add_listener()
to register a listener. The struct spa_hook
is used by the interface to keep track of registered event listeners.
Whenever the node information is changed, your node_info
method will be called with my_data
as the first data field. The events are usually also triggered when the listener is added, to enumerate the current state of the object.
Events have a version
field, set to SPA_VERSION_NODE_EVENTS
in the above example. It should contain the version of the event structure you compiled with. When new events are added later, the version field will be checked and the new signal will be ignored for older versions.
You can remove your listener with:
Some interfaces provide API that gives you a list or enumeration of objects/values. To avoid allocation overhead and ownership problems, SPA uses events to push results to the application. This makes it possible for the plugin to temporarily create complex objects on the stack and push this to the application without allocation or ownership problems. The application can look at the pushed result and keep/copy only what it wants to keep.
Here is an example of enumerating parameters on a node interface.
First install a listener for the result:
Then perform the enum_param
method:
This triggers the result event handler with a 0 sequence number for each supported format. After this completes, remove the listener again:
Asynchronous results are pushed to the application in the same way as synchronous results, they are just pushed later. You can check that a result is asynchronous by the return value of the enum function:
In the case of async results, the result callback will be called with the sequence number of the async result code, which can be obtained with:
FIXME