// Copyright 2019 The Chromium Authors
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file.
#ifndef COMPONENTS_EXO_POINTER_CONSTRAINT_DELEGATE_H_
#define COMPONENTS_EXO_POINTER_CONSTRAINT_DELEGATE_H_
namespace exo {
class Pointer;
class Surface;
class PointerConstraintDelegate {
public:
virtual ~PointerConstraintDelegate() = default;
// Called when the lock is activated by the compositor.
//
// For non-persistent ("one-shot") locks, this may be called 0 or 1 times.
// For persistent locks, this may be called again after OnConstraintBroken().
virtual void OnConstraintActivated() = 0;
// Called when the lock is not activated by the compositor because a
// pointer constraint was already requested on this surface.
virtual void OnAlreadyConstrained() = 0;
// Called when this lock is broken for any reason. Possibly:
// - A user action broke the lock.
// - The lock was granted to a different client.
// - The pointer was destroyed while the lock was active.
virtual void OnConstraintBroken() = 0;
// Whether the lock is "persistent", meaning it can be reactivated by the
// compositor after being broken.
virtual bool IsPersistent() = 0;
// Returns the surface which this delegate wants to lock the cursor for.
// The delegate does not guarantee that this pointer is valid, except
// when calling Pointer::ConstrainPointer(); the caller is responsible for
// tracking the Surface's lifetime.
virtual Surface* GetConstrainedSurface() = 0;
// Notifies the delegate that it's defunct and must not call
// Pointer::OnPointerConstraintDelegateDestroying().
virtual void OnDefunct() = 0;
};
} // namespace exo
#endif // COMPONENTS_EXO_POINTER_CONSTRAINT_DELEGATE_H_