/* * Copyright (C) 2015 The Android Open Source Project * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package android.webkit; import android.annotation.SystemApi; import android.os.Handler; /** * The Java representation of the * * HTML5 message ports. * * A Message port represents one endpoint of a Message Channel. In Android * webview, there is no separate Message Channel object. When a message channel * is created, both ports are tangled to each other and started, and then * returned in a MessagePort array, see {@link WebView#createWebMessageChannel} * for creating a message channel. * * When a message port is first created or received via transfer, it does not * have a WebMessageCallback to receive web messages. The messages are queued until * a WebMessageCallback is set. * * A message port should be closed when it is not used by the embedder application * anymore. A closed port cannot be transferred or cannot be reopened to send * messages. Close can be called multiple times. * * When a port is transferred to JS, it cannot be used to send or receive messages * at the Java side anymore. Different from HTML5 Spec, a port cannot be transferred * if one of these has ever happened: i. a message callback was set, ii. a message was * posted on it. A transferred port cannot be closed by the application, since * the ownership is also transferred. * * It is possible to transfer both ports of a channel to JS, for example for * communication between subframes. */ public abstract class WebMessagePort { /** * The listener for handling MessagePort events. The message callback * methods are called on the main thread. If the embedder application * wants to receive the messages on a different thread, it can do this * by passing a Handler in * {@link WebMessagePort#setWebMessageCallback(WebMessageCallback, Handler)}. * In the latter case, the application should be extra careful for thread safety * since WebMessagePort methods should be called on main thread. */ public static abstract class WebMessageCallback { /** * Message callback for receiving onMessage events. * * @param port the WebMessagePort that the message is destined for * @param message the message from the entangled port. */ public void onMessage(WebMessagePort port, WebMessage message) { } } /** * Constructor. * @hide */ @SystemApi public WebMessagePort() { } /** * Post a WebMessage to the entangled port. * * @param message the message from Java to JS. * * @throws IllegalStateException If message port is already transferred or closed. */ public abstract void postMessage(WebMessage message); /** * Close the message port and free any resources associated with it. */ public abstract void close(); /** * Sets a callback to receive message events on the main thread. * * @param callback the message callback. */ public abstract void setWebMessageCallback(WebMessageCallback callback); /** * Sets a callback to receive message events on the handler that is provided * by the application. * * @param callback the message callback. * @param handler the handler to receive the message messages. */ public abstract void setWebMessageCallback(WebMessageCallback callback, Handler handler); }