NAME
proplib
—
property container object
library
LIBRARY
library “libprop”
SYNOPSIS
#include
<libprop/proplib.h>
DESCRIPTION
Theproplib
library provides an abstract interface for
creating and manipulating property lists. Property lists have object types for
boolean values, opaque data, numbers, and strings. Structure is provided by
the array and dictionary collection types.
Property lists can be passed across protection boundaries by translating them to an external representation. This external representation is an XML document whose format is described by the following DTD:
http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd
Property container objects are reference counted. When an object is created, its reference count is set to 1. Any code that keeps a reference to an object, including the collection types (arrays and dictionaries), must “retain” the object (increment its reference count). When that reference is dropped, the object must be “released” (reference count decremented). When an object's reference count drops to 0, it is automatically freed.
The rules for managing reference counts are very simple:
- If you create an object and do not explicitly maintain a reference to it, you must release it.
- If you get a reference to an object from other code and wish to maintain a reference to it, you must retain the object. You are responsible for releasing the object once you drop that reference.
- You must never release an object unless you create it or retain it.
Object collections may be iterated by creating a special iterator object. Iterator objects are special; they may not be retained, and they are released using an iterator-specific release function.
SEE ALSO
prop_array(3), prop_bool(3), prop_data(3), prop_dictionary(3), prop_dictionary_util(3), prop_number(3), prop_object(3), prop_send_ioctl(3), prop_send_syscall(3), prop_string(3)
HISTORY
The proplib
property container object
library first appeared in NetBSD 4.0.
CAVEATS
proplib
does not have a
‘date’ object type, and thus will not parse
‘date’ elements from an Apple XML property list.
The proplib
‘number’ object
type differs from the Apple XML property list format in the following
ways:
- The external representation is in base 16, not base 10.
proplib
is able to parse base 8, base 10, and base 16 ‘integer’ elements. - Internally, integers are always stored as unsigned numbers (uint64_t). Therefore, the external representation will never be negative.
- Because floating point numbers are not supported, ‘real’ elements from an Apple XML property list will not be parsed.
In order to facilitate use of proplib
in
kernel, standalone, and user space environments, the
proplib
parser is not a real XML parser. It is
hard-coded to parse only the property list external representation.