Preliminary documentation for Ice 3.7.1 Beta. Do not use in production applications. Refer to the space directory for other releases.

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Basic Ruby Mapping for Classes

A Slice class maps to a Ruby class with the same name. For each Slice data member, the generated class contains an instance variable and accessors to read and write it, just as for structures and exceptions. Consider the following class definition:

Slice
class TimeOfDay
{
    short hour;         // 0 - 23
    short minute;       // 0 - 59
    short second;       // 0 - 59
}

The Ruby mapping generates the following code for this definition:

Ruby
class TimeOfDay < ::Ice::Value
    def initialize(hour=0, minute=0, second=0)
        @hour = hour
        @minute = minute
        @second = second
    end

    attr_accessor :hours, :minutes, :seconds
end

There are a number of things to note about the generated code:

  1. The generated class TimeOfDay derives from Ice::Value. This reflects the semantics of Slice classes in that all classes implicitly inherit from Ice::Value, which is the ultimate ancestor of all classes. Note that Ice::Value is not the same as Ice::ObjectPrx. In other words, you cannot pass a class where a proxy is expected and vice versa.
  2. The constructor defines an instance variable for each Slice data member.

There is quite a bit to discuss here, so we will look at each item in turn.

 

Inheritance from Ice::Value in Ruby

Like interfaces, classes implicitly inherit from a common base class, Ice::Value. However classes inherit from Ice::Value instead of Ice::ObjectPrx (which is at the base of the inheritance hierarchy for proxies). As a result, you cannot pass a class where a proxy is expected (and vice versa) because the base types for classes and proxies are not compatible.

Ice::Value contains a number of methods:

Ruby
class Value
    def inspect
        ::Ice::__stringify(self, self.class::ICE_TYPE)
    end
    def ice_id()
        self.class::ICE_ID
    end
    def Value.ice_staticId()
        self::ICE_ID
    end
end

The methods behave as follows:

  • ice_id
    This method returns the actual run-time type ID of the object. If you call ice_id through a reference to a base instance, the returned type id is the actual (possibly more derived) type ID of the instance.
  • ice_staticId
    This method returns the static type ID of the class.
  • ice_preMarshal
    If the object supports this method, the Ice run time invokes it just prior to marshaling the object's state, providing the opportunity for the object to validate its declared data members.
  • ice_postUnmarshal
    If the object supports this method, the Ice run time invokes it after unmarshaling the object's state. An object typically defines this method when it needs to perform additional initialization using the values of its declared data members.
  • ice_getSlicedData
    This functions returns the SlicedData object if the value has been sliced during un-marshaling or nil otherwise.

Note that neither Ice::Value nor the generated class override hash and ==, so the default implementations apply.

Class Data Members in Ruby

By default, data members of classes are mapped exactly as for structures and exceptions: for each data member in the Slice definition, the generated class contains a corresponding instance variable and accessor methods.

Optional data members use the same mapping as required data members, but an optional data member can also be set to the marker value Ice::Unset to indicate that the member is unset. A well-behaved program must compare an optional data member to Ice::Unset before using the member's value:

Ruby
v = ...
if v.optionalMember == Ice::Unset
    puts "optionalMember is unset"
else
    puts "optionalMember = " + v.optionalMember
end

The Ice::Unset marker value has different semantics than nil. Since nil is a legal value for certain Slice types, the Ice run time requires a separate marker value so that it can determine whether an optional value is set. An optional value set to nil is considered to be set. If you need to distinguish between an unset value and a value set to nil, you can do so as follows:

Ruby
v = ...
if v.optionalMember == Ice::Unset
    puts "optionalMember is unset"
elsif v.optionalMember == nil
    puts "optionalMember is nil"
else
    puts "optionalMember = " + v.optionalMember
end

If you wish to restrict access to a data member, you can modify its visibility using the protected metadata directive. The presence of this directive causes the Slice compiler to generate the data member with protected visibility. As a result, the member can be accessed only by the class itself or by one of its subclasses. For example, the TimeOfDay class shown below has the protected metadata directive applied to each of its data members:

Slice
class TimeOfDay
{
    ["protected"] short hour;   // 0 - 23
    ["protected"] short minute; // 0 - 59
    ["protected"] short second; // 0 - 59
}

The Slice compiler produces the following generated code for this definition:

Ruby
class TimeOfDay < ::Ice::Value

    def initialize(hour=0, minute=0, second=0)
        @hour = hour
        @minute = minute
        @second = second
    end

    attr_accessor :hours, :minutes, :seconds
    protected :hours, :hours=
    protected :minutes, :minutes=
    protected :seconds, :seconds=
end

For a class in which all of the data members are protected, the metadata directive can be applied to the class itself rather than to each member individually. For example, we can rewrite the TimeOfDay class as follows:

Slice
["protected"] class TimeOfDay
{
    short hour;         // 0 - 23
    short minute;       // 0 - 59
    short second;       // 0 - 59
}

Class Constructors in Ruby

Classes have a constructor that assigns to each data member a default value appropriate for its type:

Data Member TypeDefault Value
stringEmpty string
enumFirst enumerator in enumeration
structDefault-constructed value
NumericZero
boolFalse
sequenceNull
dictionaryNull
class/interfaceNull

You can also declare different default values for data members of primitive and enumerated types.

For derived classes, the constructor has one parameter for each of the base class's data members, plus one parameter for each of the derived class's data members, in base-to-derived order.

Pass the marker value Ice::Unset as the value of any optional data members that you wish to be unset.

Class Operations in Ruby

Deprecated Feature

Operations on classes are deprecated as of Ice 3.7. Skip this section unless you need to communicate with old applications that rely on this feature.

With the Ruby mapping, operations in classes are not mapped at all into the corresponding Ruby class. The generated Ruby class is the same whether the Slice class has operations or not.

Value Factories in Ruby

 

While value factories were necessary in previous Ice versions when using classes with operations (a now deprecated feature) with the Ruby mapping, value factories may be used for any kind of class and are not deprecated.

Value factories allow you to create classes derived from the Ruby class generated by the Slice compiler, and tell the Ice run time to create instances of these classes when unmarshaling. For example, with the following simple interface:

Slice
class CustomTimeOfDay extends TimeOfDay
{
    public function format() { ... prints formatted data members ... }
}

You then create and register a value factory for your custom class with your Ice communicator:

Ruby
class ValueFactory
    def create(type)
        fail unless type == M::TimeOfDay::ice_staticId()
        TimeOfDayI.new
    end
end

communicator = ...
communicator.getValueFactoryManager().add(ValueFactory.new, M::TimeOfDay::ice_staticId())


See Also

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