A session is a group of applications running, each of which has a particular state. The session is controlled by a service called the session manager. The applications participating in the session are called session clients.
The session manager issues commands to its clients on behalf of the user. These commands may cause clients to commit unsaved changes (for example by saving open files), to preserve their state for future sessions or to terminate gracefully. The set of these operations is called session management.
In the common case, a session consists of all applications that a user runs on his desktop at a time. Under Unix/X11, however, a session may as well run on different computers, span multiple displays or just consists of a few applications.
A session is shut down by the session manager, usually on behalf of the user when she wants to log out. A system might, however, also perform an automatic shutdown in an emergency case, when for example the power is about to be lost. Clearly there is one big difference between both shutdowns. During the first, the user may want to interact with the application, telling exactly which files should be saved and which should be discarded. In the latter case, there's no time for interaction. There may not even be a user sitting in front of the machine!
On MS-Windows, there is nothing like complete session management for applications yet, i.e. no restoring of previous sessions. Windows does, however, support graceful logouts where applications have the chance to cancel the process after getting confirmation from the user. This is the functionality that corresponds to the QApplication::commitData() method.
X11 on the other hand supports complete session management since X11R6. Within the life-time of Qt-2.0, virtually all popular Unix/X11 desktops will very likely support the XConsortium standard.
In any case you should reimplement QApplication::commitData() to enable your application to take part in the graceful logout process. If you target the MS-Windows platform only, this is all you can and have to provide. Ideally, your application should provide a shutdown dialog similar to the following one:
Example code to this dialog can be found in the documentation of QSessionManager::allowsInteraction().
For complete session management yet only supported on X11R6, you also have to take care of saving the state of the application and potentially restore the state in the next life cycle of the session. This saving is done by reimplementing QApplication::saveState(). All state data you are saving in this function, shall be marked with the session identifier QApplication::sessionId(). This application specific identifier is globally unique, so no clashes will happen.
Restauration is usually done in the application's main()
function. Check if QApplication::isSessionRestored() is TRUE.
If
that's the case, use the session identifier QApplication::sessionId() again to access your state date and restore
the state of the application.
Important: In order to allow the window manager to restore window attributes such as stacking order or geometry information, you have to identify your toplevel widgets with an application-wide unique object name (see QObject::setName() ). When restoring the application, you'll have to ensure that all restored toplevel widgets end up with their prior object name again.
As mentioned earlier, session management support on Windows is fairly limited due to the lack of this functionality in the Windows operating system itself. Simply shut the session down and verify that your application behaves as wanted. It may be a good idea to launch another application, usually the integrated development environment, before starting your application. This other application will get the shutdown message afterwards, thus permitting you to cancel the shutdown. Otherwise you would have to log in again after each test run, which is not a problem per se but time consuming.
On Unix you can either use a desktop environment that supports
standard X11R6 session management or, the recommended method, use the
session manager reference implementation provided by the X Consortium.
This sample manager is dubbed xsm
and is part of a standard X11R6
installation. As always with X11, a useful and informative manual page
is provided. Using xsm
is straightforward (apart from the clumsy
Athena-based user interface). Here's a simple approach:
.xsmstartup
in your home directory which
contains the single line
xterm
This tells xsm
that the default/failsafe session is just an xterm
and nothing else. Otherwise xsm
would try to invoke lots of
clients including the windowmanager twm,
which isn't very helpful.
xsm
from another terminal window. Both a session
manager window and the xterm will appear. The xterm has a nice
property that sets it apart from all the other shells you are
currently running: Within its shell, the SESSION_MANAGER
environment variable points to the session manager you just started.
xsm
is likely to
crash.
xsm
and not Qt. xsm
is far
from being a usable session manager on a user's desktop. It is,
however, stable and useful enough to serve as testing environment.
Copyright © 2000 Trolltech | Trademarks | Qt version 2.2.1
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