Sets a global callback to be called whenever the toolkit is creating a new RasterImage object.
public static RasterImageAllocateCallback SetRasterImageAllocateCallback(
RasterImageAllocateCallback callback
)
Public Shared Function SetRasterImageAllocateCallback( _
ByVal callback As RasterImageAllocateCallback _
) As RasterImageAllocateCallback
public:
static RasterImageAllocateCallback^ SetRasterImageAllocateCallback(
RasterImageAllocateCallback^ callback
)
callback
Method to be called whenever the toolkit is creating a new RasterImage object. You can pass null to stop the toolkit from calling any callback.
The previous global callback set, or null if no callback was set before (default).
This method allows you to inspect (and change the memory model being used) whenever the toolkit is creating a new RasterImage object. Generally, you can use the RasterMemoryFlags argument to the RasterImage constructor when creating new objects, however, in some instances, the toolkit will create images internally and you have no control on the memory model being passed. The callback set is global to all LEADTOOLS used in current process.
This can be useful for debugging purposes or to control the memory model of an image being creating internally in LEADTOOLS, for example, as a result of an image processing operation as described in the example.
The return value is the old callback set previously by the user, if no callback was set previously, this method will return null, this allow you to cascade callbacks together.
By default, the toolkit does not set a callback, and calling this method the first time will always return null.
When you are done when the callback, you can call this method with a null reference to stop the toolkit from calling any methods when creating RasterImage objects.
The following example will show how to use the SetRasterImageAllocateCallback method to stop LEADTOOLS from creating any disk images whatever. The RotateCommand used in the example will internally create a new RasterImage object. By default, the user has no control on the memory model for this image, however, by using this callback, the user can control (and change) the memory model used.
using Leadtools;
using Leadtools.Codecs;
using LeadtoolsExamples.Common;
private void SetRasterImageAllocateCallbackExample()
{
try
{
// Set the LEADTOOLS temporary directory to a value we can watch easily
RasterDefaults.TemporaryDirectory = Path.Combine(ImagesPath.Path, @"Temp\LEADTOOLS");
// Install a callback to notify us when LEADTOOLS images are created
// IMPORTANT: SetRasterImageAllocateCallback is global and not thread safe. It will fire
// for each image being created after this point, so if the action you are performing in the
// callback requires synchronzation, add the required code. For what this sample is trying
// to accomplish, our solution is perfectly safe and no synchronization is needed.
RasterDefaults.SetRasterImageAllocateCallback(new RasterImageAllocateCallback(MyRasterImageAllocateCallback));
// We want conventional memory and nothing else
RasterMemoryFlags flags = RasterMemoryFlags.Conventional | RasterMemoryFlags.NoDisk | RasterMemoryFlags.NoTiled;
// Create a huge RasterImage
using (RasterImage img = new RasterImage(flags, 20000, 20000, 24, RasterByteOrder.Bgr, RasterViewPerspective.TopLeft, null, null, 0))
{
// Rotate it 90 degrees, this will have a memory size greater than the default
// size of conventional memory and cause LEADTOOLS to switch to a disk or tiled memory
// model. In the callback below, we instruct LEADTOOLS to only use conventional memory so the command
// will throw an out of memory exception as expected.
Leadtools.ImageProcessing.RotateCommand cmd = new Leadtools.ImageProcessing.RotateCommand();
cmd.Angle = 90 * 100;
// Exception will be thrown inside here: No Memory since our callback
// will be called and we instruct LEADTOOLS to not use disk
cmd.Run(img);
}
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
// Show the error
Console.WriteLine(ex.Message);
}
}
private static RasterExceptionCode MyRasterImageAllocateCallback(RasterImageAllocateData data)
{
Console.WriteLine("Trying to allocate:");
Console.WriteLine(" Memory: {0}", data.MemoryFlags);
Console.WriteLine(" Size: {0} by {1}", data.Width, data.Height);
Console.WriteLine(" BPP: {0}, Order: {1}", data.BitsPerPixel, data.Order);
Console.WriteLine(" Size: {0}", data.Size);
// Note, all values beside MemoryFlags are read only and cannot be changed
// We want conventional memory and nothing else, so change this
data.MemoryFlags = RasterMemoryFlags.Conventional | RasterMemoryFlags.NoTiled | RasterMemoryFlags.NoDisk;
// If you remove the code above, the toolkit will most probably switch to disk or tiled memory model
// and creating this huge image will be successful, however, we only want conventional
// memory in this example, and out of memory exception is the expected behavior of this
// example
// Let LEADTOOLS continue with creating the image process
// You can return any other value to abort
return RasterExceptionCode.Success;
}
Imports Leadtools
Imports Leadtools.Codecs
Imports Leadtools.ImageProcessing
Private Sub SetRasterImageAllocateCallbackExample()
Try
' Set the LEADTOOLS temporary directory to a value we can watch easily
RasterDefaults.TemporaryDirectory = "C:\Temp\LEADTOOLS"
' Install a callback to notify us when LEADTOOLS images are created
' IMPORTANT: SetRasterImageAllocateCallback is global and not thread safe. It will fire
' for each image being created after this point, so if the action you are performing in the
' callback requires synchronzation, add the required code. For what this sample is trying
' to accomplish, our solution is perfectly safe and no synchronization is needed.
RasterDefaults.SetRasterImageAllocateCallback(AddressOf MyRasterImageAllocateCallback)
' We want conventional memory and nothing else
Dim flags As RasterMemoryFlags = RasterMemoryFlags.Conventional Or RasterMemoryFlags.NoDisk Or RasterMemoryFlags.NoTiled
' Create a huge RasterImage
Using img As RasterImage = New RasterImage(flags, 20000, 20000, 24, RasterByteOrder.Bgr, RasterViewPerspective.TopLeft, Nothing, Nothing, 0)
' Rotate it 90 degrees, this will have a memory size greater than the default
' size of conventional memory and cause LEADTOOLS to switch to a disk or tiled memory
' model. In the callback below, we instruct LEADTOOLS to only use conventional memory so the command
' will throw an out of memory exception as expected.
Dim cmd As New RotateCommand
cmd.Angle = 90 * 100
' Exception will be thrown inside here: No Memory since our callback
' will be called and we instruct LEADTOOLS to not use disk
cmd.Run(img)
End Using
Catch ex As Exception
' Show the error
Console.WriteLine(ex.Message)
End Try
End Sub
Private Shared Function MyRasterImageAllocateCallback(ByVal data As RasterImageAllocateData) As RasterExceptionCode
Console.WriteLine("Trying to allocate:")
Console.WriteLine(" Memory: {0}", data.MemoryFlags)
Console.WriteLine(" Size: {0} by {1}", data.Width, data.Height)
Console.WriteLine(" BPP: {0}, Order: {1}", data.BitsPerPixel, data.Order)
Console.WriteLine(" Size: {0}", data.Size)
' Note, all values beside MemoryFlags are read only and cannot be changed
' We want conventional memory and nothing else, so change this
data.MemoryFlags = RasterMemoryFlags.Conventional Or RasterMemoryFlags.NoTiled Or RasterMemoryFlags.NoDisk
' If you remove the code above, the toolkit will most probably switch to disk or tiled memory model
' and creating this huge image will be successful, however, we only want conventional
' memory in this example, and out of memory exception is the expected behavior of this
' example
' Let LEADTOOLS continue with creating the image process
' You can return any other value to abort
Return RasterExceptionCode.Success
End Function
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