Add a local function 'lcl_matchIA2TextBoundaryType'
that returns the UNO equivalent for the boundary
type and use it from all 3 places that previously
did the same mapping. Also, use the constants defined
in the 'AccessibleTextType.hpp' header rather than
hard-coding the values here again.
It is unclear to me what the
// In New UNO IAccessibleText.idl these constant values are defined as follows:
comment refers to, which has been there since commit
commit a18bdb3bc05e761704cc345a66a9d642bc4f4a0a
Date: Thu Nov 14 08:18:05 2013 +0000
Integrate branch of IAccessible2
Just the winaccessibility directory initially.
Change-Id: Ia21abb8d7088646ad6c1f83b3a03e7add716b0c0
(I don't see any IAccessibleText.idl anywhere. Maybe that was
meant for some follow-up change that never took place
in the end?)
Change-Id: I6b8af2215948e8d0241e6f438c0f8cc00adc800f
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/c/core/+/119316
Tested-by: Jenkins
Reviewed-by: Michael Weghorn <m.weghorn@posteo.de>
Windows Accessibility Bridge
This code provides a bridge between our internal Accessibility
interfaces (implemented on all visible 'things' in the suite: eg.
windows, buttons, entry boxes etc.) - and the Windows MSAA /
IAccessible2 COM interfaces that are familiar to windows users and
Accessible Technologies (ATs) such as the NVDA screen reader.
The code breaks into three bits:
-
source/service/- the UNO service providing the accessibility bridge. It essentially listens to events from the LibreOffice core and creates and synchronises COM peers for our internal accessibility objects when events arrive.
-
source/UAccCom/- COM implementations of the
MSAA/IAccessible2interfaces to provide native peers for the accessibility code.
- COM implementations of the
-
source/UAccCOMIDL/- COM Interface Definition Language (IDL) for UAccCom.
Here is one way of visualising the code / control flow
VCL <-> UNO toolkit <-> UNO a11y <-> win a11y <-> COM / IAccessible2
vcl/ <-> toolkit/ <-> accessibility/ <-> winaccessibility/ <-> UAccCom/
Threading
It's possible that the UNO components are called from threads other
than the main thread, so they have to be synchronized. It would be nice
to put the component into a UNO apartment (and the COM components into STA)
but UNO would spawn a new thread for it so it's not possible.
The COM components also call into the same global AccObjectWinManager
as the UNO components do so both have to be synchronized in the same way.
So we use the SolarMutex for all synchronization since anything else
would be rather difficult to make work. Unfortunately there is a
pre-existing problem in vcl with Win32 Window creation and destruction
on non-main threads where a synchronous SendMessage is used while
the SolarMutex is locked that can cause deadlocks if the main thread is
waiting on the SolarMutex itself at that time and thus not handing the
Win32 message; this is easy to trigger with JunitTests but hopefully
not by actual end users.
Debugging / Playing with winaccessibility
If NVDA is running when soffice starts, IA2 should be automatically enabled and work as expected. In order to use 'accprobe' to debug it is necessary to override the check for whether an AT (like NVDA) is running; to do that use:
SAL_FORCE_IACCESSIBLE2=1 soffice.exe -writer
Then you can use accprobe to introspect the accessibility hierarchy remotely, checkout:
http://accessibility.linuxfoundation.org/a11yweb/util/accprobe/
But often it's more useful to look at NVDA's text output window.