Files
platform-external-webrtc/api
Tomas Gunnarsson c69453d93b Change SetLocalContent in channel classes to avoid Invoke.
With these changes, we now often have 0 invokes and at most 1 when
calling SetLocalContent on a channel. Before we had at least 1 and
typically 2.

Summary of changes.
* Updating RtpExtension::DeduplicateHeaderExtensions to return a sorted
  vector (+test) for easy detection of changes.
* Before updating the transport on the network thread, detect if
  actual changes to the demuxer criteria or changes to the rtp header
  extensions have been made.
* Consolidate both transport updates to a single call instead of two.
* Added DCHECK guards to catch regressions in number of invokes.

A possible upcoming improvement is to update the transport
asynchronously.

Bug: webrtc:13536
Change-Id: I71ef7b181635a796ffa1e3a02a0f661d28a4870c
Reviewed-on: https://webrtc-review.googlesource.com/c/src/+/244700
Reviewed-by: Harald Alvestrand <hta@webrtc.org>
Commit-Queue: Tomas Gunnarsson <tommi@webrtc.org>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/main@{#35638}
2022-01-06 12:52:35 +00:00
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How to write code in the api/ directory

Mostly, just follow the regular style guide, but:

  • Note that api/ code is not exempt from the “.h and .cc files come in pairs” rule, so if you declare something in api/path/to/foo.h, it should be defined in api/path/to/foo.cc.
  • Headers in api/ should, if possible, not #include headers outside api/. It’s not always possible to avoid this, but be aware that it adds to a small mountain of technical debt that we’re trying to shrink.
  • .cc files in api/, on the other hand, are free to #include headers outside api/.

That is, the preferred way for api/ code to access non-api/ code is to call it from a .cc file, so that users of our API headers won’t transitively #include non-public headers.

For headers in api/ that need to refer to non-public types, forward declarations are often a lesser evil than including non-public header files. The usual rules still apply, though.

.cc files in api/ should preferably be kept reasonably small. If a substantial implementation is needed, consider putting it with our non-public code, and just call it from the api/ .cc file.