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SccGetProjPath function

Applies to: yesVisual Studio noVisual Studio for Mac

Note

This article applies to Visual Studio 2017. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here

This function prompts the user for a project path, which is a string that is meaningful only to the source control plug-in. It is called when the user is:

  • Creating a new project

  • Adding an existing project to version control

  • Attempting to find an existing version control project

Syntax

SCCRTN SccGetProjPath (
   LPVOID pvContext,
   HWND   hWnd,
   LPSTR  lpUser,
   LPSTR  lpProjName,
   LPSTR  lpLocalPath,
   LPSTR  lpAuxProjPath,
   BOOL   bAllowChangePath,
   LPBOOL pbNew
);

Parameters

pvContext

[in] The source control plug-in context structure.

hWnd

[in] A handle to the IDE window that the source control plug-in can use as a parent for any dialog boxes that it provides.

lpUser

[in, out] The user name (not to exceed SCC_USER_SIZE, including the NULL terminator)

lpProjName

[in, out] The name of the IDE project, project workspace, or makefile (not to exceed SCC_PRJPATH_SIZE, including the NULL terminator).

lpLocalPath

[in, out] The project's working path. If bAllowChangePath is TRUE, the source control plug-in can modify this string (not to exceed _MAX_PATH, including the null-terminator).

lpAuxProjPath

[in, out] A buffer for the returned project path (not to exceed SCC_PRJPATH_SIZE, including the NULL terminator).

bAllowChangePath

[in] If this is TRUE, the source control plug-in can prompt for and modify the lpLocalPath string.

pbNew

[in, out] Value coming in indicates whether to create a new project. Value returned indicates success of creating a project:

Incoming Interpretation
TRUE The user may create a new project.
FALSE The user may not create a new project.
Outgoing Interpretation
TRUE A new project was created.
FALSE An existing project was selected.

Return value

The source control plug-in implementation of this function is expected to return one of the following values:

Value Description
SCC_OK The project was successfully created or retrieved.
SCC_I_OPERATIONCANCELED The operation was canceled.
SCC_E_ACCESSFAILURE There was a problem accessing the source control system, probably due to network or contention issues.
SCC_E_CONNECTIONFAILURE There was a problem trying to connect to the source control system.
SCC_E_NONSPECIFICERROR An unspecified error occurred.

Remarks

The purpose of this function is for the IDE to acquire the parameters lpProjName and lpAuxProjPath. After the source control plug-in prompts the user for this information, it passes these two strings back to the IDE. The IDE persists these strings in its solution file and passes them to the SccOpenProject whenever the user opens this project. These strings enable the plug-in to track information associated with a project.

When the function is first called, lpAuxProjPath is set to an empty string. lProjName may also be empty, or it may contain the IDE project name, which the source control plug-in may use or ignore. When the function successfully returns, the plug-in returns the two corresponding strings. The IDE makes no assumptions about these strings, will not use them, and will not allow the user to modify them. If the user wants to change the settings, the IDE will call SccGetProjPath again, passing in the same values it had received the previous time. This gives the plug-in complete control over these two strings.

For lpUser, the IDE may pass in a user name, or it may simply pass in a pointer to an empty string. If there is a user name, the source control plug-in should use it as a default. However, if no name was passed or if the login failed with the given name, the plug-in should prompt the user for a login and pass the name back in lpUser when it receives a valid login. Because the plug-in may change this string, the IDE will always allocate a buffer of size (SCC_USER_LEN+1).

Note

The first action that the IDE performs may be a call to either the SccOpenProject function or the SccGetProjPath function. Hence, both of them have an identical lpUser parameter, which enables the source control plug-in to log the user in at either time. Even if the return from the function indicates a failure, the plug-in must fill this string with a valid login name.

lpLocalPath is the directory where the user keeps the project. It may be an empty string. If there is no directory currently defined (as in the case of a user attempting to download a project from the source control system) and if bAllowChangePath is TRUE, the source control plug-in can prompt the user for input or use some other method to place its own string into lpLocalPath. If bAllowChangePath is FALSE, the plug-in should not change the string, because the user is already working in the specified directory.

If the user creates a new project to be put under source control, the source control plug-in might not actually create it in the source control system at the time SccGetProjPath is called. Instead, it passes back the string along with a nonzero value for pbNew, indicating that the project will be created in the source control system.

For example, if a user in the New Project wizard in Visual Studio adds his or her project to source control, Visual Studio calls this function, and the plug-in determines if it is okay to create a new project in the source control system to contain the Visual Studio project. If the user clicks Cancel before completing the wizard, the project is never created. If the user clicks OK, Visual Studio calls SccOpenProject, passing in SCC_OPT_CREATEIFNEW, and the source controlled project is created at that time.

See also