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Revision: 1.42
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# Content
1 NAME
2 AnyEvent - provide framework for multiple event loops
3
4 EV, Event, Glib, Tk, Perl, Event::Lib, Qt and POE are various supported
5 event loops.
6
7 SYNOPSIS
8 use AnyEvent;
9
10 # file descriptor readable
11 my $w = AnyEvent->io (fh => $fh, poll => "r", cb => sub { ... });
12
13 # one-shot or repeating timers
14 my $w = AnyEvent->timer (after => $seconds, cb => sub { ... });
15 my $w = AnyEvent->timer (after => $seconds, interval => $seconds, cb => ...
16
17 print AnyEvent->now; # prints current event loop time
18 print AnyEvent->time; # think Time::HiRes::time or simply CORE::time.
19
20 # POSIX signal
21 my $w = AnyEvent->signal (signal => "TERM", cb => sub { ... });
22
23 # child process exit
24 my $w = AnyEvent->child (pid => $pid, cb => sub {
25 my ($pid, $status) = @_;
26 ...
27 });
28
29 # called when event loop idle (if applicable)
30 my $w = AnyEvent->idle (cb => sub { ... });
31
32 my $w = AnyEvent->condvar; # stores whether a condition was flagged
33 $w->send; # wake up current and all future recv's
34 $w->recv; # enters "main loop" till $condvar gets ->send
35 # use a condvar in callback mode:
36 $w->cb (sub { $_[0]->recv });
37
38 INTRODUCTION/TUTORIAL
39 This manpage is mainly a reference manual. If you are interested in a
40 tutorial or some gentle introduction, have a look at the AnyEvent::Intro
41 manpage.
42
43 WHY YOU SHOULD USE THIS MODULE (OR NOT)
44 Glib, POE, IO::Async, Event... CPAN offers event models by the dozen
45 nowadays. So what is different about AnyEvent?
46
47 Executive Summary: AnyEvent is *compatible*, AnyEvent is *free of
48 policy* and AnyEvent is *small and efficient*.
49
50 First and foremost, *AnyEvent is not an event model* itself, it only
51 interfaces to whatever event model the main program happens to use, in a
52 pragmatic way. For event models and certain classes of immortals alike,
53 the statement "there can only be one" is a bitter reality: In general,
54 only one event loop can be active at the same time in a process.
55 AnyEvent cannot change this, but it can hide the differences between
56 those event loops.
57
58 The goal of AnyEvent is to offer module authors the ability to do event
59 programming (waiting for I/O or timer events) without subscribing to a
60 religion, a way of living, and most importantly: without forcing your
61 module users into the same thing by forcing them to use the same event
62 model you use.
63
64 For modules like POE or IO::Async (which is a total misnomer as it is
65 actually doing all I/O *synchronously*...), using them in your module is
66 like joining a cult: After you joined, you are dependent on them and you
67 cannot use anything else, as they are simply incompatible to everything
68 that isn't them. What's worse, all the potential users of your module
69 are *also* forced to use the same event loop you use.
70
71 AnyEvent is different: AnyEvent + POE works fine. AnyEvent + Glib works
72 fine. AnyEvent + Tk works fine etc. etc. but none of these work together
73 with the rest: POE + IO::Async? No go. Tk + Event? No go. Again: if your
74 module uses one of those, every user of your module has to use it, too.
75 But if your module uses AnyEvent, it works transparently with all event
76 models it supports (including stuff like IO::Async, as long as those use
77 one of the supported event loops. It is trivial to add new event loops
78 to AnyEvent, too, so it is future-proof).
79
80 In addition to being free of having to use *the one and only true event
81 model*, AnyEvent also is free of bloat and policy: with POE or similar
82 modules, you get an enormous amount of code and strict rules you have to
83 follow. AnyEvent, on the other hand, is lean and up to the point, by
84 only offering the functionality that is necessary, in as thin as a
85 wrapper as technically possible.
86
87 Of course, AnyEvent comes with a big (and fully optional!) toolbox of
88 useful functionality, such as an asynchronous DNS resolver, 100%
89 non-blocking connects (even with TLS/SSL, IPv6 and on broken platforms
90 such as Windows) and lots of real-world knowledge and workarounds for
91 platform bugs and differences.
92
93 Now, if you *do want* lots of policy (this can arguably be somewhat
94 useful) and you want to force your users to use the one and only event
95 model, you should *not* use this module.
96
97 DESCRIPTION
98 AnyEvent provides an identical interface to multiple event loops. This
99 allows module authors to utilise an event loop without forcing module
100 users to use the same event loop (as only a single event loop can
101 coexist peacefully at any one time).
102
103 The interface itself is vaguely similar, but not identical to the Event
104 module.
105
106 During the first call of any watcher-creation method, the module tries
107 to detect the currently loaded event loop by probing whether one of the
108 following modules is already loaded: EV, Event, Glib,
109 AnyEvent::Impl::Perl, Tk, Event::Lib, Qt, POE. The first one found is
110 used. If none are found, the module tries to load these modules
111 (excluding Tk, Event::Lib, Qt and POE as the pure perl adaptor should
112 always succeed) in the order given. The first one that can be
113 successfully loaded will be used. If, after this, still none could be
114 found, AnyEvent will fall back to a pure-perl event loop, which is not
115 very efficient, but should work everywhere.
116
117 Because AnyEvent first checks for modules that are already loaded,
118 loading an event model explicitly before first using AnyEvent will
119 likely make that model the default. For example:
120
121 use Tk;
122 use AnyEvent;
123
124 # .. AnyEvent will likely default to Tk
125
126 The *likely* means that, if any module loads another event model and
127 starts using it, all bets are off. Maybe you should tell their authors
128 to use AnyEvent so their modules work together with others seamlessly...
129
130 The pure-perl implementation of AnyEvent is called
131 "AnyEvent::Impl::Perl". Like other event modules you can load it
132 explicitly and enjoy the high availability of that event loop :)
133
134 WATCHERS
135 AnyEvent has the central concept of a *watcher*, which is an object that
136 stores relevant data for each kind of event you are waiting for, such as
137 the callback to call, the file handle to watch, etc.
138
139 These watchers are normal Perl objects with normal Perl lifetime. After
140 creating a watcher it will immediately "watch" for events and invoke the
141 callback when the event occurs (of course, only when the event model is
142 in control).
143
144 Note that callbacks must not permanently change global variables
145 potentially in use by the event loop (such as $_ or $[) and that
146 callbacks must not "die". The former is good programming practise in
147 Perl and the latter stems from the fact that exception handling differs
148 widely between event loops.
149
150 To disable the watcher you have to destroy it (e.g. by setting the
151 variable you store it in to "undef" or otherwise deleting all references
152 to it).
153
154 All watchers are created by calling a method on the "AnyEvent" class.
155
156 Many watchers either are used with "recursion" (repeating timers for
157 example), or need to refer to their watcher object in other ways.
158
159 An any way to achieve that is this pattern:
160
161 my $w; $w = AnyEvent->type (arg => value ..., cb => sub {
162 # you can use $w here, for example to undef it
163 undef $w;
164 });
165
166 Note that "my $w; $w =" combination. This is necessary because in Perl,
167 my variables are only visible after the statement in which they are
168 declared.
169
170 I/O WATCHERS
171 You can create an I/O watcher by calling the "AnyEvent->io" method with
172 the following mandatory key-value pairs as arguments:
173
174 "fh" is the Perl *file handle* (*not* file descriptor) to watch for
175 events (AnyEvent might or might not keep a reference to this file
176 handle). Note that only file handles pointing to things for which
177 non-blocking operation makes sense are allowed. This includes sockets,
178 most character devices, pipes, fifos and so on, but not for example
179 files or block devices.
180
181 "poll" must be a string that is either "r" or "w", which creates a
182 watcher waiting for "r"eadable or "w"ritable events, respectively.
183
184 "cb" is the callback to invoke each time the file handle becomes ready.
185
186 Although the callback might get passed parameters, their value and
187 presence is undefined and you cannot rely on them. Portable AnyEvent
188 callbacks cannot use arguments passed to I/O watcher callbacks.
189
190 The I/O watcher might use the underlying file descriptor or a copy of
191 it. You must not close a file handle as long as any watcher is active on
192 the underlying file descriptor.
193
194 Some event loops issue spurious readyness notifications, so you should
195 always use non-blocking calls when reading/writing from/to your file
196 handles.
197
198 Example: wait for readability of STDIN, then read a line and disable the
199 watcher.
200
201 my $w; $w = AnyEvent->io (fh => \*STDIN, poll => 'r', cb => sub {
202 chomp (my $input = <STDIN>);
203 warn "read: $input\n";
204 undef $w;
205 });
206
207 TIME WATCHERS
208 You can create a time watcher by calling the "AnyEvent->timer" method
209 with the following mandatory arguments:
210
211 "after" specifies after how many seconds (fractional values are
212 supported) the callback should be invoked. "cb" is the callback to
213 invoke in that case.
214
215 Although the callback might get passed parameters, their value and
216 presence is undefined and you cannot rely on them. Portable AnyEvent
217 callbacks cannot use arguments passed to time watcher callbacks.
218
219 The callback will normally be invoked once only. If you specify another
220 parameter, "interval", as a strictly positive number (> 0), then the
221 callback will be invoked regularly at that interval (in fractional
222 seconds) after the first invocation. If "interval" is specified with a
223 false value, then it is treated as if it were missing.
224
225 The callback will be rescheduled before invoking the callback, but no
226 attempt is done to avoid timer drift in most backends, so the interval
227 is only approximate.
228
229 Example: fire an event after 7.7 seconds.
230
231 my $w = AnyEvent->timer (after => 7.7, cb => sub {
232 warn "timeout\n";
233 });
234
235 # to cancel the timer:
236 undef $w;
237
238 Example 2: fire an event after 0.5 seconds, then roughly every second.
239
240 my $w = AnyEvent->timer (after => 0.5, interval => 1, cb => sub {
241 warn "timeout\n";
242 };
243
244 TIMING ISSUES
245 There are two ways to handle timers: based on real time (relative, "fire
246 in 10 seconds") and based on wallclock time (absolute, "fire at 12
247 o'clock").
248
249 While most event loops expect timers to specified in a relative way,
250 they use absolute time internally. This makes a difference when your
251 clock "jumps", for example, when ntp decides to set your clock backwards
252 from the wrong date of 2014-01-01 to 2008-01-01, a watcher that is
253 supposed to fire "after" a second might actually take six years to
254 finally fire.
255
256 AnyEvent cannot compensate for this. The only event loop that is
257 conscious about these issues is EV, which offers both relative
258 (ev_timer, based on true relative time) and absolute (ev_periodic, based
259 on wallclock time) timers.
260
261 AnyEvent always prefers relative timers, if available, matching the
262 AnyEvent API.
263
264 AnyEvent has two additional methods that return the "current time":
265
266 AnyEvent->time
267 This returns the "current wallclock time" as a fractional number of
268 seconds since the Epoch (the same thing as "time" or
269 "Time::HiRes::time" return, and the result is guaranteed to be
270 compatible with those).
271
272 It progresses independently of any event loop processing, i.e. each
273 call will check the system clock, which usually gets updated
274 frequently.
275
276 AnyEvent->now
277 This also returns the "current wallclock time", but unlike "time",
278 above, this value might change only once per event loop iteration,
279 depending on the event loop (most return the same time as "time",
280 above). This is the time that AnyEvent's timers get scheduled
281 against.
282
283 *In almost all cases (in all cases if you don't care), this is the
284 function to call when you want to know the current time.*
285
286 This function is also often faster then "AnyEvent->time", and thus
287 the preferred method if you want some timestamp (for example,
288 AnyEvent::Handle uses this to update it's activity timeouts).
289
290 The rest of this section is only of relevance if you try to be very
291 exact with your timing, you can skip it without bad conscience.
292
293 For a practical example of when these times differ, consider
294 Event::Lib and EV and the following set-up:
295
296 The event loop is running and has just invoked one of your callback
297 at time=500 (assume no other callbacks delay processing). In your
298 callback, you wait a second by executing "sleep 1" (blocking the
299 process for a second) and then (at time=501) you create a relative
300 timer that fires after three seconds.
301
302 With Event::Lib, "AnyEvent->time" and "AnyEvent->now" will both
303 return 501, because that is the current time, and the timer will be
304 scheduled to fire at time=504 (501 + 3).
305
306 With EV, "AnyEvent->time" returns 501 (as that is the current time),
307 but "AnyEvent->now" returns 500, as that is the time the last event
308 processing phase started. With EV, your timer gets scheduled to run
309 at time=503 (500 + 3).
310
311 In one sense, Event::Lib is more exact, as it uses the current time
312 regardless of any delays introduced by event processing. However,
313 most callbacks do not expect large delays in processing, so this
314 causes a higher drift (and a lot more system calls to get the
315 current time).
316
317 In another sense, EV is more exact, as your timer will be scheduled
318 at the same time, regardless of how long event processing actually
319 took.
320
321 In either case, if you care (and in most cases, you don't), then you
322 can get whatever behaviour you want with any event loop, by taking
323 the difference between "AnyEvent->time" and "AnyEvent->now" into
324 account.
325
326 AnyEvent->now_update
327 Some event loops (such as EV or AnyEvent::Impl::Perl) cache the
328 current time for each loop iteration (see the discussion of
329 AnyEvent->now, above).
330
331 When a callback runs for a long time (or when the process sleeps),
332 then this "current" time will differ substantially from the real
333 time, which might affect timers and time-outs.
334
335 When this is the case, you can call this method, which will update
336 the event loop's idea of "current time".
337
338 Note that updating the time *might* cause some events to be handled.
339
340 SIGNAL WATCHERS
341 You can watch for signals using a signal watcher, "signal" is the signal
342 *name* in uppercase and without any "SIG" prefix, "cb" is the Perl
343 callback to be invoked whenever a signal occurs.
344
345 Although the callback might get passed parameters, their value and
346 presence is undefined and you cannot rely on them. Portable AnyEvent
347 callbacks cannot use arguments passed to signal watcher callbacks.
348
349 Multiple signal occurrences can be clumped together into one callback
350 invocation, and callback invocation will be synchronous. Synchronous
351 means that it might take a while until the signal gets handled by the
352 process, but it is guaranteed not to interrupt any other callbacks.
353
354 The main advantage of using these watchers is that you can share a
355 signal between multiple watchers.
356
357 This watcher might use %SIG, so programs overwriting those signals
358 directly will likely not work correctly.
359
360 Example: exit on SIGINT
361
362 my $w = AnyEvent->signal (signal => "INT", cb => sub { exit 1 });
363
364 CHILD PROCESS WATCHERS
365 You can also watch on a child process exit and catch its exit status.
366
367 The child process is specified by the "pid" argument (if set to 0, it
368 watches for any child process exit). The watcher will triggered only
369 when the child process has finished and an exit status is available, not
370 on any trace events (stopped/continued).
371
372 The callback will be called with the pid and exit status (as returned by
373 waitpid), so unlike other watcher types, you *can* rely on child watcher
374 callback arguments.
375
376 This watcher type works by installing a signal handler for "SIGCHLD",
377 and since it cannot be shared, nothing else should use SIGCHLD or reap
378 random child processes (waiting for specific child processes, e.g.
379 inside "system", is just fine).
380
381 There is a slight catch to child watchers, however: you usually start
382 them *after* the child process was created, and this means the process
383 could have exited already (and no SIGCHLD will be sent anymore).
384
385 Not all event models handle this correctly (neither POE nor IO::Async
386 do, see their AnyEvent::Impl manpages for details), but even for event
387 models that *do* handle this correctly, they usually need to be loaded
388 before the process exits (i.e. before you fork in the first place).
389 AnyEvent's pure perl event loop handles all cases correctly regardless
390 of when you start the watcher.
391
392 This means you cannot create a child watcher as the very first thing in
393 an AnyEvent program, you *have* to create at least one watcher before
394 you "fork" the child (alternatively, you can call "AnyEvent::detect").
395
396 Example: fork a process and wait for it
397
398 my $done = AnyEvent->condvar;
399
400 my $pid = fork or exit 5;
401
402 my $w = AnyEvent->child (
403 pid => $pid,
404 cb => sub {
405 my ($pid, $status) = @_;
406 warn "pid $pid exited with status $status";
407 $done->send;
408 },
409 );
410
411 # do something else, then wait for process exit
412 $done->recv;
413
414 IDLE WATCHERS
415 Sometimes there is a need to do something, but it is not so important to
416 do it instantly, but only when there is nothing better to do. This
417 "nothing better to do" is usually defined to be "no other events need
418 attention by the event loop".
419
420 Idle watchers ideally get invoked when the event loop has nothing better
421 to do, just before it would block the process to wait for new events.
422 Instead of blocking, the idle watcher is invoked.
423
424 Most event loops unfortunately do not really support idle watchers (only
425 EV, Event and Glib do it in a usable fashion) - for the rest, AnyEvent
426 will simply call the callback "from time to time".
427
428 Example: read lines from STDIN, but only process them when the program
429 is otherwise idle:
430
431 my @lines; # read data
432 my $idle_w;
433 my $io_w = AnyEvent->io (fh => \*STDIN, poll => 'r', cb => sub {
434 push @lines, scalar <STDIN>;
435
436 # start an idle watcher, if not already done
437 $idle_w ||= AnyEvent->idle (cb => sub {
438 # handle only one line, when there are lines left
439 if (my $line = shift @lines) {
440 print "handled when idle: $line";
441 } else {
442 # otherwise disable the idle watcher again
443 undef $idle_w;
444 }
445 });
446 });
447
448 CONDITION VARIABLES
449 If you are familiar with some event loops you will know that all of them
450 require you to run some blocking "loop", "run" or similar function that
451 will actively watch for new events and call your callbacks.
452
453 AnyEvent is different, it expects somebody else to run the event loop
454 and will only block when necessary (usually when told by the user).
455
456 The instrument to do that is called a "condition variable", so called
457 because they represent a condition that must become true.
458
459 Condition variables can be created by calling the "AnyEvent->condvar"
460 method, usually without arguments. The only argument pair allowed is
461
462 "cb", which specifies a callback to be called when the condition
463 variable becomes true, with the condition variable as the first argument
464 (but not the results).
465
466 After creation, the condition variable is "false" until it becomes
467 "true" by calling the "send" method (or calling the condition variable
468 as if it were a callback, read about the caveats in the description for
469 the "->send" method).
470
471 Condition variables are similar to callbacks, except that you can
472 optionally wait for them. They can also be called merge points - points
473 in time where multiple outstanding events have been processed. And yet
474 another way to call them is transactions - each condition variable can
475 be used to represent a transaction, which finishes at some point and
476 delivers a result.
477
478 Condition variables are very useful to signal that something has
479 finished, for example, if you write a module that does asynchronous http
480 requests, then a condition variable would be the ideal candidate to
481 signal the availability of results. The user can either act when the
482 callback is called or can synchronously "->recv" for the results.
483
484 You can also use them to simulate traditional event loops - for example,
485 you can block your main program until an event occurs - for example, you
486 could "->recv" in your main program until the user clicks the Quit
487 button of your app, which would "->send" the "quit" event.
488
489 Note that condition variables recurse into the event loop - if you have
490 two pieces of code that call "->recv" in a round-robin fashion, you
491 lose. Therefore, condition variables are good to export to your caller,
492 but you should avoid making a blocking wait yourself, at least in
493 callbacks, as this asks for trouble.
494
495 Condition variables are represented by hash refs in perl, and the keys
496 used by AnyEvent itself are all named "_ae_XXX" to make subclassing easy
497 (it is often useful to build your own transaction class on top of
498 AnyEvent). To subclass, use "AnyEvent::CondVar" as base class and call
499 it's "new" method in your own "new" method.
500
501 There are two "sides" to a condition variable - the "producer side"
502 which eventually calls "-> send", and the "consumer side", which waits
503 for the send to occur.
504
505 Example: wait for a timer.
506
507 # wait till the result is ready
508 my $result_ready = AnyEvent->condvar;
509
510 # do something such as adding a timer
511 # or socket watcher the calls $result_ready->send
512 # when the "result" is ready.
513 # in this case, we simply use a timer:
514 my $w = AnyEvent->timer (
515 after => 1,
516 cb => sub { $result_ready->send },
517 );
518
519 # this "blocks" (while handling events) till the callback
520 # calls send
521 $result_ready->recv;
522
523 Example: wait for a timer, but take advantage of the fact that condition
524 variables are also code references.
525
526 my $done = AnyEvent->condvar;
527 my $delay = AnyEvent->timer (after => 5, cb => $done);
528 $done->recv;
529
530 Example: Imagine an API that returns a condvar and doesn't support
531 callbacks. This is how you make a synchronous call, for example from the
532 main program:
533
534 use AnyEvent::CouchDB;
535
536 ...
537
538 my @info = $couchdb->info->recv;
539
540 And this is how you would just ste a callback to be called whenever the
541 results are available:
542
543 $couchdb->info->cb (sub {
544 my @info = $_[0]->recv;
545 });
546
547 METHODS FOR PRODUCERS
548 These methods should only be used by the producing side, i.e. the
549 code/module that eventually sends the signal. Note that it is also the
550 producer side which creates the condvar in most cases, but it isn't
551 uncommon for the consumer to create it as well.
552
553 $cv->send (...)
554 Flag the condition as ready - a running "->recv" and all further
555 calls to "recv" will (eventually) return after this method has been
556 called. If nobody is waiting the send will be remembered.
557
558 If a callback has been set on the condition variable, it is called
559 immediately from within send.
560
561 Any arguments passed to the "send" call will be returned by all
562 future "->recv" calls.
563
564 Condition variables are overloaded so one can call them directly (as
565 a code reference). Calling them directly is the same as calling
566 "send". Note, however, that many C-based event loops do not handle
567 overloading, so as tempting as it may be, passing a condition
568 variable instead of a callback does not work. Both the pure perl and
569 EV loops support overloading, however, as well as all functions that
570 use perl to invoke a callback (as in AnyEvent::Socket and
571 AnyEvent::DNS for example).
572
573 $cv->croak ($error)
574 Similar to send, but causes all call's to "->recv" to invoke
575 "Carp::croak" with the given error message/object/scalar.
576
577 This can be used to signal any errors to the condition variable
578 user/consumer.
579
580 $cv->begin ([group callback])
581 $cv->end
582 These two methods can be used to combine many transactions/events
583 into one. For example, a function that pings many hosts in parallel
584 might want to use a condition variable for the whole process.
585
586 Every call to "->begin" will increment a counter, and every call to
587 "->end" will decrement it. If the counter reaches 0 in "->end", the
588 (last) callback passed to "begin" will be executed. That callback is
589 *supposed* to call "->send", but that is not required. If no
590 callback was set, "send" will be called without any arguments.
591
592 You can think of "$cv->send" giving you an OR condition (one call
593 sends), while "$cv->begin" and "$cv->end" giving you an AND
594 condition (all "begin" calls must be "end"'ed before the condvar
595 sends).
596
597 Let's start with a simple example: you have two I/O watchers (for
598 example, STDOUT and STDERR for a program), and you want to wait for
599 both streams to close before activating a condvar:
600
601 my $cv = AnyEvent->condvar;
602
603 $cv->begin; # first watcher
604 my $w1 = AnyEvent->io (fh => $fh1, cb => sub {
605 defined sysread $fh1, my $buf, 4096
606 or $cv->end;
607 });
608
609 $cv->begin; # second watcher
610 my $w2 = AnyEvent->io (fh => $fh2, cb => sub {
611 defined sysread $fh2, my $buf, 4096
612 or $cv->end;
613 });
614
615 $cv->recv;
616
617 This works because for every event source (EOF on file handle),
618 there is one call to "begin", so the condvar waits for all calls to
619 "end" before sending.
620
621 The ping example mentioned above is slightly more complicated, as
622 the there are results to be passwd back, and the number of tasks
623 that are begung can potentially be zero:
624
625 my $cv = AnyEvent->condvar;
626
627 my %result;
628 $cv->begin (sub { $cv->send (\%result) });
629
630 for my $host (@list_of_hosts) {
631 $cv->begin;
632 ping_host_then_call_callback $host, sub {
633 $result{$host} = ...;
634 $cv->end;
635 };
636 }
637
638 $cv->end;
639
640 This code fragment supposedly pings a number of hosts and calls
641 "send" after results for all then have have been gathered - in any
642 order. To achieve this, the code issues a call to "begin" when it
643 starts each ping request and calls "end" when it has received some
644 result for it. Since "begin" and "end" only maintain a counter, the
645 order in which results arrive is not relevant.
646
647 There is an additional bracketing call to "begin" and "end" outside
648 the loop, which serves two important purposes: first, it sets the
649 callback to be called once the counter reaches 0, and second, it
650 ensures that "send" is called even when "no" hosts are being pinged
651 (the loop doesn't execute once).
652
653 This is the general pattern when you "fan out" into multiple (but
654 potentially none) subrequests: use an outer "begin"/"end" pair to
655 set the callback and ensure "end" is called at least once, and then,
656 for each subrequest you start, call "begin" and for each subrequest
657 you finish, call "end".
658
659 METHODS FOR CONSUMERS
660 These methods should only be used by the consuming side, i.e. the code
661 awaits the condition.
662
663 $cv->recv
664 Wait (blocking if necessary) until the "->send" or "->croak" methods
665 have been called on c<$cv>, while servicing other watchers normally.
666
667 You can only wait once on a condition - additional calls are valid
668 but will return immediately.
669
670 If an error condition has been set by calling "->croak", then this
671 function will call "croak".
672
673 In list context, all parameters passed to "send" will be returned,
674 in scalar context only the first one will be returned.
675
676 Not all event models support a blocking wait - some die in that case
677 (programs might want to do that to stay interactive), so *if you are
678 using this from a module, never require a blocking wait*, but let
679 the caller decide whether the call will block or not (for example,
680 by coupling condition variables with some kind of request results
681 and supporting callbacks so the caller knows that getting the result
682 will not block, while still supporting blocking waits if the caller
683 so desires).
684
685 Another reason *never* to "->recv" in a module is that you cannot
686 sensibly have two "->recv"'s in parallel, as that would require
687 multiple interpreters or coroutines/threads, none of which
688 "AnyEvent" can supply.
689
690 The Coro module, however, *can* and *does* supply coroutines and, in
691 fact, Coro::AnyEvent replaces AnyEvent's condvars by coroutine-safe
692 versions and also integrates coroutines into AnyEvent, making
693 blocking "->recv" calls perfectly safe as long as they are done from
694 another coroutine (one that doesn't run the event loop).
695
696 You can ensure that "-recv" never blocks by setting a callback and
697 only calling "->recv" from within that callback (or at a later
698 time). This will work even when the event loop does not support
699 blocking waits otherwise.
700
701 $bool = $cv->ready
702 Returns true when the condition is "true", i.e. whether "send" or
703 "croak" have been called.
704
705 $cb = $cv->cb ($cb->($cv))
706 This is a mutator function that returns the callback set and
707 optionally replaces it before doing so.
708
709 The callback will be called when the condition becomes "true", i.e.
710 when "send" or "croak" are called, with the only argument being the
711 condition variable itself. Calling "recv" inside the callback or at
712 any later time is guaranteed not to block.
713
714 GLOBAL VARIABLES AND FUNCTIONS
715 $AnyEvent::MODEL
716 Contains "undef" until the first watcher is being created. Then it
717 contains the event model that is being used, which is the name of
718 the Perl class implementing the model. This class is usually one of
719 the "AnyEvent::Impl:xxx" modules, but can be any other class in the
720 case AnyEvent has been extended at runtime (e.g. in *rxvt-unicode*).
721
722 The known classes so far are:
723
724 AnyEvent::Impl::EV based on EV (an interface to libev, best choice).
725 AnyEvent::Impl::Event based on Event, second best choice.
726 AnyEvent::Impl::Perl pure-perl implementation, fast and portable.
727 AnyEvent::Impl::Glib based on Glib, third-best choice.
728 AnyEvent::Impl::Tk based on Tk, very bad choice.
729 AnyEvent::Impl::Qt based on Qt, cannot be autoprobed (see its docs).
730 AnyEvent::Impl::EventLib based on Event::Lib, leaks memory and worse.
731 AnyEvent::Impl::POE based on POE, not generic enough for full support.
732
733 # warning, support for IO::Async is only partial, as it is too broken
734 # and limited toe ven support the AnyEvent API. See AnyEvent::Impl::Async.
735 AnyEvent::Impl::IOAsync based on IO::Async, cannot be autoprobed (see its docs).
736
737 There is no support for WxWidgets, as WxWidgets has no support for
738 watching file handles. However, you can use WxWidgets through the
739 POE Adaptor, as POE has a Wx backend that simply polls 20 times per
740 second, which was considered to be too horrible to even consider for
741 AnyEvent. Likewise, other POE backends can be used by AnyEvent by
742 using it's adaptor.
743
744 AnyEvent knows about Prima and Wx and will try to use POE when
745 autodetecting them.
746
747 AnyEvent::detect
748 Returns $AnyEvent::MODEL, forcing autodetection of the event model
749 if necessary. You should only call this function right before you
750 would have created an AnyEvent watcher anyway, that is, as late as
751 possible at runtime.
752
753 $guard = AnyEvent::post_detect { BLOCK }
754 Arranges for the code block to be executed as soon as the event
755 model is autodetected (or immediately if this has already happened).
756
757 If called in scalar or list context, then it creates and returns an
758 object that automatically removes the callback again when it is
759 destroyed. See Coro::BDB for a case where this is useful.
760
761 @AnyEvent::post_detect
762 If there are any code references in this array (you can "push" to it
763 before or after loading AnyEvent), then they will called directly
764 after the event loop has been chosen.
765
766 You should check $AnyEvent::MODEL before adding to this array,
767 though: if it contains a true value then the event loop has already
768 been detected, and the array will be ignored.
769
770 Best use "AnyEvent::post_detect { BLOCK }" instead.
771
772 WHAT TO DO IN A MODULE
773 As a module author, you should "use AnyEvent" and call AnyEvent methods
774 freely, but you should not load a specific event module or rely on it.
775
776 Be careful when you create watchers in the module body - AnyEvent will
777 decide which event module to use as soon as the first method is called,
778 so by calling AnyEvent in your module body you force the user of your
779 module to load the event module first.
780
781 Never call "->recv" on a condition variable unless you *know* that the
782 "->send" method has been called on it already. This is because it will
783 stall the whole program, and the whole point of using events is to stay
784 interactive.
785
786 It is fine, however, to call "->recv" when the user of your module
787 requests it (i.e. if you create a http request object ad have a method
788 called "results" that returns the results, it should call "->recv"
789 freely, as the user of your module knows what she is doing. always).
790
791 WHAT TO DO IN THE MAIN PROGRAM
792 There will always be a single main program - the only place that should
793 dictate which event model to use.
794
795 If it doesn't care, it can just "use AnyEvent" and use it itself, or not
796 do anything special (it does not need to be event-based) and let
797 AnyEvent decide which implementation to chose if some module relies on
798 it.
799
800 If the main program relies on a specific event model - for example, in
801 Gtk2 programs you have to rely on the Glib module - you should load the
802 event module before loading AnyEvent or any module that uses it:
803 generally speaking, you should load it as early as possible. The reason
804 is that modules might create watchers when they are loaded, and AnyEvent
805 will decide on the event model to use as soon as it creates watchers,
806 and it might chose the wrong one unless you load the correct one
807 yourself.
808
809 You can chose to use a pure-perl implementation by loading the
810 "AnyEvent::Impl::Perl" module, which gives you similar behaviour
811 everywhere, but letting AnyEvent chose the model is generally better.
812
813 MAINLOOP EMULATION
814 Sometimes (often for short test scripts, or even standalone programs who
815 only want to use AnyEvent), you do not want to run a specific event
816 loop.
817
818 In that case, you can use a condition variable like this:
819
820 AnyEvent->condvar->recv;
821
822 This has the effect of entering the event loop and looping forever.
823
824 Note that usually your program has some exit condition, in which case it
825 is better to use the "traditional" approach of storing a condition
826 variable somewhere, waiting for it, and sending it when the program
827 should exit cleanly.
828
829 OTHER MODULES
830 The following is a non-exhaustive list of additional modules that use
831 AnyEvent and can therefore be mixed easily with other AnyEvent modules
832 in the same program. Some of the modules come with AnyEvent, some are
833 available via CPAN.
834
835 AnyEvent::Util
836 Contains various utility functions that replace often-used but
837 blocking functions such as "inet_aton" by event-/callback-based
838 versions.
839
840 AnyEvent::Socket
841 Provides various utility functions for (internet protocol) sockets,
842 addresses and name resolution. Also functions to create non-blocking
843 tcp connections or tcp servers, with IPv6 and SRV record support and
844 more.
845
846 AnyEvent::Handle
847 Provide read and write buffers, manages watchers for reads and
848 writes, supports raw and formatted I/O, I/O queued and fully
849 transparent and non-blocking SSL/TLS.
850
851 AnyEvent::DNS
852 Provides rich asynchronous DNS resolver capabilities.
853
854 AnyEvent::HTTP
855 A simple-to-use HTTP library that is capable of making a lot of
856 concurrent HTTP requests.
857
858 AnyEvent::HTTPD
859 Provides a simple web application server framework.
860
861 AnyEvent::FastPing
862 The fastest ping in the west.
863
864 AnyEvent::DBI
865 Executes DBI requests asynchronously in a proxy process.
866
867 AnyEvent::AIO
868 Truly asynchronous I/O, should be in the toolbox of every event
869 programmer. AnyEvent::AIO transparently fuses IO::AIO and AnyEvent
870 together.
871
872 AnyEvent::BDB
873 Truly asynchronous Berkeley DB access. AnyEvent::BDB transparently
874 fuses BDB and AnyEvent together.
875
876 AnyEvent::GPSD
877 A non-blocking interface to gpsd, a daemon delivering GPS
878 information.
879
880 AnyEvent::IGS
881 A non-blocking interface to the Internet Go Server protocol (used by
882 App::IGS).
883
884 AnyEvent::IRC
885 AnyEvent based IRC client module family (replacing the older
886 Net::IRC3).
887
888 Net::XMPP2
889 AnyEvent based XMPP (Jabber protocol) module family.
890
891 Net::FCP
892 AnyEvent-based implementation of the Freenet Client Protocol,
893 birthplace of AnyEvent.
894
895 Event::ExecFlow
896 High level API for event-based execution flow control.
897
898 Coro
899 Has special support for AnyEvent via Coro::AnyEvent.
900
901 IO::Lambda
902 The lambda approach to I/O - don't ask, look there. Can use
903 AnyEvent.
904
905 ERROR AND EXCEPTION HANDLING
906 In general, AnyEvent does not do any error handling - it relies on the
907 caller to do that if required. The AnyEvent::Strict module (see also the
908 "PERL_ANYEVENT_STRICT" environment variable, below) provides strict
909 checking of all AnyEvent methods, however, which is highly useful during
910 development.
911
912 As for exception handling (i.e. runtime errors and exceptions thrown
913 while executing a callback), this is not only highly event-loop
914 specific, but also not in any way wrapped by this module, as this is the
915 job of the main program.
916
917 The pure perl event loop simply re-throws the exception (usually within
918 "condvar->recv"), the Event and EV modules call "$Event/EV::DIED->()",
919 Glib uses "install_exception_handler" and so on.
920
921 ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
922 The following environment variables are used by this module or its
923 submodules.
924
925 Note that AnyEvent will remove *all* environment variables starting with
926 "PERL_ANYEVENT_" from %ENV when it is loaded while taint mode is
927 enabled.
928
929 "PERL_ANYEVENT_VERBOSE"
930 By default, AnyEvent will be completely silent except in fatal
931 conditions. You can set this environment variable to make AnyEvent
932 more talkative.
933
934 When set to 1 or higher, causes AnyEvent to warn about unexpected
935 conditions, such as not being able to load the event model specified
936 by "PERL_ANYEVENT_MODEL".
937
938 When set to 2 or higher, cause AnyEvent to report to STDERR which
939 event model it chooses.
940
941 "PERL_ANYEVENT_STRICT"
942 AnyEvent does not do much argument checking by default, as thorough
943 argument checking is very costly. Setting this variable to a true
944 value will cause AnyEvent to load "AnyEvent::Strict" and then to
945 thoroughly check the arguments passed to most method calls. If it
946 finds any problems, it will croak.
947
948 In other words, enables "strict" mode.
949
950 Unlike "use strict", it is definitely recommended to keep it off in
951 production. Keeping "PERL_ANYEVENT_STRICT=1" in your environment
952 while developing programs can be very useful, however.
953
954 "PERL_ANYEVENT_MODEL"
955 This can be used to specify the event model to be used by AnyEvent,
956 before auto detection and -probing kicks in. It must be a string
957 consisting entirely of ASCII letters. The string "AnyEvent::Impl::"
958 gets prepended and the resulting module name is loaded and if the
959 load was successful, used as event model. If it fails to load
960 AnyEvent will proceed with auto detection and -probing.
961
962 This functionality might change in future versions.
963
964 For example, to force the pure perl model (AnyEvent::Impl::Perl) you
965 could start your program like this:
966
967 PERL_ANYEVENT_MODEL=Perl perl ...
968
969 "PERL_ANYEVENT_PROTOCOLS"
970 Used by both AnyEvent::DNS and AnyEvent::Socket to determine
971 preferences for IPv4 or IPv6. The default is unspecified (and might
972 change, or be the result of auto probing).
973
974 Must be set to a comma-separated list of protocols or address
975 families, current supported: "ipv4" and "ipv6". Only protocols
976 mentioned will be used, and preference will be given to protocols
977 mentioned earlier in the list.
978
979 This variable can effectively be used for denial-of-service attacks
980 against local programs (e.g. when setuid), although the impact is
981 likely small, as the program has to handle conenction and other
982 failures anyways.
983
984 Examples: "PERL_ANYEVENT_PROTOCOLS=ipv4,ipv6" - prefer IPv4 over
985 IPv6, but support both and try to use both.
986 "PERL_ANYEVENT_PROTOCOLS=ipv4" - only support IPv4, never try to
987 resolve or contact IPv6 addresses.
988 "PERL_ANYEVENT_PROTOCOLS=ipv6,ipv4" support either IPv4 or IPv6, but
989 prefer IPv6 over IPv4.
990
991 "PERL_ANYEVENT_EDNS0"
992 Used by AnyEvent::DNS to decide whether to use the EDNS0 extension
993 for DNS. This extension is generally useful to reduce DNS traffic,
994 but some (broken) firewalls drop such DNS packets, which is why it
995 is off by default.
996
997 Setting this variable to 1 will cause AnyEvent::DNS to announce
998 EDNS0 in its DNS requests.
999
1000 "PERL_ANYEVENT_MAX_FORKS"
1001 The maximum number of child processes that
1002 "AnyEvent::Util::fork_call" will create in parallel.
1003
1004 SUPPLYING YOUR OWN EVENT MODEL INTERFACE
1005 This is an advanced topic that you do not normally need to use AnyEvent
1006 in a module. This section is only of use to event loop authors who want
1007 to provide AnyEvent compatibility.
1008
1009 If you need to support another event library which isn't directly
1010 supported by AnyEvent, you can supply your own interface to it by
1011 pushing, before the first watcher gets created, the package name of the
1012 event module and the package name of the interface to use onto
1013 @AnyEvent::REGISTRY. You can do that before and even without loading
1014 AnyEvent, so it is reasonably cheap.
1015
1016 Example:
1017
1018 push @AnyEvent::REGISTRY, [urxvt => urxvt::anyevent::];
1019
1020 This tells AnyEvent to (literally) use the "urxvt::anyevent::"
1021 package/class when it finds the "urxvt" package/module is already
1022 loaded.
1023
1024 When AnyEvent is loaded and asked to find a suitable event model, it
1025 will first check for the presence of urxvt by trying to "use" the
1026 "urxvt::anyevent" module.
1027
1028 The class should provide implementations for all watcher types. See
1029 AnyEvent::Impl::EV (source code), AnyEvent::Impl::Glib (Source code) and
1030 so on for actual examples. Use "perldoc -m AnyEvent::Impl::Glib" to see
1031 the sources.
1032
1033 If you don't provide "signal" and "child" watchers than AnyEvent will
1034 provide suitable (hopefully) replacements.
1035
1036 The above example isn't fictitious, the *rxvt-unicode* (a.k.a. urxvt)
1037 terminal emulator uses the above line as-is. An interface isn't included
1038 in AnyEvent because it doesn't make sense outside the embedded
1039 interpreter inside *rxvt-unicode*, and it is updated and maintained as
1040 part of the *rxvt-unicode* distribution.
1041
1042 *rxvt-unicode* also cheats a bit by not providing blocking access to
1043 condition variables: code blocking while waiting for a condition will
1044 "die". This still works with most modules/usages, and blocking calls
1045 must not be done in an interactive application, so it makes sense.
1046
1047 EXAMPLE PROGRAM
1048 The following program uses an I/O watcher to read data from STDIN, a
1049 timer to display a message once per second, and a condition variable to
1050 quit the program when the user enters quit:
1051
1052 use AnyEvent;
1053
1054 my $cv = AnyEvent->condvar;
1055
1056 my $io_watcher = AnyEvent->io (
1057 fh => \*STDIN,
1058 poll => 'r',
1059 cb => sub {
1060 warn "io event <$_[0]>\n"; # will always output <r>
1061 chomp (my $input = <STDIN>); # read a line
1062 warn "read: $input\n"; # output what has been read
1063 $cv->send if $input =~ /^q/i; # quit program if /^q/i
1064 },
1065 );
1066
1067 my $time_watcher; # can only be used once
1068
1069 sub new_timer {
1070 $timer = AnyEvent->timer (after => 1, cb => sub {
1071 warn "timeout\n"; # print 'timeout' about every second
1072 &new_timer; # and restart the time
1073 });
1074 }
1075
1076 new_timer; # create first timer
1077
1078 $cv->recv; # wait until user enters /^q/i
1079
1080 REAL-WORLD EXAMPLE
1081 Consider the Net::FCP module. It features (among others) the following
1082 API calls, which are to freenet what HTTP GET requests are to http:
1083
1084 my $data = $fcp->client_get ($url); # blocks
1085
1086 my $transaction = $fcp->txn_client_get ($url); # does not block
1087 $transaction->cb ( sub { ... } ); # set optional result callback
1088 my $data = $transaction->result; # possibly blocks
1089
1090 The "client_get" method works like "LWP::Simple::get": it requests the
1091 given URL and waits till the data has arrived. It is defined to be:
1092
1093 sub client_get { $_[0]->txn_client_get ($_[1])->result }
1094
1095 And in fact is automatically generated. This is the blocking API of
1096 Net::FCP, and it works as simple as in any other, similar, module.
1097
1098 More complicated is "txn_client_get": It only creates a transaction
1099 (completion, result, ...) object and initiates the transaction.
1100
1101 my $txn = bless { }, Net::FCP::Txn::;
1102
1103 It also creates a condition variable that is used to signal the
1104 completion of the request:
1105
1106 $txn->{finished} = AnyAvent->condvar;
1107
1108 It then creates a socket in non-blocking mode.
1109
1110 socket $txn->{fh}, ...;
1111 fcntl $txn->{fh}, F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK;
1112 connect $txn->{fh}, ...
1113 and !$!{EWOULDBLOCK}
1114 and !$!{EINPROGRESS}
1115 and Carp::croak "unable to connect: $!\n";
1116
1117 Then it creates a write-watcher which gets called whenever an error
1118 occurs or the connection succeeds:
1119
1120 $txn->{w} = AnyEvent->io (fh => $txn->{fh}, poll => 'w', cb => sub { $txn->fh_ready_w });
1121
1122 And returns this transaction object. The "fh_ready_w" callback gets
1123 called as soon as the event loop detects that the socket is ready for
1124 writing.
1125
1126 The "fh_ready_w" method makes the socket blocking again, writes the
1127 request data and replaces the watcher by a read watcher (waiting for
1128 reply data). The actual code is more complicated, but that doesn't
1129 matter for this example:
1130
1131 fcntl $txn->{fh}, F_SETFL, 0;
1132 syswrite $txn->{fh}, $txn->{request}
1133 or die "connection or write error";
1134 $txn->{w} = AnyEvent->io (fh => $txn->{fh}, poll => 'r', cb => sub { $txn->fh_ready_r });
1135
1136 Again, "fh_ready_r" waits till all data has arrived, and then stores the
1137 result and signals any possible waiters that the request has finished:
1138
1139 sysread $txn->{fh}, $txn->{buf}, length $txn->{$buf};
1140
1141 if (end-of-file or data complete) {
1142 $txn->{result} = $txn->{buf};
1143 $txn->{finished}->send;
1144 $txb->{cb}->($txn) of $txn->{cb}; # also call callback
1145 }
1146
1147 The "result" method, finally, just waits for the finished signal (if the
1148 request was already finished, it doesn't wait, of course, and returns
1149 the data:
1150
1151 $txn->{finished}->recv;
1152 return $txn->{result};
1153
1154 The actual code goes further and collects all errors ("die"s,
1155 exceptions) that occurred during request processing. The "result" method
1156 detects whether an exception as thrown (it is stored inside the $txn
1157 object) and just throws the exception, which means connection errors and
1158 other problems get reported tot he code that tries to use the result,
1159 not in a random callback.
1160
1161 All of this enables the following usage styles:
1162
1163 1. Blocking:
1164
1165 my $data = $fcp->client_get ($url);
1166
1167 2. Blocking, but running in parallel:
1168
1169 my @datas = map $_->result,
1170 map $fcp->txn_client_get ($_),
1171 @urls;
1172
1173 Both blocking examples work without the module user having to know
1174 anything about events.
1175
1176 3a. Event-based in a main program, using any supported event module:
1177
1178 use EV;
1179
1180 $fcp->txn_client_get ($url)->cb (sub {
1181 my $txn = shift;
1182 my $data = $txn->result;
1183 ...
1184 });
1185
1186 EV::loop;
1187
1188 3b. The module user could use AnyEvent, too:
1189
1190 use AnyEvent;
1191
1192 my $quit = AnyEvent->condvar;
1193
1194 $fcp->txn_client_get ($url)->cb (sub {
1195 ...
1196 $quit->send;
1197 });
1198
1199 $quit->recv;
1200
1201 BENCHMARKS
1202 To give you an idea of the performance and overheads that AnyEvent adds
1203 over the event loops themselves and to give you an impression of the
1204 speed of various event loops I prepared some benchmarks.
1205
1206 BENCHMARKING ANYEVENT OVERHEAD
1207 Here is a benchmark of various supported event models used natively and
1208 through AnyEvent. The benchmark creates a lot of timers (with a zero
1209 timeout) and I/O watchers (watching STDOUT, a pty, to become writable,
1210 which it is), lets them fire exactly once and destroys them again.
1211
1212 Source code for this benchmark is found as eg/bench in the AnyEvent
1213 distribution.
1214
1215 Explanation of the columns
1216 *watcher* is the number of event watchers created/destroyed. Since
1217 different event models feature vastly different performances, each event
1218 loop was given a number of watchers so that overall runtime is
1219 acceptable and similar between tested event loop (and keep them from
1220 crashing): Glib would probably take thousands of years if asked to
1221 process the same number of watchers as EV in this benchmark.
1222
1223 *bytes* is the number of bytes (as measured by the resident set size,
1224 RSS) consumed by each watcher. This method of measuring captures both C
1225 and Perl-based overheads.
1226
1227 *create* is the time, in microseconds (millionths of seconds), that it
1228 takes to create a single watcher. The callback is a closure shared
1229 between all watchers, to avoid adding memory overhead. That means
1230 closure creation and memory usage is not included in the figures.
1231
1232 *invoke* is the time, in microseconds, used to invoke a simple callback.
1233 The callback simply counts down a Perl variable and after it was invoked
1234 "watcher" times, it would "->send" a condvar once to signal the end of
1235 this phase.
1236
1237 *destroy* is the time, in microseconds, that it takes to destroy a
1238 single watcher.
1239
1240 Results
1241 name watchers bytes create invoke destroy comment
1242 EV/EV 400000 224 0.47 0.35 0.27 EV native interface
1243 EV/Any 100000 224 2.88 0.34 0.27 EV + AnyEvent watchers
1244 CoroEV/Any 100000 224 2.85 0.35 0.28 coroutines + Coro::Signal
1245 Perl/Any 100000 452 4.13 0.73 0.95 pure perl implementation
1246 Event/Event 16000 517 32.20 31.80 0.81 Event native interface
1247 Event/Any 16000 590 35.85 31.55 1.06 Event + AnyEvent watchers
1248 IOAsync/Any 16000 989 38.10 32.77 11.13 via IO::Async::Loop::IO_Poll
1249 IOAsync/Any 16000 990 37.59 29.50 10.61 via IO::Async::Loop::Epoll
1250 Glib/Any 16000 1357 102.33 12.31 51.00 quadratic behaviour
1251 Tk/Any 2000 1860 27.20 66.31 14.00 SEGV with >> 2000 watchers
1252 POE/Event 2000 6328 109.99 751.67 14.02 via POE::Loop::Event
1253 POE/Select 2000 6027 94.54 809.13 579.80 via POE::Loop::Select
1254
1255 Discussion
1256 The benchmark does *not* measure scalability of the event loop very
1257 well. For example, a select-based event loop (such as the pure perl one)
1258 can never compete with an event loop that uses epoll when the number of
1259 file descriptors grows high. In this benchmark, all events become ready
1260 at the same time, so select/poll-based implementations get an unnatural
1261 speed boost.
1262
1263 Also, note that the number of watchers usually has a nonlinear effect on
1264 overall speed, that is, creating twice as many watchers doesn't take
1265 twice the time - usually it takes longer. This puts event loops tested
1266 with a higher number of watchers at a disadvantage.
1267
1268 To put the range of results into perspective, consider that on the
1269 benchmark machine, handling an event takes roughly 1600 CPU cycles with
1270 EV, 3100 CPU cycles with AnyEvent's pure perl loop and almost 3000000
1271 CPU cycles with POE.
1272
1273 "EV" is the sole leader regarding speed and memory use, which are both
1274 maximal/minimal, respectively. Even when going through AnyEvent, it uses
1275 far less memory than any other event loop and is still faster than Event
1276 natively.
1277
1278 The pure perl implementation is hit in a few sweet spots (both the
1279 constant timeout and the use of a single fd hit optimisations in the
1280 perl interpreter and the backend itself). Nevertheless this shows that
1281 it adds very little overhead in itself. Like any select-based backend
1282 its performance becomes really bad with lots of file descriptors (and
1283 few of them active), of course, but this was not subject of this
1284 benchmark.
1285
1286 The "Event" module has a relatively high setup and callback invocation
1287 cost, but overall scores in on the third place.
1288
1289 "IO::Async" performs admirably well, about on par with "Event", even
1290 when using its pure perl backend.
1291
1292 "Glib"'s memory usage is quite a bit higher, but it features a faster
1293 callback invocation and overall ends up in the same class as "Event".
1294 However, Glib scales extremely badly, doubling the number of watchers
1295 increases the processing time by more than a factor of four, making it
1296 completely unusable when using larger numbers of watchers (note that
1297 only a single file descriptor was used in the benchmark, so
1298 inefficiencies of "poll" do not account for this).
1299
1300 The "Tk" adaptor works relatively well. The fact that it crashes with
1301 more than 2000 watchers is a big setback, however, as correctness takes
1302 precedence over speed. Nevertheless, its performance is surprising, as
1303 the file descriptor is dup()ed for each watcher. This shows that the
1304 dup() employed by some adaptors is not a big performance issue (it does
1305 incur a hidden memory cost inside the kernel which is not reflected in
1306 the figures above).
1307
1308 "POE", regardless of underlying event loop (whether using its pure perl
1309 select-based backend or the Event module, the POE-EV backend couldn't be
1310 tested because it wasn't working) shows abysmal performance and memory
1311 usage with AnyEvent: Watchers use almost 30 times as much memory as EV
1312 watchers, and 10 times as much memory as Event (the high memory
1313 requirements are caused by requiring a session for each watcher).
1314 Watcher invocation speed is almost 900 times slower than with AnyEvent's
1315 pure perl implementation.
1316
1317 The design of the POE adaptor class in AnyEvent can not really account
1318 for the performance issues, though, as session creation overhead is
1319 small compared to execution of the state machine, which is coded pretty
1320 optimally within AnyEvent::Impl::POE (and while everybody agrees that
1321 using multiple sessions is not a good approach, especially regarding
1322 memory usage, even the author of POE could not come up with a faster
1323 design).
1324
1325 Summary
1326 * Using EV through AnyEvent is faster than any other event loop (even
1327 when used without AnyEvent), but most event loops have acceptable
1328 performance with or without AnyEvent.
1329
1330 * The overhead AnyEvent adds is usually much smaller than the overhead
1331 of the actual event loop, only with extremely fast event loops such
1332 as EV adds AnyEvent significant overhead.
1333
1334 * You should avoid POE like the plague if you want performance or
1335 reasonable memory usage.
1336
1337 BENCHMARKING THE LARGE SERVER CASE
1338 This benchmark actually benchmarks the event loop itself. It works by
1339 creating a number of "servers": each server consists of a socket pair, a
1340 timeout watcher that gets reset on activity (but never fires), and an
1341 I/O watcher waiting for input on one side of the socket. Each time the
1342 socket watcher reads a byte it will write that byte to a random other
1343 "server".
1344
1345 The effect is that there will be a lot of I/O watchers, only part of
1346 which are active at any one point (so there is a constant number of
1347 active fds for each loop iteration, but which fds these are is random).
1348 The timeout is reset each time something is read because that reflects
1349 how most timeouts work (and puts extra pressure on the event loops).
1350
1351 In this benchmark, we use 10000 socket pairs (20000 sockets), of which
1352 100 (1%) are active. This mirrors the activity of large servers with
1353 many connections, most of which are idle at any one point in time.
1354
1355 Source code for this benchmark is found as eg/bench2 in the AnyEvent
1356 distribution.
1357
1358 Explanation of the columns
1359 *sockets* is the number of sockets, and twice the number of "servers"
1360 (as each server has a read and write socket end).
1361
1362 *create* is the time it takes to create a socket pair (which is
1363 nontrivial) and two watchers: an I/O watcher and a timeout watcher.
1364
1365 *request*, the most important value, is the time it takes to handle a
1366 single "request", that is, reading the token from the pipe and
1367 forwarding it to another server. This includes deleting the old timeout
1368 and creating a new one that moves the timeout into the future.
1369
1370 Results
1371 name sockets create request
1372 EV 20000 69.01 11.16
1373 Perl 20000 73.32 35.87
1374 IOAsync 20000 157.00 98.14 epoll
1375 IOAsync 20000 159.31 616.06 poll
1376 Event 20000 212.62 257.32
1377 Glib 20000 651.16 1896.30
1378 POE 20000 349.67 12317.24 uses POE::Loop::Event
1379
1380 Discussion
1381 This benchmark *does* measure scalability and overall performance of the
1382 particular event loop.
1383
1384 EV is again fastest. Since it is using epoll on my system, the setup
1385 time is relatively high, though.
1386
1387 Perl surprisingly comes second. It is much faster than the C-based event
1388 loops Event and Glib.
1389
1390 IO::Async performs very well when using its epoll backend, and still
1391 quite good compared to Glib when using its pure perl backend.
1392
1393 Event suffers from high setup time as well (look at its code and you
1394 will understand why). Callback invocation also has a high overhead
1395 compared to the "$_->() for .."-style loop that the Perl event loop
1396 uses. Event uses select or poll in basically all documented
1397 configurations.
1398
1399 Glib is hit hard by its quadratic behaviour w.r.t. many watchers. It
1400 clearly fails to perform with many filehandles or in busy servers.
1401
1402 POE is still completely out of the picture, taking over 1000 times as
1403 long as EV, and over 100 times as long as the Perl implementation, even
1404 though it uses a C-based event loop in this case.
1405
1406 Summary
1407 * The pure perl implementation performs extremely well.
1408
1409 * Avoid Glib or POE in large projects where performance matters.
1410
1411 BENCHMARKING SMALL SERVERS
1412 While event loops should scale (and select-based ones do not...) even to
1413 large servers, most programs we (or I :) actually write have only a few
1414 I/O watchers.
1415
1416 In this benchmark, I use the same benchmark program as in the large
1417 server case, but it uses only eight "servers", of which three are active
1418 at any one time. This should reflect performance for a small server
1419 relatively well.
1420
1421 The columns are identical to the previous table.
1422
1423 Results
1424 name sockets create request
1425 EV 16 20.00 6.54
1426 Perl 16 25.75 12.62
1427 Event 16 81.27 35.86
1428 Glib 16 32.63 15.48
1429 POE 16 261.87 276.28 uses POE::Loop::Event
1430
1431 Discussion
1432 The benchmark tries to test the performance of a typical small server.
1433 While knowing how various event loops perform is interesting, keep in
1434 mind that their overhead in this case is usually not as important, due
1435 to the small absolute number of watchers (that is, you need efficiency
1436 and speed most when you have lots of watchers, not when you only have a
1437 few of them).
1438
1439 EV is again fastest.
1440
1441 Perl again comes second. It is noticeably faster than the C-based event
1442 loops Event and Glib, although the difference is too small to really
1443 matter.
1444
1445 POE also performs much better in this case, but is is still far behind
1446 the others.
1447
1448 Summary
1449 * C-based event loops perform very well with small number of watchers,
1450 as the management overhead dominates.
1451
1452 THE IO::Lambda BENCHMARK
1453 Recently I was told about the benchmark in the IO::Lambda manpage, which
1454 could be misinterpreted to make AnyEvent look bad. In fact, the
1455 benchmark simply compares IO::Lambda with POE, and IO::Lambda looks
1456 better (which shouldn't come as a surprise to anybody). As such, the
1457 benchmark is fine, and mostly shows that the AnyEvent backend from
1458 IO::Lambda isn't very optimal. But how would AnyEvent compare when used
1459 without the extra baggage? To explore this, I wrote the equivalent
1460 benchmark for AnyEvent.
1461
1462 The benchmark itself creates an echo-server, and then, for 500 times,
1463 connects to the echo server, sends a line, waits for the reply, and then
1464 creates the next connection. This is a rather bad benchmark, as it
1465 doesn't test the efficiency of the framework or much non-blocking I/O,
1466 but it is a benchmark nevertheless.
1467
1468 name runtime
1469 Lambda/select 0.330 sec
1470 + optimized 0.122 sec
1471 Lambda/AnyEvent 0.327 sec
1472 + optimized 0.138 sec
1473 Raw sockets/select 0.077 sec
1474 POE/select, components 0.662 sec
1475 POE/select, raw sockets 0.226 sec
1476 POE/select, optimized 0.404 sec
1477
1478 AnyEvent/select/nb 0.085 sec
1479 AnyEvent/EV/nb 0.068 sec
1480 +state machine 0.134 sec
1481
1482 The benchmark is also a bit unfair (my fault): the IO::Lambda/POE
1483 benchmarks actually make blocking connects and use 100% blocking I/O,
1484 defeating the purpose of an event-based solution. All of the newly
1485 written AnyEvent benchmarks use 100% non-blocking connects (using
1486 AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect and the asynchronous pure perl DNS
1487 resolver), so AnyEvent is at a disadvantage here, as non-blocking
1488 connects generally require a lot more bookkeeping and event handling
1489 than blocking connects (which involve a single syscall only).
1490
1491 The last AnyEvent benchmark additionally uses AnyEvent::Handle, which
1492 offers similar expressive power as POE and IO::Lambda, using
1493 conventional Perl syntax. This means that both the echo server and the
1494 client are 100% non-blocking, further placing it at a disadvantage.
1495
1496 As you can see, the AnyEvent + EV combination even beats the
1497 hand-optimised "raw sockets benchmark", while AnyEvent + its pure perl
1498 backend easily beats IO::Lambda and POE.
1499
1500 And even the 100% non-blocking version written using the high-level (and
1501 slow :) AnyEvent::Handle abstraction beats both POE and IO::Lambda by a
1502 large margin, even though it does all of DNS, tcp-connect and socket I/O
1503 in a non-blocking way.
1504
1505 The two AnyEvent benchmarks programs can be found as eg/ae0.pl and
1506 eg/ae2.pl in the AnyEvent distribution, the remaining benchmarks are
1507 part of the IO::lambda distribution and were used without any changes.
1508
1509 SIGNALS
1510 AnyEvent currently installs handlers for these signals:
1511
1512 SIGCHLD
1513 A handler for "SIGCHLD" is installed by AnyEvent's child watcher
1514 emulation for event loops that do not support them natively. Also,
1515 some event loops install a similar handler.
1516
1517 If, when AnyEvent is loaded, SIGCHLD is set to IGNORE, then AnyEvent
1518 will reset it to default, to avoid losing child exit statuses.
1519
1520 SIGPIPE
1521 A no-op handler is installed for "SIGPIPE" when $SIG{PIPE} is
1522 "undef" when AnyEvent gets loaded.
1523
1524 The rationale for this is that AnyEvent users usually do not really
1525 depend on SIGPIPE delivery (which is purely an optimisation for
1526 shell use, or badly-written programs), but "SIGPIPE" can cause
1527 spurious and rare program exits as a lot of people do not expect
1528 "SIGPIPE" when writing to some random socket.
1529
1530 The rationale for installing a no-op handler as opposed to ignoring
1531 it is that this way, the handler will be restored to defaults on
1532 exec.
1533
1534 Feel free to install your own handler, or reset it to defaults.
1535
1536 FORK
1537 Most event libraries are not fork-safe. The ones who are usually are
1538 because they rely on inefficient but fork-safe "select" or "poll" calls.
1539 Only EV is fully fork-aware.
1540
1541 If you have to fork, you must either do so *before* creating your first
1542 watcher OR you must not use AnyEvent at all in the child.
1543
1544 SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
1545 AnyEvent can be forced to load any event model via
1546 $ENV{PERL_ANYEVENT_MODEL}. While this cannot (to my knowledge) be used
1547 to execute arbitrary code or directly gain access, it can easily be used
1548 to make the program hang or malfunction in subtle ways, as AnyEvent
1549 watchers will not be active when the program uses a different event
1550 model than specified in the variable.
1551
1552 You can make AnyEvent completely ignore this variable by deleting it
1553 before the first watcher gets created, e.g. with a "BEGIN" block:
1554
1555 BEGIN { delete $ENV{PERL_ANYEVENT_MODEL} }
1556
1557 use AnyEvent;
1558
1559 Similar considerations apply to $ENV{PERL_ANYEVENT_VERBOSE}, as that can
1560 be used to probe what backend is used and gain other information (which
1561 is probably even less useful to an attacker than PERL_ANYEVENT_MODEL),
1562 and $ENV{PERL_ANYEVENT_STRICT}.
1563
1564 Note that AnyEvent will remove *all* environment variables starting with
1565 "PERL_ANYEVENT_" from %ENV when it is loaded while taint mode is
1566 enabled.
1567
1568 BUGS
1569 Perl 5.8 has numerous memleaks that sometimes hit this module and are
1570 hard to work around. If you suffer from memleaks, first upgrade to Perl
1571 5.10 and check wether the leaks still show up. (Perl 5.10.0 has other
1572 annoying memleaks, such as leaking on "map" and "grep" but it is usually
1573 not as pronounced).
1574
1575 SEE ALSO
1576 Utility functions: AnyEvent::Util.
1577
1578 Event modules: EV, EV::Glib, Glib::EV, Event, Glib::Event, Glib, Tk,
1579 Event::Lib, Qt, POE.
1580
1581 Implementations: AnyEvent::Impl::EV, AnyEvent::Impl::Event,
1582 AnyEvent::Impl::Glib, AnyEvent::Impl::Tk, AnyEvent::Impl::Perl,
1583 AnyEvent::Impl::EventLib, AnyEvent::Impl::Qt, AnyEvent::Impl::POE.
1584
1585 Non-blocking file handles, sockets, TCP clients and servers:
1586 AnyEvent::Handle, AnyEvent::Socket.
1587
1588 Asynchronous DNS: AnyEvent::DNS.
1589
1590 Coroutine support: Coro, Coro::AnyEvent, Coro::EV, Coro::Event,
1591
1592 Nontrivial usage examples: Net::FCP, Net::XMPP2, AnyEvent::DNS.
1593
1594 AUTHOR
1595 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
1596 http://home.schmorp.de/
1597