1 | package AnyEvent::Handle; |
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2 | |
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3 | use warnings; |
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4 | use strict; |
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5 | |
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6 | use AnyEvent; |
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7 | use IO::Handle; |
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8 | use Errno qw/EAGAIN EINTR/; |
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9 | |
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10 | =head1 NAME |
1 | =head1 NAME |
11 | |
2 | |
12 | AnyEvent::Handle - non-blocking I/O on filehandles via AnyEvent |
3 | AnyEvent::Handle - non-blocking I/O on file handles via AnyEvent |
13 | |
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14 | =head1 VERSION |
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15 | |
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16 | Version 0.01 |
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17 | |
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18 | =cut |
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19 | |
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20 | our $VERSION = '0.01'; |
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21 | |
4 | |
22 | =head1 SYNOPSIS |
5 | =head1 SYNOPSIS |
23 | |
6 | |
24 | use AnyEvent; |
7 | use AnyEvent; |
25 | use AnyEvent::Handle; |
8 | use AnyEvent::Handle; |
26 | |
9 | |
27 | my $cv = AnyEvent->condvar; |
10 | my $cv = AnyEvent->condvar; |
28 | |
11 | |
29 | my $ae_fh = AnyEvent::Handle->new (fh => \*STDIN); |
12 | my $hdl; $hdl = new AnyEvent::Handle |
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13 | fh => \*STDIN, |
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14 | on_error => sub { |
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15 | my ($hdl, $fatal, $msg) = @_; |
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16 | warn "got error $msg\n"; |
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17 | $hdl->destroy; |
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18 | $cv->send; |
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19 | }; |
30 | |
20 | |
31 | $ae_fh->readlines (sub { |
21 | # send some request line |
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22 | $hdl->push_write ("getinfo\015\012"); |
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23 | |
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24 | # read the response line |
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25 | $hdl->push_read (line => sub { |
32 | my ($ae_fh, @lines) = @_; |
26 | my ($hdl, $line) = @_; |
33 | for (@lines) { |
27 | warn "got line <$line>\n"; |
34 | chomp; |
28 | $cv->send; |
35 | print "Line: $_"; |
29 | }); |
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30 | |
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31 | $cv->recv; |
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32 | |
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33 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
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34 | |
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35 | This module is a helper module to make it easier to do event-based I/O on |
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36 | filehandles. |
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37 | |
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38 | The L<AnyEvent::Intro> tutorial contains some well-documented |
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39 | AnyEvent::Handle examples. |
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40 | |
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41 | In the following, when the documentation refers to of "bytes" then this |
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42 | means characters. As sysread and syswrite are used for all I/O, their |
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43 | treatment of characters applies to this module as well. |
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44 | |
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45 | At the very minimum, you should specify C<fh> or C<connect>, and the |
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46 | C<on_error> callback. |
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47 | |
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48 | All callbacks will be invoked with the handle object as their first |
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49 | argument. |
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50 | |
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51 | =cut |
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52 | |
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53 | package AnyEvent::Handle; |
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54 | |
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55 | use Scalar::Util (); |
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56 | use List::Util (); |
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57 | use Carp (); |
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58 | use Errno qw(EAGAIN EINTR); |
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59 | |
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60 | use AnyEvent (); BEGIN { AnyEvent::common_sense } |
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61 | use AnyEvent::Util qw(WSAEWOULDBLOCK); |
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62 | |
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63 | our $VERSION = $AnyEvent::VERSION; |
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64 | |
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65 | sub _load_func($) { |
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66 | my $func = $_[0]; |
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67 | |
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68 | unless (defined &$func) { |
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69 | my $pkg = $func; |
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70 | do { |
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71 | $pkg =~ s/::[^:]+$// |
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72 | or return; |
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73 | eval "require $pkg"; |
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74 | } until defined &$func; |
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75 | } |
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76 | |
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77 | \&$func |
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78 | } |
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79 | |
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80 | =head1 METHODS |
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81 | |
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82 | =over 4 |
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83 | |
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84 | =item $handle = B<new> AnyEvent::Handle fh => $filehandle, key => value... |
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85 | |
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86 | The constructor supports these arguments (all as C<< key => value >> pairs). |
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87 | |
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88 | =over 4 |
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89 | |
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90 | =item fh => $filehandle [C<fh> or C<connect> MANDATORY] |
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91 | |
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92 | The filehandle this L<AnyEvent::Handle> object will operate on. |
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93 | NOTE: The filehandle will be set to non-blocking mode (using |
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94 | C<AnyEvent::Util::fh_nonblocking>) by the constructor and needs to stay in |
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95 | that mode. |
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96 | |
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97 | =item connect => [$host, $service] [C<fh> or C<connect> MANDATORY] |
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98 | |
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99 | Try to connect to the specified host and service (port), using |
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100 | C<AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect>. The C<$host> additionally becomes the |
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101 | default C<peername>. |
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102 | |
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103 | You have to specify either this parameter, or C<fh>, above. |
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104 | |
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105 | It is possible to push requests on the read and write queues, and modify |
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106 | properties of the stream, even while AnyEvent::Handle is connecting. |
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107 | |
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108 | When this parameter is specified, then the C<on_prepare>, |
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109 | C<on_connect_error> and C<on_connect> callbacks will be called under the |
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110 | appropriate circumstances: |
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111 | |
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112 | =over 4 |
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113 | |
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114 | =item on_prepare => $cb->($handle) |
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115 | |
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116 | This (rarely used) callback is called before a new connection is |
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117 | attempted, but after the file handle has been created. It could be used to |
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118 | prepare the file handle with parameters required for the actual connect |
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119 | (as opposed to settings that can be changed when the connection is already |
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120 | established). |
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121 | |
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122 | The return value of this callback should be the connect timeout value in |
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123 | seconds (or C<0>, or C<undef>, or the empty list, to indicate the default |
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124 | timeout is to be used). |
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125 | |
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126 | =item on_connect => $cb->($handle, $host, $port, $retry->()) |
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127 | |
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128 | This callback is called when a connection has been successfully established. |
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129 | |
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130 | The actual numeric host and port (the socket peername) are passed as |
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131 | parameters, together with a retry callback. |
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132 | |
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133 | When, for some reason, the handle is not acceptable, then calling |
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134 | C<$retry> will continue with the next connection target (in case of |
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135 | multi-homed hosts or SRV records there can be multiple connection |
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136 | endpoints). At the time it is called the read and write queues, eof |
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137 | status, tls status and similar properties of the handle will have been |
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138 | reset. |
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139 | |
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140 | In most cases, ignoring the C<$retry> parameter is the way to go. |
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141 | |
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142 | =item on_connect_error => $cb->($handle, $message) |
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143 | |
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144 | This callback is called when the connection could not be |
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145 | established. C<$!> will contain the relevant error code, and C<$message> a |
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146 | message describing it (usually the same as C<"$!">). |
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147 | |
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148 | If this callback isn't specified, then C<on_error> will be called with a |
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149 | fatal error instead. |
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150 | |
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151 | =back |
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152 | |
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153 | =item on_error => $cb->($handle, $fatal, $message) |
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154 | |
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155 | This is the error callback, which is called when, well, some error |
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156 | occured, such as not being able to resolve the hostname, failure to |
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157 | connect or a read error. |
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158 | |
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159 | Some errors are fatal (which is indicated by C<$fatal> being true). On |
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160 | fatal errors the handle object will be destroyed (by a call to C<< -> |
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161 | destroy >>) after invoking the error callback (which means you are free to |
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162 | examine the handle object). Examples of fatal errors are an EOF condition |
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163 | with active (but unsatisifable) read watchers (C<EPIPE>) or I/O errors. In |
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164 | cases where the other side can close the connection at their will it is |
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165 | often easiest to not report C<EPIPE> errors in this callback. |
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166 | |
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167 | AnyEvent::Handle tries to find an appropriate error code for you to check |
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168 | against, but in some cases (TLS errors), this does not work well. It is |
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169 | recommended to always output the C<$message> argument in human-readable |
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170 | error messages (it's usually the same as C<"$!">). |
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171 | |
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172 | Non-fatal errors can be retried by simply returning, but it is recommended |
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173 | to simply ignore this parameter and instead abondon the handle object |
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174 | when this callback is invoked. Examples of non-fatal errors are timeouts |
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175 | C<ETIMEDOUT>) or badly-formatted data (C<EBADMSG>). |
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176 | |
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177 | On callback entrance, the value of C<$!> contains the operating system |
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178 | error code (or C<ENOSPC>, C<EPIPE>, C<ETIMEDOUT>, C<EBADMSG> or |
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179 | C<EPROTO>). |
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180 | |
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181 | While not mandatory, it is I<highly> recommended to set this callback, as |
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182 | you will not be notified of errors otherwise. The default simply calls |
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183 | C<croak>. |
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184 | |
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185 | =item on_read => $cb->($handle) |
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186 | |
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187 | This sets the default read callback, which is called when data arrives |
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188 | and no read request is in the queue (unlike read queue callbacks, this |
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189 | callback will only be called when at least one octet of data is in the |
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190 | read buffer). |
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191 | |
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192 | To access (and remove data from) the read buffer, use the C<< ->rbuf >> |
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193 | method or access the C<< $handle->{rbuf} >> member directly. Note that you |
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194 | must not enlarge or modify the read buffer, you can only remove data at |
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195 | the beginning from it. |
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196 | |
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197 | When an EOF condition is detected then AnyEvent::Handle will first try to |
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198 | feed all the remaining data to the queued callbacks and C<on_read> before |
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199 | calling the C<on_eof> callback. If no progress can be made, then a fatal |
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200 | error will be raised (with C<$!> set to C<EPIPE>). |
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201 | |
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202 | Note that, unlike requests in the read queue, an C<on_read> callback |
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203 | doesn't mean you I<require> some data: if there is an EOF and there |
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204 | are outstanding read requests then an error will be flagged. With an |
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205 | C<on_read> callback, the C<on_eof> callback will be invoked. |
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206 | |
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207 | =item on_eof => $cb->($handle) |
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208 | |
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209 | Set the callback to be called when an end-of-file condition is detected, |
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210 | i.e. in the case of a socket, when the other side has closed the |
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211 | connection cleanly, and there are no outstanding read requests in the |
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212 | queue (if there are read requests, then an EOF counts as an unexpected |
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213 | connection close and will be flagged as an error). |
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214 | |
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215 | For sockets, this just means that the other side has stopped sending data, |
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216 | you can still try to write data, and, in fact, one can return from the EOF |
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217 | callback and continue writing data, as only the read part has been shut |
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218 | down. |
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219 | |
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220 | If an EOF condition has been detected but no C<on_eof> callback has been |
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221 | set, then a fatal error will be raised with C<$!> set to <0>. |
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222 | |
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223 | =item on_drain => $cb->($handle) |
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224 | |
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225 | This sets the callback that is called when the write buffer becomes empty |
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226 | (or when the callback is set and the buffer is empty already). |
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227 | |
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228 | To append to the write buffer, use the C<< ->push_write >> method. |
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229 | |
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230 | This callback is useful when you don't want to put all of your write data |
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231 | into the queue at once, for example, when you want to write the contents |
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232 | of some file to the socket you might not want to read the whole file into |
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233 | memory and push it into the queue, but instead only read more data from |
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234 | the file when the write queue becomes empty. |
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235 | |
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236 | =item timeout => $fractional_seconds |
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237 | |
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238 | =item rtimeout => $fractional_seconds |
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239 | |
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240 | =item wtimeout => $fractional_seconds |
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241 | |
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242 | If non-zero, then these enables an "inactivity" timeout: whenever this |
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243 | many seconds pass without a successful read or write on the underlying |
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244 | file handle (or a call to C<timeout_reset>), the C<on_timeout> callback |
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245 | will be invoked (and if that one is missing, a non-fatal C<ETIMEDOUT> |
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246 | error will be raised). |
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247 | |
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248 | There are three variants of the timeouts that work fully independent |
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249 | of each other, for both read and write, just read, and just write: |
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250 | C<timeout>, C<rtimeout> and C<wtimeout>, with corresponding callbacks |
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251 | C<on_timeout>, C<on_rtimeout> and C<on_wtimeout>, and reset functions |
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252 | C<timeout_reset>, C<rtimeout_reset>, and C<wtimeout_reset>. |
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253 | |
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254 | Note that timeout processing is also active when you currently do not have |
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255 | any outstanding read or write requests: If you plan to keep the connection |
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256 | idle then you should disable the timout temporarily or ignore the timeout |
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257 | in the C<on_timeout> callback, in which case AnyEvent::Handle will simply |
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258 | restart the timeout. |
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259 | |
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260 | Zero (the default) disables this timeout. |
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261 | |
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262 | =item on_timeout => $cb->($handle) |
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263 | |
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264 | Called whenever the inactivity timeout passes. If you return from this |
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265 | callback, then the timeout will be reset as if some activity had happened, |
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266 | so this condition is not fatal in any way. |
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267 | |
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268 | =item rbuf_max => <bytes> |
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269 | |
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270 | If defined, then a fatal error will be raised (with C<$!> set to C<ENOSPC>) |
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271 | when the read buffer ever (strictly) exceeds this size. This is useful to |
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272 | avoid some forms of denial-of-service attacks. |
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273 | |
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274 | For example, a server accepting connections from untrusted sources should |
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275 | be configured to accept only so-and-so much data that it cannot act on |
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276 | (for example, when expecting a line, an attacker could send an unlimited |
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277 | amount of data without a callback ever being called as long as the line |
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278 | isn't finished). |
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279 | |
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280 | =item autocork => <boolean> |
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281 | |
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282 | When disabled (the default), then C<push_write> will try to immediately |
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283 | write the data to the handle, if possible. This avoids having to register |
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284 | a write watcher and wait for the next event loop iteration, but can |
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285 | be inefficient if you write multiple small chunks (on the wire, this |
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286 | disadvantage is usually avoided by your kernel's nagle algorithm, see |
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287 | C<no_delay>, but this option can save costly syscalls). |
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288 | |
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289 | When enabled, then writes will always be queued till the next event loop |
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290 | iteration. This is efficient when you do many small writes per iteration, |
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291 | but less efficient when you do a single write only per iteration (or when |
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292 | the write buffer often is full). It also increases write latency. |
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293 | |
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294 | =item no_delay => <boolean> |
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295 | |
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296 | When doing small writes on sockets, your operating system kernel might |
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297 | wait a bit for more data before actually sending it out. This is called |
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298 | the Nagle algorithm, and usually it is beneficial. |
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299 | |
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300 | In some situations you want as low a delay as possible, which can be |
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301 | accomplishd by setting this option to a true value. |
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302 | |
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303 | The default is your opertaing system's default behaviour (most likely |
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304 | enabled), this option explicitly enables or disables it, if possible. |
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305 | |
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306 | =item keepalive => <boolean> |
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307 | |
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308 | Enables (default disable) the SO_KEEPALIVE option on the stream socket: |
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309 | normally, TCP connections have no time-out once established, so TCP |
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310 | connections, once established, can stay alive forever even when the other |
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311 | side has long gone. TCP keepalives are a cheap way to take down long-lived |
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312 | TCP connections whent he other side becomes unreachable. While the default |
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313 | is OS-dependent, TCP keepalives usually kick in after around two hours, |
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314 | and, if the other side doesn't reply, take down the TCP connection some 10 |
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315 | to 15 minutes later. |
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316 | |
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317 | It is harmless to specify this option for file handles that do not support |
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318 | keepalives, and enabling it on connections that are potentially long-lived |
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319 | is usually a good idea. |
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320 | |
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321 | =item oobinline => <boolean> |
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322 | |
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323 | BSD majorly fucked up the implementation of TCP urgent data. The result |
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324 | is that almost no OS implements TCP according to the specs, and every OS |
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325 | implements it slightly differently. |
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326 | |
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327 | If you want to handle TCP urgent data, then setting this flag (the default |
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328 | is enabled) gives you the most portable way of getting urgent data, by |
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329 | putting it into the stream. |
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330 | |
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331 | Since BSD emulation of OOB data on top of TCP's urgent data can have |
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332 | security implications, AnyEvent::Handle sets this flag automatically |
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333 | unless explicitly specified. Note that setting this flag after |
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334 | establishing a connection I<may> be a bit too late (data loss could |
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335 | already have occured on BSD systems), but at least it will protect you |
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336 | from most attacks. |
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337 | |
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338 | =item read_size => <bytes> |
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339 | |
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340 | The default read block size (the amount of bytes this module will |
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341 | try to read during each loop iteration, which affects memory |
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342 | requirements). Default: C<8192>. |
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343 | |
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344 | =item low_water_mark => <bytes> |
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345 | |
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346 | Sets the amount of bytes (default: C<0>) that make up an "empty" write |
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347 | buffer: If the write reaches this size or gets even samller it is |
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348 | considered empty. |
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349 | |
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350 | Sometimes it can be beneficial (for performance reasons) to add data to |
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351 | the write buffer before it is fully drained, but this is a rare case, as |
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352 | the operating system kernel usually buffers data as well, so the default |
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353 | is good in almost all cases. |
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354 | |
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355 | =item linger => <seconds> |
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356 | |
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357 | If non-zero (default: C<3600>), then the destructor of the |
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358 | AnyEvent::Handle object will check whether there is still outstanding |
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359 | write data and will install a watcher that will write this data to the |
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360 | socket. No errors will be reported (this mostly matches how the operating |
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361 | system treats outstanding data at socket close time). |
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362 | |
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363 | This will not work for partial TLS data that could not be encoded |
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364 | yet. This data will be lost. Calling the C<stoptls> method in time might |
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365 | help. |
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366 | |
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367 | =item peername => $string |
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368 | |
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369 | A string used to identify the remote site - usually the DNS hostname |
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370 | (I<not> IDN!) used to create the connection, rarely the IP address. |
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371 | |
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372 | Apart from being useful in error messages, this string is also used in TLS |
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373 | peername verification (see C<verify_peername> in L<AnyEvent::TLS>). This |
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374 | verification will be skipped when C<peername> is not specified or |
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375 | C<undef>. |
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376 | |
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377 | =item tls => "accept" | "connect" | Net::SSLeay::SSL object |
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378 | |
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379 | When this parameter is given, it enables TLS (SSL) mode, that means |
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380 | AnyEvent will start a TLS handshake as soon as the connection has been |
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381 | established and will transparently encrypt/decrypt data afterwards. |
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382 | |
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383 | All TLS protocol errors will be signalled as C<EPROTO>, with an |
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384 | appropriate error message. |
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385 | |
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386 | TLS mode requires Net::SSLeay to be installed (it will be loaded |
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387 | automatically when you try to create a TLS handle): this module doesn't |
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388 | have a dependency on that module, so if your module requires it, you have |
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389 | to add the dependency yourself. |
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390 | |
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391 | Unlike TCP, TLS has a server and client side: for the TLS server side, use |
|
|
392 | C<accept>, and for the TLS client side of a connection, use C<connect> |
|
|
393 | mode. |
|
|
394 | |
|
|
395 | You can also provide your own TLS connection object, but you have |
|
|
396 | to make sure that you call either C<Net::SSLeay::set_connect_state> |
|
|
397 | or C<Net::SSLeay::set_accept_state> on it before you pass it to |
|
|
398 | AnyEvent::Handle. Also, this module will take ownership of this connection |
|
|
399 | object. |
|
|
400 | |
|
|
401 | At some future point, AnyEvent::Handle might switch to another TLS |
|
|
402 | implementation, then the option to use your own session object will go |
|
|
403 | away. |
|
|
404 | |
|
|
405 | B<IMPORTANT:> since Net::SSLeay "objects" are really only integers, |
|
|
406 | passing in the wrong integer will lead to certain crash. This most often |
|
|
407 | happens when one uses a stylish C<< tls => 1 >> and is surprised about the |
|
|
408 | segmentation fault. |
|
|
409 | |
|
|
410 | See the C<< ->starttls >> method for when need to start TLS negotiation later. |
|
|
411 | |
|
|
412 | =item tls_ctx => $anyevent_tls |
|
|
413 | |
|
|
414 | Use the given C<AnyEvent::TLS> object to create the new TLS connection |
|
|
415 | (unless a connection object was specified directly). If this parameter is |
|
|
416 | missing, then AnyEvent::Handle will use C<AnyEvent::Handle::TLS_CTX>. |
|
|
417 | |
|
|
418 | Instead of an object, you can also specify a hash reference with C<< key |
|
|
419 | => value >> pairs. Those will be passed to L<AnyEvent::TLS> to create a |
|
|
420 | new TLS context object. |
|
|
421 | |
|
|
422 | =item on_starttls => $cb->($handle, $success[, $error_message]) |
|
|
423 | |
|
|
424 | This callback will be invoked when the TLS/SSL handshake has finished. If |
|
|
425 | C<$success> is true, then the TLS handshake succeeded, otherwise it failed |
|
|
426 | (C<on_stoptls> will not be called in this case). |
|
|
427 | |
|
|
428 | The session in C<< $handle->{tls} >> can still be examined in this |
|
|
429 | callback, even when the handshake was not successful. |
|
|
430 | |
|
|
431 | TLS handshake failures will not cause C<on_error> to be invoked when this |
|
|
432 | callback is in effect, instead, the error message will be passed to C<on_starttls>. |
|
|
433 | |
|
|
434 | Without this callback, handshake failures lead to C<on_error> being |
|
|
435 | called, as normal. |
|
|
436 | |
|
|
437 | Note that you cannot call C<starttls> right again in this callback. If you |
|
|
438 | need to do that, start an zero-second timer instead whose callback can |
|
|
439 | then call C<< ->starttls >> again. |
|
|
440 | |
|
|
441 | =item on_stoptls => $cb->($handle) |
|
|
442 | |
|
|
443 | When a SSLv3/TLS shutdown/close notify/EOF is detected and this callback is |
|
|
444 | set, then it will be invoked after freeing the TLS session. If it is not, |
|
|
445 | then a TLS shutdown condition will be treated like a normal EOF condition |
|
|
446 | on the handle. |
|
|
447 | |
|
|
448 | The session in C<< $handle->{tls} >> can still be examined in this |
|
|
449 | callback. |
|
|
450 | |
|
|
451 | This callback will only be called on TLS shutdowns, not when the |
|
|
452 | underlying handle signals EOF. |
|
|
453 | |
|
|
454 | =item json => JSON or JSON::XS object |
|
|
455 | |
|
|
456 | This is the json coder object used by the C<json> read and write types. |
|
|
457 | |
|
|
458 | If you don't supply it, then AnyEvent::Handle will create and use a |
|
|
459 | suitable one (on demand), which will write and expect UTF-8 encoded JSON |
|
|
460 | texts. |
|
|
461 | |
|
|
462 | Note that you are responsible to depend on the JSON module if you want to |
|
|
463 | use this functionality, as AnyEvent does not have a dependency itself. |
|
|
464 | |
|
|
465 | =back |
|
|
466 | |
|
|
467 | =cut |
|
|
468 | |
|
|
469 | sub new { |
|
|
470 | my $class = shift; |
|
|
471 | my $self = bless { @_ }, $class; |
|
|
472 | |
|
|
473 | if ($self->{fh}) { |
|
|
474 | $self->_start; |
|
|
475 | return unless $self->{fh}; # could be gone by now |
|
|
476 | |
|
|
477 | } elsif ($self->{connect}) { |
|
|
478 | require AnyEvent::Socket; |
|
|
479 | |
|
|
480 | $self->{peername} = $self->{connect}[0] |
|
|
481 | unless exists $self->{peername}; |
|
|
482 | |
|
|
483 | $self->{_skip_drain_rbuf} = 1; |
|
|
484 | |
|
|
485 | { |
|
|
486 | Scalar::Util::weaken (my $self = $self); |
|
|
487 | |
|
|
488 | $self->{_connect} = |
|
|
489 | AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect ( |
|
|
490 | $self->{connect}[0], |
|
|
491 | $self->{connect}[1], |
|
|
492 | sub { |
|
|
493 | my ($fh, $host, $port, $retry) = @_; |
|
|
494 | |
|
|
495 | if ($fh) { |
|
|
496 | $self->{fh} = $fh; |
|
|
497 | |
|
|
498 | delete $self->{_skip_drain_rbuf}; |
|
|
499 | $self->_start; |
|
|
500 | |
|
|
501 | $self->{on_connect} |
|
|
502 | and $self->{on_connect}($self, $host, $port, sub { |
|
|
503 | delete @$self{qw(fh _tw _rtw _wtw _ww _rw _eof _queue rbuf _wbuf tls _tls_rbuf _tls_wbuf)}; |
|
|
504 | $self->{_skip_drain_rbuf} = 1; |
|
|
505 | &$retry; |
|
|
506 | }); |
|
|
507 | |
|
|
508 | } else { |
|
|
509 | if ($self->{on_connect_error}) { |
|
|
510 | $self->{on_connect_error}($self, "$!"); |
|
|
511 | $self->destroy; |
|
|
512 | } else { |
|
|
513 | $self->_error ($!, 1); |
|
|
514 | } |
|
|
515 | } |
|
|
516 | }, |
|
|
517 | sub { |
|
|
518 | local $self->{fh} = $_[0]; |
|
|
519 | |
|
|
520 | $self->{on_prepare} |
|
|
521 | ? $self->{on_prepare}->($self) |
|
|
522 | : () |
|
|
523 | } |
|
|
524 | ); |
36 | } |
525 | } |
37 | $cv->broadcast; |
526 | |
|
|
527 | } else { |
|
|
528 | Carp::croak "AnyEvent::Handle: either an existing fh or the connect parameter must be specified"; |
|
|
529 | } |
|
|
530 | |
|
|
531 | $self |
|
|
532 | } |
|
|
533 | |
|
|
534 | sub _start { |
|
|
535 | my ($self) = @_; |
|
|
536 | |
|
|
537 | AnyEvent::Util::fh_nonblocking $self->{fh}, 1; |
|
|
538 | |
|
|
539 | $self->{_activity} = |
|
|
540 | $self->{_ractivity} = |
|
|
541 | $self->{_wactivity} = AE::now; |
|
|
542 | |
|
|
543 | $self->timeout (delete $self->{timeout} ) if $self->{timeout}; |
|
|
544 | $self->rtimeout (delete $self->{rtimeout} ) if $self->{rtimeout}; |
|
|
545 | $self->wtimeout (delete $self->{wtimeout} ) if $self->{wtimeout}; |
|
|
546 | |
|
|
547 | $self->no_delay (delete $self->{no_delay} ) if exists $self->{no_delay} && $self->{no_delay}; |
|
|
548 | $self->keepalive (delete $self->{keepalive}) if exists $self->{keepalive} && $self->{keepalive}; |
|
|
549 | |
|
|
550 | $self->oobinline (exists $self->{oobinline} ? delete $self->{oobinline} : 1); |
|
|
551 | |
|
|
552 | $self->starttls (delete $self->{tls}, delete $self->{tls_ctx}) |
|
|
553 | if $self->{tls}; |
|
|
554 | |
|
|
555 | $self->on_drain (delete $self->{on_drain}) if $self->{on_drain}; |
|
|
556 | |
|
|
557 | $self->start_read |
|
|
558 | if $self->{on_read} || @{ $self->{_queue} }; |
|
|
559 | |
|
|
560 | $self->_drain_wbuf; |
|
|
561 | } |
|
|
562 | |
|
|
563 | sub _error { |
|
|
564 | my ($self, $errno, $fatal, $message) = @_; |
|
|
565 | |
|
|
566 | $! = $errno; |
|
|
567 | $message ||= "$!"; |
|
|
568 | |
|
|
569 | if ($self->{on_error}) { |
|
|
570 | $self->{on_error}($self, $fatal, $message); |
|
|
571 | $self->destroy if $fatal; |
|
|
572 | } elsif ($self->{fh} || $self->{connect}) { |
|
|
573 | $self->destroy; |
|
|
574 | Carp::croak "AnyEvent::Handle uncaught error: $message"; |
|
|
575 | } |
|
|
576 | } |
|
|
577 | |
|
|
578 | =item $fh = $handle->fh |
|
|
579 | |
|
|
580 | This method returns the file handle used to create the L<AnyEvent::Handle> object. |
|
|
581 | |
|
|
582 | =cut |
|
|
583 | |
|
|
584 | sub fh { $_[0]{fh} } |
|
|
585 | |
|
|
586 | =item $handle->on_error ($cb) |
|
|
587 | |
|
|
588 | Replace the current C<on_error> callback (see the C<on_error> constructor argument). |
|
|
589 | |
|
|
590 | =cut |
|
|
591 | |
|
|
592 | sub on_error { |
|
|
593 | $_[0]{on_error} = $_[1]; |
|
|
594 | } |
|
|
595 | |
|
|
596 | =item $handle->on_eof ($cb) |
|
|
597 | |
|
|
598 | Replace the current C<on_eof> callback (see the C<on_eof> constructor argument). |
|
|
599 | |
|
|
600 | =cut |
|
|
601 | |
|
|
602 | sub on_eof { |
|
|
603 | $_[0]{on_eof} = $_[1]; |
|
|
604 | } |
|
|
605 | |
|
|
606 | =item $handle->on_timeout ($cb) |
|
|
607 | |
|
|
608 | =item $handle->on_rtimeout ($cb) |
|
|
609 | |
|
|
610 | =item $handle->on_wtimeout ($cb) |
|
|
611 | |
|
|
612 | Replace the current C<on_timeout>, C<on_rtimeout> or C<on_wtimeout> |
|
|
613 | callback, or disables the callback (but not the timeout) if C<$cb> = |
|
|
614 | C<undef>. See the C<timeout> constructor argument and method. |
|
|
615 | |
|
|
616 | =cut |
|
|
617 | |
|
|
618 | # see below |
|
|
619 | |
|
|
620 | =item $handle->autocork ($boolean) |
|
|
621 | |
|
|
622 | Enables or disables the current autocork behaviour (see C<autocork> |
|
|
623 | constructor argument). Changes will only take effect on the next write. |
|
|
624 | |
|
|
625 | =cut |
|
|
626 | |
|
|
627 | sub autocork { |
|
|
628 | $_[0]{autocork} = $_[1]; |
|
|
629 | } |
|
|
630 | |
|
|
631 | =item $handle->no_delay ($boolean) |
|
|
632 | |
|
|
633 | Enables or disables the C<no_delay> setting (see constructor argument of |
|
|
634 | the same name for details). |
|
|
635 | |
|
|
636 | =cut |
|
|
637 | |
|
|
638 | sub no_delay { |
|
|
639 | $_[0]{no_delay} = $_[1]; |
|
|
640 | |
|
|
641 | eval { |
|
|
642 | local $SIG{__DIE__}; |
|
|
643 | setsockopt $_[0]{fh}, Socket::IPPROTO_TCP (), Socket::TCP_NODELAY (), int $_[1] |
|
|
644 | if $_[0]{fh}; |
|
|
645 | }; |
|
|
646 | } |
|
|
647 | |
|
|
648 | =item $handle->keepalive ($boolean) |
|
|
649 | |
|
|
650 | Enables or disables the C<keepalive> setting (see constructor argument of |
|
|
651 | the same name for details). |
|
|
652 | |
|
|
653 | =cut |
|
|
654 | |
|
|
655 | sub keepalive { |
|
|
656 | $_[0]{keepalive} = $_[1]; |
|
|
657 | |
|
|
658 | eval { |
|
|
659 | local $SIG{__DIE__}; |
|
|
660 | setsockopt $_[0]{fh}, Socket::SOL_SOCKET (), Socket::SO_KEEPALIVE (), int $_[1] |
|
|
661 | if $_[0]{fh}; |
|
|
662 | }; |
|
|
663 | } |
|
|
664 | |
|
|
665 | =item $handle->oobinline ($boolean) |
|
|
666 | |
|
|
667 | Enables or disables the C<oobinline> setting (see constructor argument of |
|
|
668 | the same name for details). |
|
|
669 | |
|
|
670 | =cut |
|
|
671 | |
|
|
672 | sub oobinline { |
|
|
673 | $_[0]{oobinline} = $_[1]; |
|
|
674 | |
|
|
675 | eval { |
|
|
676 | local $SIG{__DIE__}; |
|
|
677 | setsockopt $_[0]{fh}, Socket::SOL_SOCKET (), Socket::SO_OOBINLINE (), int $_[1] |
|
|
678 | if $_[0]{fh}; |
|
|
679 | }; |
|
|
680 | } |
|
|
681 | |
|
|
682 | =item $handle->keepalive ($boolean) |
|
|
683 | |
|
|
684 | Enables or disables the C<keepalive> setting (see constructor argument of |
|
|
685 | the same name for details). |
|
|
686 | |
|
|
687 | =cut |
|
|
688 | |
|
|
689 | sub keepalive { |
|
|
690 | $_[0]{keepalive} = $_[1]; |
|
|
691 | |
|
|
692 | eval { |
|
|
693 | local $SIG{__DIE__}; |
|
|
694 | setsockopt $_[0]{fh}, Socket::SOL_SOCKET (), Socket::SO_KEEPALIVE (), int $_[1] |
|
|
695 | if $_[0]{fh}; |
|
|
696 | }; |
|
|
697 | } |
|
|
698 | |
|
|
699 | =item $handle->on_starttls ($cb) |
|
|
700 | |
|
|
701 | Replace the current C<on_starttls> callback (see the C<on_starttls> constructor argument). |
|
|
702 | |
|
|
703 | =cut |
|
|
704 | |
|
|
705 | sub on_starttls { |
|
|
706 | $_[0]{on_starttls} = $_[1]; |
|
|
707 | } |
|
|
708 | |
|
|
709 | =item $handle->on_stoptls ($cb) |
|
|
710 | |
|
|
711 | Replace the current C<on_stoptls> callback (see the C<on_stoptls> constructor argument). |
|
|
712 | |
|
|
713 | =cut |
|
|
714 | |
|
|
715 | sub on_stoptls { |
|
|
716 | $_[0]{on_stoptls} = $_[1]; |
|
|
717 | } |
|
|
718 | |
|
|
719 | =item $handle->rbuf_max ($max_octets) |
|
|
720 | |
|
|
721 | Configures the C<rbuf_max> setting (C<undef> disables it). |
|
|
722 | |
|
|
723 | =cut |
|
|
724 | |
|
|
725 | sub rbuf_max { |
|
|
726 | $_[0]{rbuf_max} = $_[1]; |
|
|
727 | } |
|
|
728 | |
|
|
729 | ############################################################################# |
|
|
730 | |
|
|
731 | =item $handle->timeout ($seconds) |
|
|
732 | |
|
|
733 | =item $handle->rtimeout ($seconds) |
|
|
734 | |
|
|
735 | =item $handle->wtimeout ($seconds) |
|
|
736 | |
|
|
737 | Configures (or disables) the inactivity timeout. |
|
|
738 | |
|
|
739 | =item $handle->timeout_reset |
|
|
740 | |
|
|
741 | =item $handle->rtimeout_reset |
|
|
742 | |
|
|
743 | =item $handle->wtimeout_reset |
|
|
744 | |
|
|
745 | Reset the activity timeout, as if data was received or sent. |
|
|
746 | |
|
|
747 | These methods are cheap to call. |
|
|
748 | |
|
|
749 | =cut |
|
|
750 | |
|
|
751 | for my $dir ("", "r", "w") { |
|
|
752 | my $timeout = "${dir}timeout"; |
|
|
753 | my $tw = "_${dir}tw"; |
|
|
754 | my $on_timeout = "on_${dir}timeout"; |
|
|
755 | my $activity = "_${dir}activity"; |
|
|
756 | my $cb; |
|
|
757 | |
|
|
758 | *$on_timeout = sub { |
|
|
759 | $_[0]{$on_timeout} = $_[1]; |
|
|
760 | }; |
|
|
761 | |
|
|
762 | *$timeout = sub { |
|
|
763 | my ($self, $new_value) = @_; |
|
|
764 | |
|
|
765 | $self->{$timeout} = $new_value; |
|
|
766 | delete $self->{$tw}; &$cb; |
|
|
767 | }; |
|
|
768 | |
|
|
769 | *{"${dir}timeout_reset"} = sub { |
|
|
770 | $_[0]{$activity} = AE::now; |
|
|
771 | }; |
|
|
772 | |
|
|
773 | # main workhorse: |
|
|
774 | # reset the timeout watcher, as neccessary |
|
|
775 | # also check for time-outs |
|
|
776 | $cb = sub { |
|
|
777 | my ($self) = @_; |
|
|
778 | |
|
|
779 | if ($self->{$timeout} && $self->{fh}) { |
|
|
780 | my $NOW = AE::now; |
|
|
781 | |
|
|
782 | # when would the timeout trigger? |
|
|
783 | my $after = $self->{$activity} + $self->{$timeout} - $NOW; |
|
|
784 | |
|
|
785 | # now or in the past already? |
|
|
786 | if ($after <= 0) { |
|
|
787 | $self->{$activity} = $NOW; |
|
|
788 | |
|
|
789 | if ($self->{$on_timeout}) { |
|
|
790 | $self->{$on_timeout}($self); |
|
|
791 | } else { |
|
|
792 | $self->_error (Errno::ETIMEDOUT); |
|
|
793 | } |
|
|
794 | |
|
|
795 | # callback could have changed timeout value, optimise |
|
|
796 | return unless $self->{$timeout}; |
|
|
797 | |
|
|
798 | # calculate new after |
|
|
799 | $after = $self->{$timeout}; |
|
|
800 | } |
|
|
801 | |
|
|
802 | Scalar::Util::weaken $self; |
|
|
803 | return unless $self; # ->error could have destroyed $self |
|
|
804 | |
|
|
805 | $self->{$tw} ||= AE::timer $after, 0, sub { |
|
|
806 | delete $self->{$tw}; |
|
|
807 | $cb->($self); |
|
|
808 | }; |
|
|
809 | } else { |
|
|
810 | delete $self->{$tw}; |
|
|
811 | } |
|
|
812 | } |
|
|
813 | } |
|
|
814 | |
|
|
815 | ############################################################################# |
|
|
816 | |
|
|
817 | =back |
|
|
818 | |
|
|
819 | =head2 WRITE QUEUE |
|
|
820 | |
|
|
821 | AnyEvent::Handle manages two queues per handle, one for writing and one |
|
|
822 | for reading. |
|
|
823 | |
|
|
824 | The write queue is very simple: you can add data to its end, and |
|
|
825 | AnyEvent::Handle will automatically try to get rid of it for you. |
|
|
826 | |
|
|
827 | When data could be written and the write buffer is shorter then the low |
|
|
828 | water mark, the C<on_drain> callback will be invoked. |
|
|
829 | |
|
|
830 | =over 4 |
|
|
831 | |
|
|
832 | =item $handle->on_drain ($cb) |
|
|
833 | |
|
|
834 | Sets the C<on_drain> callback or clears it (see the description of |
|
|
835 | C<on_drain> in the constructor). |
|
|
836 | |
|
|
837 | =cut |
|
|
838 | |
|
|
839 | sub on_drain { |
|
|
840 | my ($self, $cb) = @_; |
|
|
841 | |
|
|
842 | $self->{on_drain} = $cb; |
|
|
843 | |
|
|
844 | $cb->($self) |
|
|
845 | if $cb && $self->{low_water_mark} >= (length $self->{wbuf}) + (length $self->{_tls_wbuf}); |
|
|
846 | } |
|
|
847 | |
|
|
848 | =item $handle->push_write ($data) |
|
|
849 | |
|
|
850 | Queues the given scalar to be written. You can push as much data as you |
|
|
851 | want (only limited by the available memory), as C<AnyEvent::Handle> |
|
|
852 | buffers it independently of the kernel. |
|
|
853 | |
|
|
854 | =cut |
|
|
855 | |
|
|
856 | sub _drain_wbuf { |
|
|
857 | my ($self) = @_; |
|
|
858 | |
|
|
859 | if (!$self->{_ww} && length $self->{wbuf}) { |
|
|
860 | |
|
|
861 | Scalar::Util::weaken $self; |
|
|
862 | |
|
|
863 | my $cb = sub { |
|
|
864 | my $len = syswrite $self->{fh}, $self->{wbuf}; |
|
|
865 | |
|
|
866 | if (defined $len) { |
|
|
867 | substr $self->{wbuf}, 0, $len, ""; |
|
|
868 | |
|
|
869 | $self->{_activity} = $self->{_wactivity} = AE::now; |
|
|
870 | |
|
|
871 | $self->{on_drain}($self) |
|
|
872 | if $self->{low_water_mark} >= (length $self->{wbuf}) + (length $self->{_tls_wbuf}) |
|
|
873 | && $self->{on_drain}; |
|
|
874 | |
|
|
875 | delete $self->{_ww} unless length $self->{wbuf}; |
|
|
876 | } elsif ($! != EAGAIN && $! != EINTR && $! != WSAEWOULDBLOCK) { |
|
|
877 | $self->_error ($!, 1); |
|
|
878 | } |
|
|
879 | }; |
|
|
880 | |
|
|
881 | # try to write data immediately |
|
|
882 | $cb->() unless $self->{autocork}; |
|
|
883 | |
|
|
884 | # if still data left in wbuf, we need to poll |
|
|
885 | $self->{_ww} = AE::io $self->{fh}, 1, $cb |
|
|
886 | if length $self->{wbuf}; |
|
|
887 | }; |
|
|
888 | } |
|
|
889 | |
|
|
890 | our %WH; |
|
|
891 | |
|
|
892 | # deprecated |
|
|
893 | sub register_write_type($$) { |
|
|
894 | $WH{$_[0]} = $_[1]; |
|
|
895 | } |
|
|
896 | |
|
|
897 | sub push_write { |
|
|
898 | my $self = shift; |
|
|
899 | |
|
|
900 | if (@_ > 1) { |
|
|
901 | my $type = shift; |
|
|
902 | |
|
|
903 | @_ = ($WH{$type} ||= _load_func "$type\::anyevent_write_type" |
|
|
904 | or Carp::croak "unsupported/unloadable type '$type' passed to AnyEvent::Handle::push_write") |
|
|
905 | ->($self, @_); |
|
|
906 | } |
|
|
907 | |
|
|
908 | # we downgrade here to avoid hard-to-track-down bugs, |
|
|
909 | # and diagnose the problem earlier and better. |
|
|
910 | |
|
|
911 | if ($self->{tls}) { |
|
|
912 | utf8::downgrade $self->{_tls_wbuf} .= $_[0]; |
|
|
913 | &_dotls ($self) if $self->{fh}; |
|
|
914 | } else { |
|
|
915 | utf8::downgrade $self->{wbuf} .= $_[0]; |
|
|
916 | $self->_drain_wbuf if $self->{fh}; |
|
|
917 | } |
|
|
918 | } |
|
|
919 | |
|
|
920 | =item $handle->push_write (type => @args) |
|
|
921 | |
|
|
922 | Instead of formatting your data yourself, you can also let this module |
|
|
923 | do the job by specifying a type and type-specific arguments. You |
|
|
924 | can also specify the (fully qualified) name of a package, in which |
|
|
925 | case AnyEvent tries to load the package and then expects to find the |
|
|
926 | C<anyevent_read_type> function inside (see "custom write types", below). |
|
|
927 | |
|
|
928 | Predefined types are (if you have ideas for additional types, feel free to |
|
|
929 | drop by and tell us): |
|
|
930 | |
|
|
931 | =over 4 |
|
|
932 | |
|
|
933 | =item netstring => $string |
|
|
934 | |
|
|
935 | Formats the given value as netstring |
|
|
936 | (http://cr.yp.to/proto/netstrings.txt, this is not a recommendation to use them). |
|
|
937 | |
|
|
938 | =cut |
|
|
939 | |
|
|
940 | register_write_type netstring => sub { |
|
|
941 | my ($self, $string) = @_; |
|
|
942 | |
|
|
943 | (length $string) . ":$string," |
|
|
944 | }; |
|
|
945 | |
|
|
946 | =item packstring => $format, $data |
|
|
947 | |
|
|
948 | An octet string prefixed with an encoded length. The encoding C<$format> |
|
|
949 | uses the same format as a Perl C<pack> format, but must specify a single |
|
|
950 | integer only (only one of C<cCsSlLqQiInNvVjJw> is allowed, plus an |
|
|
951 | optional C<!>, C<< < >> or C<< > >> modifier). |
|
|
952 | |
|
|
953 | =cut |
|
|
954 | |
|
|
955 | register_write_type packstring => sub { |
|
|
956 | my ($self, $format, $string) = @_; |
|
|
957 | |
|
|
958 | pack "$format/a*", $string |
|
|
959 | }; |
|
|
960 | |
|
|
961 | =item json => $array_or_hashref |
|
|
962 | |
|
|
963 | Encodes the given hash or array reference into a JSON object. Unless you |
|
|
964 | provide your own JSON object, this means it will be encoded to JSON text |
|
|
965 | in UTF-8. |
|
|
966 | |
|
|
967 | JSON objects (and arrays) are self-delimiting, so you can write JSON at |
|
|
968 | one end of a handle and read them at the other end without using any |
|
|
969 | additional framing. |
|
|
970 | |
|
|
971 | The generated JSON text is guaranteed not to contain any newlines: While |
|
|
972 | this module doesn't need delimiters after or between JSON texts to be |
|
|
973 | able to read them, many other languages depend on that. |
|
|
974 | |
|
|
975 | A simple RPC protocol that interoperates easily with others is to send |
|
|
976 | JSON arrays (or objects, although arrays are usually the better choice as |
|
|
977 | they mimic how function argument passing works) and a newline after each |
|
|
978 | JSON text: |
|
|
979 | |
|
|
980 | $handle->push_write (json => ["method", "arg1", "arg2"]); # whatever |
|
|
981 | $handle->push_write ("\012"); |
|
|
982 | |
|
|
983 | An AnyEvent::Handle receiver would simply use the C<json> read type and |
|
|
984 | rely on the fact that the newline will be skipped as leading whitespace: |
|
|
985 | |
|
|
986 | $handle->push_read (json => sub { my $array = $_[1]; ... }); |
|
|
987 | |
|
|
988 | Other languages could read single lines terminated by a newline and pass |
|
|
989 | this line into their JSON decoder of choice. |
|
|
990 | |
|
|
991 | =cut |
|
|
992 | |
|
|
993 | sub json_coder() { |
|
|
994 | eval { require JSON::XS; JSON::XS->new->utf8 } |
|
|
995 | || do { require JSON; JSON->new->utf8 } |
|
|
996 | } |
|
|
997 | |
|
|
998 | register_write_type json => sub { |
|
|
999 | my ($self, $ref) = @_; |
|
|
1000 | |
|
|
1001 | my $json = $self->{json} ||= json_coder; |
|
|
1002 | |
|
|
1003 | $json->encode ($ref) |
|
|
1004 | }; |
|
|
1005 | |
|
|
1006 | =item storable => $reference |
|
|
1007 | |
|
|
1008 | Freezes the given reference using L<Storable> and writes it to the |
|
|
1009 | handle. Uses the C<nfreeze> format. |
|
|
1010 | |
|
|
1011 | =cut |
|
|
1012 | |
|
|
1013 | register_write_type storable => sub { |
|
|
1014 | my ($self, $ref) = @_; |
|
|
1015 | |
|
|
1016 | require Storable; |
|
|
1017 | |
|
|
1018 | pack "w/a*", Storable::nfreeze ($ref) |
|
|
1019 | }; |
|
|
1020 | |
|
|
1021 | =back |
|
|
1022 | |
|
|
1023 | =item $handle->push_shutdown |
|
|
1024 | |
|
|
1025 | Sometimes you know you want to close the socket after writing your data |
|
|
1026 | before it was actually written. One way to do that is to replace your |
|
|
1027 | C<on_drain> handler by a callback that shuts down the socket (and set |
|
|
1028 | C<low_water_mark> to C<0>). This method is a shorthand for just that, and |
|
|
1029 | replaces the C<on_drain> callback with: |
|
|
1030 | |
|
|
1031 | sub { shutdown $_[0]{fh}, 1 } # for push_shutdown |
|
|
1032 | |
|
|
1033 | This simply shuts down the write side and signals an EOF condition to the |
|
|
1034 | the peer. |
|
|
1035 | |
|
|
1036 | You can rely on the normal read queue and C<on_eof> handling |
|
|
1037 | afterwards. This is the cleanest way to close a connection. |
|
|
1038 | |
|
|
1039 | =cut |
|
|
1040 | |
|
|
1041 | sub push_shutdown { |
|
|
1042 | my ($self) = @_; |
|
|
1043 | |
|
|
1044 | delete $self->{low_water_mark}; |
|
|
1045 | $self->on_drain (sub { shutdown $_[0]{fh}, 1 }); |
|
|
1046 | } |
|
|
1047 | |
|
|
1048 | =item custom write types - Package::anyevent_write_type $handle, @args |
|
|
1049 | |
|
|
1050 | Instead of one of the predefined types, you can also specify the name of |
|
|
1051 | a package. AnyEvent will try to load the package and then expects to find |
|
|
1052 | a function named C<anyevent_write_type> inside. If it isn't found, it |
|
|
1053 | progressively tries to load the parent package until it either finds the |
|
|
1054 | function (good) or runs out of packages (bad). |
|
|
1055 | |
|
|
1056 | Whenever the given C<type> is used, C<push_write> will the function with |
|
|
1057 | the handle object and the remaining arguments. |
|
|
1058 | |
|
|
1059 | The function is supposed to return a single octet string that will be |
|
|
1060 | appended to the write buffer, so you cna mentally treat this function as a |
|
|
1061 | "arguments to on-the-wire-format" converter. |
|
|
1062 | |
|
|
1063 | Example: implement a custom write type C<join> that joins the remaining |
|
|
1064 | arguments using the first one. |
|
|
1065 | |
|
|
1066 | $handle->push_write (My::Type => " ", 1,2,3); |
|
|
1067 | |
|
|
1068 | # uses the following package, which can be defined in the "My::Type" or in |
|
|
1069 | # the "My" modules to be auto-loaded, or just about anywhere when the |
|
|
1070 | # My::Type::anyevent_write_type is defined before invoking it. |
|
|
1071 | |
|
|
1072 | package My::Type; |
|
|
1073 | |
|
|
1074 | sub anyevent_write_type { |
|
|
1075 | my ($handle, $delim, @args) = @_; |
|
|
1076 | |
|
|
1077 | join $delim, @args |
|
|
1078 | } |
|
|
1079 | |
|
|
1080 | =cut |
|
|
1081 | |
|
|
1082 | ############################################################################# |
|
|
1083 | |
|
|
1084 | =back |
|
|
1085 | |
|
|
1086 | =head2 READ QUEUE |
|
|
1087 | |
|
|
1088 | AnyEvent::Handle manages two queues per handle, one for writing and one |
|
|
1089 | for reading. |
|
|
1090 | |
|
|
1091 | The read queue is more complex than the write queue. It can be used in two |
|
|
1092 | ways, the "simple" way, using only C<on_read> and the "complex" way, using |
|
|
1093 | a queue. |
|
|
1094 | |
|
|
1095 | In the simple case, you just install an C<on_read> callback and whenever |
|
|
1096 | new data arrives, it will be called. You can then remove some data (if |
|
|
1097 | enough is there) from the read buffer (C<< $handle->rbuf >>). Or you cna |
|
|
1098 | leave the data there if you want to accumulate more (e.g. when only a |
|
|
1099 | partial message has been received so far). |
|
|
1100 | |
|
|
1101 | In the more complex case, you want to queue multiple callbacks. In this |
|
|
1102 | case, AnyEvent::Handle will call the first queued callback each time new |
|
|
1103 | data arrives (also the first time it is queued) and removes it when it has |
|
|
1104 | done its job (see C<push_read>, below). |
|
|
1105 | |
|
|
1106 | This way you can, for example, push three line-reads, followed by reading |
|
|
1107 | a chunk of data, and AnyEvent::Handle will execute them in order. |
|
|
1108 | |
|
|
1109 | Example 1: EPP protocol parser. EPP sends 4 byte length info, followed by |
|
|
1110 | the specified number of bytes which give an XML datagram. |
|
|
1111 | |
|
|
1112 | # in the default state, expect some header bytes |
|
|
1113 | $handle->on_read (sub { |
|
|
1114 | # some data is here, now queue the length-header-read (4 octets) |
|
|
1115 | shift->unshift_read (chunk => 4, sub { |
|
|
1116 | # header arrived, decode |
|
|
1117 | my $len = unpack "N", $_[1]; |
|
|
1118 | |
|
|
1119 | # now read the payload |
|
|
1120 | shift->unshift_read (chunk => $len, sub { |
|
|
1121 | my $xml = $_[1]; |
|
|
1122 | # handle xml |
|
|
1123 | }); |
|
|
1124 | }); |
38 | }); |
1125 | }); |
39 | |
1126 | |
40 | $cv->wait; |
1127 | Example 2: Implement a client for a protocol that replies either with "OK" |
|
|
1128 | and another line or "ERROR" for the first request that is sent, and 64 |
|
|
1129 | bytes for the second request. Due to the availability of a queue, we can |
|
|
1130 | just pipeline sending both requests and manipulate the queue as necessary |
|
|
1131 | in the callbacks. |
41 | |
1132 | |
42 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
1133 | When the first callback is called and sees an "OK" response, it will |
|
|
1134 | C<unshift> another line-read. This line-read will be queued I<before> the |
|
|
1135 | 64-byte chunk callback. |
43 | |
1136 | |
44 | This module is a helper module to make it easier to do non-blocking I/O |
1137 | # request one, returns either "OK + extra line" or "ERROR" |
45 | on filehandles (and sockets, see L<AnyEvent::Socket>). |
1138 | $handle->push_write ("request 1\015\012"); |
46 | |
1139 | |
47 | The event loop is provided by L<AnyEvent>. |
1140 | # we expect "ERROR" or "OK" as response, so push a line read |
|
|
1141 | $handle->push_read (line => sub { |
|
|
1142 | # if we got an "OK", we have to _prepend_ another line, |
|
|
1143 | # so it will be read before the second request reads its 64 bytes |
|
|
1144 | # which are already in the queue when this callback is called |
|
|
1145 | # we don't do this in case we got an error |
|
|
1146 | if ($_[1] eq "OK") { |
|
|
1147 | $_[0]->unshift_read (line => sub { |
|
|
1148 | my $response = $_[1]; |
|
|
1149 | ... |
|
|
1150 | }); |
|
|
1151 | } |
|
|
1152 | }); |
48 | |
1153 | |
49 | =head1 METHODS |
1154 | # request two, simply returns 64 octets |
|
|
1155 | $handle->push_write ("request 2\015\012"); |
|
|
1156 | |
|
|
1157 | # simply read 64 bytes, always |
|
|
1158 | $handle->push_read (chunk => 64, sub { |
|
|
1159 | my $response = $_[1]; |
|
|
1160 | ... |
|
|
1161 | }); |
50 | |
1162 | |
51 | =over 4 |
1163 | =over 4 |
52 | |
1164 | |
53 | =item B<new (%args)> |
|
|
54 | |
|
|
55 | The constructor has these arguments: |
|
|
56 | |
|
|
57 | =over 4 |
|
|
58 | |
|
|
59 | =item fh => $filehandle |
|
|
60 | |
|
|
61 | The filehandle this L<AnyEvent::Handle> object will operate on. |
|
|
62 | |
|
|
63 | NOTE: The filehandle will be set to non-blocking. |
|
|
64 | |
|
|
65 | =item read_block_size => $size |
|
|
66 | |
|
|
67 | The default read block size use for reads via the C<on_read> |
|
|
68 | method. |
|
|
69 | |
|
|
70 | =back |
|
|
71 | |
|
|
72 | =cut |
1165 | =cut |
73 | |
1166 | |
74 | sub new { |
1167 | sub _drain_rbuf { |
75 | my $this = shift; |
|
|
76 | my $class = ref($this) || $this; |
|
|
77 | my $self = { |
1168 | my ($self) = @_; |
78 | read_block_size => 4096, |
|
|
79 | rbuf => '', |
|
|
80 | @_ |
|
|
81 | }; |
|
|
82 | bless $self, $class; |
|
|
83 | |
1169 | |
84 | $self->{fh}->blocking (0) if $self->{fh}; |
1170 | # avoid recursion |
|
|
1171 | return if $self->{_skip_drain_rbuf}; |
|
|
1172 | local $self->{_skip_drain_rbuf} = 1; |
85 | |
1173 | |
86 | if ($self->{on_read}) { |
1174 | while () { |
87 | $self->on_read ($self->{on_read}); |
1175 | # we need to use a separate tls read buffer, as we must not receive data while |
|
|
1176 | # we are draining the buffer, and this can only happen with TLS. |
|
|
1177 | $self->{rbuf} .= delete $self->{_tls_rbuf} |
|
|
1178 | if exists $self->{_tls_rbuf}; |
88 | |
1179 | |
|
|
1180 | my $len = length $self->{rbuf}; |
|
|
1181 | |
|
|
1182 | if (my $cb = shift @{ $self->{_queue} }) { |
|
|
1183 | unless ($cb->($self)) { |
|
|
1184 | # no progress can be made |
|
|
1185 | # (not enough data and no data forthcoming) |
|
|
1186 | $self->_error (Errno::EPIPE, 1), return |
|
|
1187 | if $self->{_eof}; |
|
|
1188 | |
|
|
1189 | unshift @{ $self->{_queue} }, $cb; |
|
|
1190 | last; |
|
|
1191 | } |
89 | } elsif ($self->{on_readline}) { |
1192 | } elsif ($self->{on_read}) { |
90 | $self->readlines ($self->{on_readline}); |
1193 | last unless $len; |
91 | } |
|
|
92 | |
1194 | |
93 | return $self |
1195 | $self->{on_read}($self); |
94 | } |
|
|
95 | |
1196 | |
96 | =item B<fh> |
1197 | if ( |
|
|
1198 | $len == length $self->{rbuf} # if no data has been consumed |
|
|
1199 | && !@{ $self->{_queue} } # and the queue is still empty |
|
|
1200 | && $self->{on_read} # but we still have on_read |
|
|
1201 | ) { |
|
|
1202 | # no further data will arrive |
|
|
1203 | # so no progress can be made |
|
|
1204 | $self->_error (Errno::EPIPE, 1), return |
|
|
1205 | if $self->{_eof}; |
97 | |
1206 | |
98 | This method returns the filehandle of the L<AnyEvent::Handle> object. |
1207 | last; # more data might arrive |
|
|
1208 | } |
|
|
1209 | } else { |
|
|
1210 | # read side becomes idle |
|
|
1211 | delete $self->{_rw} unless $self->{tls}; |
|
|
1212 | last; |
|
|
1213 | } |
|
|
1214 | } |
99 | |
1215 | |
100 | =cut |
1216 | if ($self->{_eof}) { |
|
|
1217 | $self->{on_eof} |
|
|
1218 | ? $self->{on_eof}($self) |
|
|
1219 | : $self->_error (0, 1, "Unexpected end-of-file"); |
101 | |
1220 | |
102 | sub fh { $_[0]->{fh} } |
1221 | return; |
|
|
1222 | } |
103 | |
1223 | |
104 | =item B<on_read ($callback)> |
1224 | if ( |
|
|
1225 | defined $self->{rbuf_max} |
|
|
1226 | && $self->{rbuf_max} < length $self->{rbuf} |
|
|
1227 | ) { |
|
|
1228 | $self->_error (Errno::ENOSPC, 1), return; |
|
|
1229 | } |
105 | |
1230 | |
106 | This method installs a C<$callback> that will be called |
1231 | # may need to restart read watcher |
107 | when new data arrived. You can access the read buffer via the C<rbuf> |
1232 | unless ($self->{_rw}) { |
108 | method (see below). |
1233 | $self->start_read |
|
|
1234 | if $self->{on_read} || @{ $self->{_queue} }; |
|
|
1235 | } |
|
|
1236 | } |
109 | |
1237 | |
110 | The first argument of the C<$callback> will be the L<AnyEvent::Handle> object. |
1238 | =item $handle->on_read ($cb) |
|
|
1239 | |
|
|
1240 | This replaces the currently set C<on_read> callback, or clears it (when |
|
|
1241 | the new callback is C<undef>). See the description of C<on_read> in the |
|
|
1242 | constructor. |
111 | |
1243 | |
112 | =cut |
1244 | =cut |
113 | |
1245 | |
114 | sub on_read { |
1246 | sub on_read { |
115 | my ($self, $cb) = @_; |
1247 | my ($self, $cb) = @_; |
|
|
1248 | |
116 | $self->{on_read} = $cb; |
1249 | $self->{on_read} = $cb; |
|
|
1250 | $self->_drain_rbuf if $cb; |
|
|
1251 | } |
117 | |
1252 | |
118 | unless (defined $self->{on_read}) { |
1253 | =item $handle->rbuf |
119 | delete $self->{on_read_w}; |
1254 | |
|
|
1255 | Returns the read buffer (as a modifiable lvalue). |
|
|
1256 | |
|
|
1257 | You can access the read buffer directly as the C<< ->{rbuf} >> |
|
|
1258 | member, if you want. However, the only operation allowed on the |
|
|
1259 | read buffer (apart from looking at it) is removing data from its |
|
|
1260 | beginning. Otherwise modifying or appending to it is not allowed and will |
|
|
1261 | lead to hard-to-track-down bugs. |
|
|
1262 | |
|
|
1263 | NOTE: The read buffer should only be used or modified if the C<on_read>, |
|
|
1264 | C<push_read> or C<unshift_read> methods are used. The other read methods |
|
|
1265 | automatically manage the read buffer. |
|
|
1266 | |
|
|
1267 | =cut |
|
|
1268 | |
|
|
1269 | sub rbuf : lvalue { |
|
|
1270 | $_[0]{rbuf} |
|
|
1271 | } |
|
|
1272 | |
|
|
1273 | =item $handle->push_read ($cb) |
|
|
1274 | |
|
|
1275 | =item $handle->unshift_read ($cb) |
|
|
1276 | |
|
|
1277 | Append the given callback to the end of the queue (C<push_read>) or |
|
|
1278 | prepend it (C<unshift_read>). |
|
|
1279 | |
|
|
1280 | The callback is called each time some additional read data arrives. |
|
|
1281 | |
|
|
1282 | It must check whether enough data is in the read buffer already. |
|
|
1283 | |
|
|
1284 | If not enough data is available, it must return the empty list or a false |
|
|
1285 | value, in which case it will be called repeatedly until enough data is |
|
|
1286 | available (or an error condition is detected). |
|
|
1287 | |
|
|
1288 | If enough data was available, then the callback must remove all data it is |
|
|
1289 | interested in (which can be none at all) and return a true value. After returning |
|
|
1290 | true, it will be removed from the queue. |
|
|
1291 | |
|
|
1292 | =cut |
|
|
1293 | |
|
|
1294 | our %RH; |
|
|
1295 | |
|
|
1296 | sub register_read_type($$) { |
|
|
1297 | $RH{$_[0]} = $_[1]; |
|
|
1298 | } |
|
|
1299 | |
|
|
1300 | sub push_read { |
|
|
1301 | my $self = shift; |
|
|
1302 | my $cb = pop; |
|
|
1303 | |
|
|
1304 | if (@_) { |
|
|
1305 | my $type = shift; |
|
|
1306 | |
|
|
1307 | $cb = ($RH{$type} ||= _load_func "$type\::anyevent_read_type" |
|
|
1308 | or Carp::croak "unsupported/unloadable type '$type' passed to AnyEvent::Handle::push_read") |
|
|
1309 | ->($self, $cb, @_); |
|
|
1310 | } |
|
|
1311 | |
|
|
1312 | push @{ $self->{_queue} }, $cb; |
|
|
1313 | $self->_drain_rbuf; |
|
|
1314 | } |
|
|
1315 | |
|
|
1316 | sub unshift_read { |
|
|
1317 | my $self = shift; |
|
|
1318 | my $cb = pop; |
|
|
1319 | |
|
|
1320 | if (@_) { |
|
|
1321 | my $type = shift; |
|
|
1322 | |
|
|
1323 | $cb = ($RH{$type} or Carp::croak "unsupported type passed to AnyEvent::Handle::unshift_read") |
|
|
1324 | ->($self, $cb, @_); |
|
|
1325 | } |
|
|
1326 | |
|
|
1327 | unshift @{ $self->{_queue} }, $cb; |
|
|
1328 | $self->_drain_rbuf; |
|
|
1329 | } |
|
|
1330 | |
|
|
1331 | =item $handle->push_read (type => @args, $cb) |
|
|
1332 | |
|
|
1333 | =item $handle->unshift_read (type => @args, $cb) |
|
|
1334 | |
|
|
1335 | Instead of providing a callback that parses the data itself you can chose |
|
|
1336 | between a number of predefined parsing formats, for chunks of data, lines |
|
|
1337 | etc. You can also specify the (fully qualified) name of a package, in |
|
|
1338 | which case AnyEvent tries to load the package and then expects to find the |
|
|
1339 | C<anyevent_read_type> function inside (see "custom read types", below). |
|
|
1340 | |
|
|
1341 | Predefined types are (if you have ideas for additional types, feel free to |
|
|
1342 | drop by and tell us): |
|
|
1343 | |
|
|
1344 | =over 4 |
|
|
1345 | |
|
|
1346 | =item chunk => $octets, $cb->($handle, $data) |
|
|
1347 | |
|
|
1348 | Invoke the callback only once C<$octets> bytes have been read. Pass the |
|
|
1349 | data read to the callback. The callback will never be called with less |
|
|
1350 | data. |
|
|
1351 | |
|
|
1352 | Example: read 2 bytes. |
|
|
1353 | |
|
|
1354 | $handle->push_read (chunk => 2, sub { |
|
|
1355 | warn "yay ", unpack "H*", $_[1]; |
|
|
1356 | }); |
|
|
1357 | |
|
|
1358 | =cut |
|
|
1359 | |
|
|
1360 | register_read_type chunk => sub { |
|
|
1361 | my ($self, $cb, $len) = @_; |
|
|
1362 | |
|
|
1363 | sub { |
|
|
1364 | $len <= length $_[0]{rbuf} or return; |
|
|
1365 | $cb->($_[0], substr $_[0]{rbuf}, 0, $len, ""); |
|
|
1366 | 1 |
|
|
1367 | } |
|
|
1368 | }; |
|
|
1369 | |
|
|
1370 | =item line => [$eol, ]$cb->($handle, $line, $eol) |
|
|
1371 | |
|
|
1372 | The callback will be called only once a full line (including the end of |
|
|
1373 | line marker, C<$eol>) has been read. This line (excluding the end of line |
|
|
1374 | marker) will be passed to the callback as second argument (C<$line>), and |
|
|
1375 | the end of line marker as the third argument (C<$eol>). |
|
|
1376 | |
|
|
1377 | The end of line marker, C<$eol>, can be either a string, in which case it |
|
|
1378 | will be interpreted as a fixed record end marker, or it can be a regex |
|
|
1379 | object (e.g. created by C<qr>), in which case it is interpreted as a |
|
|
1380 | regular expression. |
|
|
1381 | |
|
|
1382 | The end of line marker argument C<$eol> is optional, if it is missing (NOT |
|
|
1383 | undef), then C<qr|\015?\012|> is used (which is good for most internet |
|
|
1384 | protocols). |
|
|
1385 | |
|
|
1386 | Partial lines at the end of the stream will never be returned, as they are |
|
|
1387 | not marked by the end of line marker. |
|
|
1388 | |
|
|
1389 | =cut |
|
|
1390 | |
|
|
1391 | register_read_type line => sub { |
|
|
1392 | my ($self, $cb, $eol) = @_; |
|
|
1393 | |
|
|
1394 | if (@_ < 3) { |
|
|
1395 | # this is more than twice as fast as the generic code below |
|
|
1396 | sub { |
|
|
1397 | $_[0]{rbuf} =~ s/^([^\015\012]*)(\015?\012)// or return; |
|
|
1398 | |
|
|
1399 | $cb->($_[0], $1, $2); |
|
|
1400 | 1 |
|
|
1401 | } |
|
|
1402 | } else { |
|
|
1403 | $eol = quotemeta $eol unless ref $eol; |
|
|
1404 | $eol = qr|^(.*?)($eol)|s; |
|
|
1405 | |
|
|
1406 | sub { |
|
|
1407 | $_[0]{rbuf} =~ s/$eol// or return; |
|
|
1408 | |
|
|
1409 | $cb->($_[0], $1, $2); |
|
|
1410 | 1 |
|
|
1411 | } |
|
|
1412 | } |
|
|
1413 | }; |
|
|
1414 | |
|
|
1415 | =item regex => $accept[, $reject[, $skip], $cb->($handle, $data) |
|
|
1416 | |
|
|
1417 | Makes a regex match against the regex object C<$accept> and returns |
|
|
1418 | everything up to and including the match. |
|
|
1419 | |
|
|
1420 | Example: read a single line terminated by '\n'. |
|
|
1421 | |
|
|
1422 | $handle->push_read (regex => qr<\n>, sub { ... }); |
|
|
1423 | |
|
|
1424 | If C<$reject> is given and not undef, then it determines when the data is |
|
|
1425 | to be rejected: it is matched against the data when the C<$accept> regex |
|
|
1426 | does not match and generates an C<EBADMSG> error when it matches. This is |
|
|
1427 | useful to quickly reject wrong data (to avoid waiting for a timeout or a |
|
|
1428 | receive buffer overflow). |
|
|
1429 | |
|
|
1430 | Example: expect a single decimal number followed by whitespace, reject |
|
|
1431 | anything else (not the use of an anchor). |
|
|
1432 | |
|
|
1433 | $handle->push_read (regex => qr<^[0-9]+\s>, qr<[^0-9]>, sub { ... }); |
|
|
1434 | |
|
|
1435 | If C<$skip> is given and not C<undef>, then it will be matched against |
|
|
1436 | the receive buffer when neither C<$accept> nor C<$reject> match, |
|
|
1437 | and everything preceding and including the match will be accepted |
|
|
1438 | unconditionally. This is useful to skip large amounts of data that you |
|
|
1439 | know cannot be matched, so that the C<$accept> or C<$reject> regex do not |
|
|
1440 | have to start matching from the beginning. This is purely an optimisation |
|
|
1441 | and is usually worth only when you expect more than a few kilobytes. |
|
|
1442 | |
|
|
1443 | Example: expect a http header, which ends at C<\015\012\015\012>. Since we |
|
|
1444 | expect the header to be very large (it isn't in practise, but...), we use |
|
|
1445 | a skip regex to skip initial portions. The skip regex is tricky in that |
|
|
1446 | it only accepts something not ending in either \015 or \012, as these are |
|
|
1447 | required for the accept regex. |
|
|
1448 | |
|
|
1449 | $handle->push_read (regex => |
|
|
1450 | qr<\015\012\015\012>, |
|
|
1451 | undef, # no reject |
|
|
1452 | qr<^.*[^\015\012]>, |
|
|
1453 | sub { ... }); |
|
|
1454 | |
|
|
1455 | =cut |
|
|
1456 | |
|
|
1457 | register_read_type regex => sub { |
|
|
1458 | my ($self, $cb, $accept, $reject, $skip) = @_; |
|
|
1459 | |
|
|
1460 | my $data; |
|
|
1461 | my $rbuf = \$self->{rbuf}; |
|
|
1462 | |
|
|
1463 | sub { |
|
|
1464 | # accept |
|
|
1465 | if ($$rbuf =~ $accept) { |
|
|
1466 | $data .= substr $$rbuf, 0, $+[0], ""; |
|
|
1467 | $cb->($self, $data); |
|
|
1468 | return 1; |
|
|
1469 | } |
|
|
1470 | |
|
|
1471 | # reject |
|
|
1472 | if ($reject && $$rbuf =~ $reject) { |
|
|
1473 | $self->_error (Errno::EBADMSG); |
|
|
1474 | } |
|
|
1475 | |
|
|
1476 | # skip |
|
|
1477 | if ($skip && $$rbuf =~ $skip) { |
|
|
1478 | $data .= substr $$rbuf, 0, $+[0], ""; |
|
|
1479 | } |
|
|
1480 | |
|
|
1481 | () |
|
|
1482 | } |
|
|
1483 | }; |
|
|
1484 | |
|
|
1485 | =item netstring => $cb->($handle, $string) |
|
|
1486 | |
|
|
1487 | A netstring (http://cr.yp.to/proto/netstrings.txt, this is not an endorsement). |
|
|
1488 | |
|
|
1489 | Throws an error with C<$!> set to EBADMSG on format violations. |
|
|
1490 | |
|
|
1491 | =cut |
|
|
1492 | |
|
|
1493 | register_read_type netstring => sub { |
|
|
1494 | my ($self, $cb) = @_; |
|
|
1495 | |
|
|
1496 | sub { |
|
|
1497 | unless ($_[0]{rbuf} =~ s/^(0|[1-9][0-9]*)://) { |
|
|
1498 | if ($_[0]{rbuf} =~ /[^0-9]/) { |
|
|
1499 | $self->_error (Errno::EBADMSG); |
|
|
1500 | } |
120 | return; |
1501 | return; |
|
|
1502 | } |
|
|
1503 | |
|
|
1504 | my $len = $1; |
|
|
1505 | |
|
|
1506 | $self->unshift_read (chunk => $len, sub { |
|
|
1507 | my $string = $_[1]; |
|
|
1508 | $_[0]->unshift_read (chunk => 1, sub { |
|
|
1509 | if ($_[1] eq ",") { |
|
|
1510 | $cb->($_[0], $string); |
|
|
1511 | } else { |
|
|
1512 | $self->_error (Errno::EBADMSG); |
|
|
1513 | } |
|
|
1514 | }); |
|
|
1515 | }); |
|
|
1516 | |
|
|
1517 | 1 |
|
|
1518 | } |
|
|
1519 | }; |
|
|
1520 | |
|
|
1521 | =item packstring => $format, $cb->($handle, $string) |
|
|
1522 | |
|
|
1523 | An octet string prefixed with an encoded length. The encoding C<$format> |
|
|
1524 | uses the same format as a Perl C<pack> format, but must specify a single |
|
|
1525 | integer only (only one of C<cCsSlLqQiInNvVjJw> is allowed, plus an |
|
|
1526 | optional C<!>, C<< < >> or C<< > >> modifier). |
|
|
1527 | |
|
|
1528 | For example, DNS over TCP uses a prefix of C<n> (2 octet network order), |
|
|
1529 | EPP uses a prefix of C<N> (4 octtes). |
|
|
1530 | |
|
|
1531 | Example: read a block of data prefixed by its length in BER-encoded |
|
|
1532 | format (very efficient). |
|
|
1533 | |
|
|
1534 | $handle->push_read (packstring => "w", sub { |
|
|
1535 | my ($handle, $data) = @_; |
121 | } |
1536 | }); |
122 | |
1537 | |
123 | $self->{on_read_w} = |
1538 | =cut |
124 | AnyEvent->io (poll => 'r', fh => $self->{fh}, cb => sub { |
1539 | |
125 | #d# warn "READ:[$self->{read_size}] $self->{read_block_size} : ".length ($self->{rbuf})."\n"; |
1540 | register_read_type packstring => sub { |
|
|
1541 | my ($self, $cb, $format) = @_; |
|
|
1542 | |
|
|
1543 | sub { |
|
|
1544 | # when we can use 5.10 we can use ".", but for 5.8 we use the re-pack method |
|
|
1545 | defined (my $len = eval { unpack $format, $_[0]{rbuf} }) |
|
|
1546 | or return; |
|
|
1547 | |
|
|
1548 | $format = length pack $format, $len; |
|
|
1549 | |
|
|
1550 | # bypass unshift if we already have the remaining chunk |
|
|
1551 | if ($format + $len <= length $_[0]{rbuf}) { |
|
|
1552 | my $data = substr $_[0]{rbuf}, $format, $len; |
|
|
1553 | substr $_[0]{rbuf}, 0, $format + $len, ""; |
|
|
1554 | $cb->($_[0], $data); |
|
|
1555 | } else { |
|
|
1556 | # remove prefix |
|
|
1557 | substr $_[0]{rbuf}, 0, $format, ""; |
|
|
1558 | |
|
|
1559 | # read remaining chunk |
|
|
1560 | $_[0]->unshift_read (chunk => $len, $cb); |
|
|
1561 | } |
|
|
1562 | |
|
|
1563 | 1 |
|
|
1564 | } |
|
|
1565 | }; |
|
|
1566 | |
|
|
1567 | =item json => $cb->($handle, $hash_or_arrayref) |
|
|
1568 | |
|
|
1569 | Reads a JSON object or array, decodes it and passes it to the |
|
|
1570 | callback. When a parse error occurs, an C<EBADMSG> error will be raised. |
|
|
1571 | |
|
|
1572 | If a C<json> object was passed to the constructor, then that will be used |
|
|
1573 | for the final decode, otherwise it will create a JSON coder expecting UTF-8. |
|
|
1574 | |
|
|
1575 | This read type uses the incremental parser available with JSON version |
|
|
1576 | 2.09 (and JSON::XS version 2.2) and above. You have to provide a |
|
|
1577 | dependency on your own: this module will load the JSON module, but |
|
|
1578 | AnyEvent does not depend on it itself. |
|
|
1579 | |
|
|
1580 | Since JSON texts are fully self-delimiting, the C<json> read and write |
|
|
1581 | types are an ideal simple RPC protocol: just exchange JSON datagrams. See |
|
|
1582 | the C<json> write type description, above, for an actual example. |
|
|
1583 | |
|
|
1584 | =cut |
|
|
1585 | |
|
|
1586 | register_read_type json => sub { |
|
|
1587 | my ($self, $cb) = @_; |
|
|
1588 | |
|
|
1589 | my $json = $self->{json} ||= json_coder; |
|
|
1590 | |
|
|
1591 | my $data; |
126 | my $rbuf_len = length $self->{rbuf}; |
1592 | my $rbuf = \$self->{rbuf}; |
127 | my $l; |
1593 | |
128 | if (defined $self->{read_size}) { |
1594 | sub { |
129 | $l = sysread $self->{fh}, $self->{rbuf}, |
1595 | my $ref = eval { $json->incr_parse ($self->{rbuf}) }; |
130 | ($self->{read_size} - $rbuf_len), $rbuf_len; |
1596 | |
|
|
1597 | if ($ref) { |
|
|
1598 | $self->{rbuf} = $json->incr_text; |
|
|
1599 | $json->incr_text = ""; |
|
|
1600 | $cb->($self, $ref); |
|
|
1601 | |
|
|
1602 | 1 |
|
|
1603 | } elsif ($@) { |
|
|
1604 | # error case |
|
|
1605 | $json->incr_skip; |
|
|
1606 | |
|
|
1607 | $self->{rbuf} = $json->incr_text; |
|
|
1608 | $json->incr_text = ""; |
|
|
1609 | |
|
|
1610 | $self->_error (Errno::EBADMSG); |
|
|
1611 | |
|
|
1612 | () |
|
|
1613 | } else { |
|
|
1614 | $self->{rbuf} = ""; |
|
|
1615 | |
|
|
1616 | () |
|
|
1617 | } |
|
|
1618 | } |
|
|
1619 | }; |
|
|
1620 | |
|
|
1621 | =item storable => $cb->($handle, $ref) |
|
|
1622 | |
|
|
1623 | Deserialises a L<Storable> frozen representation as written by the |
|
|
1624 | C<storable> write type (BER-encoded length prefix followed by nfreeze'd |
|
|
1625 | data). |
|
|
1626 | |
|
|
1627 | Raises C<EBADMSG> error if the data could not be decoded. |
|
|
1628 | |
|
|
1629 | =cut |
|
|
1630 | |
|
|
1631 | register_read_type storable => sub { |
|
|
1632 | my ($self, $cb) = @_; |
|
|
1633 | |
|
|
1634 | require Storable; |
|
|
1635 | |
|
|
1636 | sub { |
|
|
1637 | # when we can use 5.10 we can use ".", but for 5.8 we use the re-pack method |
|
|
1638 | defined (my $len = eval { unpack "w", $_[0]{rbuf} }) |
|
|
1639 | or return; |
|
|
1640 | |
|
|
1641 | my $format = length pack "w", $len; |
|
|
1642 | |
|
|
1643 | # bypass unshift if we already have the remaining chunk |
|
|
1644 | if ($format + $len <= length $_[0]{rbuf}) { |
|
|
1645 | my $data = substr $_[0]{rbuf}, $format, $len; |
|
|
1646 | substr $_[0]{rbuf}, 0, $format + $len, ""; |
|
|
1647 | $cb->($_[0], Storable::thaw ($data)); |
|
|
1648 | } else { |
|
|
1649 | # remove prefix |
|
|
1650 | substr $_[0]{rbuf}, 0, $format, ""; |
|
|
1651 | |
|
|
1652 | # read remaining chunk |
|
|
1653 | $_[0]->unshift_read (chunk => $len, sub { |
|
|
1654 | if (my $ref = eval { Storable::thaw ($_[1]) }) { |
|
|
1655 | $cb->($_[0], $ref); |
|
|
1656 | } else { |
|
|
1657 | $self->_error (Errno::EBADMSG); |
|
|
1658 | } |
|
|
1659 | }); |
|
|
1660 | } |
|
|
1661 | |
|
|
1662 | 1 |
|
|
1663 | } |
|
|
1664 | }; |
|
|
1665 | |
|
|
1666 | =back |
|
|
1667 | |
|
|
1668 | =item custom read types - Package::anyevent_read_type $handle, $cb, @args |
|
|
1669 | |
|
|
1670 | Instead of one of the predefined types, you can also specify the name |
|
|
1671 | of a package. AnyEvent will try to load the package and then expects to |
|
|
1672 | find a function named C<anyevent_read_type> inside. If it isn't found, it |
|
|
1673 | progressively tries to load the parent package until it either finds the |
|
|
1674 | function (good) or runs out of packages (bad). |
|
|
1675 | |
|
|
1676 | Whenever this type is used, C<push_read> will invoke the function with the |
|
|
1677 | handle object, the original callback and the remaining arguments. |
|
|
1678 | |
|
|
1679 | The function is supposed to return a callback (usually a closure) that |
|
|
1680 | works as a plain read callback (see C<< ->push_read ($cb) >>), so you can |
|
|
1681 | mentally treat the function as a "configurable read type to read callback" |
|
|
1682 | converter. |
|
|
1683 | |
|
|
1684 | It should invoke the original callback when it is done reading (remember |
|
|
1685 | to pass C<$handle> as first argument as all other callbacks do that, |
|
|
1686 | although there is no strict requirement on this). |
|
|
1687 | |
|
|
1688 | For examples, see the source of this module (F<perldoc -m |
|
|
1689 | AnyEvent::Handle>, search for C<register_read_type>)). |
|
|
1690 | |
|
|
1691 | =item $handle->stop_read |
|
|
1692 | |
|
|
1693 | =item $handle->start_read |
|
|
1694 | |
|
|
1695 | In rare cases you actually do not want to read anything from the |
|
|
1696 | socket. In this case you can call C<stop_read>. Neither C<on_read> nor |
|
|
1697 | any queued callbacks will be executed then. To start reading again, call |
|
|
1698 | C<start_read>. |
|
|
1699 | |
|
|
1700 | Note that AnyEvent::Handle will automatically C<start_read> for you when |
|
|
1701 | you change the C<on_read> callback or push/unshift a read callback, and it |
|
|
1702 | will automatically C<stop_read> for you when neither C<on_read> is set nor |
|
|
1703 | there are any read requests in the queue. |
|
|
1704 | |
|
|
1705 | These methods will have no effect when in TLS mode (as TLS doesn't support |
|
|
1706 | half-duplex connections). |
|
|
1707 | |
|
|
1708 | =cut |
|
|
1709 | |
|
|
1710 | sub stop_read { |
|
|
1711 | my ($self) = @_; |
|
|
1712 | |
|
|
1713 | delete $self->{_rw} unless $self->{tls}; |
|
|
1714 | } |
|
|
1715 | |
|
|
1716 | sub start_read { |
|
|
1717 | my ($self) = @_; |
|
|
1718 | |
|
|
1719 | unless ($self->{_rw} || $self->{_eof} || !$self->{fh}) { |
|
|
1720 | Scalar::Util::weaken $self; |
|
|
1721 | |
|
|
1722 | $self->{_rw} = AE::io $self->{fh}, 0, sub { |
|
|
1723 | my $rbuf = \($self->{tls} ? my $buf : $self->{rbuf}); |
|
|
1724 | my $len = sysread $self->{fh}, $$rbuf, $self->{read_size} || 8192, length $$rbuf; |
|
|
1725 | |
|
|
1726 | if ($len > 0) { |
|
|
1727 | $self->{_activity} = $self->{_ractivity} = AE::now; |
|
|
1728 | |
|
|
1729 | if ($self->{tls}) { |
|
|
1730 | Net::SSLeay::BIO_write ($self->{_rbio}, $$rbuf); |
|
|
1731 | |
|
|
1732 | &_dotls ($self); |
|
|
1733 | } else { |
|
|
1734 | $self->_drain_rbuf; |
|
|
1735 | } |
|
|
1736 | |
|
|
1737 | } elsif (defined $len) { |
|
|
1738 | delete $self->{_rw}; |
|
|
1739 | $self->{_eof} = 1; |
|
|
1740 | $self->_drain_rbuf; |
|
|
1741 | |
|
|
1742 | } elsif ($! != EAGAIN && $! != EINTR && $! != WSAEWOULDBLOCK) { |
|
|
1743 | return $self->_error ($!, 1); |
|
|
1744 | } |
|
|
1745 | }; |
|
|
1746 | } |
|
|
1747 | } |
|
|
1748 | |
|
|
1749 | our $ERROR_SYSCALL; |
|
|
1750 | our $ERROR_WANT_READ; |
|
|
1751 | |
|
|
1752 | sub _tls_error { |
|
|
1753 | my ($self, $err) = @_; |
|
|
1754 | |
|
|
1755 | return $self->_error ($!, 1) |
|
|
1756 | if $err == Net::SSLeay::ERROR_SYSCALL (); |
|
|
1757 | |
|
|
1758 | my $err =Net::SSLeay::ERR_error_string (Net::SSLeay::ERR_get_error ()); |
|
|
1759 | |
|
|
1760 | # reduce error string to look less scary |
|
|
1761 | $err =~ s/^error:[0-9a-fA-F]{8}:[^:]+:([^:]+):/\L$1: /; |
|
|
1762 | |
|
|
1763 | if ($self->{_on_starttls}) { |
|
|
1764 | (delete $self->{_on_starttls})->($self, undef, $err); |
|
|
1765 | &_freetls; |
|
|
1766 | } else { |
|
|
1767 | &_freetls; |
|
|
1768 | $self->_error (Errno::EPROTO, 1, $err); |
|
|
1769 | } |
|
|
1770 | } |
|
|
1771 | |
|
|
1772 | # poll the write BIO and send the data if applicable |
|
|
1773 | # also decode read data if possible |
|
|
1774 | # this is basiclaly our TLS state machine |
|
|
1775 | # more efficient implementations are possible with openssl, |
|
|
1776 | # but not with the buggy and incomplete Net::SSLeay. |
|
|
1777 | sub _dotls { |
|
|
1778 | my ($self) = @_; |
|
|
1779 | |
|
|
1780 | my $tmp; |
|
|
1781 | |
|
|
1782 | if (length $self->{_tls_wbuf}) { |
|
|
1783 | while (($tmp = Net::SSLeay::write ($self->{tls}, $self->{_tls_wbuf})) > 0) { |
|
|
1784 | substr $self->{_tls_wbuf}, 0, $tmp, ""; |
|
|
1785 | } |
|
|
1786 | |
|
|
1787 | $tmp = Net::SSLeay::get_error ($self->{tls}, $tmp); |
|
|
1788 | return $self->_tls_error ($tmp) |
|
|
1789 | if $tmp != $ERROR_WANT_READ |
|
|
1790 | && ($tmp != $ERROR_SYSCALL || $!); |
|
|
1791 | } |
|
|
1792 | |
|
|
1793 | while (defined ($tmp = Net::SSLeay::read ($self->{tls}))) { |
|
|
1794 | unless (length $tmp) { |
|
|
1795 | $self->{_on_starttls} |
|
|
1796 | and (delete $self->{_on_starttls})->($self, undef, "EOF during handshake"); # ??? |
|
|
1797 | &_freetls; |
|
|
1798 | |
|
|
1799 | if ($self->{on_stoptls}) { |
|
|
1800 | $self->{on_stoptls}($self); |
|
|
1801 | return; |
131 | } else { |
1802 | } else { |
132 | $l = sysread $self->{fh}, $self->{rbuf}, $self->{read_block_size}, $rbuf_len; |
1803 | # let's treat SSL-eof as we treat normal EOF |
133 | } |
|
|
134 | #d# warn "READL $l [$self->{rbuf}]\n"; |
|
|
135 | |
|
|
136 | if (not defined $l) { |
|
|
137 | return if $! == EAGAIN || $! == EINTR; |
|
|
138 | $self->{on_error}->($self, $!) if $self->{on_error}; |
|
|
139 | delete $self->{on_read_w}; |
1804 | delete $self->{_rw}; |
140 | |
|
|
141 | } elsif ($l == 0) { |
|
|
142 | $self->{on_eof}->($self) if $self->{on_eof}; |
|
|
143 | delete $self->{on_read_w}; |
|
|
144 | |
|
|
145 | } else { |
|
|
146 | $self->{on_read}->($self); |
|
|
147 | } |
|
|
148 | }); |
|
|
149 | } |
|
|
150 | |
|
|
151 | =item B<on_error ($callback)> |
|
|
152 | |
|
|
153 | Whenever a read or write operation resulted in an error the C<$callback> |
|
|
154 | will be called. |
|
|
155 | |
|
|
156 | The first argument of C<$callback> will be the L<AnyEvent::Handle> object itself |
|
|
157 | and the second argument will be the value of C<$!>. |
|
|
158 | |
|
|
159 | =cut |
|
|
160 | |
|
|
161 | sub on_error { |
|
|
162 | $_[0]->{on_error} = $_[1]; |
|
|
163 | } |
|
|
164 | |
|
|
165 | =item B<on_eof ($callback)> |
|
|
166 | |
|
|
167 | Installs the C<$callback> that will be called when the end of file is |
|
|
168 | encountered in a read operation this C<$callback> will be called. The first |
|
|
169 | argument will be the L<AnyEvent::Handle> object itself. |
|
|
170 | |
|
|
171 | =cut |
|
|
172 | |
|
|
173 | sub on_eof { |
|
|
174 | $_[0]->{on_eof} = $_[1]; |
|
|
175 | } |
|
|
176 | |
|
|
177 | =item B<rbuf> |
|
|
178 | |
|
|
179 | Returns a reference to the read buffer. |
|
|
180 | |
|
|
181 | NOTE: The read buffer should only be used or modified if the C<on_read> |
|
|
182 | method is used directly. The C<read> and C<readlines> methods will provide |
|
|
183 | the read data to their callbacks. |
|
|
184 | |
|
|
185 | =cut |
|
|
186 | |
|
|
187 | sub rbuf : lvalue { $_[0]->{rbuf} } |
|
|
188 | |
|
|
189 | =item B<read ($len, $callback)> |
|
|
190 | |
|
|
191 | Will read exactly C<$len> bytes from the filehandle and call the C<$callback> |
|
|
192 | if done so. The first argument to the C<$callback> will be the L<AnyEvent::Handle> |
|
|
193 | object itself and the second argument the read data. |
|
|
194 | |
|
|
195 | NOTE: This method will override any callbacks installed via the C<on_read> method. |
|
|
196 | |
|
|
197 | =cut |
|
|
198 | |
|
|
199 | sub read { |
|
|
200 | my ($self, $len, $cb) = @_; |
|
|
201 | |
|
|
202 | $self->{read_cb} = $cb; |
|
|
203 | my $old_blk_size = $self->{read_block_size}; |
|
|
204 | $self->{read_block_size} = $len; |
|
|
205 | |
|
|
206 | $self->on_read (sub { |
|
|
207 | #d# warn "OFOFO $len || ".length($_[0]->{rbuf})."||\n"; |
|
|
208 | |
|
|
209 | if ($len == length $_[0]->{rbuf}) { |
|
|
210 | $_[0]->{read_block_size} = $old_blk_size; |
|
|
211 | $_[0]->on_read (undef); |
|
|
212 | $_[0]->{read_cb}->($_[0], (substr $self->{rbuf}, 0, $len, '')); |
|
|
213 | } |
|
|
214 | }); |
|
|
215 | } |
|
|
216 | |
|
|
217 | =item B<readlines ($callback)> |
|
|
218 | |
|
|
219 | =item B<readlines ($sep, $callback)> |
|
|
220 | |
|
|
221 | This method will read lines from the filehandle, seperated by C<$sep> or C<"\n"> |
|
|
222 | if C<$sep> is not provided. C<$sep> will be used as part of a regex, so it can be |
|
|
223 | a regex itself and won't be quoted! |
|
|
224 | |
|
|
225 | The C<$callback> will be called when at least one |
|
|
226 | line could be read. The first argument to the C<$callback> will be the L<AnyEvent::Handle> |
|
|
227 | object itself and the rest of the arguments will be the read lines. |
|
|
228 | |
|
|
229 | NOTE: This method will override any callbacks installed via the C<on_read> method. |
|
|
230 | |
|
|
231 | =cut |
|
|
232 | |
|
|
233 | sub readlines { |
|
|
234 | my ($self, $NL, $cb) = @_; |
|
|
235 | |
|
|
236 | if (ref $NL) { |
|
|
237 | $cb = $NL; |
|
|
238 | $NL = "\n"; |
|
|
239 | } |
|
|
240 | |
|
|
241 | $self->{on_readline} = $cb; |
|
|
242 | |
|
|
243 | $self->on_read (sub { |
|
|
244 | my @lines; |
|
|
245 | push @lines, $1 while $_[0]->{rbuf} =~ s/(.*)$NL//; |
|
|
246 | $self->{on_readline}->($_[0], @lines); |
|
|
247 | }); |
|
|
248 | } |
|
|
249 | |
|
|
250 | =item B<write ($data)> |
|
|
251 | |
|
|
252 | =item B<write ($callback)> |
|
|
253 | |
|
|
254 | =item B<write ($data, $callback)> |
|
|
255 | |
|
|
256 | This method will write C<$data> to the filehandle and call the C<$callback> |
|
|
257 | afterwards. If only C<$callback> is provided it will be called when the |
|
|
258 | write buffer becomes empty the next time (or immediately if it already is empty). |
|
|
259 | |
|
|
260 | =cut |
|
|
261 | |
|
|
262 | sub write { |
|
|
263 | my ($self, $data, $cb) = @_; |
|
|
264 | if (ref $data) { $cb = $data; undef $data } |
|
|
265 | push @{$self->{write_bufs}}, [$data, $cb]; |
|
|
266 | $self->_check_writer; |
|
|
267 | } |
|
|
268 | |
|
|
269 | sub _check_writer { |
|
|
270 | my ($self) = @_; |
|
|
271 | |
|
|
272 | if ($self->{write_w}) { |
|
|
273 | unless ($self->{write_cb}) { |
|
|
274 | while (@{$self->{write_bufs}} && not defined $self->{write_bufs}->[0]->[1]) { |
|
|
275 | my $wba = shift @{$self->{write_bufs}}; |
|
|
276 | $self->{wbuf} .= $wba->[0]; |
1805 | $self->{_eof} = 1; |
277 | } |
1806 | } |
278 | } |
1807 | } |
279 | return; |
1808 | |
|
|
1809 | $self->{_tls_rbuf} .= $tmp; |
|
|
1810 | $self->_drain_rbuf; |
|
|
1811 | $self->{tls} or return; # tls session might have gone away in callback |
|
|
1812 | } |
|
|
1813 | |
|
|
1814 | $tmp = Net::SSLeay::get_error ($self->{tls}, -1); |
|
|
1815 | return $self->_tls_error ($tmp) |
|
|
1816 | if $tmp != $ERROR_WANT_READ |
|
|
1817 | && ($tmp != $ERROR_SYSCALL || $!); |
|
|
1818 | |
|
|
1819 | while (length ($tmp = Net::SSLeay::BIO_read ($self->{_wbio}))) { |
|
|
1820 | $self->{wbuf} .= $tmp; |
|
|
1821 | $self->_drain_wbuf; |
|
|
1822 | $self->{tls} or return; # tls session might have gone away in callback |
|
|
1823 | } |
|
|
1824 | |
|
|
1825 | $self->{_on_starttls} |
|
|
1826 | and Net::SSLeay::state ($self->{tls}) == Net::SSLeay::ST_OK () |
|
|
1827 | and (delete $self->{_on_starttls})->($self, 1, "TLS/SSL connection established"); |
|
|
1828 | } |
|
|
1829 | |
|
|
1830 | =item $handle->starttls ($tls[, $tls_ctx]) |
|
|
1831 | |
|
|
1832 | Instead of starting TLS negotiation immediately when the AnyEvent::Handle |
|
|
1833 | object is created, you can also do that at a later time by calling |
|
|
1834 | C<starttls>. |
|
|
1835 | |
|
|
1836 | Starting TLS is currently an asynchronous operation - when you push some |
|
|
1837 | write data and then call C<< ->starttls >> then TLS negotiation will start |
|
|
1838 | immediately, after which the queued write data is then sent. |
|
|
1839 | |
|
|
1840 | The first argument is the same as the C<tls> constructor argument (either |
|
|
1841 | C<"connect">, C<"accept"> or an existing Net::SSLeay object). |
|
|
1842 | |
|
|
1843 | The second argument is the optional C<AnyEvent::TLS> object that is used |
|
|
1844 | when AnyEvent::Handle has to create its own TLS connection object, or |
|
|
1845 | a hash reference with C<< key => value >> pairs that will be used to |
|
|
1846 | construct a new context. |
|
|
1847 | |
|
|
1848 | The TLS connection object will end up in C<< $handle->{tls} >>, the TLS |
|
|
1849 | context in C<< $handle->{tls_ctx} >> after this call and can be used or |
|
|
1850 | changed to your liking. Note that the handshake might have already started |
|
|
1851 | when this function returns. |
|
|
1852 | |
|
|
1853 | Due to bugs in OpenSSL, it might or might not be possible to do multiple |
|
|
1854 | handshakes on the same stream. Best do not attempt to use the stream after |
|
|
1855 | stopping TLS. |
|
|
1856 | |
|
|
1857 | =cut |
|
|
1858 | |
|
|
1859 | our %TLS_CACHE; #TODO not yet documented, should we? |
|
|
1860 | |
|
|
1861 | sub starttls { |
|
|
1862 | my ($self, $tls, $ctx) = @_; |
|
|
1863 | |
|
|
1864 | Carp::croak "It is an error to call starttls on an AnyEvent::Handle object while TLS is already active, caught" |
|
|
1865 | if $self->{tls}; |
|
|
1866 | |
|
|
1867 | $self->{tls} = $tls; |
|
|
1868 | $self->{tls_ctx} = $ctx if @_ > 2; |
|
|
1869 | |
|
|
1870 | return unless $self->{fh}; |
|
|
1871 | |
|
|
1872 | require Net::SSLeay; |
|
|
1873 | |
|
|
1874 | $ERROR_SYSCALL = Net::SSLeay::ERROR_SYSCALL (); |
|
|
1875 | $ERROR_WANT_READ = Net::SSLeay::ERROR_WANT_READ (); |
|
|
1876 | |
|
|
1877 | $tls = delete $self->{tls}; |
|
|
1878 | $ctx = $self->{tls_ctx}; |
|
|
1879 | |
|
|
1880 | local $Carp::CarpLevel = 1; # skip ourselves when creating a new context or session |
|
|
1881 | |
|
|
1882 | if ("HASH" eq ref $ctx) { |
|
|
1883 | require AnyEvent::TLS; |
|
|
1884 | |
|
|
1885 | if ($ctx->{cache}) { |
|
|
1886 | my $key = $ctx+0; |
|
|
1887 | $ctx = $TLS_CACHE{$key} ||= new AnyEvent::TLS %$ctx; |
|
|
1888 | } else { |
|
|
1889 | $ctx = new AnyEvent::TLS %$ctx; |
|
|
1890 | } |
|
|
1891 | } |
280 | } |
1892 | |
|
|
1893 | $self->{tls_ctx} = $ctx || TLS_CTX (); |
|
|
1894 | $self->{tls} = $tls = $self->{tls_ctx}->_get_session ($tls, $self, $self->{peername}); |
281 | |
1895 | |
282 | my $wba = shift @{$self->{write_bufs}} |
1896 | # basically, this is deep magic (because SSL_read should have the same issues) |
283 | or return; |
1897 | # but the openssl maintainers basically said: "trust us, it just works". |
|
|
1898 | # (unfortunately, we have to hardcode constants because the abysmally misdesigned |
|
|
1899 | # and mismaintained ssleay-module doesn't even offer them). |
|
|
1900 | # http://www.mail-archive.com/openssl-dev@openssl.org/msg22420.html |
|
|
1901 | # |
|
|
1902 | # in short: this is a mess. |
|
|
1903 | # |
|
|
1904 | # note that we do not try to keep the length constant between writes as we are required to do. |
|
|
1905 | # we assume that most (but not all) of this insanity only applies to non-blocking cases, |
|
|
1906 | # and we drive openssl fully in blocking mode here. Or maybe we don't - openssl seems to |
|
|
1907 | # have identity issues in that area. |
|
|
1908 | # Net::SSLeay::CTX_set_mode ($ssl, |
|
|
1909 | # (eval { local $SIG{__DIE__}; Net::SSLeay::MODE_ENABLE_PARTIAL_WRITE () } || 1) |
|
|
1910 | # | (eval { local $SIG{__DIE__}; Net::SSLeay::MODE_ACCEPT_MOVING_WRITE_BUFFER () } || 2)); |
|
|
1911 | Net::SSLeay::CTX_set_mode ($tls, 1|2); |
284 | |
1912 | |
285 | unless (defined $wba->[0]) { |
1913 | $self->{_rbio} = Net::SSLeay::BIO_new (Net::SSLeay::BIO_s_mem ()); |
286 | $wba->[1]->($self) if $wba->[1]; |
1914 | $self->{_wbio} = Net::SSLeay::BIO_new (Net::SSLeay::BIO_s_mem ()); |
287 | $self->_check_writer; |
1915 | |
288 | return; |
1916 | Net::SSLeay::BIO_write ($self->{_rbio}, delete $self->{rbuf}); |
|
|
1917 | |
|
|
1918 | Net::SSLeay::set_bio ($tls, $self->{_rbio}, $self->{_wbio}); |
|
|
1919 | |
|
|
1920 | $self->{_on_starttls} = sub { $_[0]{on_starttls}(@_) } |
|
|
1921 | if $self->{on_starttls}; |
|
|
1922 | |
|
|
1923 | &_dotls; # need to trigger the initial handshake |
|
|
1924 | $self->start_read; # make sure we actually do read |
|
|
1925 | } |
|
|
1926 | |
|
|
1927 | =item $handle->stoptls |
|
|
1928 | |
|
|
1929 | Shuts down the SSL connection - this makes a proper EOF handshake by |
|
|
1930 | sending a close notify to the other side, but since OpenSSL doesn't |
|
|
1931 | support non-blocking shut downs, it is not guaranteed that you can re-use |
|
|
1932 | the stream afterwards. |
|
|
1933 | |
|
|
1934 | =cut |
|
|
1935 | |
|
|
1936 | sub stoptls { |
|
|
1937 | my ($self) = @_; |
|
|
1938 | |
|
|
1939 | if ($self->{tls} && $self->{fh}) { |
|
|
1940 | Net::SSLeay::shutdown ($self->{tls}); |
|
|
1941 | |
|
|
1942 | &_dotls; |
|
|
1943 | |
|
|
1944 | # # we don't give a shit. no, we do, but we can't. no...#d# |
|
|
1945 | # # we, we... have to use openssl :/#d# |
|
|
1946 | # &_freetls;#d# |
|
|
1947 | } |
|
|
1948 | } |
|
|
1949 | |
|
|
1950 | sub _freetls { |
|
|
1951 | my ($self) = @_; |
|
|
1952 | |
|
|
1953 | return unless $self->{tls}; |
|
|
1954 | |
|
|
1955 | $self->{tls_ctx}->_put_session (delete $self->{tls}) |
|
|
1956 | if $self->{tls} > 0; |
289 | } |
1957 | |
|
|
1958 | delete @$self{qw(_rbio _wbio _tls_wbuf _on_starttls)}; |
|
|
1959 | } |
290 | |
1960 | |
291 | $self->{wbuf} = $wba->[0]; |
1961 | sub DESTROY { |
292 | $self->{write_cb} = $wba->[1]; |
1962 | my ($self) = @_; |
293 | |
1963 | |
294 | $self->{write_w} = |
1964 | &_freetls; |
295 | AnyEvent->io (poll => 'w', fh => $self->{fh}, cb => sub { |
1965 | |
|
|
1966 | my $linger = exists $self->{linger} ? $self->{linger} : 3600; |
|
|
1967 | |
|
|
1968 | if ($linger && length $self->{wbuf} && $self->{fh}) { |
|
|
1969 | my $fh = delete $self->{fh}; |
|
|
1970 | my $wbuf = delete $self->{wbuf}; |
|
|
1971 | |
|
|
1972 | my @linger; |
|
|
1973 | |
|
|
1974 | push @linger, AE::io $fh, 1, sub { |
296 | my $l = syswrite $self->{fh}, $self->{wbuf}, length $self->{wbuf}; |
1975 | my $len = syswrite $fh, $wbuf, length $wbuf; |
297 | |
1976 | |
298 | if (not defined $l) { |
1977 | if ($len > 0) { |
299 | return if $! == EAGAIN || $! == EINTR; |
1978 | substr $wbuf, 0, $len, ""; |
300 | delete $self->{write_w}; |
|
|
301 | |
|
|
302 | $self->{on_error}->($self, $!) if $self->{on_error}; |
|
|
303 | |
|
|
304 | } else { |
1979 | } else { |
305 | substr $self->{wbuf}, 0, $l, ''; |
1980 | @linger = (); # end |
306 | |
|
|
307 | if (length ($self->{wbuf}) == 0) { |
|
|
308 | $self->{write_cb}->($self) if $self->{write_cb}; |
|
|
309 | |
|
|
310 | delete $self->{write_w}; |
|
|
311 | delete $self->{wbuf}; |
|
|
312 | delete $self->{write_cb}; |
|
|
313 | |
|
|
314 | $self->_check_writer; |
|
|
315 | } |
|
|
316 | } |
1981 | } |
317 | }); |
1982 | }; |
|
|
1983 | push @linger, AE::timer $linger, 0, sub { |
|
|
1984 | @linger = (); |
|
|
1985 | }; |
|
|
1986 | } |
|
|
1987 | } |
|
|
1988 | |
|
|
1989 | =item $handle->destroy |
|
|
1990 | |
|
|
1991 | Shuts down the handle object as much as possible - this call ensures that |
|
|
1992 | no further callbacks will be invoked and as many resources as possible |
|
|
1993 | will be freed. Any method you will call on the handle object after |
|
|
1994 | destroying it in this way will be silently ignored (and it will return the |
|
|
1995 | empty list). |
|
|
1996 | |
|
|
1997 | Normally, you can just "forget" any references to an AnyEvent::Handle |
|
|
1998 | object and it will simply shut down. This works in fatal error and EOF |
|
|
1999 | callbacks, as well as code outside. It does I<NOT> work in a read or write |
|
|
2000 | callback, so when you want to destroy the AnyEvent::Handle object from |
|
|
2001 | within such an callback. You I<MUST> call C<< ->destroy >> explicitly in |
|
|
2002 | that case. |
|
|
2003 | |
|
|
2004 | Destroying the handle object in this way has the advantage that callbacks |
|
|
2005 | will be removed as well, so if those are the only reference holders (as |
|
|
2006 | is common), then one doesn't need to do anything special to break any |
|
|
2007 | reference cycles. |
|
|
2008 | |
|
|
2009 | The handle might still linger in the background and write out remaining |
|
|
2010 | data, as specified by the C<linger> option, however. |
|
|
2011 | |
|
|
2012 | =cut |
|
|
2013 | |
|
|
2014 | sub destroy { |
|
|
2015 | my ($self) = @_; |
|
|
2016 | |
|
|
2017 | $self->DESTROY; |
|
|
2018 | %$self = (); |
|
|
2019 | bless $self, "AnyEvent::Handle::destroyed"; |
|
|
2020 | } |
|
|
2021 | |
|
|
2022 | sub AnyEvent::Handle::destroyed::AUTOLOAD { |
|
|
2023 | #nop |
|
|
2024 | } |
|
|
2025 | |
|
|
2026 | =item $handle->destroyed |
|
|
2027 | |
|
|
2028 | Returns false as long as the handle hasn't been destroyed by a call to C<< |
|
|
2029 | ->destroy >>, true otherwise. |
|
|
2030 | |
|
|
2031 | Can be useful to decide whether the handle is still valid after some |
|
|
2032 | callback possibly destroyed the handle. For example, C<< ->push_write >>, |
|
|
2033 | C<< ->starttls >> and other methods can call user callbacks, which in turn |
|
|
2034 | can destroy the handle, so work can be avoided by checking sometimes: |
|
|
2035 | |
|
|
2036 | $hdl->starttls ("accept"); |
|
|
2037 | return if $hdl->destroyed; |
|
|
2038 | $hdl->push_write (... |
|
|
2039 | |
|
|
2040 | Note that the call to C<push_write> will silently be ignored if the handle |
|
|
2041 | has been destroyed, so often you can just ignore the possibility of the |
|
|
2042 | handle being destroyed. |
|
|
2043 | |
|
|
2044 | =cut |
|
|
2045 | |
|
|
2046 | sub destroyed { 0 } |
|
|
2047 | sub AnyEvent::Handle::destroyed::destroyed { 1 } |
|
|
2048 | |
|
|
2049 | =item AnyEvent::Handle::TLS_CTX |
|
|
2050 | |
|
|
2051 | This function creates and returns the AnyEvent::TLS object used by default |
|
|
2052 | for TLS mode. |
|
|
2053 | |
|
|
2054 | The context is created by calling L<AnyEvent::TLS> without any arguments. |
|
|
2055 | |
|
|
2056 | =cut |
|
|
2057 | |
|
|
2058 | our $TLS_CTX; |
|
|
2059 | |
|
|
2060 | sub TLS_CTX() { |
|
|
2061 | $TLS_CTX ||= do { |
|
|
2062 | require AnyEvent::TLS; |
|
|
2063 | |
|
|
2064 | new AnyEvent::TLS |
|
|
2065 | } |
318 | } |
2066 | } |
319 | |
2067 | |
320 | =back |
2068 | =back |
321 | |
2069 | |
|
|
2070 | |
|
|
2071 | =head1 NONFREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS |
|
|
2072 | |
|
|
2073 | =over 4 |
|
|
2074 | |
|
|
2075 | =item I C<undef> the AnyEvent::Handle reference inside my callback and |
|
|
2076 | still get further invocations! |
|
|
2077 | |
|
|
2078 | That's because AnyEvent::Handle keeps a reference to itself when handling |
|
|
2079 | read or write callbacks. |
|
|
2080 | |
|
|
2081 | It is only safe to "forget" the reference inside EOF or error callbacks, |
|
|
2082 | from within all other callbacks, you need to explicitly call the C<< |
|
|
2083 | ->destroy >> method. |
|
|
2084 | |
|
|
2085 | =item I get different callback invocations in TLS mode/Why can't I pause |
|
|
2086 | reading? |
|
|
2087 | |
|
|
2088 | Unlike, say, TCP, TLS connections do not consist of two independent |
|
|
2089 | communication channels, one for each direction. Or put differently. The |
|
|
2090 | read and write directions are not independent of each other: you cannot |
|
|
2091 | write data unless you are also prepared to read, and vice versa. |
|
|
2092 | |
|
|
2093 | This can mean than, in TLS mode, you might get C<on_error> or C<on_eof> |
|
|
2094 | callback invocations when you are not expecting any read data - the reason |
|
|
2095 | is that AnyEvent::Handle always reads in TLS mode. |
|
|
2096 | |
|
|
2097 | During the connection, you have to make sure that you always have a |
|
|
2098 | non-empty read-queue, or an C<on_read> watcher. At the end of the |
|
|
2099 | connection (or when you no longer want to use it) you can call the |
|
|
2100 | C<destroy> method. |
|
|
2101 | |
|
|
2102 | =item How do I read data until the other side closes the connection? |
|
|
2103 | |
|
|
2104 | If you just want to read your data into a perl scalar, the easiest way |
|
|
2105 | to achieve this is by setting an C<on_read> callback that does nothing, |
|
|
2106 | clearing the C<on_eof> callback and in the C<on_error> callback, the data |
|
|
2107 | will be in C<$_[0]{rbuf}>: |
|
|
2108 | |
|
|
2109 | $handle->on_read (sub { }); |
|
|
2110 | $handle->on_eof (undef); |
|
|
2111 | $handle->on_error (sub { |
|
|
2112 | my $data = delete $_[0]{rbuf}; |
|
|
2113 | }); |
|
|
2114 | |
|
|
2115 | The reason to use C<on_error> is that TCP connections, due to latencies |
|
|
2116 | and packets loss, might get closed quite violently with an error, when in |
|
|
2117 | fact, all data has been received. |
|
|
2118 | |
|
|
2119 | It is usually better to use acknowledgements when transferring data, |
|
|
2120 | to make sure the other side hasn't just died and you got the data |
|
|
2121 | intact. This is also one reason why so many internet protocols have an |
|
|
2122 | explicit QUIT command. |
|
|
2123 | |
|
|
2124 | =item I don't want to destroy the handle too early - how do I wait until |
|
|
2125 | all data has been written? |
|
|
2126 | |
|
|
2127 | After writing your last bits of data, set the C<on_drain> callback |
|
|
2128 | and destroy the handle in there - with the default setting of |
|
|
2129 | C<low_water_mark> this will be called precisely when all data has been |
|
|
2130 | written to the socket: |
|
|
2131 | |
|
|
2132 | $handle->push_write (...); |
|
|
2133 | $handle->on_drain (sub { |
|
|
2134 | warn "all data submitted to the kernel\n"; |
|
|
2135 | undef $handle; |
|
|
2136 | }); |
|
|
2137 | |
|
|
2138 | If you just want to queue some data and then signal EOF to the other side, |
|
|
2139 | consider using C<< ->push_shutdown >> instead. |
|
|
2140 | |
|
|
2141 | =item I want to contact a TLS/SSL server, I don't care about security. |
|
|
2142 | |
|
|
2143 | If your TLS server is a pure TLS server (e.g. HTTPS) that only speaks TLS, |
|
|
2144 | simply connect to it and then create the AnyEvent::Handle with the C<tls> |
|
|
2145 | parameter: |
|
|
2146 | |
|
|
2147 | tcp_connect $host, $port, sub { |
|
|
2148 | my ($fh) = @_; |
|
|
2149 | |
|
|
2150 | my $handle = new AnyEvent::Handle |
|
|
2151 | fh => $fh, |
|
|
2152 | tls => "connect", |
|
|
2153 | on_error => sub { ... }; |
|
|
2154 | |
|
|
2155 | $handle->push_write (...); |
|
|
2156 | }; |
|
|
2157 | |
|
|
2158 | =item I want to contact a TLS/SSL server, I do care about security. |
|
|
2159 | |
|
|
2160 | Then you should additionally enable certificate verification, including |
|
|
2161 | peername verification, if the protocol you use supports it (see |
|
|
2162 | L<AnyEvent::TLS>, C<verify_peername>). |
|
|
2163 | |
|
|
2164 | E.g. for HTTPS: |
|
|
2165 | |
|
|
2166 | tcp_connect $host, $port, sub { |
|
|
2167 | my ($fh) = @_; |
|
|
2168 | |
|
|
2169 | my $handle = new AnyEvent::Handle |
|
|
2170 | fh => $fh, |
|
|
2171 | peername => $host, |
|
|
2172 | tls => "connect", |
|
|
2173 | tls_ctx => { verify => 1, verify_peername => "https" }, |
|
|
2174 | ... |
|
|
2175 | |
|
|
2176 | Note that you must specify the hostname you connected to (or whatever |
|
|
2177 | "peername" the protocol needs) as the C<peername> argument, otherwise no |
|
|
2178 | peername verification will be done. |
|
|
2179 | |
|
|
2180 | The above will use the system-dependent default set of trusted CA |
|
|
2181 | certificates. If you want to check against a specific CA, add the |
|
|
2182 | C<ca_file> (or C<ca_cert>) arguments to C<tls_ctx>: |
|
|
2183 | |
|
|
2184 | tls_ctx => { |
|
|
2185 | verify => 1, |
|
|
2186 | verify_peername => "https", |
|
|
2187 | ca_file => "my-ca-cert.pem", |
|
|
2188 | }, |
|
|
2189 | |
|
|
2190 | =item I want to create a TLS/SSL server, how do I do that? |
|
|
2191 | |
|
|
2192 | Well, you first need to get a server certificate and key. You have |
|
|
2193 | three options: a) ask a CA (buy one, use cacert.org etc.) b) create a |
|
|
2194 | self-signed certificate (cheap. check the search engine of your choice, |
|
|
2195 | there are many tutorials on the net) or c) make your own CA (tinyca2 is a |
|
|
2196 | nice program for that purpose). |
|
|
2197 | |
|
|
2198 | Then create a file with your private key (in PEM format, see |
|
|
2199 | L<AnyEvent::TLS>), followed by the certificate (also in PEM format). The |
|
|
2200 | file should then look like this: |
|
|
2201 | |
|
|
2202 | -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY----- |
|
|
2203 | ...header data |
|
|
2204 | ... lots of base64'y-stuff |
|
|
2205 | -----END RSA PRIVATE KEY----- |
|
|
2206 | |
|
|
2207 | -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- |
|
|
2208 | ... lots of base64'y-stuff |
|
|
2209 | -----END CERTIFICATE----- |
|
|
2210 | |
|
|
2211 | The important bits are the "PRIVATE KEY" and "CERTIFICATE" parts. Then |
|
|
2212 | specify this file as C<cert_file>: |
|
|
2213 | |
|
|
2214 | tcp_server undef, $port, sub { |
|
|
2215 | my ($fh) = @_; |
|
|
2216 | |
|
|
2217 | my $handle = new AnyEvent::Handle |
|
|
2218 | fh => $fh, |
|
|
2219 | tls => "accept", |
|
|
2220 | tls_ctx => { cert_file => "my-server-keycert.pem" }, |
|
|
2221 | ... |
|
|
2222 | |
|
|
2223 | When you have intermediate CA certificates that your clients might not |
|
|
2224 | know about, just append them to the C<cert_file>. |
|
|
2225 | |
|
|
2226 | =back |
|
|
2227 | |
|
|
2228 | |
|
|
2229 | =head1 SUBCLASSING AnyEvent::Handle |
|
|
2230 | |
|
|
2231 | In many cases, you might want to subclass AnyEvent::Handle. |
|
|
2232 | |
|
|
2233 | To make this easier, a given version of AnyEvent::Handle uses these |
|
|
2234 | conventions: |
|
|
2235 | |
|
|
2236 | =over 4 |
|
|
2237 | |
|
|
2238 | =item * all constructor arguments become object members. |
|
|
2239 | |
|
|
2240 | At least initially, when you pass a C<tls>-argument to the constructor it |
|
|
2241 | will end up in C<< $handle->{tls} >>. Those members might be changed or |
|
|
2242 | mutated later on (for example C<tls> will hold the TLS connection object). |
|
|
2243 | |
|
|
2244 | =item * other object member names are prefixed with an C<_>. |
|
|
2245 | |
|
|
2246 | All object members not explicitly documented (internal use) are prefixed |
|
|
2247 | with an underscore character, so the remaining non-C<_>-namespace is free |
|
|
2248 | for use for subclasses. |
|
|
2249 | |
|
|
2250 | =item * all members not documented here and not prefixed with an underscore |
|
|
2251 | are free to use in subclasses. |
|
|
2252 | |
|
|
2253 | Of course, new versions of AnyEvent::Handle may introduce more "public" |
|
|
2254 | member variables, but thats just life, at least it is documented. |
|
|
2255 | |
|
|
2256 | =back |
|
|
2257 | |
322 | =head1 AUTHOR |
2258 | =head1 AUTHOR |
323 | |
2259 | |
324 | Robin Redeker, C<< <elmex at ta-sa.org> >> |
2260 | Robin Redeker C<< <elmex at ta-sa.org> >>, Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>. |
325 | |
|
|
326 | =head1 BUGS |
|
|
327 | |
|
|
328 | Please report any bugs or feature requests to |
|
|
329 | C<bug-io-anyevent at rt.cpan.org>, or through the web interface at |
|
|
330 | L<http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=IO-AnyEvent>. |
|
|
331 | I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on |
|
|
332 | your bug as I make changes. |
|
|
333 | |
|
|
334 | =head1 SUPPORT |
|
|
335 | |
|
|
336 | You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command. |
|
|
337 | |
|
|
338 | perldoc AnyEvent::Handle |
|
|
339 | |
|
|
340 | You can also look for information at: |
|
|
341 | |
|
|
342 | =over 4 |
|
|
343 | |
|
|
344 | =item * AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation |
|
|
345 | |
|
|
346 | L<http://annocpan.org/dist/IO-AnyEvent> |
|
|
347 | |
|
|
348 | =item * CPAN Ratings |
|
|
349 | |
|
|
350 | L<http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/IO-AnyEvent> |
|
|
351 | |
|
|
352 | =item * RT: CPAN's request tracker |
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353 | |
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354 | L<http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=IO-AnyEvent> |
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355 | |
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356 | =item * Search CPAN |
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357 | |
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358 | L<http://search.cpan.org/dist/IO-AnyEvent> |
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359 | |
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360 | =back |
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361 | |
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362 | =head1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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363 | |
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364 | =head1 COPYRIGHT & LICENSE |
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365 | |
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366 | Copyright 2008 Robin Redeker, all rights reserved. |
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367 | |
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368 | This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it |
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369 | under the same terms as Perl itself. |
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370 | |
2261 | |
371 | =cut |
2262 | =cut |
372 | |
2263 | |
373 | 1; # End of AnyEvent::Handle |
2264 | 1; # End of AnyEvent::Handle |