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Revision 1.2 by root, Tue Jul 3 03:40:07 2001 UTC vs.
Revision 1.20 by root, Sat Jul 21 18:21:45 2001 UTC

1=head1 NAME 1=head1 NAME
2 2
3Coro - create an manage coroutines 3Coro - coroutine process abstraction
4 4
5=head1 SYNOPSIS 5=head1 SYNOPSIS
6 6
7 use Coro; 7 use Coro;
8 8
9 $new = new Coro sub { 9 async {
10 print "in coroutine, switching back\n"; 10 # some asynchronous thread of execution
11 $Coro::main->resume;
12 print "in coroutine again, switching back\n";
13 $Coro::main->resume;
14 }; 11 };
15 12
16 print "in main, switching to coroutine\n"; 13 # alternatively create an async process like this:
17 $new->resume; 14
18 print "back in main, switch to coroutine again\n"; 15 sub some_func : Coro {
19 $new->resume; 16 # some more async code
20 print "back in main\n"; 17 }
18
19 yield;
21 20
22=head1 DESCRIPTION 21=head1 DESCRIPTION
23 22
24This module implements coroutines. Coroutines, similar to continuations, 23This module collection manages coroutines. Coroutines are similar to
25allow you to run more than one "thread of execution" in parallel. Unlike 24Threads but don't run in parallel.
26threads this, only voluntary switching is used so locking problems are
27greatly reduced.
28 25
29Although this is the "main" module of the Coro family it provides only 26This module is still experimental, see the BUGS section below.
30low-level functionality. See L<Coro::Process> and related modules for a 27
31more useful process abstraction including scheduling. 28In this module, coroutines are defined as "callchain + lexical variables
29+ @_ + $_ + $@ + $^W), that is, a coroutine has it's own callchain, it's
30own set of lexicals and it's own set of perl's most important global
31variables.
32
33=cut
34
35package Coro;
36
37use Coro::State;
38
39use base Exporter;
40
41$VERSION = 0.10;
42
43@EXPORT = qw(async yield schedule terminate current);
44@EXPORT_OK = qw($current);
45
46{
47 my @async;
48
49 # this way of handling attributes simply is NOT scalable ;()
50 sub import {
51 Coro->export_to_level(1, @_);
52 my $old = *{(caller)[0]."::MODIFY_CODE_ATTRIBUTES"}{CODE};
53 *{(caller)[0]."::MODIFY_CODE_ATTRIBUTES"} = sub {
54 my ($package, $ref) = (shift, shift);
55 my @attrs;
56 for (@_) {
57 if ($_ eq "Coro") {
58 push @async, $ref;
59 } else {
60 push @attrs, $_;
61 }
62 }
63 return $old ? $old->($package, $ref, @attrs) : @attrs;
64 };
65 }
66
67 sub INIT {
68 &async(pop @async) while @async;
69 }
70}
71
72=item $main
73
74This coroutine represents the main program.
75
76=cut
77
78our $main = new Coro;
79
80=item $current (or as function: current)
81
82The current coroutine (the last coroutine switched to). The initial value is C<$main> (of course).
83
84=cut
85
86# maybe some other module used Coro::Specific before...
87if ($current) {
88 $main->{specific} = $current->{specific};
89}
90
91our $current = $main;
92
93sub current() { $current }
94
95=item $idle
96
97The coroutine to switch to when no other coroutine is running. The default
98implementation prints "FATAL: deadlock detected" and exits.
99
100=cut
101
102# should be done using priorities :(
103our $idle = new Coro sub {
104 print STDERR "FATAL: deadlock detected\n";
105 exit(51);
106};
107
108# we really need priorities...
109my @ready; # the ready queue. hehe, rather broken ;)
110
111# static methods. not really.
112
113=head2 STATIC METHODS
114
115Static methods are actually functions that operate on the current process only.
32 116
33=over 4 117=over 4
34 118
35=cut 119=item async { ... } [@args...]
36 120
37package Coro; 121Create a new asynchronous process and return it's process object
122(usually unused). When the sub returns the new process is automatically
123terminated.
38 124
39BEGIN { 125 # create a new coroutine that just prints its arguments
40 $VERSION = 0.01; 126 async {
127 print "@_\n";
128 } 1,2,3,4;
41 129
42 require XSLoader; 130The coderef you submit MUST NOT be a closure that refers to variables
43 XSLoader::load Coro, $VERSION; 131in an outer scope. This does NOT work. Pass arguments into it instead.
44}
45 132
46=item $main
47
48This coroutine represents the main program.
49
50=item $current
51
52The current coroutine (the last coroutine switched to). The initial value is C<$main> (of course).
53
54=cut 133=cut
55 134
56$main = $current = _newprocess { 135sub async(&@) {
57 # never being called 136 my $pid = new Coro @_;
58}; 137 $pid->ready;
138 $pid;
139}
59 140
60=item $error, $error_msg, $error_coro 141=item schedule
61 142
62This coroutine will be called on fatal errors. C<$error_msg> and 143Calls the scheduler. Please note that the current process will not be put
63C<$error_coro> return the error message and the error-causing coroutine, 144into the ready queue, so calling this function usually means you will
64respectively. 145never be called again.
65 146
66=cut 147=cut
67 148
68$error_msg = 149my $prev;
69$error_coro = undef;
70 150
71$error = _newprocess { 151sub schedule {
72 print STDERR "FATAL: $error_msg\nprogram aborted\n"; 152 # should be done using priorities :(
73 exit 250; 153 ($prev, $current) = ($current, shift @ready || $idle);
74}; 154 Coro::State::transfer($prev, $current);
155}
75 156
76=item $coro = new $coderef [, @args] 157=item yield
77 158
78Create a new coroutine and return it. The first C<resume> call to this 159Yield to other processes. This function puts the current process into the
79coroutine will start execution at the given coderef. If it returns it 160ready queue and calls C<schedule>.
80should return a coroutine to switch to. If, after returning, the coroutine
81is C<resume>d again it starts execution again at the givne coderef.
82 161
83=cut 162=cut
163
164sub yield {
165 $current->ready;
166 &schedule;
167}
168
169=item terminate
170
171Terminates the current process.
172
173Future versions of this function will allow result arguments.
174
175=cut
176
177sub terminate {
178 $current->{_results} = [@_];
179 &schedule;
180}
181
182=back
183
184# dynamic methods
185
186=head2 PROCESS METHODS
187
188These are the methods you can call on process objects.
189
190=over 4
191
192=item new Coro \&sub [, @args...]
193
194Create a new process and return it. When the sub returns the process
195automatically terminates. To start the process you must first put it into
196the ready queue by calling the ready method.
197
198The coderef you submit MUST NOT be a closure that refers to variables
199in an outer scope. This does NOT work. Pass arguments into it instead.
200
201=cut
202
203sub _newcoro {
204 terminate &{+shift};
205}
84 206
85sub new { 207sub new {
86 my $class = $_[0]; 208 my $class = shift;
87 my $proc = $_[1]; 209 bless {
88 bless _newprocess { 210 _coro_state => (new Coro::State $_[0] && \&_newcoro, @_),
89 do {
90 eval { &$proc->resume };
91 if ($@) {
92 ($error_msg, $error_coro) = ($@, $current);
93 $error->resume;
94 }
95 } while ();
96 }, $class; 211 }, $class;
97} 212}
98 213
99=item $coro->resume 214=item $process->ready
100 215
101Resume execution at the given coroutine. 216Put the current process into the ready queue.
102 217
103=cut 218=cut
104 219
105my $prev; 220sub ready {
106 221 push @ready, $_[0];
107sub resume {
108 $prev = $current; $current = $_[0];
109 _transfer($prev, $current);
110} 222}
223
224=back
225
226=cut
111 227
1121; 2281;
113 229
114=back 230=head1 BUGS/LIMITATIONS
115 231
116=head1 BUGS 232 - could be faster, especially when the core would introduce special
117 233 support for coroutines (like it does for threads).
118This module has not yet been extensively tested. 234 - there is still a memleak on coroutine termination that I could not
235 identify. Could be as small as a single SV.
236 - this module is not well-tested.
237 - if variables or arguments "disappear" (become undef) or become
238 corrupted please contact the author so he cen iron out the
239 remaining bugs.
240 - this module is not thread-safe. You must only ever use this module from
241 the same thread (this requirement might be loosened in the future to
242 allow per-thread schedulers, but Coro::State does not yet allow this).
119 243
120=head1 SEE ALSO 244=head1 SEE ALSO
121 245
122L<Coro::Process>, L<Coro::Signal>. 246L<Coro::Channel>, L<Coro::Cont>, L<Coro::Specific>, L<Coro::Semaphore>,
247L<Coro::Signal>, L<Coro::State>, L<Coro::Event>.
123 248
124=head1 AUTHOR 249=head1 AUTHOR
125 250
126 Marc Lehmann <pcg@goof.com> 251 Marc Lehmann <pcg@goof.com>
127 http://www.goof.com/pcg/marc/ 252 http://www.goof.com/pcg/marc/

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