=head1 NAME Coro::Specific - manage coroutine-specific variables. =head1 SYNOPSIS use Coro::Specific; my $ref = new Coro::Specific; $$ref = 5; print $$ref; =head1 DESCRIPTION This module can be used to create variables (or better: references to them) that are specific to the currently executing coroutine. This module does not automatically load the Coro module (so the overhead will be small when no coroutines are used). A much faster method is to store extra keys into C<%$Coro::current> - all you have to do is to make sure that the key is unique (e.g. by prefixing it with your module name). You can even store data there before loading the L module - when Coro is loaded, the keys stored in C<%$Coro::current> are automatically attached to the coro thread executing the main program. You don't have to load C manually, it will be loaded automatically when you C and call the C constructor. =over 4 =cut package Coro::Specific; use common::sense; our $VERSION = 6.39; =item new Create a new coroutine-specific scalar and return a reference to it. The scalar is guarenteed to be "undef". Once such a scalar has been allocated you cannot deallocate it (yet), so allocate only when you must. =cut my $idx; sub new { my $var; tie $var, Coro::Specific::; \$var; } sub TIESCALAR { my $idx = $idx++; bless \$idx, $_[0]; } sub FETCH { $Coro::current->{_specific}[${$_[0]}]; } sub STORE { $Coro::current->{_specific}[${$_[0]}] = $_[1]; } #sub DESTROY { # push @idx, $$_[0]; #} 1; =back =head1 BUGS The actual coroutine specific values do not automatically get destroyed when the Coro::Specific object gets destroyed. =head1 AUTHOR Marc Lehmann http://home.schmorp.de/ =cut