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=head1 NAME |
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|
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Coro::Timer - simple timer package, independent of used event loops |
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|
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=head1 SYNOPSIS |
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|
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use Coro::Timer qw(sleep timeout); |
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# nothing exported by default |
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|
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sleep 10; |
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|
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=head1 DESCRIPTION |
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|
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This package implements a simple timer callback system which works |
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independent of the event loop mechanism used. If no event mechanism is |
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used, it is emulated. The C<Coro::Event> module overwrites functions with |
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versions better suited. |
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|
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This module is not subclassable. |
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|
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=over 4 |
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|
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=cut |
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|
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package Coro::Timer; |
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|
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BEGIN { eval { require warnings } && warnings->unimport ("uninitialized") } |
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|
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use Carp (); |
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use Exporter; |
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|
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use Coro (); |
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|
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BEGIN { |
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eval "use Time::HiRes 'time'"; |
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} |
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|
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$VERSION = 1.9; |
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@EXPORT_OK = qw(timeout sleep); |
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|
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=item $flag = timeout $seconds; |
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|
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This function will wake up the current coroutine after $seconds |
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seconds and sets $flag to true (it is false initially). If $flag goes |
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out of scope earlier nothing happens. This is used to implement the |
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C<timed_down>, C<timed_wait> etc. primitives. It is used like this: |
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|
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sub timed_wait { |
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my $timeout = Coro::Timer::timeout 60; |
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|
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while (condition false) { |
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schedule; # wait until woken up or timeout |
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return 0 if $timeout; # timed out |
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} |
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return 1; # condition satisfied |
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} |
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|
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=cut |
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|
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# deep magic, expecially the double indirection :(:( |
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sub timeout($) { |
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my $self = \\my $timer; |
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my $current = $Coro::current; |
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$timer = _new_timer(time + $_[0], sub { |
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undef $timer; # set flag |
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$current->ready; |
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}); |
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bless $self, 'Coro::timeout'; # weird quoting required by 5.9.3, it seems |
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} |
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|
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package Coro::timeout; |
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|
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sub bool { |
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!${${$_[0]}} |
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} |
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|
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sub DESTROY { |
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${${$_[0]}}->cancel if ${${$_[0]}}; |
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undef ${${$_[0]}}; # without this it leaks like hell. breaks the circular reference inside the closure |
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} |
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|
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use overload 'bool' => \&bool, '0+' => \&bool; |
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|
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package Coro::Timer; |
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|
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=item sleep $seconds |
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|
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This function works like the built-in sleep, except maybe more precise |
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and, most important, without blocking other coroutines. |
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|
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=cut |
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|
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sub sleep { |
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my $current = $Coro::current; |
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my $timer = _new_timer(time + $_[0], sub { $current->ready }); |
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Coro::schedule; |
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$timer->cancel; |
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} |
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|
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=item $timer = new Coro::Timer at/after => xxx, cb => \&yyy; |
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|
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Create a new timer. |
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|
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=cut |
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|
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sub new { |
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my $class = shift; |
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my %arg = @_; |
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|
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$arg{at} = time + delete $arg{after} if exists $arg{after}; |
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|
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_new_timer($arg{at}, $arg{cb}); |
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} |
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|
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my $timer; |
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my @timer; |
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|
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unless ($override) { |
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$override = 1; |
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*_new_timer = sub { |
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my $self = bless [$_[0], $_[1]], Coro::Timer::simple; |
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|
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# my version of rapid prototyping. guys, use a real event module! |
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@timer = sort { $a->[0] cmp $b->[0] } @timer, $self; |
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|
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unless ($timer) { |
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$timer = new Coro sub { |
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my $NOW = time; |
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while (@timer) { |
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Coro::cede; |
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if ($NOW >= $timer[0][0]) { |
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my $next = shift @timer; |
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$next->[1] and $next->[1]->(); |
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} else { |
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select undef, undef, undef, $timer[0][0] - $NOW; |
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$NOW = time; |
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} |
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}; |
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undef $timer; |
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}; |
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$timer->prio(Coro::PRIO_MIN); |
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$timer->ready; |
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} |
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|
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$self; |
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}; |
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|
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*Coro::Timer::simple::cancel = sub { |
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@{$_[0]} = (); |
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}; |
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} |
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|
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=item $timer->cancel |
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|
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Cancel the timer (the callback will no longer be called). This method MUST |
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be called to remove the timer from memory, otherwise it will never be |
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freed! |
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|
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=cut |
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|
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1; |
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|
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=back |
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|
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=head1 AUTHOR |
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|
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Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de> |
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http://home.schmorp.de/ |
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|
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=cut |
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