ViewVC Help
View File | Revision Log | Show Annotations | Download File
/cvs/Coro/README
Revision: 1.30
Committed: Wed Jun 29 17:58:52 2011 UTC (12 years, 10 months ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: rel-6_0, rel-6_10, rel-6_09, rel-6_08, rel-6_07, rel-6_06, rel-6_05, rel-6_04, rel-6_03, rel-6_02, rel-6_01, rel-6_23
Changes since 1.29: +138 -32 lines
Log Message:
6.0

File Contents

# Content
1 NAME
2 Coro - the only real threads in perl
3
4 SYNOPSIS
5 use Coro;
6
7 async {
8 # some asynchronous thread of execution
9 print "2\n";
10 cede; # yield back to main
11 print "4\n";
12 };
13 print "1\n";
14 cede; # yield to coro
15 print "3\n";
16 cede; # and again
17
18 # use locking
19 my $lock = new Coro::Semaphore;
20 my $locked;
21
22 $lock->down;
23 $locked = 1;
24 $lock->up;
25
26 DESCRIPTION
27 For a tutorial-style introduction, please read the Coro::Intro manpage.
28 This manpage mainly contains reference information.
29
30 This module collection manages continuations in general, most often in
31 the form of cooperative threads (also called coros, or simply "coro" in
32 the documentation). They are similar to kernel threads but don't (in
33 general) run in parallel at the same time even on SMP machines. The
34 specific flavor of thread offered by this module also guarantees you
35 that it will not switch between threads unless necessary, at
36 easily-identified points in your program, so locking and parallel access
37 are rarely an issue, making thread programming much safer and easier
38 than using other thread models.
39
40 Unlike the so-called "Perl threads" (which are not actually real threads
41 but only the windows process emulation (see section of same name for
42 more details) ported to UNIX, and as such act as processes), Coro
43 provides a full shared address space, which makes communication between
44 threads very easy. And coro threads are fast, too: disabling the Windows
45 process emulation code in your perl and using Coro can easily result in
46 a two to four times speed increase for your programs. A parallel matrix
47 multiplication benchmark (very communication-intensive) runs over 300
48 times faster on a single core than perls pseudo-threads on a quad core
49 using all four cores.
50
51 Coro achieves that by supporting multiple running interpreters that
52 share data, which is especially useful to code pseudo-parallel processes
53 and for event-based programming, such as multiple HTTP-GET requests
54 running concurrently. See Coro::AnyEvent to learn more on how to
55 integrate Coro into an event-based environment.
56
57 In this module, a thread is defined as "callchain + lexical variables +
58 some package variables + C stack), that is, a thread has its own
59 callchain, its own set of lexicals and its own set of perls most
60 important global variables (see Coro::State for more configuration and
61 background info).
62
63 See also the "SEE ALSO" section at the end of this document - the Coro
64 module family is quite large.
65
66 CORO THREAD LIFE CYCLE
67 During the long and exciting (or not) life of a coro thread, it goes
68 through a number of states:
69
70 1. Creation
71 The first thing in the life of a coro thread is it's creation -
72 obviously. The typical way to create a thread is to call the "async
73 BLOCK" function:
74
75 async {
76 # thread code goes here
77 };
78
79 You can also pass arguments, which are put in @_:
80
81 async {
82 print $_[1]; # prints 2
83 } 1, 2, 3;
84
85 This creates a new coro thread and puts it into the ready queue,
86 meaning it will run as soon as the CPU is free for it.
87
88 "async" will return a Coro object - you can store this for future
89 reference or ignore it - a thread that is running, ready to run or
90 waiting for some event is alive on it's own.
91
92 Another way to create a thread is to call the "new" constructor with
93 a code-reference:
94
95 new Coro sub {
96 # thread code goes here
97 }, @optional_arguments;
98
99 This is quite similar to calling "async", but the important
100 difference is that the new thread is not put into the ready queue,
101 so the thread will not run until somebody puts it there. "async" is,
102 therefore, identical to this sequence:
103
104 my $coro = new Coro sub {
105 # thread code goes here
106 };
107 $coro->ready;
108 return $coro;
109
110 2. Startup
111 When a new coro thread is created, only a copy of the code reference
112 and the arguments are stored, no extra memory for stacks and so on
113 is allocated, keeping the coro thread in a low-memory state.
114
115 Only when it actually starts executing will all the resources be
116 finally allocated.
117
118 The optional arguments specified at coro creation are available in
119 @_, similar to function calls.
120
121 3. Running / Blocking
122 A lot can happen after the coro thread has started running. Quite
123 usually, it will not run to the end in one go (because you could use
124 a function instead), but it will give up the CPU regularly because
125 it waits for external events.
126
127 As long as a coro thread runs, its Coro object is available in the
128 global variable $Coro::current.
129
130 The low-level way to give up the CPU is to call the scheduler, which
131 selects a new coro thread to run:
132
133 Coro::schedule;
134
135 Since running threads are not in the ready queue, calling the
136 scheduler without doing anything else will block the coro thread
137 forever - you need to arrange either for the coro to put woken up
138 (readied) by some other event or some other thread, or you can put
139 it into the ready queue before scheduling:
140
141 # this is exactly what Coro::cede does
142 $Coro::current->ready;
143 Coro::schedule;
144
145 All the higher-level synchronisation methods (Coro::Semaphore,
146 Coro::rouse_*...) are actually implemented via "->ready" and
147 "Coro::schedule".
148
149 While the coro thread is running it also might get assigned a
150 C-level thread, or the C-level thread might be unassigned from it,
151 as the Coro runtime wishes. A C-level thread needs to be assigned
152 when your perl thread calls into some C-level function and that
153 function in turn calls perl and perl then wants to switch
154 coroutines. This happens most often when you run an event loop and
155 block in the callback, or when perl itself calls some function such
156 as "AUTOLOAD" or methods via the "tie" mechanism.
157
158 4. Termination
159 Many threads actually terminate after some time. There are a number
160 of ways to terminate a coro thread, the simplest is returning from
161 the top-level code reference:
162
163 async {
164 # after returning from here, the coro thread is terminated
165 };
166
167 async {
168 return if 0.5 < rand; # terminate a little earlier, maybe
169 print "got a chance to print this\n";
170 # or here
171 };
172
173 Any values returned from the coroutine can be recovered using
174 "->join":
175
176 my $coro = async {
177 "hello, world\n" # return a string
178 };
179
180 my $hello_world = $coro->join;
181
182 print $hello_world;
183
184 Another way to terminate is to call "Coro::terminate", which at any
185 subroutine call nesting level:
186
187 async {
188 Coro::terminate "return value 1", "return value 2";
189 };
190
191 And yet another way is to "->cancel" (or "->safe_cancel") the coro
192 thread from another thread:
193
194 my $coro = async {
195 exit 1;
196 };
197
198 $coro->cancel; # also accepts values for ->join to retrieve
199
200 Cancellation *can* be dangerous - it's a bit like calling "exit"
201 without actually exiting, and might leave C libraries and XS modules
202 in a weird state. Unlike other thread implementations, however, Coro
203 is exceptionally safe with regards to cancellation, as perl will
204 always be in a consistent state, and for those cases where you want
205 to do truly marvellous things with your coro while it is being
206 cancelled - that is, make sure all cleanup code is executed from the
207 thread being cancelled - there is even a "->safe_cancel" method.
208
209 So, cancelling a thread that runs in an XS event loop might not be
210 the best idea, but any other combination that deals with perl only
211 (cancelling when a thread is in a "tie" method or an "AUTOLOAD" for
212 example) is safe.
213
214 Lastly, a coro thread object that isn't referenced is "->cancel"'ed
215 automatically - just like other objects in Perl. This is not such a
216 common case, however - a running thread is referencedy b
217 $Coro::current, a thread ready to run is referenced by the ready
218 queue, a thread waiting on a lock or semaphore is referenced by
219 being in some wait list and so on. But a thread that isn't in any of
220 those queues gets cancelled:
221
222 async {
223 schedule; # cede to other coros, don't go into the ready queue
224 };
225
226 cede;
227 # now the async above is destroyed, as it is not referenced by anything.
228
229 5. Cleanup
230 Threads will allocate various resources. Most but not all will be
231 returned when a thread terminates, during clean-up.
232
233 Cleanup is quite similar to throwing an uncaught exception: perl
234 will work it's way up through all subroutine calls and blocks. On
235 it's way, it will release all "my" variables, undo all "local"'s and
236 free any other resources truly local to the thread.
237
238 So, a common way to free resources is to keep them referenced only
239 by my variables:
240
241 async {
242 my $big_cache = new Cache ...;
243 };
244
245 If there are no other references, then the $big_cache object will be
246 freed when the thread terminates, regardless of how it does so.
247
248 What it does "NOT" do is unlock any Coro::Semaphores or similar
249 resources, but that's where the "guard" methods come in handy:
250
251 my $sem = new Coro::Semaphore;
252
253 async {
254 my $lock_guard = $sem->guard;
255 # if we reutrn, or die or get cancelled, here,
256 # then the semaphore will be "up"ed.
257 };
258
259 The "Guard::guard" function comes in handy for any custom cleanup
260 you might want to do (but you cannot switch to other coroutines form
261 those code blocks):
262
263 async {
264 my $window = new Gtk2::Window "toplevel";
265 # The window will not be cleaned up automatically, even when $window
266 # gets freed, so use a guard to ensure it's destruction
267 # in case of an error:
268 my $window_guard = Guard::guard { $window->destroy };
269
270 # we are safe here
271 };
272
273 Last not least, "local" can often be handy, too, e.g. when
274 temporarily replacing the coro thread description:
275
276 sub myfunction {
277 local $Coro::current->{desc} = "inside myfunction(@_)";
278
279 # if we return or die here, the description will be restored
280 }
281
282 6. Viva La Zombie Muerte
283 Even after a thread has terminated and cleaned up its resources, the
284 Coro object still is there and stores the return values of the
285 thread.
286
287 The means the Coro object gets freed automatically when the thread
288 has terminated and cleaned up and there arenot other references.
289
290 If there are, the Coro object will stay around, and you can call
291 "->join" as many times as you wish to retrieve the result values:
292
293 async {
294 print "hi\n";
295 1
296 };
297
298 # run the async above, and free everything before returning
299 # from Coro::cede:
300 Coro::cede;
301
302 {
303 my $coro = async {
304 print "hi\n";
305 1
306 };
307
308 # run the async above, and clean up, but do not free the coro
309 # object:
310 Coro::cede;
311
312 # optionally retrieve the result values
313 my @results = $coro->join;
314
315 # now $coro goes out of scope, and presumably gets freed
316 };
317
318 GLOBAL VARIABLES
319 $Coro::main
320 This variable stores the Coro object that represents the main
321 program. While you cna "ready" it and do most other things you can
322 do to coro, it is mainly useful to compare again $Coro::current, to
323 see whether you are running in the main program or not.
324
325 $Coro::current
326 The Coro object representing the current coro (the last coro that
327 the Coro scheduler switched to). The initial value is $Coro::main
328 (of course).
329
330 This variable is strictly *read-only*. You can take copies of the
331 value stored in it and use it as any other Coro object, but you must
332 not otherwise modify the variable itself.
333
334 $Coro::idle
335 This variable is mainly useful to integrate Coro into event loops.
336 It is usually better to rely on Coro::AnyEvent or Coro::EV, as this
337 is pretty low-level functionality.
338
339 This variable stores a Coro object that is put into the ready queue
340 when there are no other ready threads (without invoking any ready
341 hooks).
342
343 The default implementation dies with "FATAL: deadlock detected.",
344 followed by a thread listing, because the program has no other way
345 to continue.
346
347 This hook is overwritten by modules such as "Coro::EV" and
348 "Coro::AnyEvent" to wait on an external event that hopefully wakes
349 up a coro so the scheduler can run it.
350
351 See Coro::EV or Coro::AnyEvent for examples of using this technique.
352
353 SIMPLE CORO CREATION
354 async { ... } [@args...]
355 Create a new coro and return its Coro object (usually unused). The
356 coro will be put into the ready queue, so it will start running
357 automatically on the next scheduler run.
358
359 The first argument is a codeblock/closure that should be executed in
360 the coro. When it returns argument returns the coro is automatically
361 terminated.
362
363 The remaining arguments are passed as arguments to the closure.
364
365 See the "Coro::State::new" constructor for info about the coro
366 environment in which coro are executed.
367
368 Calling "exit" in a coro will do the same as calling exit outside
369 the coro. Likewise, when the coro dies, the program will exit, just
370 as it would in the main program.
371
372 If you do not want that, you can provide a default "die" handler, or
373 simply avoid dieing (by use of "eval").
374
375 Example: Create a new coro that just prints its arguments.
376
377 async {
378 print "@_\n";
379 } 1,2,3,4;
380
381 async_pool { ... } [@args...]
382 Similar to "async", but uses a coro pool, so you should not call
383 terminate or join on it (although you are allowed to), and you get a
384 coro that might have executed other code already (which can be good
385 or bad :).
386
387 On the plus side, this function is about twice as fast as creating
388 (and destroying) a completely new coro, so if you need a lot of
389 generic coros in quick successsion, use "async_pool", not "async".
390
391 The code block is executed in an "eval" context and a warning will
392 be issued in case of an exception instead of terminating the
393 program, as "async" does. As the coro is being reused, stuff like
394 "on_destroy" will not work in the expected way, unless you call
395 terminate or cancel, which somehow defeats the purpose of pooling
396 (but is fine in the exceptional case).
397
398 The priority will be reset to 0 after each run, tracing will be
399 disabled, the description will be reset and the default output
400 filehandle gets restored, so you can change all these. Otherwise the
401 coro will be re-used "as-is": most notably if you change other
402 per-coro global stuff such as $/ you *must needs* revert that
403 change, which is most simply done by using local as in: "local $/".
404
405 The idle pool size is limited to 8 idle coros (this can be adjusted
406 by changing $Coro::POOL_SIZE), but there can be as many non-idle
407 coros as required.
408
409 If you are concerned about pooled coros growing a lot because a
410 single "async_pool" used a lot of stackspace you can e.g.
411 "async_pool { terminate }" once per second or so to slowly replenish
412 the pool. In addition to that, when the stacks used by a handler
413 grows larger than 32kb (adjustable via $Coro::POOL_RSS) it will also
414 be destroyed.
415
416 STATIC METHODS
417 Static methods are actually functions that implicitly operate on the
418 current coro.
419
420 schedule
421 Calls the scheduler. The scheduler will find the next coro that is
422 to be run from the ready queue and switches to it. The next coro to
423 be run is simply the one with the highest priority that is longest
424 in its ready queue. If there is no coro ready, it will call the
425 $Coro::idle hook.
426
427 Please note that the current coro will *not* be put into the ready
428 queue, so calling this function usually means you will never be
429 called again unless something else (e.g. an event handler) calls
430 "->ready", thus waking you up.
431
432 This makes "schedule" *the* generic method to use to block the
433 current coro and wait for events: first you remember the current
434 coro in a variable, then arrange for some callback of yours to call
435 "->ready" on that once some event happens, and last you call
436 "schedule" to put yourself to sleep. Note that a lot of things can
437 wake your coro up, so you need to check whether the event indeed
438 happened, e.g. by storing the status in a variable.
439
440 See HOW TO WAIT FOR A CALLBACK, below, for some ways to wait for
441 callbacks.
442
443 cede
444 "Cede" to other coros. This function puts the current coro into the
445 ready queue and calls "schedule", which has the effect of giving up
446 the current "timeslice" to other coros of the same or higher
447 priority. Once your coro gets its turn again it will automatically
448 be resumed.
449
450 This function is often called "yield" in other languages.
451
452 Coro::cede_notself
453 Works like cede, but is not exported by default and will cede to
454 *any* coro, regardless of priority. This is useful sometimes to
455 ensure progress is made.
456
457 terminate [arg...]
458 Terminates the current coro with the given status values (see
459 cancel). The values will not be copied, but referenced directly.
460
461 Coro::on_enter BLOCK, Coro::on_leave BLOCK
462 These function install enter and leave winders in the current scope.
463 The enter block will be executed when on_enter is called and
464 whenever the current coro is re-entered by the scheduler, while the
465 leave block is executed whenever the current coro is blocked by the
466 scheduler, and also when the containing scope is exited (by whatever
467 means, be it exit, die, last etc.).
468
469 *Neither invoking the scheduler, nor exceptions, are allowed within
470 those BLOCKs*. That means: do not even think about calling "die"
471 without an eval, and do not even think of entering the scheduler in
472 any way.
473
474 Since both BLOCKs are tied to the current scope, they will
475 automatically be removed when the current scope exits.
476
477 These functions implement the same concept as "dynamic-wind" in
478 scheme does, and are useful when you want to localise some resource
479 to a specific coro.
480
481 They slow down thread switching considerably for coros that use them
482 (about 40% for a BLOCK with a single assignment, so thread switching
483 is still reasonably fast if the handlers are fast).
484
485 These functions are best understood by an example: The following
486 function will change the current timezone to
487 "Antarctica/South_Pole", which requires a call to "tzset", but by
488 using "on_enter" and "on_leave", which remember/change the current
489 timezone and restore the previous value, respectively, the timezone
490 is only changed for the coro that installed those handlers.
491
492 use POSIX qw(tzset);
493
494 async {
495 my $old_tz; # store outside TZ value here
496
497 Coro::on_enter {
498 $old_tz = $ENV{TZ}; # remember the old value
499
500 $ENV{TZ} = "Antarctica/South_Pole";
501 tzset; # enable new value
502 };
503
504 Coro::on_leave {
505 $ENV{TZ} = $old_tz;
506 tzset; # restore old value
507 };
508
509 # at this place, the timezone is Antarctica/South_Pole,
510 # without disturbing the TZ of any other coro.
511 };
512
513 This can be used to localise about any resource (locale, uid,
514 current working directory etc.) to a block, despite the existance of
515 other coros.
516
517 Another interesting example implements time-sliced multitasking
518 using interval timers (this could obviously be optimised, but does
519 the job):
520
521 # "timeslice" the given block
522 sub timeslice(&) {
523 use Time::HiRes ();
524
525 Coro::on_enter {
526 # on entering the thread, we set an VTALRM handler to cede
527 $SIG{VTALRM} = sub { cede };
528 # and then start the interval timer
529 Time::HiRes::setitimer &Time::HiRes::ITIMER_VIRTUAL, 0.01, 0.01;
530 };
531 Coro::on_leave {
532 # on leaving the thread, we stop the interval timer again
533 Time::HiRes::setitimer &Time::HiRes::ITIMER_VIRTUAL, 0, 0;
534 };
535
536 &{+shift};
537 }
538
539 # use like this:
540 timeslice {
541 # The following is an endless loop that would normally
542 # monopolise the process. Since it runs in a timesliced
543 # environment, it will regularly cede to other threads.
544 while () { }
545 };
546
547 killall
548 Kills/terminates/cancels all coros except the currently running one.
549
550 Note that while this will try to free some of the main interpreter
551 resources if the calling coro isn't the main coro, but one cannot
552 free all of them, so if a coro that is not the main coro calls this
553 function, there will be some one-time resource leak.
554
555 CORO OBJECT METHODS
556 These are the methods you can call on coro objects (or to create them).
557
558 new Coro \&sub [, @args...]
559 Create a new coro and return it. When the sub returns, the coro
560 automatically terminates as if "terminate" with the returned values
561 were called. To make the coro run you must first put it into the
562 ready queue by calling the ready method.
563
564 See "async" and "Coro::State::new" for additional info about the
565 coro environment.
566
567 $success = $coro->ready
568 Put the given coro into the end of its ready queue (there is one
569 queue for each priority) and return true. If the coro is already in
570 the ready queue, do nothing and return false.
571
572 This ensures that the scheduler will resume this coro automatically
573 once all the coro of higher priority and all coro of the same
574 priority that were put into the ready queue earlier have been
575 resumed.
576
577 $coro->suspend
578 Suspends the specified coro. A suspended coro works just like any
579 other coro, except that the scheduler will not select a suspended
580 coro for execution.
581
582 Suspending a coro can be useful when you want to keep the coro from
583 running, but you don't want to destroy it, or when you want to
584 temporarily freeze a coro (e.g. for debugging) to resume it later.
585
586 A scenario for the former would be to suspend all (other) coros
587 after a fork and keep them alive, so their destructors aren't
588 called, but new coros can be created.
589
590 $coro->resume
591 If the specified coro was suspended, it will be resumed. Note that
592 when the coro was in the ready queue when it was suspended, it might
593 have been unreadied by the scheduler, so an activation might have
594 been lost.
595
596 To avoid this, it is best to put a suspended coro into the ready
597 queue unconditionally, as every synchronisation mechanism must
598 protect itself against spurious wakeups, and the one in the Coro
599 family certainly do that.
600
601 $state->is_new
602 Returns true iff this Coro object is "new", i.e. has never been run
603 yet. Those states basically consist of only the code reference to
604 call and the arguments, but consumes very little other resources.
605 New states will automatically get assigned a perl interpreter when
606 they are transfered to.
607
608 $state->is_zombie
609 Returns true iff the Coro object has been cancelled, i.e. it's
610 resources freed because they were "cancel"'ed, "terminate"'d,
611 "safe_cancel"'ed or simply went out of scope.
612
613 The name "zombie" stems from UNIX culture, where a process that has
614 exited and only stores and exit status and no other resources is
615 called a "zombie".
616
617 $is_ready = $coro->is_ready
618 Returns true iff the Coro object is in the ready queue. Unless the
619 Coro object gets destroyed, it will eventually be scheduled by the
620 scheduler.
621
622 $is_running = $coro->is_running
623 Returns true iff the Coro object is currently running. Only one Coro
624 object can ever be in the running state (but it currently is
625 possible to have multiple running Coro::States).
626
627 $is_suspended = $coro->is_suspended
628 Returns true iff this Coro object has been suspended. Suspended
629 Coros will not ever be scheduled.
630
631 $coro->cancel (arg...)
632 Terminates the given Coro thread and makes it return the given
633 arguments as status (default: an empty list). Never returns if the
634 Coro is the current Coro.
635
636 This is a rather brutal way to free a coro, with some limitations -
637 if the thread is inside a C callback that doesn't expect to be
638 canceled, bad things can happen, or if the cancelled thread insists
639 on running complicated cleanup handlers that rely on its thread
640 context, things will not work.
641
642 Any cleanup code being run (e.g. from "guard" blocks) will be run
643 without a thread context, and is not allowed to switch to other
644 threads. On the plus side, "->cancel" will always clean up the
645 thread, no matter what. If your cleanup code is complex or you want
646 to avoid cancelling a C-thread that doesn't know how to clean up
647 itself, it can be better to "->throw" an exception, or use
648 "->safe_cancel".
649
650 The arguments to "->cancel" are not copied, but instead will be
651 referenced directly (e.g. if you pass $var and after the call change
652 that variable, then you might change the return values passed to
653 e.g. "join", so don't do that).
654
655 The resources of the Coro are usually freed (or destructed) before
656 this call returns, but this can be delayed for an indefinite amount
657 of time, as in some cases the manager thread has to run first to
658 actually destruct the Coro object.
659
660 $coro->safe_cancel ($arg...)
661 Works mostly like "->cancel", but is inherently "safer", and
662 consequently, can fail with an exception in cases the thread is not
663 in a cancellable state.
664
665 This method works a bit like throwing an exception that cannot be
666 caught - specifically, it will clean up the thread from within
667 itself, so all cleanup handlers (e.g. "guard" blocks) are run with
668 full thread context and can block if they wish. The downside is that
669 there is no guarantee that the thread can be cancelled when you call
670 this method, and therefore, it might fail. It is also considerably
671 slower than "cancel" or "terminate".
672
673 A thread is in a safe-cancellable state if it either hasn't been run
674 yet, or it has no C context attached and is inside an SLF function.
675
676 The latter two basically mean that the thread isn't currently inside
677 a perl callback called from some C function (usually via some XS
678 modules) and isn't currently executing inside some C function itself
679 (via Coro's XS API).
680
681 This call returns true when it could cancel the thread, or croaks
682 with an error otherwise (i.e. it either returns true or doesn't
683 return at all).
684
685 Why the weird interface? Well, there are two common models on how
686 and when to cancel things. In the first, you have the expectation
687 that your coro thread can be cancelled when you want to cancel it -
688 if the thread isn't cancellable, this would be a bug somewhere, so
689 "->safe_cancel" croaks to notify of the bug.
690
691 In the second model you sometimes want to ask nicely to cancel a
692 thread, but if it's not a good time, well, then don't cancel. This
693 can be done relatively easy like this:
694
695 if (! eval { $coro->safe_cancel }) {
696 warn "unable to cancel thread: $@";
697 }
698
699 However, what you never should do is first try to cancel "safely"
700 and if that fails, cancel the "hard" way with "->cancel". That makes
701 no sense: either you rely on being able to execute cleanup code in
702 your thread context, or you don't. If you do, then "->safe_cancel"
703 is the only way, and if you don't, then "->cancel" is always faster
704 and more direct.
705
706 $coro->schedule_to
707 Puts the current coro to sleep (like "Coro::schedule"), but instead
708 of continuing with the next coro from the ready queue, always switch
709 to the given coro object (regardless of priority etc.). The
710 readyness state of that coro isn't changed.
711
712 This is an advanced method for special cases - I'd love to hear
713 about any uses for this one.
714
715 $coro->cede_to
716 Like "schedule_to", but puts the current coro into the ready queue.
717 This has the effect of temporarily switching to the given coro, and
718 continuing some time later.
719
720 This is an advanced method for special cases - I'd love to hear
721 about any uses for this one.
722
723 $coro->throw ([$scalar])
724 If $throw is specified and defined, it will be thrown as an
725 exception inside the coro at the next convenient point in time.
726 Otherwise clears the exception object.
727
728 Coro will check for the exception each time a schedule-like-function
729 returns, i.e. after each "schedule", "cede",
730 "Coro::Semaphore->down", "Coro::Handle->readable" and so on. Most of
731 those functions (all that are part of Coro itself) detect this case
732 and return early in case an exception is pending.
733
734 The exception object will be thrown "as is" with the specified
735 scalar in $@, i.e. if it is a string, no line number or newline will
736 be appended (unlike with "die").
737
738 This can be used as a softer means than either "cancel" or
739 "safe_cancel "to ask a coro to end itself, although there is no
740 guarantee that the exception will lead to termination, and if the
741 exception isn't caught it might well end the whole program.
742
743 You might also think of "throw" as being the moral equivalent of
744 "kill"ing a coro with a signal (in this case, a scalar).
745
746 $coro->join
747 Wait until the coro terminates and return any values given to the
748 "terminate" or "cancel" functions. "join" can be called concurrently
749 from multiple threads, and all will be resumed and given the status
750 return once the $coro terminates.
751
752 $coro->on_destroy (\&cb)
753 Registers a callback that is called when this coro thread gets
754 destroyed, that is, after it's resources have been freed but before
755 it is joined. The callback gets passed the terminate/cancel
756 arguments, if any, and *must not* die, under any circumstances.
757
758 There can be any number of "on_destroy" callbacks per coro, and
759 there is no way currently to remove a callback once added.
760
761 $oldprio = $coro->prio ($newprio)
762 Sets (or gets, if the argument is missing) the priority of the coro
763 thread. Higher priority coro get run before lower priority coros.
764 Priorities are small signed integers (currently -4 .. +3), that you
765 can refer to using PRIO_xxx constants (use the import tag :prio to
766 get then):
767
768 PRIO_MAX > PRIO_HIGH > PRIO_NORMAL > PRIO_LOW > PRIO_IDLE > PRIO_MIN
769 3 > 1 > 0 > -1 > -3 > -4
770
771 # set priority to HIGH
772 current->prio (PRIO_HIGH);
773
774 The idle coro thread ($Coro::idle) always has a lower priority than
775 any existing coro.
776
777 Changing the priority of the current coro will take effect
778 immediately, but changing the priority of a coro in the ready queue
779 (but not running) will only take effect after the next schedule (of
780 that coro). This is a bug that will be fixed in some future version.
781
782 $newprio = $coro->nice ($change)
783 Similar to "prio", but subtract the given value from the priority
784 (i.e. higher values mean lower priority, just as in UNIX's nice
785 command).
786
787 $olddesc = $coro->desc ($newdesc)
788 Sets (or gets in case the argument is missing) the description for
789 this coro thread. This is just a free-form string you can associate
790 with a coro.
791
792 This method simply sets the "$coro->{desc}" member to the given
793 string. You can modify this member directly if you wish, and in
794 fact, this is often preferred to indicate major processing states
795 that cna then be seen for example in a Coro::Debug session:
796
797 sub my_long_function {
798 local $Coro::current->{desc} = "now in my_long_function";
799 ...
800 $Coro::current->{desc} = "my_long_function: phase 1";
801 ...
802 $Coro::current->{desc} = "my_long_function: phase 2";
803 ...
804 }
805
806 GLOBAL FUNCTIONS
807 Coro::nready
808 Returns the number of coro that are currently in the ready state,
809 i.e. that can be switched to by calling "schedule" directory or
810 indirectly. The value 0 means that the only runnable coro is the
811 currently running one, so "cede" would have no effect, and
812 "schedule" would cause a deadlock unless there is an idle handler
813 that wakes up some coro.
814
815 my $guard = Coro::guard { ... }
816 This function still exists, but is deprecated. Please use the
817 "Guard::guard" function instead.
818
819 unblock_sub { ... }
820 This utility function takes a BLOCK or code reference and "unblocks"
821 it, returning a new coderef. Unblocking means that calling the new
822 coderef will return immediately without blocking, returning nothing,
823 while the original code ref will be called (with parameters) from
824 within another coro.
825
826 The reason this function exists is that many event libraries (such
827 as the venerable Event module) are not thread-safe (a weaker form of
828 reentrancy). This means you must not block within event callbacks,
829 otherwise you might suffer from crashes or worse. The only event
830 library currently known that is safe to use without "unblock_sub" is
831 EV (but you might still run into deadlocks if all event loops are
832 blocked).
833
834 Coro will try to catch you when you block in the event loop
835 ("FATAL:$Coro::IDLE blocked itself"), but this is just best effort
836 and only works when you do not run your own event loop.
837
838 This function allows your callbacks to block by executing them in
839 another coro where it is safe to block. One example where blocking
840 is handy is when you use the Coro::AIO functions to save results to
841 disk, for example.
842
843 In short: simply use "unblock_sub { ... }" instead of "sub { ... }"
844 when creating event callbacks that want to block.
845
846 If your handler does not plan to block (e.g. simply sends a message
847 to another coro, or puts some other coro into the ready queue),
848 there is no reason to use "unblock_sub".
849
850 Note that you also need to use "unblock_sub" for any other callbacks
851 that are indirectly executed by any C-based event loop. For example,
852 when you use a module that uses AnyEvent (and you use
853 Coro::AnyEvent) and it provides callbacks that are the result of
854 some event callback, then you must not block either, or use
855 "unblock_sub".
856
857 $cb = rouse_cb
858 Create and return a "rouse callback". That's a code reference that,
859 when called, will remember a copy of its arguments and notify the
860 owner coro of the callback.
861
862 See the next function.
863
864 @args = rouse_wait [$cb]
865 Wait for the specified rouse callback (or the last one that was
866 created in this coro).
867
868 As soon as the callback is invoked (or when the callback was invoked
869 before "rouse_wait"), it will return the arguments originally passed
870 to the rouse callback. In scalar context, that means you get the
871 *last* argument, just as if "rouse_wait" had a "return ($a1, $a2,
872 $a3...)" statement at the end.
873
874 See the section HOW TO WAIT FOR A CALLBACK for an actual usage
875 example.
876
877 HOW TO WAIT FOR A CALLBACK
878 It is very common for a coro to wait for some callback to be called.
879 This occurs naturally when you use coro in an otherwise event-based
880 program, or when you use event-based libraries.
881
882 These typically register a callback for some event, and call that
883 callback when the event occured. In a coro, however, you typically want
884 to just wait for the event, simplyifying things.
885
886 For example "AnyEvent->child" registers a callback to be called when a
887 specific child has exited:
888
889 my $child_watcher = AnyEvent->child (pid => $pid, cb => sub { ... });
890
891 But from within a coro, you often just want to write this:
892
893 my $status = wait_for_child $pid;
894
895 Coro offers two functions specifically designed to make this easy,
896 "Coro::rouse_cb" and "Coro::rouse_wait".
897
898 The first function, "rouse_cb", generates and returns a callback that,
899 when invoked, will save its arguments and notify the coro that created
900 the callback.
901
902 The second function, "rouse_wait", waits for the callback to be called
903 (by calling "schedule" to go to sleep) and returns the arguments
904 originally passed to the callback.
905
906 Using these functions, it becomes easy to write the "wait_for_child"
907 function mentioned above:
908
909 sub wait_for_child($) {
910 my ($pid) = @_;
911
912 my $watcher = AnyEvent->child (pid => $pid, cb => Coro::rouse_cb);
913
914 my ($rpid, $rstatus) = Coro::rouse_wait;
915 $rstatus
916 }
917
918 In the case where "rouse_cb" and "rouse_wait" are not flexible enough,
919 you can roll your own, using "schedule":
920
921 sub wait_for_child($) {
922 my ($pid) = @_;
923
924 # store the current coro in $current,
925 # and provide result variables for the closure passed to ->child
926 my $current = $Coro::current;
927 my ($done, $rstatus);
928
929 # pass a closure to ->child
930 my $watcher = AnyEvent->child (pid => $pid, cb => sub {
931 $rstatus = $_[1]; # remember rstatus
932 $done = 1; # mark $rstatus as valud
933 });
934
935 # wait until the closure has been called
936 schedule while !$done;
937
938 $rstatus
939 }
940
941 BUGS/LIMITATIONS
942 fork with pthread backend
943 When Coro is compiled using the pthread backend (which isn't
944 recommended but required on many BSDs as their libcs are completely
945 broken), then coro will not survive a fork. There is no known
946 workaround except to fix your libc and use a saner backend.
947
948 perl process emulation ("threads")
949 This module is not perl-pseudo-thread-safe. You should only ever use
950 this module from the first thread (this requirement might be removed
951 in the future to allow per-thread schedulers, but Coro::State does
952 not yet allow this). I recommend disabling thread support and using
953 processes, as having the windows process emulation enabled under
954 unix roughly halves perl performance, even when not used.
955
956 Attempts to use threads created in another emulated process will
957 crash ("cleanly", with a null pointer exception).
958
959 coro switching is not signal safe
960 You must not switch to another coro from within a signal handler
961 (only relevant with %SIG - most event libraries provide safe
962 signals), *unless* you are sure you are not interrupting a Coro
963 function.
964
965 That means you *MUST NOT* call any function that might "block" the
966 current coro - "cede", "schedule" "Coro::Semaphore->down" or
967 anything that calls those. Everything else, including calling
968 "ready", works.
969
970 WINDOWS PROCESS EMULATION
971 A great many people seem to be confused about ithreads (for example,
972 Chip Salzenberg called me unintelligent, incapable, stupid and gullible,
973 while in the same mail making rather confused statements about perl
974 ithreads (for example, that memory or files would be shared), showing
975 his lack of understanding of this area - if it is hard to understand for
976 Chip, it is probably not obvious to everybody).
977
978 What follows is an ultra-condensed version of my talk about threads in
979 scripting languages given on the perl workshop 2009:
980
981 The so-called "ithreads" were originally implemented for two reasons:
982 first, to (badly) emulate unix processes on native win32 perls, and
983 secondly, to replace the older, real thread model ("5.005-threads").
984
985 It does that by using threads instead of OS processes. The difference
986 between processes and threads is that threads share memory (and other
987 state, such as files) between threads within a single process, while
988 processes do not share anything (at least not semantically). That means
989 that modifications done by one thread are seen by others, while
990 modifications by one process are not seen by other processes.
991
992 The "ithreads" work exactly like that: when creating a new ithreads
993 process, all state is copied (memory is copied physically, files and
994 code is copied logically). Afterwards, it isolates all modifications. On
995 UNIX, the same behaviour can be achieved by using operating system
996 processes, except that UNIX typically uses hardware built into the
997 system to do this efficiently, while the windows process emulation
998 emulates this hardware in software (rather efficiently, but of course it
999 is still much slower than dedicated hardware).
1000
1001 As mentioned before, loading code, modifying code, modifying data
1002 structures and so on is only visible in the ithreads process doing the
1003 modification, not in other ithread processes within the same OS process.
1004
1005 This is why "ithreads" do not implement threads for perl at all, only
1006 processes. What makes it so bad is that on non-windows platforms, you
1007 can actually take advantage of custom hardware for this purpose (as
1008 evidenced by the forks module, which gives you the (i-) threads API,
1009 just much faster).
1010
1011 Sharing data is in the i-threads model is done by transfering data
1012 structures between threads using copying semantics, which is very slow -
1013 shared data simply does not exist. Benchmarks using i-threads which are
1014 communication-intensive show extremely bad behaviour with i-threads (in
1015 fact, so bad that Coro, which cannot take direct advantage of multiple
1016 CPUs, is often orders of magnitude faster because it shares data using
1017 real threads, refer to my talk for details).
1018
1019 As summary, i-threads *use* threads to implement processes, while the
1020 compatible forks module *uses* processes to emulate, uhm, processes.
1021 I-threads slow down every perl program when enabled, and outside of
1022 windows, serve no (or little) practical purpose, but disadvantages every
1023 single-threaded Perl program.
1024
1025 This is the reason that I try to avoid the name "ithreads", as it is
1026 misleading as it implies that it implements some kind of thread model
1027 for perl, and prefer the name "windows process emulation", which
1028 describes the actual use and behaviour of it much better.
1029
1030 SEE ALSO
1031 Event-Loop integration: Coro::AnyEvent, Coro::EV, Coro::Event.
1032
1033 Debugging: Coro::Debug.
1034
1035 Support/Utility: Coro::Specific, Coro::Util.
1036
1037 Locking and IPC: Coro::Signal, Coro::Channel, Coro::Semaphore,
1038 Coro::SemaphoreSet, Coro::RWLock.
1039
1040 I/O and Timers: Coro::Timer, Coro::Handle, Coro::Socket, Coro::AIO.
1041
1042 Compatibility with other modules: Coro::LWP (but see also AnyEvent::HTTP
1043 for a better-working alternative), Coro::BDB, Coro::Storable,
1044 Coro::Select.
1045
1046 XS API: Coro::MakeMaker.
1047
1048 Low level Configuration, Thread Environment, Continuations: Coro::State.
1049
1050 AUTHOR
1051 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
1052 http://home.schmorp.de/
1053