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# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 EV - perl interface to libev, a high performance full-featured event loop
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 use EV;
8
9 # TIMERS
10
11 my $w = EV::timer 2, 0, sub {
12 warn "is called after 2s";
13 };
14
15 my $w = EV::timer 2, 2, sub {
16 warn "is called roughly every 2s (repeat = 2)";
17 };
18
19 undef $w; # destroy event watcher again
20
21 my $w = EV::periodic 0, 60, 0, sub {
22 warn "is called every minute, on the minute, exactly";
23 };
24
25 # IO
26
27 my $w = EV::io *STDIN, EV::READ, sub {
28 my ($w, $revents) = @_; # all callbacks receive the watcher and event mask
29 warn "stdin is readable, you entered: ", <STDIN>;
30 };
31
32 # SIGNALS
33
34 my $w = EV::signal 'QUIT', sub {
35 warn "sigquit received\n";
36 };
37
38 # CHILD/PID STATUS CHANGES
39
40 my $w = EV::child 666, 0, sub {
41 my ($w, $revents) = @_;
42 my $status = $w->rstatus;
43 };
44
45 # STAT CHANGES
46 my $w = EV::stat "/etc/passwd", 10, sub {
47 my ($w, $revents) = @_;
48 warn $w->path, " has changed somehow.\n";
49 };
50
51 # MAINLOOP
52 EV::loop; # loop until EV::unloop is called or all watchers stop
53 EV::loop EV::LOOP_ONESHOT; # block until at least one event could be handled
54 EV::loop EV::LOOP_NONBLOCK; # try to handle same events, but do not block
55
56 =head1 DESCRIPTION
57
58 This module provides an interface to libev
59 (L<http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/libev.html>). While the documentation
60 below is comprehensive, one might also consult the documentation of
61 libev itself (L<http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/libev/ev.pod> or
62 F<perldoc EV::libev>) for more subtle details on watcher semantics or some
63 discussion on the available backends, or how to force a specific backend
64 with C<LIBEV_FLAGS>, or just about in any case because it has much more
65 detailed information.
66
67 This module is very fast and scalable. It is actually so fast that you
68 can use it through the L<AnyEvent> module, stay portable to other event
69 loops (if you don't rely on any watcher types not available through it)
70 and still be faster than with any other event loop currently supported in
71 Perl.
72
73 =head2 MODULE EXPORTS
74
75 This module does not export any symbols.
76
77 =cut
78
79 package EV;
80
81 use common::sense;
82
83 BEGIN {
84 our $VERSION = '3.7';
85 use XSLoader;
86 XSLoader::load "EV", $VERSION;
87 }
88
89 @EV::IO::ISA =
90 @EV::Timer::ISA =
91 @EV::Periodic::ISA =
92 @EV::Signal::ISA =
93 @EV::Child::ISA =
94 @EV::Stat::ISA =
95 @EV::Idle::ISA =
96 @EV::Prepare::ISA =
97 @EV::Check::ISA =
98 @EV::Embed::ISA =
99 @EV::Fork::ISA =
100 @EV::Async::ISA =
101 "EV::Watcher";
102
103 @EV::Loop::Default::ISA = "EV::Loop";
104
105 =head1 EVENT LOOPS
106
107 EV supports multiple event loops: There is a single "default event loop"
108 that can handle everything including signals and child watchers, and any
109 number of "dynamic event loops" that can use different backends (with
110 various limitations), but no child and signal watchers.
111
112 You do not have to do anything to create the default event loop: When
113 the module is loaded a suitable backend is selected on the premise of
114 selecting a working backend (which for example rules out kqueue on most
115 BSDs). Modules should, unless they have "special needs" always use the
116 default loop as this is fastest (perl-wise), best supported by other
117 modules (e.g. AnyEvent or Coro) and most portable event loop.
118
119 For specific programs you can create additional event loops dynamically.
120
121 If you want to take advantage of kqueue (which often works properly for
122 sockets only) even though the default loop doesn't enable it, you can
123 I<embed> a kqueue loop into the default loop: running the default loop
124 will then also service the kqueue loop to some extent. See the example in
125 the section about embed watchers for an example on how to achieve that.
126
127 =over 4
128
129 =item $loop = new EV::Loop [$flags]
130
131 Create a new event loop as per the specified flags. Please refer to
132 the C<ev_loop_new ()> function description in the libev documentation
133 (L<http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/libev/ev.pod#GLOBAL_FUNCTIONS>,
134 or locally-installed as F<EV::libev> manpage) for more info.
135
136 The loop will automatically be destroyed when it is no longer referenced
137 by any watcher and the loop object goes out of scope.
138
139 If you are not embedding the loop, then Using C<EV::FLAG_FORKCHECK>
140 is recommended, as only the default event loop is protected by this
141 module. If you I<are> embedding this loop in the default loop, this is not
142 necessary, as C<EV::embed> automatically does the right thing on fork.
143
144 =item $loop->loop_fork
145
146 Must be called after a fork in the child, before entering or continuing
147 the event loop. An alternative is to use C<EV::FLAG_FORKCHECK> which calls
148 this function automatically, at some performance loss (refer to the libev
149 documentation).
150
151 =item $loop->loop_verify
152
153 Calls C<ev_verify> to make internal consistency checks (for debugging
154 libev) and abort the program if any data structures were found to be
155 corrupted.
156
157 =item $loop = EV::default_loop [$flags]
158
159 Return the default loop (which is a singleton object). Since this module
160 already creates the default loop with default flags, specifying flags here
161 will not have any effect unless you destroy the default loop first, which
162 isn't supported. So in short: don't do it, and if you break it, you get to
163 keep the pieces.
164
165 =back
166
167
168 =head1 BASIC INTERFACE
169
170 =over 4
171
172 =item $EV::DIED
173
174 Must contain a reference to a function that is called when a callback
175 throws an exception (with $@ containing the error). The default prints an
176 informative message and continues.
177
178 If this callback throws an exception it will be silently ignored.
179
180 =item $flags = EV::supported_backends
181
182 =item $flags = EV::recommended_backends
183
184 =item $flags = EV::embeddable_backends
185
186 Returns the set (see C<EV::BACKEND_*> flags) of backends supported by this
187 instance of EV, the set of recommended backends (supposed to be good) for
188 this platform and the set of embeddable backends (see EMBED WATCHERS).
189
190 =item EV::sleep $seconds
191
192 Block the process for the given number of (fractional) seconds.
193
194 =item $time = EV::time
195
196 Returns the current time in (fractional) seconds since the epoch.
197
198 =item $time = EV::now
199
200 =item $time = $loop->now
201
202 Returns the time the last event loop iteration has been started. This
203 is the time that (relative) timers are based on, and referring to it is
204 usually faster then calling EV::time.
205
206 =item EV::now_update
207
208 =item $loop->now_update
209
210 Establishes the current time by querying the kernel, updating the time
211 returned by C<EV::now> in the progress. This is a costly operation and
212 is usually done automatically within C<EV::loop>.
213
214 This function is rarely useful, but when some event callback runs for a
215 very long time without entering the event loop, updating libev's idea of
216 the current time is a good idea.
217
218 =item EV::suspend
219
220 =item $loop->suspend
221
222 =item EV::resume
223
224 =item $loop->resume
225
226 These two functions suspend and resume a loop, for use when the loop is
227 not used for a while and timeouts should not be processed.
228
229 A typical use case would be an interactive program such as a game: When
230 the user presses C<^Z> to suspend the game and resumes it an hour later it
231 would be best to handle timeouts as if no time had actually passed while
232 the program was suspended. This can be achieved by calling C<suspend>
233 in your C<SIGTSTP> handler, sending yourself a C<SIGSTOP> and calling
234 C<resume> directly afterwards to resume timer processing.
235
236 Effectively, all C<timer> watchers will be delayed by the time spend
237 between C<suspend> and C<resume>, and all C<periodic> watchers
238 will be rescheduled (that is, they will lose any events that would have
239 occured while suspended).
240
241 After calling C<suspend> you B<must not> call I<any> function on the given
242 loop other than C<resume>, and you B<must not> call C<resume>
243 without a previous call to C<suspend>.
244
245 Calling C<suspend>/C<resume> has the side effect of updating the event
246 loop time (see C<now_update>).
247
248 =item $backend = EV::backend
249
250 =item $backend = $loop->backend
251
252 Returns an integer describing the backend used by libev (EV::BACKEND_SELECT
253 or EV::BACKEND_EPOLL).
254
255 =item EV::loop [$flags]
256
257 =item $loop->loop ([$flags])
258
259 Begin checking for events and calling callbacks. It returns when a
260 callback calls EV::unloop.
261
262 The $flags argument can be one of the following:
263
264 0 as above
265 EV::LOOP_ONESHOT block at most once (wait, but do not loop)
266 EV::LOOP_NONBLOCK do not block at all (fetch/handle events but do not wait)
267
268 =item EV::unloop [$how]
269
270 =item $loop->unloop ([$how])
271
272 When called with no arguments or an argument of EV::UNLOOP_ONE, makes the
273 innermost call to EV::loop return.
274
275 When called with an argument of EV::UNLOOP_ALL, all calls to EV::loop will return as
276 fast as possible.
277
278 =item $count = EV::loop_count
279
280 =item $count = $loop->loop_count
281
282 Return the number of times the event loop has polled for new
283 events. Sometimes useful as a generation counter.
284
285 =item EV::once $fh_or_undef, $events, $timeout, $cb->($revents)
286
287 =item $loop->once ($fh_or_undef, $events, $timeout, $cb->($revents))
288
289 This function rolls together an I/O and a timer watcher for a single
290 one-shot event without the need for managing a watcher object.
291
292 If C<$fh_or_undef> is a filehandle or file descriptor, then C<$events>
293 must be a bitset containing either C<EV::READ>, C<EV::WRITE> or C<EV::READ
294 | EV::WRITE>, indicating the type of I/O event you want to wait for. If
295 you do not want to wait for some I/O event, specify C<undef> for
296 C<$fh_or_undef> and C<0> for C<$events>).
297
298 If timeout is C<undef> or negative, then there will be no
299 timeout. Otherwise a EV::timer with this value will be started.
300
301 When an error occurs or either the timeout or I/O watcher triggers, then
302 the callback will be called with the received event set (in general
303 you can expect it to be a combination of C<EV::ERROR>, C<EV::READ>,
304 C<EV::WRITE> and C<EV::TIMEOUT>).
305
306 EV::once doesn't return anything: the watchers stay active till either
307 of them triggers, then they will be stopped and freed, and the callback
308 invoked.
309
310 =item EV::feed_fd_event ($fd, $revents)
311
312 =item $loop->feed_fd_event ($fd, $revents)
313
314 Feed an event on a file descriptor into EV. EV will react to this call as
315 if the readyness notifications specified by C<$revents> (a combination of
316 C<EV::READ> and C<EV::WRITE>) happened on the file descriptor C<$fd>.
317
318 =item EV::feed_signal_event ($signal)
319
320 Feed a signal event into EV. EV will react to this call as if the signal
321 specified by C<$signal> had occured.
322
323 =item EV::set_io_collect_interval $time
324
325 =item $loop->set_io_collect_interval ($time)
326
327 =item EV::set_timeout_collect_interval $time
328
329 =item $loop->set_timeout_collect_interval ($time)
330
331 These advanced functions set the minimum block interval when polling for I/O events and the minimum
332 wait interval for timer events. See the libev documentation at
333 L<http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/libev/ev.pod#FUNCTIONS_CONTROLLING_THE_EVENT_LOOP>
334 (locally installed as F<EV::libev>) for a more detailed discussion.
335
336 =back
337
338
339 =head1 WATCHER OBJECTS
340
341 A watcher is an object that gets created to record your interest in some
342 event. For instance, if you want to wait for STDIN to become readable, you
343 would create an EV::io watcher for that:
344
345 my $watcher = EV::io *STDIN, EV::READ, sub {
346 my ($watcher, $revents) = @_;
347 warn "yeah, STDIN should now be readable without blocking!\n"
348 };
349
350 All watchers can be active (waiting for events) or inactive (paused). Only
351 active watchers will have their callbacks invoked. All callbacks will be
352 called with at least two arguments: the watcher and a bitmask of received
353 events.
354
355 Each watcher type has its associated bit in revents, so you can use the
356 same callback for multiple watchers. The event mask is named after the
357 type, i.e. EV::child sets EV::CHILD, EV::prepare sets EV::PREPARE,
358 EV::periodic sets EV::PERIODIC and so on, with the exception of I/O events
359 (which can set both EV::READ and EV::WRITE bits), and EV::timer (which
360 uses EV::TIMEOUT).
361
362 In the rare case where one wants to create a watcher but not start it at
363 the same time, each constructor has a variant with a trailing C<_ns> in
364 its name, e.g. EV::io has a non-starting variant EV::io_ns and so on.
365
366 Please note that a watcher will automatically be stopped when the watcher
367 object is destroyed, so you I<need> to keep the watcher objects returned by
368 the constructors.
369
370 Also, all methods changing some aspect of a watcher (->set, ->priority,
371 ->fh and so on) automatically stop and start it again if it is active,
372 which means pending events get lost.
373
374 =head2 COMMON WATCHER METHODS
375
376 This section lists methods common to all watchers.
377
378 =over 4
379
380 =item $w->start
381
382 Starts a watcher if it isn't active already. Does nothing to an already
383 active watcher. By default, all watchers start out in the active state
384 (see the description of the C<_ns> variants if you need stopped watchers).
385
386 =item $w->stop
387
388 Stop a watcher if it is active. Also clear any pending events (events that
389 have been received but that didn't yet result in a callback invocation),
390 regardless of whether the watcher was active or not.
391
392 =item $bool = $w->is_active
393
394 Returns true if the watcher is active, false otherwise.
395
396 =item $current_data = $w->data
397
398 =item $old_data = $w->data ($new_data)
399
400 Queries a freely usable data scalar on the watcher and optionally changes
401 it. This is a way to associate custom data with a watcher:
402
403 my $w = EV::timer 60, 0, sub {
404 warn $_[0]->data;
405 };
406 $w->data ("print me!");
407
408 =item $current_cb = $w->cb
409
410 =item $old_cb = $w->cb ($new_cb)
411
412 Queries the callback on the watcher and optionally changes it. You can do
413 this at any time without the watcher restarting.
414
415 =item $current_priority = $w->priority
416
417 =item $old_priority = $w->priority ($new_priority)
418
419 Queries the priority on the watcher and optionally changes it. Pending
420 watchers with higher priority will be invoked first. The valid range of
421 priorities lies between EV::MAXPRI (default 2) and EV::MINPRI (default
422 -2). If the priority is outside this range it will automatically be
423 normalised to the nearest valid priority.
424
425 The default priority of any newly-created watcher is 0.
426
427 Note that the priority semantics have not yet been fleshed out and are
428 subject to almost certain change.
429
430 =item $w->invoke ($revents)
431
432 Call the callback *now* with the given event mask.
433
434 =item $w->feed_event ($revents)
435
436 Feed some events on this watcher into EV. EV will react to this call as if
437 the watcher had received the given C<$revents> mask.
438
439 =item $revents = $w->clear_pending
440
441 If the watcher is pending, this function clears its pending status and
442 returns its C<$revents> bitset (as if its callback was invoked). If the
443 watcher isn't pending it does nothing and returns C<0>.
444
445 =item $previous_state = $w->keepalive ($bool)
446
447 Normally, C<EV::loop> will return when there are no active watchers
448 (which is a "deadlock" because no progress can be made anymore). This is
449 convinient because it allows you to start your watchers (and your jobs),
450 call C<EV::loop> once and when it returns you know that all your jobs are
451 finished (or they forgot to register some watchers for their task :).
452
453 Sometimes, however, this gets in your way, for example when the module
454 that calls C<EV::loop> (usually the main program) is not the same module
455 as a long-living watcher (for example a DNS client module written by
456 somebody else even). Then you might want any outstanding requests to be
457 handled, but you would not want to keep C<EV::loop> from returning just
458 because you happen to have this long-running UDP port watcher.
459
460 In this case you can clear the keepalive status, which means that even
461 though your watcher is active, it won't keep C<EV::loop> from returning.
462
463 The initial value for keepalive is true (enabled), and you can change it
464 any time.
465
466 Example: Register an I/O watcher for some UDP socket but do not keep the
467 event loop from running just because of that watcher.
468
469 my $udp_socket = ...
470 my $udp_watcher = EV::io $udp_socket, EV::READ, sub { ... };
471 $udp_watcher->keepalive (0);
472
473 =item $loop = $w->loop
474
475 Return the loop that this watcher is attached to.
476
477 =back
478
479
480 =head1 WATCHER TYPES
481
482 Each of the following subsections describes a single watcher type.
483
484 =head3 I/O WATCHERS - is this file descriptor readable or writable?
485
486 =over 4
487
488 =item $w = EV::io $fileno_or_fh, $eventmask, $callback
489
490 =item $w = EV::io_ns $fileno_or_fh, $eventmask, $callback
491
492 =item $w = $loop->io ($fileno_or_fh, $eventmask, $callback)
493
494 =item $w = $loop->io_ns ($fileno_or_fh, $eventmask, $callback)
495
496 As long as the returned watcher object is alive, call the C<$callback>
497 when at least one of events specified in C<$eventmask> occurs.
498
499 The $eventmask can be one or more of these constants ORed together:
500
501 EV::READ wait until read() wouldn't block anymore
502 EV::WRITE wait until write() wouldn't block anymore
503
504 The C<io_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher.
505
506 =item $w->set ($fileno_or_fh, $eventmask)
507
508 Reconfigures the watcher, see the constructor above for details. Can be
509 called at any time.
510
511 =item $current_fh = $w->fh
512
513 =item $old_fh = $w->fh ($new_fh)
514
515 Returns the previously set filehandle and optionally set a new one.
516
517 =item $current_eventmask = $w->events
518
519 =item $old_eventmask = $w->events ($new_eventmask)
520
521 Returns the previously set event mask and optionally set a new one.
522
523 =back
524
525
526 =head3 TIMER WATCHERS - relative and optionally repeating timeouts
527
528 =over 4
529
530 =item $w = EV::timer $after, $repeat, $callback
531
532 =item $w = EV::timer_ns $after, $repeat, $callback
533
534 =item $w = $loop->timer ($after, $repeat, $callback)
535
536 =item $w = $loop->timer_ns ($after, $repeat, $callback)
537
538 Calls the callback after C<$after> seconds (which may be fractional). If
539 C<$repeat> is non-zero, the timer will be restarted (with the $repeat
540 value as $after) after the callback returns.
541
542 This means that the callback would be called roughly after C<$after>
543 seconds, and then every C<$repeat> seconds. The timer does his best not
544 to drift, but it will not invoke the timer more often then once per event
545 loop iteration, and might drift in other cases. If that isn't acceptable,
546 look at EV::periodic, which can provide long-term stable timers.
547
548 The timer is based on a monotonic clock, that is, if somebody is sitting
549 in front of the machine while the timer is running and changes the system
550 clock, the timer will nevertheless run (roughly) the same time.
551
552 The C<timer_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher.
553
554 =item $w->set ($after, $repeat)
555
556 Reconfigures the watcher, see the constructor above for details. Can be called at
557 any time.
558
559 =item $w->again
560
561 Similar to the C<start> method, but has special semantics for repeating timers:
562
563 If the timer is active and non-repeating, it will be stopped.
564
565 If the timer is active and repeating, reset the timeout to occur
566 C<$repeat> seconds after now.
567
568 If the timer is inactive and repeating, start it using the repeat value.
569
570 Otherwise do nothing.
571
572 This behaviour is useful when you have a timeout for some IO
573 operation. You create a timer object with the same value for C<$after> and
574 C<$repeat>, and then, in the read/write watcher, run the C<again> method
575 on the timeout.
576
577 =back
578
579
580 =head3 PERIODIC WATCHERS - to cron or not to cron?
581
582 =over 4
583
584 =item $w = EV::periodic $at, $interval, $reschedule_cb, $callback
585
586 =item $w = EV::periodic_ns $at, $interval, $reschedule_cb, $callback
587
588 =item $w = $loop->periodic ($at, $interval, $reschedule_cb, $callback)
589
590 =item $w = $loop->periodic_ns ($at, $interval, $reschedule_cb, $callback)
591
592 Similar to EV::timer, but is not based on relative timeouts but on
593 absolute times. Apart from creating "simple" timers that trigger "at" the
594 specified time, it can also be used for non-drifting absolute timers and
595 more complex, cron-like, setups that are not adversely affected by time
596 jumps (i.e. when the system clock is changed by explicit date -s or other
597 means such as ntpd). It is also the most complex watcher type in EV.
598
599 It has three distinct "modes":
600
601 =over 4
602
603 =item * absolute timer ($interval = $reschedule_cb = 0)
604
605 This time simply fires at the wallclock time C<$at> and doesn't repeat. It
606 will not adjust when a time jump occurs, that is, if it is to be run
607 at January 1st 2011 then it will run when the system time reaches or
608 surpasses this time.
609
610 =item * repeating interval timer ($interval > 0, $reschedule_cb = 0)
611
612 In this mode the watcher will always be scheduled to time out at the
613 next C<$at + N * $interval> time (for some integer N) and then repeat,
614 regardless of any time jumps.
615
616 This can be used to create timers that do not drift with respect to system
617 time:
618
619 my $hourly = EV::periodic 0, 3600, 0, sub { print "once/hour\n" };
620
621 That doesn't mean there will always be 3600 seconds in between triggers,
622 but only that the the clalback will be called when the system time shows a
623 full hour (UTC).
624
625 Another way to think about it (for the mathematically inclined) is that
626 EV::periodic will try to run the callback in this mode at the next
627 possible time where C<$time = $at (mod $interval)>, regardless of any time
628 jumps.
629
630 =item * manual reschedule mode ($reschedule_cb = coderef)
631
632 In this mode $interval and $at are both being ignored. Instead, each
633 time the periodic watcher gets scheduled, the reschedule callback
634 ($reschedule_cb) will be called with the watcher as first, and the current
635 time as second argument.
636
637 I<This callback MUST NOT stop or destroy this or any other periodic
638 watcher, ever, and MUST NOT call any event loop functions or methods>. If
639 you need to stop it, return 1e30 and stop it afterwards. You may create
640 and start a C<EV::prepare> watcher for this task.
641
642 It must return the next time to trigger, based on the passed time value
643 (that is, the lowest time value larger than or equal to to the second
644 argument). It will usually be called just before the callback will be
645 triggered, but might be called at other times, too.
646
647 This can be used to create very complex timers, such as a timer that
648 triggers on each midnight, local time (actually 24 hours after the last
649 midnight, to keep the example simple. If you know a way to do it correctly
650 in about the same space (without requiring elaborate modules), drop me a
651 note :):
652
653 my $daily = EV::periodic 0, 0, sub {
654 my ($w, $now) = @_;
655
656 use Time::Local ();
657 my (undef, undef, undef, $d, $m, $y) = localtime $now;
658 86400 + Time::Local::timelocal 0, 0, 0, $d, $m, $y
659 }, sub {
660 print "it's midnight or likely shortly after, now\n";
661 };
662
663 =back
664
665 The C<periodic_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher.
666
667 =item $w->set ($at, $interval, $reschedule_cb)
668
669 Reconfigures the watcher, see the constructor above for details. Can be called at
670 any time.
671
672 =item $w->again
673
674 Simply stops and starts the watcher again.
675
676 =item $time = $w->at
677
678 Return the time that the watcher is expected to trigger next.
679
680 =back
681
682
683 =head3 SIGNAL WATCHERS - signal me when a signal gets signalled!
684
685 =over 4
686
687 =item $w = EV::signal $signal, $callback
688
689 =item $w = EV::signal_ns $signal, $callback
690
691 Call the callback when $signal is received (the signal can be specified by
692 number or by name, just as with C<kill> or C<%SIG>).
693
694 EV will grab the signal for the process (the kernel only allows one
695 component to receive a signal at a time) when you start a signal watcher,
696 and removes it again when you stop it. Perl does the same when you
697 add/remove callbacks to C<%SIG>, so watch out.
698
699 You can have as many signal watchers per signal as you want.
700
701 The C<signal_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher.
702
703 =item $w->set ($signal)
704
705 Reconfigures the watcher, see the constructor above for details. Can be
706 called at any time.
707
708 =item $current_signum = $w->signal
709
710 =item $old_signum = $w->signal ($new_signal)
711
712 Returns the previously set signal (always as a number not name) and
713 optionally set a new one.
714
715 =back
716
717
718 =head3 CHILD WATCHERS - watch out for process status changes
719
720 =over 4
721
722 =item $w = EV::child $pid, $trace, $callback
723
724 =item $w = EV::child_ns $pid, $trace, $callback
725
726 =item $w = $loop->child ($pid, $trace, $callback)
727
728 =item $w = $loop->child_ns ($pid, $trace, $callback)
729
730 Call the callback when a status change for pid C<$pid> (or any pid
731 if C<$pid> is 0) has been received (a status change happens when the
732 process terminates or is killed, or, when trace is true, additionally when
733 it is stopped or continued). More precisely: when the process receives
734 a C<SIGCHLD>, EV will fetch the outstanding exit/wait status for all
735 changed/zombie children and call the callback.
736
737 It is valid (and fully supported) to install a child watcher after a child
738 has exited but before the event loop has started its next iteration (for
739 example, first you C<fork>, then the new child process might exit, and
740 only then do you install a child watcher in the parent for the new pid).
741
742 You can access both exit (or tracing) status and pid by using the
743 C<rstatus> and C<rpid> methods on the watcher object.
744
745 You can have as many pid watchers per pid as you want, they will all be
746 called.
747
748 The C<child_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher.
749
750 =item $w->set ($pid, $trace)
751
752 Reconfigures the watcher, see the constructor above for details. Can be called at
753 any time.
754
755 =item $current_pid = $w->pid
756
757 Returns the previously set process id and optionally set a new one.
758
759 =item $exit_status = $w->rstatus
760
761 Return the exit/wait status (as returned by waitpid, see the waitpid entry
762 in perlfunc).
763
764 =item $pid = $w->rpid
765
766 Return the pid of the awaited child (useful when you have installed a
767 watcher for all pids).
768
769 =back
770
771
772 =head3 STAT WATCHERS - did the file attributes just change?
773
774 =over 4
775
776 =item $w = EV::stat $path, $interval, $callback
777
778 =item $w = EV::stat_ns $path, $interval, $callback
779
780 =item $w = $loop->stat ($path, $interval, $callback)
781
782 =item $w = $loop->stat_ns ($path, $interval, $callback)
783
784 Call the callback when a file status change has been detected on
785 C<$path>. The C<$path> does not need to exist, changing from "path exists"
786 to "path does not exist" is a status change like any other.
787
788 The C<$interval> is a recommended polling interval for systems where
789 OS-supported change notifications don't exist or are not supported. If
790 you use C<0> then an unspecified default is used (which is highly
791 recommended!), which is to be expected to be around five seconds usually.
792
793 This watcher type is not meant for massive numbers of stat watchers,
794 as even with OS-supported change notifications, this can be
795 resource-intensive.
796
797 The C<stat_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher.
798
799 =item ... = $w->stat
800
801 This call is very similar to the perl C<stat> built-in: It stats (using
802 C<lstat>) the path specified in the watcher and sets perls stat cache (as
803 well as EV's idea of the current stat values) to the values found.
804
805 In scalar context, a boolean is return indicating success or failure of
806 the stat. In list context, the same 13-value list as with stat is returned
807 (except that the blksize and blocks fields are not reliable).
808
809 In the case of an error, errno is set to C<ENOENT> (regardless of the
810 actual error value) and the C<nlink> value is forced to zero (if the stat
811 was successful then nlink is guaranteed to be non-zero).
812
813 See also the next two entries for more info.
814
815 =item ... = $w->attr
816
817 Just like C<< $w->stat >>, but without the initial stat'ing: this returns
818 the values most recently detected by EV. See the next entry for more info.
819
820 =item ... = $w->prev
821
822 Just like C<< $w->stat >>, but without the initial stat'ing: this returns
823 the previous set of values, before the change.
824
825 That is, when the watcher callback is invoked, C<< $w->prev >> will be set
826 to the values found I<before> a change was detected, while C<< $w->attr >>
827 returns the values found leading to the change detection. The difference (if any)
828 between C<prev> and C<attr> is what triggered the callback.
829
830 If you did something to the filesystem object and do not want to trigger
831 yet another change, you can call C<stat> to update EV's idea of what the
832 current attributes are.
833
834 =item $w->set ($path, $interval)
835
836 Reconfigures the watcher, see the constructor above for details. Can be
837 called at any time.
838
839 =item $current_path = $w->path
840
841 =item $old_path = $w->path ($new_path)
842
843 Returns the previously set path and optionally set a new one.
844
845 =item $current_interval = $w->interval
846
847 =item $old_interval = $w->interval ($new_interval)
848
849 Returns the previously set interval and optionally set a new one. Can be
850 used to query the actual interval used.
851
852 =back
853
854
855 =head3 IDLE WATCHERS - when you've got nothing better to do...
856
857 =over 4
858
859 =item $w = EV::idle $callback
860
861 =item $w = EV::idle_ns $callback
862
863 =item $w = $loop->idle ($callback)
864
865 =item $w = $loop->idle_ns ($callback)
866
867 Call the callback when there are no other pending watchers of the same or
868 higher priority (excluding check, prepare and other idle watchers of the
869 same or lower priority, of course). They are called idle watchers because
870 when the watcher is the highest priority pending event in the process, the
871 process is considered to be idle at that priority.
872
873 If you want a watcher that is only ever called when I<no> other events are
874 outstanding you have to set the priority to C<EV::MINPRI>.
875
876 The process will not block as long as any idle watchers are active, and
877 they will be called repeatedly until stopped.
878
879 For example, if you have idle watchers at priority C<0> and C<1>, and
880 an I/O watcher at priority C<0>, then the idle watcher at priority C<1>
881 and the I/O watcher will always run when ready. Only when the idle watcher
882 at priority C<1> is stopped and the I/O watcher at priority C<0> is not
883 pending with the C<0>-priority idle watcher be invoked.
884
885 The C<idle_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher.
886
887 =back
888
889
890 =head3 PREPARE WATCHERS - customise your event loop!
891
892 =over 4
893
894 =item $w = EV::prepare $callback
895
896 =item $w = EV::prepare_ns $callback
897
898 =item $w = $loop->prepare ($callback)
899
900 =item $w = $loop->prepare_ns ($callback)
901
902 Call the callback just before the process would block. You can still
903 create/modify any watchers at this point.
904
905 See the EV::check watcher, below, for explanations and an example.
906
907 The C<prepare_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher.
908
909 =back
910
911
912 =head3 CHECK WATCHERS - customise your event loop even more!
913
914 =over 4
915
916 =item $w = EV::check $callback
917
918 =item $w = EV::check_ns $callback
919
920 =item $w = $loop->check ($callback)
921
922 =item $w = $loop->check_ns ($callback)
923
924 Call the callback just after the process wakes up again (after it has
925 gathered events), but before any other callbacks have been invoked.
926
927 This is used to integrate other event-based software into the EV
928 mainloop: You register a prepare callback and in there, you create io and
929 timer watchers as required by the other software. Here is a real-world
930 example of integrating Net::SNMP (with some details left out):
931
932 our @snmp_watcher;
933
934 our $snmp_prepare = EV::prepare sub {
935 # do nothing unless active
936 $dispatcher->{_event_queue_h}
937 or return;
938
939 # make the dispatcher handle any outstanding stuff
940 ... not shown
941
942 # create an I/O watcher for each and every socket
943 @snmp_watcher = (
944 (map { EV::io $_, EV::READ, sub { } }
945 keys %{ $dispatcher->{_descriptors} }),
946
947 EV::timer +($event->[Net::SNMP::Dispatcher::_ACTIVE]
948 ? $event->[Net::SNMP::Dispatcher::_TIME] - EV::now : 0),
949 0, sub { },
950 );
951 };
952
953 The callbacks are irrelevant (and are not even being called), the
954 only purpose of those watchers is to wake up the process as soon as
955 one of those events occurs (socket readable, or timer timed out). The
956 corresponding EV::check watcher will then clean up:
957
958 our $snmp_check = EV::check sub {
959 # destroy all watchers
960 @snmp_watcher = ();
961
962 # make the dispatcher handle any new stuff
963 ... not shown
964 };
965
966 The callbacks of the created watchers will not be called as the watchers
967 are destroyed before this can happen (remember EV::check gets called
968 first).
969
970 The C<check_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher.
971
972 =back
973
974
975 =head3 FORK WATCHERS - the audacity to resume the event loop after a fork
976
977 Fork watchers are called when a C<fork ()> was detected. The invocation
978 is done before the event loop blocks next and before C<check> watchers
979 are being called, and only in the child after the fork.
980
981 =over 4
982
983 =item $w = EV::fork $callback
984
985 =item $w = EV::fork_ns $callback
986
987 =item $w = $loop->fork ($callback)
988
989 =item $w = $loop->fork_ns ($callback)
990
991 Call the callback before the event loop is resumed in the child process
992 after a fork.
993
994 The C<fork_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher.
995
996 =back
997
998
999 =head3 EMBED WATCHERS - when one backend isn't enough...
1000
1001 This is a rather advanced watcher type that lets you embed one event loop
1002 into another (currently only IO events are supported in the embedded
1003 loop, other types of watchers might be handled in a delayed or incorrect
1004 fashion and must not be used).
1005
1006 See the libev documentation at
1007 L<http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/libev/ev.pod#code_ev_embed_code_when_one_backend_>
1008 (locally installed as F<EV::libev>) for more details.
1009
1010 In short, this watcher is most useful on BSD systems without working
1011 kqueue to still be able to handle a large number of sockets:
1012
1013 my $socket_loop;
1014
1015 # check wether we use SELECT or POLL _and_ KQUEUE is supported
1016 if (
1017 (EV::backend & (EV::BACKEND_POLL | EV::BACKEND_SELECT))
1018 && (EV::supported_backends & EV::embeddable_backends & EV::BACKEND_KQUEUE)
1019 ) {
1020 # use kqueue for sockets
1021 $socket_loop = new EV::Loop EV::BACKEND_KQUEUE | EV::FLAG_NOENV;
1022 }
1023
1024 # use the default loop otherwise
1025 $socket_loop ||= EV::default_loop;
1026
1027 =over 4
1028
1029 =item $w = EV::embed $otherloop[, $callback]
1030
1031 =item $w = EV::embed_ns $otherloop[, $callback]
1032
1033 =item $w = $loop->embed ($otherloop[, $callback])
1034
1035 =item $w = $loop->embed_ns ($otherloop[, $callback])
1036
1037 Call the callback when the embedded event loop (C<$otherloop>) has any
1038 I/O activity. The C<$callback> is optional: if it is missing, then the
1039 embedded event loop will be managed automatically (which is recommended),
1040 otherwise you have to invoke C<sweep> yourself.
1041
1042 The C<embed_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher.
1043
1044 =back
1045
1046 =head3 ASYNC WATCHERS - how to wake up another event loop
1047
1048 Async watchers are provided by EV, but have little use in perl directly,
1049 as perl neither supports threads running in parallel nor direct access to
1050 signal handlers or other contexts where they could be of value.
1051
1052 It is, however, possible to use them from the XS level.
1053
1054 Please see the libev documentation for further details.
1055
1056 =over 4
1057
1058 =item $w = EV::async $callback
1059
1060 =item $w = EV::async_ns $callback
1061
1062 =item $w->send
1063
1064 =item $bool = $w->async_pending
1065
1066 =back
1067
1068
1069 =head1 PERL SIGNALS
1070
1071 While Perl signal handling (C<%SIG>) is not affected by EV, the behaviour
1072 with EV is as the same as any other C library: Perl-signals will only be
1073 handled when Perl runs, which means your signal handler might be invoked
1074 only the next time an event callback is invoked.
1075
1076 The solution is to use EV signal watchers (see C<EV::signal>), which will
1077 ensure proper operations with regards to other event watchers.
1078
1079 If you cannot do this for whatever reason, you can also force a watcher
1080 to be called on every event loop iteration by installing a C<EV::check>
1081 watcher:
1082
1083 my $async_check = EV::check sub { };
1084
1085 This ensures that perl gets into control for a short time to handle any
1086 pending signals, and also ensures (slightly) slower overall operation.
1087
1088 =head1 ITHREADS
1089
1090 Ithreads are not supported by this module in any way. Perl pseudo-threads
1091 is evil stuff and must die. Real threads as provided by Coro are fully
1092 supported (and enhanced support is available via L<Coro::EV>).
1093
1094 =head1 FORK
1095
1096 Most of the "improved" event delivering mechanisms of modern operating
1097 systems have quite a few problems with fork(2) (to put it bluntly: it is
1098 not supported and usually destructive). Libev makes it possible to work
1099 around this by having a function that recreates the kernel state after
1100 fork in the child.
1101
1102 On non-win32 platforms, this module requires the pthread_atfork
1103 functionality to do this automatically for you. This function is quite
1104 buggy on most BSDs, though, so YMMV. The overhead for this is quite
1105 negligible, because everything the function currently does is set a flag
1106 that is checked only when the event loop gets used the next time, so when
1107 you do fork but not use EV, the overhead is minimal.
1108
1109 On win32, there is no notion of fork so all this doesn't apply, of course.
1110
1111 =cut
1112
1113 our $DIED = sub {
1114 warn "EV: error in callback (ignoring): $@";
1115 };
1116
1117 default_loop
1118 or die 'EV: cannot initialise libev backend. bad $ENV{LIBEV_FLAGS}?';
1119
1120 1;
1121
1122 =head1 SEE ALSO
1123
1124 L<EV::ADNS> (asynchronous DNS), L<Glib::EV> (makes Glib/Gtk2 use EV as
1125 event loop), L<EV::Glib> (embed Glib into EV), L<Coro::EV> (efficient
1126 coroutines with EV), L<Net::SNMP::EV> (asynchronous SNMP), L<AnyEvent> for
1127 event-loop agnostic and portable event driven programming.
1128
1129 =head1 AUTHOR
1130
1131 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
1132 http://home.schmorp.de/
1133
1134 =cut
1135