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Revision: 1.29
Committed: Wed Apr 16 16:45:30 2008 UTC (16 years, 1 month ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: rel-2_61, rel-2_62
Changes since 1.28: +6 -26 lines
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File Contents

# Content
1 NAME
2 IO::AIO - Asynchronous Input/Output
3
4 SYNOPSIS
5 use IO::AIO;
6
7 aio_open "/etc/passwd", O_RDONLY, 0, sub {
8 my $fh = shift
9 or die "/etc/passwd: $!";
10 ...
11 };
12
13 aio_unlink "/tmp/file", sub { };
14
15 aio_read $fh, 30000, 1024, $buffer, 0, sub {
16 $_[0] > 0 or die "read error: $!";
17 };
18
19 # version 2+ has request and group objects
20 use IO::AIO 2;
21
22 aioreq_pri 4; # give next request a very high priority
23 my $req = aio_unlink "/tmp/file", sub { };
24 $req->cancel; # cancel request if still in queue
25
26 my $grp = aio_group sub { print "all stats done\n" };
27 add $grp aio_stat "..." for ...;
28
29 # AnyEvent integration (EV, Event, Glib, Tk, urxvt, pureperl...)
30 open my $fh, "<&=" . IO::AIO::poll_fileno or die "$!";
31 my $w = AnyEvent->io (fh => $fh, poll => 'r', cb => sub { IO::AIO::poll_cb });
32
33 # EV integration
34 my $w = EV::io IO::AIO::poll_fileno, EV::READ, \&IO::AIO::poll_cb;
35
36 # Event integration
37 Event->io (fd => IO::AIO::poll_fileno,
38 poll => 'r',
39 cb => \&IO::AIO::poll_cb);
40
41 # Glib/Gtk2 integration
42 add_watch Glib::IO IO::AIO::poll_fileno,
43 in => sub { IO::AIO::poll_cb; 1 };
44
45 # Tk integration
46 Tk::Event::IO->fileevent (IO::AIO::poll_fileno, "",
47 readable => \&IO::AIO::poll_cb);
48
49 # Danga::Socket integration
50 Danga::Socket->AddOtherFds (IO::AIO::poll_fileno =>
51 \&IO::AIO::poll_cb);
52
53 DESCRIPTION
54 This module implements asynchronous I/O using whatever means your
55 operating system supports.
56
57 Asynchronous means that operations that can normally block your program
58 (e.g. reading from disk) will be done asynchronously: the operation will
59 still block, but you can do something else in the meantime. This is
60 extremely useful for programs that need to stay interactive even when
61 doing heavy I/O (GUI programs, high performance network servers etc.),
62 but can also be used to easily do operations in parallel that are
63 normally done sequentially, e.g. stat'ing many files, which is much
64 faster on a RAID volume or over NFS when you do a number of stat
65 operations concurrently.
66
67 While most of this works on all types of file descriptors (for example
68 sockets), using these functions on file descriptors that support
69 nonblocking operation (again, sockets, pipes etc.) is very inefficient.
70 Use an event loop for that (such as the Event module): IO::AIO will
71 naturally fit into such an event loop itself.
72
73 In this version, a number of threads are started that execute your
74 requests and signal their completion. You don't need thread support in
75 perl, and the threads created by this module will not be visible to
76 perl. In the future, this module might make use of the native aio
77 functions available on many operating systems. However, they are often
78 not well-supported or restricted (GNU/Linux doesn't allow them on normal
79 files currently, for example), and they would only support aio_read and
80 aio_write, so the remaining functionality would have to be implemented
81 using threads anyway.
82
83 Although the module will work in the presence of other (Perl-) threads,
84 it is currently not reentrant in any way, so use appropriate locking
85 yourself, always call "poll_cb" from within the same thread, or never
86 call "poll_cb" (or other "aio_" functions) recursively.
87
88 EXAMPLE
89 This is a simple example that uses the Event module and loads
90 /etc/passwd asynchronously:
91
92 use Fcntl;
93 use Event;
94 use IO::AIO;
95
96 # register the IO::AIO callback with Event
97 Event->io (fd => IO::AIO::poll_fileno,
98 poll => 'r',
99 cb => \&IO::AIO::poll_cb);
100
101 # queue the request to open /etc/passwd
102 aio_open "/etc/passwd", O_RDONLY, 0, sub {
103 my $fh = shift
104 or die "error while opening: $!";
105
106 # stat'ing filehandles is generally non-blocking
107 my $size = -s $fh;
108
109 # queue a request to read the file
110 my $contents;
111 aio_read $fh, 0, $size, $contents, 0, sub {
112 $_[0] == $size
113 or die "short read: $!";
114
115 close $fh;
116
117 # file contents now in $contents
118 print $contents;
119
120 # exit event loop and program
121 Event::unloop;
122 };
123 };
124
125 # possibly queue up other requests, or open GUI windows,
126 # check for sockets etc. etc.
127
128 # process events as long as there are some:
129 Event::loop;
130
131 REQUEST ANATOMY AND LIFETIME
132 Every "aio_*" function creates a request. which is a C data structure
133 not directly visible to Perl.
134
135 If called in non-void context, every request function returns a Perl
136 object representing the request. In void context, nothing is returned,
137 which saves a bit of memory.
138
139 The perl object is a fairly standard ref-to-hash object. The hash
140 contents are not used by IO::AIO so you are free to store anything you
141 like in it.
142
143 During their existance, aio requests travel through the following
144 states, in order:
145
146 ready
147 Immediately after a request is created it is put into the ready
148 state, waiting for a thread to execute it.
149
150 execute
151 A thread has accepted the request for processing and is currently
152 executing it (e.g. blocking in read).
153
154 pending
155 The request has been executed and is waiting for result processing.
156
157 While request submission and execution is fully asynchronous, result
158 processing is not and relies on the perl interpreter calling
159 "poll_cb" (or another function with the same effect).
160
161 result
162 The request results are processed synchronously by "poll_cb".
163
164 The "poll_cb" function will process all outstanding aio requests by
165 calling their callbacks, freeing memory associated with them and
166 managing any groups they are contained in.
167
168 done
169 Request has reached the end of its lifetime and holds no resources
170 anymore (except possibly for the Perl object, but its connection to
171 the actual aio request is severed and calling its methods will
172 either do nothing or result in a runtime error).
173
174 FUNCTIONS
175 AIO REQUEST FUNCTIONS
176 All the "aio_*" calls are more or less thin wrappers around the syscall
177 with the same name (sans "aio_"). The arguments are similar or
178 identical, and they all accept an additional (and optional) $callback
179 argument which must be a code reference. This code reference will get
180 called with the syscall return code (e.g. most syscalls return -1 on
181 error, unlike perl, which usually delivers "false") as it's sole
182 argument when the given syscall has been executed asynchronously.
183
184 All functions expecting a filehandle keep a copy of the filehandle
185 internally until the request has finished.
186
187 All functions return request objects of type IO::AIO::REQ that allow
188 further manipulation of those requests while they are in-flight.
189
190 The pathnames you pass to these routines *must* be absolute and encoded
191 as octets. The reason for the former is that at the time the request is
192 being executed, the current working directory could have changed.
193 Alternatively, you can make sure that you never change the current
194 working directory anywhere in the program and then use relative paths.
195
196 To encode pathnames as octets, either make sure you either: a) always
197 pass in filenames you got from outside (command line, readdir etc.)
198 without tinkering, b) are ASCII or ISO 8859-1, c) use the Encode module
199 and encode your pathnames to the locale (or other) encoding in effect in
200 the user environment, d) use Glib::filename_from_unicode on unicode
201 filenames or e) use something else to ensure your scalar has the correct
202 contents.
203
204 This works, btw. independent of the internal UTF-8 bit, which IO::AIO
205 handles correctly wether it is set or not.
206
207 $prev_pri = aioreq_pri [$pri]
208 Returns the priority value that would be used for the next request
209 and, if $pri is given, sets the priority for the next aio request.
210
211 The default priority is 0, the minimum and maximum priorities are -4
212 and 4, respectively. Requests with higher priority will be serviced
213 first.
214
215 The priority will be reset to 0 after each call to one of the
216 "aio_*" functions.
217
218 Example: open a file with low priority, then read something from it
219 with higher priority so the read request is serviced before other
220 low priority open requests (potentially spamming the cache):
221
222 aioreq_pri -3;
223 aio_open ..., sub {
224 return unless $_[0];
225
226 aioreq_pri -2;
227 aio_read $_[0], ..., sub {
228 ...
229 };
230 };
231
232 aioreq_nice $pri_adjust
233 Similar to "aioreq_pri", but subtracts the given value from the
234 current priority, so the effect is cumulative.
235
236 aio_open $pathname, $flags, $mode, $callback->($fh)
237 Asynchronously open or create a file and call the callback with a
238 newly created filehandle for the file.
239
240 The pathname passed to "aio_open" must be absolute. See API NOTES,
241 above, for an explanation.
242
243 The $flags argument is a bitmask. See the "Fcntl" module for a list.
244 They are the same as used by "sysopen".
245
246 Likewise, $mode specifies the mode of the newly created file, if it
247 didn't exist and "O_CREAT" has been given, just like perl's
248 "sysopen", except that it is mandatory (i.e. use 0 if you don't
249 create new files, and 0666 or 0777 if you do). Note that the $mode
250 will be modified by the umask in effect then the request is being
251 executed, so better never change the umask.
252
253 Example:
254
255 aio_open "/etc/passwd", O_RDONLY, 0, sub {
256 if ($_[0]) {
257 print "open successful, fh is $_[0]\n";
258 ...
259 } else {
260 die "open failed: $!\n";
261 }
262 };
263
264 aio_close $fh, $callback->($status)
265 Asynchronously close a file and call the callback with the result
266 code.
267
268 Unfortunately, you can't do this to perl. Perl *insists* very
269 strongly on closing the file descriptor associated with the
270 filehandle itself.
271
272 Therefore, "aio_close" will not close the filehandle - instead it
273 will use dup2 to overwrite the file descriptor with the write-end of
274 a pipe (the pipe fd will be created on demand and will be cached).
275
276 Or in other words: the file descriptor will be closed, but it will
277 not be free for reuse until the perl filehandle is closed.
278
279 aio_read $fh,$offset,$length, $data,$dataoffset, $callback->($retval)
280 aio_write $fh,$offset,$length, $data,$dataoffset, $callback->($retval)
281 Reads or writes $length bytes from the specified $fh and $offset
282 into the scalar given by $data and offset $dataoffset and calls the
283 callback without the actual number of bytes read (or -1 on error,
284 just like the syscall).
285
286 If $offset is undefined, then the current file descriptor offset
287 will be used (and updated), otherwise the file descriptor offset
288 will not be changed by these calls.
289
290 If $length is undefined in "aio_write", use the remaining length of
291 $data.
292
293 If $dataoffset is less than zero, it will be counted from the end of
294 $data.
295
296 The $data scalar *MUST NOT* be modified in any way while the request
297 is outstanding. Modifying it can result in segfaults or World War
298 III (if the necessary/optional hardware is installed).
299
300 Example: Read 15 bytes at offset 7 into scalar $buffer, starting at
301 offset 0 within the scalar:
302
303 aio_read $fh, 7, 15, $buffer, 0, sub {
304 $_[0] > 0 or die "read error: $!";
305 print "read $_[0] bytes: <$buffer>\n";
306 };
307
308 aio_sendfile $out_fh, $in_fh, $in_offset, $length, $callback->($retval)
309 Tries to copy $length bytes from $in_fh to $out_fh. It starts
310 reading at byte offset $in_offset, and starts writing at the current
311 file offset of $out_fh. Because of that, it is not safe to issue
312 more than one "aio_sendfile" per $out_fh, as they will interfere
313 with each other.
314
315 This call tries to make use of a native "sendfile" syscall to
316 provide zero-copy operation. For this to work, $out_fh should refer
317 to a socket, and $in_fh should refer to mmap'able file.
318
319 If the native sendfile call fails or is not implemented, it will be
320 emulated, so you can call "aio_sendfile" on any type of filehandle
321 regardless of the limitations of the operating system.
322
323 Please note, however, that "aio_sendfile" can read more bytes from
324 $in_fh than are written, and there is no way to find out how many
325 bytes have been read from "aio_sendfile" alone, as "aio_sendfile"
326 only provides the number of bytes written to $out_fh. Only if the
327 result value equals $length one can assume that $length bytes have
328 been read.
329
330 aio_readahead $fh,$offset,$length, $callback->($retval)
331 "aio_readahead" populates the page cache with data from a file so
332 that subsequent reads from that file will not block on disk I/O. The
333 $offset argument specifies the starting point from which data is to
334 be read and $length specifies the number of bytes to be read. I/O is
335 performed in whole pages, so that offset is effectively rounded down
336 to a page boundary and bytes are read up to the next page boundary
337 greater than or equal to (off-set+length). "aio_readahead" does not
338 read beyond the end of the file. The current file offset of the file
339 is left unchanged.
340
341 If that syscall doesn't exist (likely if your OS isn't Linux) it
342 will be emulated by simply reading the data, which would have a
343 similar effect.
344
345 aio_stat $fh_or_path, $callback->($status)
346 aio_lstat $fh, $callback->($status)
347 Works like perl's "stat" or "lstat" in void context. The callback
348 will be called after the stat and the results will be available
349 using "stat _" or "-s _" etc...
350
351 The pathname passed to "aio_stat" must be absolute. See API NOTES,
352 above, for an explanation.
353
354 Currently, the stats are always 64-bit-stats, i.e. instead of
355 returning an error when stat'ing a large file, the results will be
356 silently truncated unless perl itself is compiled with large file
357 support.
358
359 Example: Print the length of /etc/passwd:
360
361 aio_stat "/etc/passwd", sub {
362 $_[0] and die "stat failed: $!";
363 print "size is ", -s _, "\n";
364 };
365
366 aio_utime $fh_or_path, $atime, $mtime, $callback->($status)
367 Works like perl's "utime" function (including the special case of
368 $atime and $mtime being undef). Fractional times are supported if
369 the underlying syscalls support them.
370
371 When called with a pathname, uses utimes(2) if available, otherwise
372 utime(2). If called on a file descriptor, uses futimes(2) if
373 available, otherwise returns ENOSYS, so this is not portable.
374
375 Examples:
376
377 # set atime and mtime to current time (basically touch(1)):
378 aio_utime "path", undef, undef;
379 # set atime to current time and mtime to beginning of the epoch:
380 aio_utime "path", time, undef; # undef==0
381
382 aio_chown $fh_or_path, $uid, $gid, $callback->($status)
383 Works like perl's "chown" function, except that "undef" for either
384 $uid or $gid is being interpreted as "do not change" (but -1 can
385 also be used).
386
387 Examples:
388
389 # same as "chown root path" in the shell:
390 aio_chown "path", 0, -1;
391 # same as above:
392 aio_chown "path", 0, undef;
393
394 aio_truncate $fh_or_path, $offset, $callback->($status)
395 Works like truncate(2) or ftruncate(2).
396
397 aio_chmod $fh_or_path, $mode, $callback->($status)
398 Works like perl's "chmod" function.
399
400 aio_unlink $pathname, $callback->($status)
401 Asynchronously unlink (delete) a file and call the callback with the
402 result code.
403
404 aio_mknod $path, $mode, $dev, $callback->($status)
405 [EXPERIMENTAL]
406
407 Asynchronously create a device node (or fifo). See mknod(2).
408
409 The only (POSIX-) portable way of calling this function is:
410
411 aio_mknod $path, IO::AIO::S_IFIFO | $mode, 0, sub { ...
412
413 aio_link $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
414 Asynchronously create a new link to the existing object at $srcpath
415 at the path $dstpath and call the callback with the result code.
416
417 aio_symlink $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
418 Asynchronously create a new symbolic link to the existing object at
419 $srcpath at the path $dstpath and call the callback with the result
420 code.
421
422 aio_readlink $path, $callback->($link)
423 Asynchronously read the symlink specified by $path and pass it to
424 the callback. If an error occurs, nothing or undef gets passed to
425 the callback.
426
427 aio_rename $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
428 Asynchronously rename the object at $srcpath to $dstpath, just as
429 rename(2) and call the callback with the result code.
430
431 aio_mkdir $pathname, $mode, $callback->($status)
432 Asynchronously mkdir (create) a directory and call the callback with
433 the result code. $mode will be modified by the umask at the time the
434 request is executed, so do not change your umask.
435
436 aio_rmdir $pathname, $callback->($status)
437 Asynchronously rmdir (delete) a directory and call the callback with
438 the result code.
439
440 aio_readdir $pathname, $callback->($entries)
441 Unlike the POSIX call of the same name, "aio_readdir" reads an
442 entire directory (i.e. opendir + readdir + closedir). The entries
443 will not be sorted, and will NOT include the "." and ".." entries.
444
445 The callback a single argument which is either "undef" or an
446 array-ref with the filenames.
447
448 aio_load $path, $data, $callback->($status)
449 This is a composite request that tries to fully load the given file
450 into memory. Status is the same as with aio_read.
451
452 aio_copy $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
453 Try to copy the *file* (directories not supported as either source
454 or destination) from $srcpath to $dstpath and call the callback with
455 the 0 (error) or -1 ok.
456
457 This is a composite request that it creates the destination file
458 with mode 0200 and copies the contents of the source file into it
459 using "aio_sendfile", followed by restoring atime, mtime, access
460 mode and uid/gid, in that order.
461
462 If an error occurs, the partial destination file will be unlinked,
463 if possible, except when setting atime, mtime, access mode and
464 uid/gid, where errors are being ignored.
465
466 aio_move $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
467 Try to move the *file* (directories not supported as either source
468 or destination) from $srcpath to $dstpath and call the callback with
469 the 0 (error) or -1 ok.
470
471 This is a composite request that tries to rename(2) the file first.
472 If rename files with "EXDEV", it copies the file with "aio_copy"
473 and, if that is successful, unlinking the $srcpath.
474
475 aio_scandir $path, $maxreq, $callback->($dirs, $nondirs)
476 Scans a directory (similar to "aio_readdir") but additionally tries
477 to efficiently separate the entries of directory $path into two sets
478 of names, directories you can recurse into (directories), and ones
479 you cannot recurse into (everything else, including symlinks to
480 directories).
481
482 "aio_scandir" is a composite request that creates of many sub
483 requests_ $maxreq specifies the maximum number of outstanding aio
484 requests that this function generates. If it is "<= 0", then a
485 suitable default will be chosen (currently 4).
486
487 On error, the callback is called without arguments, otherwise it
488 receives two array-refs with path-relative entry names.
489
490 Example:
491
492 aio_scandir $dir, 0, sub {
493 my ($dirs, $nondirs) = @_;
494 print "real directories: @$dirs\n";
495 print "everything else: @$nondirs\n";
496 };
497
498 Implementation notes.
499
500 The "aio_readdir" cannot be avoided, but "stat()"'ing every entry
501 can.
502
503 After reading the directory, the modification time, size etc. of the
504 directory before and after the readdir is checked, and if they match
505 (and isn't the current time), the link count will be used to decide
506 how many entries are directories (if >= 2). Otherwise, no knowledge
507 of the number of subdirectories will be assumed.
508
509 Then entries will be sorted into likely directories (everything
510 without a non-initial dot currently) and likely non-directories
511 (everything else). Then every entry plus an appended "/." will be
512 "stat"'ed, likely directories first. If that succeeds, it assumes
513 that the entry is a directory or a symlink to directory (which will
514 be checked seperately). This is often faster than stat'ing the entry
515 itself because filesystems might detect the type of the entry
516 without reading the inode data (e.g. ext2fs filetype feature).
517
518 If the known number of directories (link count - 2) has been
519 reached, the rest of the entries is assumed to be non-directories.
520
521 This only works with certainty on POSIX (= UNIX) filesystems, which
522 fortunately are the vast majority of filesystems around.
523
524 It will also likely work on non-POSIX filesystems with reduced
525 efficiency as those tend to return 0 or 1 as link counts, which
526 disables the directory counting heuristic.
527
528 aio_rmtree $path, $callback->($status)
529 Delete a directory tree starting (and including) $path, return the
530 status of the final "rmdir" only. This is a composite request that
531 uses "aio_scandir" to recurse into and rmdir directories, and unlink
532 everything else.
533
534 aio_sync $callback->($status)
535 Asynchronously call sync and call the callback when finished.
536
537 aio_fsync $fh, $callback->($status)
538 Asynchronously call fsync on the given filehandle and call the
539 callback with the fsync result code.
540
541 aio_fdatasync $fh, $callback->($status)
542 Asynchronously call fdatasync on the given filehandle and call the
543 callback with the fdatasync result code.
544
545 If this call isn't available because your OS lacks it or it couldn't
546 be detected, it will be emulated by calling "fsync" instead.
547
548 aio_pathsync $path, $callback->($status)
549 This request tries to open, fsync and close the given path. This is
550 a composite request intended tosync directories after directory
551 operations (E.g. rename). This might not work on all operating
552 systems or have any specific effect, but usually it makes sure that
553 directory changes get written to disc. It works for anything that
554 can be opened for read-only, not just directories.
555
556 Passes 0 when everything went ok, and -1 on error.
557
558 aio_group $callback->(...)
559 This is a very special aio request: Instead of doing something, it
560 is a container for other aio requests, which is useful if you want
561 to bundle many requests into a single, composite, request with a
562 definite callback and the ability to cancel the whole request with
563 its subrequests.
564
565 Returns an object of class IO::AIO::GRP. See its documentation below
566 for more info.
567
568 Example:
569
570 my $grp = aio_group sub {
571 print "all stats done\n";
572 };
573
574 add $grp
575 (aio_stat ...),
576 (aio_stat ...),
577 ...;
578
579 aio_nop $callback->()
580 This is a special request - it does nothing in itself and is only
581 used for side effects, such as when you want to add a dummy request
582 to a group so that finishing the requests in the group depends on
583 executing the given code.
584
585 While this request does nothing, it still goes through the execution
586 phase and still requires a worker thread. Thus, the callback will
587 not be executed immediately but only after other requests in the
588 queue have entered their execution phase. This can be used to
589 measure request latency.
590
591 IO::AIO::aio_busy $fractional_seconds, $callback->() *NOT EXPORTED*
592 Mainly used for debugging and benchmarking, this aio request puts
593 one of the request workers to sleep for the given time.
594
595 While it is theoretically handy to have simple I/O scheduling
596 requests like sleep and file handle readable/writable, the overhead
597 this creates is immense (it blocks a thread for a long time) so do
598 not use this function except to put your application under
599 artificial I/O pressure.
600
601 IO::AIO::REQ CLASS
602 All non-aggregate "aio_*" functions return an object of this class when
603 called in non-void context.
604
605 cancel $req
606 Cancels the request, if possible. Has the effect of skipping
607 execution when entering the execute state and skipping calling the
608 callback when entering the the result state, but will leave the
609 request otherwise untouched. That means that requests that currently
610 execute will not be stopped and resources held by the request will
611 not be freed prematurely.
612
613 cb $req $callback->(...)
614 Replace (or simply set) the callback registered to the request.
615
616 IO::AIO::GRP CLASS
617 This class is a subclass of IO::AIO::REQ, so all its methods apply to
618 objects of this class, too.
619
620 A IO::AIO::GRP object is a special request that can contain multiple
621 other aio requests.
622
623 You create one by calling the "aio_group" constructing function with a
624 callback that will be called when all contained requests have entered
625 the "done" state:
626
627 my $grp = aio_group sub {
628 print "all requests are done\n";
629 };
630
631 You add requests by calling the "add" method with one or more
632 "IO::AIO::REQ" objects:
633
634 $grp->add (aio_unlink "...");
635
636 add $grp aio_stat "...", sub {
637 $_[0] or return $grp->result ("error");
638
639 # add another request dynamically, if first succeeded
640 add $grp aio_open "...", sub {
641 $grp->result ("ok");
642 };
643 };
644
645 This makes it very easy to create composite requests (see the source of
646 "aio_move" for an application) that work and feel like simple requests.
647
648 * The IO::AIO::GRP objects will be cleaned up during calls to
649 "IO::AIO::poll_cb", just like any other request.
650
651 * They can be canceled like any other request. Canceling will cancel
652 not only the request itself, but also all requests it contains.
653
654 * They can also can also be added to other IO::AIO::GRP objects.
655
656 * You must not add requests to a group from within the group callback
657 (or any later time).
658
659 Their lifetime, simplified, looks like this: when they are empty, they
660 will finish very quickly. If they contain only requests that are in the
661 "done" state, they will also finish. Otherwise they will continue to
662 exist.
663
664 That means after creating a group you have some time to add requests.
665 And in the callbacks of those requests, you can add further requests to
666 the group. And only when all those requests have finished will the the
667 group itself finish.
668
669 add $grp ...
670 $grp->add (...)
671 Add one or more requests to the group. Any type of IO::AIO::REQ can
672 be added, including other groups, as long as you do not create
673 circular dependencies.
674
675 Returns all its arguments.
676
677 $grp->cancel_subs
678 Cancel all subrequests and clears any feeder, but not the group
679 request itself. Useful when you queued a lot of events but got a
680 result early.
681
682 $grp->result (...)
683 Set the result value(s) that will be passed to the group callback
684 when all subrequests have finished and set the groups errno to the
685 current value of errno (just like calling "errno" without an error
686 number). By default, no argument will be passed and errno is zero.
687
688 $grp->errno ([$errno])
689 Sets the group errno value to $errno, or the current value of errno
690 when the argument is missing.
691
692 Every aio request has an associated errno value that is restored
693 when the callback is invoked. This method lets you change this value
694 from its default (0).
695
696 Calling "result" will also set errno, so make sure you either set $!
697 before the call to "result", or call c<errno> after it.
698
699 feed $grp $callback->($grp)
700 Sets a feeder/generator on this group: every group can have an
701 attached generator that generates requests if idle. The idea behind
702 this is that, although you could just queue as many requests as you
703 want in a group, this might starve other requests for a potentially
704 long time. For example, "aio_scandir" might generate hundreds of
705 thousands "aio_stat" requests, delaying any later requests for a
706 long time.
707
708 To avoid this, and allow incremental generation of requests, you can
709 instead a group and set a feeder on it that generates those
710 requests. The feed callback will be called whenever there are few
711 enough (see "limit", below) requests active in the group itself and
712 is expected to queue more requests.
713
714 The feed callback can queue as many requests as it likes (i.e. "add"
715 does not impose any limits).
716
717 If the feed does not queue more requests when called, it will be
718 automatically removed from the group.
719
720 If the feed limit is 0, it will be set to 2 automatically.
721
722 Example:
723
724 # stat all files in @files, but only ever use four aio requests concurrently:
725
726 my $grp = aio_group sub { print "finished\n" };
727 limit $grp 4;
728 feed $grp sub {
729 my $file = pop @files
730 or return;
731
732 add $grp aio_stat $file, sub { ... };
733 };
734
735 limit $grp $num
736 Sets the feeder limit for the group: The feeder will be called
737 whenever the group contains less than this many requests.
738
739 Setting the limit to 0 will pause the feeding process.
740
741 SUPPORT FUNCTIONS
742 EVENT PROCESSING AND EVENT LOOP INTEGRATION
743 $fileno = IO::AIO::poll_fileno
744 Return the *request result pipe file descriptor*. This filehandle
745 must be polled for reading by some mechanism outside this module
746 (e.g. Event or select, see below or the SYNOPSIS). If the pipe
747 becomes readable you have to call "poll_cb" to check the results.
748
749 See "poll_cb" for an example.
750
751 IO::AIO::poll_cb
752 Process some outstanding events on the result pipe. You have to call
753 this regularly. Returns the number of events processed. Returns
754 immediately when no events are outstanding. The amount of events
755 processed depends on the settings of "IO::AIO::max_poll_req" and
756 "IO::AIO::max_poll_time".
757
758 If not all requests were processed for whatever reason, the
759 filehandle will still be ready when "poll_cb" returns.
760
761 Example: Install an Event watcher that automatically calls
762 IO::AIO::poll_cb with high priority:
763
764 Event->io (fd => IO::AIO::poll_fileno,
765 poll => 'r', async => 1,
766 cb => \&IO::AIO::poll_cb);
767
768 IO::AIO::max_poll_reqs $nreqs
769 IO::AIO::max_poll_time $seconds
770 These set the maximum number of requests (default 0, meaning
771 infinity) that are being processed by "IO::AIO::poll_cb" in one
772 call, respectively the maximum amount of time (default 0, meaning
773 infinity) spent in "IO::AIO::poll_cb" to process requests (more
774 correctly the mininum amount of time "poll_cb" is allowed to use).
775
776 Setting "max_poll_time" to a non-zero value creates an overhead of
777 one syscall per request processed, which is not normally a problem
778 unless your callbacks are really really fast or your OS is really
779 really slow (I am not mentioning Solaris here). Using
780 "max_poll_reqs" incurs no overhead.
781
782 Setting these is useful if you want to ensure some level of
783 interactiveness when perl is not fast enough to process all requests
784 in time.
785
786 For interactive programs, values such as 0.01 to 0.1 should be fine.
787
788 Example: Install an Event watcher that automatically calls
789 IO::AIO::poll_cb with low priority, to ensure that other parts of
790 the program get the CPU sometimes even under high AIO load.
791
792 # try not to spend much more than 0.1s in poll_cb
793 IO::AIO::max_poll_time 0.1;
794
795 # use a low priority so other tasks have priority
796 Event->io (fd => IO::AIO::poll_fileno,
797 poll => 'r', nice => 1,
798 cb => &IO::AIO::poll_cb);
799
800 IO::AIO::poll_wait
801 If there are any outstanding requests and none of them in the result
802 phase, wait till the result filehandle becomes ready for reading
803 (simply does a "select" on the filehandle. This is useful if you
804 want to synchronously wait for some requests to finish).
805
806 See "nreqs" for an example.
807
808 IO::AIO::poll
809 Waits until some requests have been handled.
810
811 Returns the number of requests processed, but is otherwise strictly
812 equivalent to:
813
814 IO::AIO::poll_wait, IO::AIO::poll_cb
815
816 IO::AIO::flush
817 Wait till all outstanding AIO requests have been handled.
818
819 Strictly equivalent to:
820
821 IO::AIO::poll_wait, IO::AIO::poll_cb
822 while IO::AIO::nreqs;
823
824 CONTROLLING THE NUMBER OF THREADS
825 IO::AIO::min_parallel $nthreads
826 Set the minimum number of AIO threads to $nthreads. The current
827 default is 8, which means eight asynchronous operations can execute
828 concurrently at any one time (the number of outstanding requests,
829 however, is unlimited).
830
831 IO::AIO starts threads only on demand, when an AIO request is queued
832 and no free thread exists. Please note that queueing up a hundred
833 requests can create demand for a hundred threads, even if it turns
834 out that everything is in the cache and could have been processed
835 faster by a single thread.
836
837 It is recommended to keep the number of threads relatively low, as
838 some Linux kernel versions will scale negatively with the number of
839 threads (higher parallelity => MUCH higher latency). With current
840 Linux 2.6 versions, 4-32 threads should be fine.
841
842 Under most circumstances you don't need to call this function, as
843 the module selects a default that is suitable for low to moderate
844 load.
845
846 IO::AIO::max_parallel $nthreads
847 Sets the maximum number of AIO threads to $nthreads. If more than
848 the specified number of threads are currently running, this function
849 kills them. This function blocks until the limit is reached.
850
851 While $nthreads are zero, aio requests get queued but not executed
852 until the number of threads has been increased again.
853
854 This module automatically runs "max_parallel 0" at program end, to
855 ensure that all threads are killed and that there are no outstanding
856 requests.
857
858 Under normal circumstances you don't need to call this function.
859
860 IO::AIO::max_idle $nthreads
861 Limit the number of threads (default: 4) that are allowed to idle
862 (i.e., threads that did not get a request to process within 10
863 seconds). That means if a thread becomes idle while $nthreads other
864 threads are also idle, it will free its resources and exit.
865
866 This is useful when you allow a large number of threads (e.g. 100 or
867 1000) to allow for extremely high load situations, but want to free
868 resources under normal circumstances (1000 threads can easily
869 consume 30MB of RAM).
870
871 The default is probably ok in most situations, especially if thread
872 creation is fast. If thread creation is very slow on your system you
873 might want to use larger values.
874
875 $oldmaxreqs = IO::AIO::max_outstanding $maxreqs
876 This is a very bad function to use in interactive programs because
877 it blocks, and a bad way to reduce concurrency because it is
878 inexact: Better use an "aio_group" together with a feed callback.
879
880 Sets the maximum number of outstanding requests to $nreqs. If you do
881 queue up more than this number of requests, the next call to the
882 "poll_cb" (and "poll_some" and other functions calling "poll_cb")
883 function will block until the limit is no longer exceeded.
884
885 The default value is very large, so there is no practical limit on
886 the number of outstanding requests.
887
888 You can still queue as many requests as you want. Therefore,
889 "max_oustsanding" is mainly useful in simple scripts (with low
890 values) or as a stop gap to shield against fatal memory overflow
891 (with large values).
892
893 STATISTICAL INFORMATION
894 IO::AIO::nreqs
895 Returns the number of requests currently in the ready, execute or
896 pending states (i.e. for which their callback has not been invoked
897 yet).
898
899 Example: wait till there are no outstanding requests anymore:
900
901 IO::AIO::poll_wait, IO::AIO::poll_cb
902 while IO::AIO::nreqs;
903
904 IO::AIO::nready
905 Returns the number of requests currently in the ready state (not yet
906 executed).
907
908 IO::AIO::npending
909 Returns the number of requests currently in the pending state
910 (executed, but not yet processed by poll_cb).
911
912 FORK BEHAVIOUR
913 This module should do "the right thing" when the process using it forks:
914
915 Before the fork, IO::AIO enters a quiescent state where no requests can
916 be added in other threads and no results will be processed. After the
917 fork the parent simply leaves the quiescent state and continues
918 request/result processing, while the child frees the request/result
919 queue (so that the requests started before the fork will only be handled
920 in the parent). Threads will be started on demand until the limit set in
921 the parent process has been reached again.
922
923 In short: the parent will, after a short pause, continue as if fork had
924 not been called, while the child will act as if IO::AIO has not been
925 used yet.
926
927 MEMORY USAGE
928 Per-request usage:
929
930 Each aio request uses - depending on your architecture - around 100-200
931 bytes of memory. In addition, stat requests need a stat buffer (possibly
932 a few hundred bytes), readdir requires a result buffer and so on. Perl
933 scalars and other data passed into aio requests will also be locked and
934 will consume memory till the request has entered the done state.
935
936 This is not awfully much, so queuing lots of requests is not usually a
937 problem.
938
939 Per-thread usage:
940
941 In the execution phase, some aio requests require more memory for
942 temporary buffers, and each thread requires a stack and other data
943 structures (usually around 16k-128k, depending on the OS).
944
945 KNOWN BUGS
946 Known bugs will be fixed in the next release.
947
948 SEE ALSO
949 Coro::AIO.
950
951 AUTHOR
952 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
953 http://home.schmorp.de/
954