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1 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2 <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd">
3 <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en">
4 <head>
5 <title>libev</title>
6 <meta name="description" content="Pod documentation for libev" />
7 <meta name="inputfile" content="&lt;standard input&gt;" />
8 <meta name="outputfile" content="&lt;standard output&gt;" />
9 <meta name="created" content="Sat Nov 24 17:57:37 2007" />
10 <meta name="generator" content="Pod::Xhtml 1.57" />
11 <link rel="stylesheet" href="http://res.tst.eu/pod.css"/></head>
12 <body>
13 <div class="pod">
14 <!-- INDEX START -->
15 <h3 id="TOP">Index</h3>
16
17 <ul><li><a href="#NAME">NAME</a></li>
18 <li><a href="#SYNOPSIS">SYNOPSIS</a></li>
19 <li><a href="#DESCRIPTION">DESCRIPTION</a></li>
20 <li><a href="#FEATURES">FEATURES</a></li>
21 <li><a href="#CONVENTIONS">CONVENTIONS</a></li>
22 <li><a href="#TIME_REPRESENTATION">TIME REPRESENTATION</a></li>
23 <li><a href="#GLOBAL_FUNCTIONS">GLOBAL FUNCTIONS</a></li>
24 <li><a href="#FUNCTIONS_CONTROLLING_THE_EVENT_LOOP">FUNCTIONS CONTROLLING THE EVENT LOOP</a></li>
25 <li><a href="#ANATOMY_OF_A_WATCHER">ANATOMY OF A WATCHER</a>
26 <ul><li><a href="#GENERIC_WATCHER_FUNCTIONS">GENERIC WATCHER FUNCTIONS</a></li>
27 <li><a href="#ASSOCIATING_CUSTOM_DATA_WITH_A_WATCH">ASSOCIATING CUSTOM DATA WITH A WATCHER</a></li>
28 </ul>
29 </li>
30 <li><a href="#WATCHER_TYPES">WATCHER TYPES</a>
31 <ul><li><a href="#code_ev_io_code_is_this_file_descrip"><code>ev_io</code> - is this file descriptor readable or writable?</a></li>
32 <li><a href="#code_ev_timer_code_relative_and_opti"><code>ev_timer</code> - relative and optionally repeating timeouts</a></li>
33 <li><a href="#code_ev_periodic_code_to_cron_or_not"><code>ev_periodic</code> - to cron or not to cron?</a></li>
34 <li><a href="#code_ev_signal_code_signal_me_when_a"><code>ev_signal</code> - signal me when a signal gets signalled!</a></li>
35 <li><a href="#code_ev_child_code_watch_out_for_pro"><code>ev_child</code> - watch out for process status changes</a></li>
36 <li><a href="#code_ev_idle_code_when_you_ve_got_no"><code>ev_idle</code> - when you've got nothing better to do...</a></li>
37 <li><a href="#code_ev_prepare_code_and_code_ev_che"><code>ev_prepare</code> and <code>ev_check</code> - customise your event loop!</a></li>
38 <li><a href="#code_ev_embed_code_when_one_backend_"><code>ev_embed</code> - when one backend isn't enough...</a></li>
39 </ul>
40 </li>
41 <li><a href="#OTHER_FUNCTIONS">OTHER FUNCTIONS</a></li>
42 <li><a href="#LIBEVENT_EMULATION">LIBEVENT EMULATION</a></li>
43 <li><a href="#C_SUPPORT">C++ SUPPORT</a></li>
44 <li><a href="#EMBEDDING">EMBEDDING</a>
45 <ul><li><a href="#FILESETS">FILESETS</a>
46 <ul><li><a href="#CORE_EVENT_LOOP">CORE EVENT LOOP</a></li>
47 <li><a href="#LIBEVENT_COMPATIBILITY_API">LIBEVENT COMPATIBILITY API</a></li>
48 <li><a href="#AUTOCONF_SUPPORT">AUTOCONF SUPPORT</a></li>
49 </ul>
50 </li>
51 <li><a href="#PREPROCESSOR_SYMBOLS_MACROS">PREPROCESSOR SYMBOLS/MACROS</a></li>
52 <li><a href="#EXAMPLES">EXAMPLES</a></li>
53 </ul>
54 </li>
55 <li><a href="#AUTHOR">AUTHOR</a>
56 </li>
57 </ul><hr />
58 <!-- INDEX END -->
59
60 <h1 id="NAME">NAME</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
61 <div id="NAME_CONTENT">
62 <p>libev - a high performance full-featured event loop written in C</p>
63
64 </div>
65 <h1 id="SYNOPSIS">SYNOPSIS</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
66 <div id="SYNOPSIS_CONTENT">
67 <pre> #include &lt;ev.h&gt;
68
69 </pre>
70
71 </div>
72 <h1 id="DESCRIPTION">DESCRIPTION</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
73 <div id="DESCRIPTION_CONTENT">
74 <p>Libev is an event loop: you register interest in certain events (such as a
75 file descriptor being readable or a timeout occuring), and it will manage
76 these event sources and provide your program with events.</p>
77 <p>To do this, it must take more or less complete control over your process
78 (or thread) by executing the <i>event loop</i> handler, and will then
79 communicate events via a callback mechanism.</p>
80 <p>You register interest in certain events by registering so-called <i>event
81 watchers</i>, which are relatively small C structures you initialise with the
82 details of the event, and then hand it over to libev by <i>starting</i> the
83 watcher.</p>
84
85 </div>
86 <h1 id="FEATURES">FEATURES</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
87 <div id="FEATURES_CONTENT">
88 <p>Libev supports select, poll, the linux-specific epoll and the bsd-specific
89 kqueue mechanisms for file descriptor events, relative timers, absolute
90 timers with customised rescheduling, signal events, process status change
91 events (related to SIGCHLD), and event watchers dealing with the event
92 loop mechanism itself (idle, prepare and check watchers). It also is quite
93 fast (see this <a href="http://libev.schmorp.de/bench.html">benchmark</a> comparing
94 it to libevent for example).</p>
95
96 </div>
97 <h1 id="CONVENTIONS">CONVENTIONS</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
98 <div id="CONVENTIONS_CONTENT">
99 <p>Libev is very configurable. In this manual the default configuration
100 will be described, which supports multiple event loops. For more info
101 about various configuration options please have a look at the file
102 <cite>README.embed</cite> in the libev distribution. If libev was configured without
103 support for multiple event loops, then all functions taking an initial
104 argument of name <code>loop</code> (which is always of type <code>struct ev_loop *</code>)
105 will not have this argument.</p>
106
107 </div>
108 <h1 id="TIME_REPRESENTATION">TIME REPRESENTATION</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
109 <div id="TIME_REPRESENTATION_CONTENT">
110 <p>Libev represents time as a single floating point number, representing the
111 (fractional) number of seconds since the (POSIX) epoch (somewhere near
112 the beginning of 1970, details are complicated, don't ask). This type is
113 called <code>ev_tstamp</code>, which is what you should use too. It usually aliases
114 to the <code>double</code> type in C, and when you need to do any calculations on
115 it, you should treat it as such.</p>
116
117
118
119
120
121 </div>
122 <h1 id="GLOBAL_FUNCTIONS">GLOBAL FUNCTIONS</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
123 <div id="GLOBAL_FUNCTIONS_CONTENT">
124 <p>These functions can be called anytime, even before initialising the
125 library in any way.</p>
126 <dl>
127 <dt>ev_tstamp ev_time ()</dt>
128 <dd>
129 <p>Returns the current time as libev would use it. Please note that the
130 <code>ev_now</code> function is usually faster and also often returns the timestamp
131 you actually want to know.</p>
132 </dd>
133 <dt>int ev_version_major ()</dt>
134 <dt>int ev_version_minor ()</dt>
135 <dd>
136 <p>You can find out the major and minor version numbers of the library
137 you linked against by calling the functions <code>ev_version_major</code> and
138 <code>ev_version_minor</code>. If you want, you can compare against the global
139 symbols <code>EV_VERSION_MAJOR</code> and <code>EV_VERSION_MINOR</code>, which specify the
140 version of the library your program was compiled against.</p>
141 <p>Usually, it's a good idea to terminate if the major versions mismatch,
142 as this indicates an incompatible change. Minor versions are usually
143 compatible to older versions, so a larger minor version alone is usually
144 not a problem.</p>
145 <p>Example: make sure we haven't accidentally been linked against the wrong
146 version:</p>
147 <pre> assert ((&quot;libev version mismatch&quot;,
148 ev_version_major () == EV_VERSION_MAJOR
149 &amp;&amp; ev_version_minor () &gt;= EV_VERSION_MINOR));
150
151 </pre>
152 </dd>
153 <dt>unsigned int ev_supported_backends ()</dt>
154 <dd>
155 <p>Return the set of all backends (i.e. their corresponding <code>EV_BACKEND_*</code>
156 value) compiled into this binary of libev (independent of their
157 availability on the system you are running on). See <code>ev_default_loop</code> for
158 a description of the set values.</p>
159 <p>Example: make sure we have the epoll method, because yeah this is cool and
160 a must have and can we have a torrent of it please!!!11</p>
161 <pre> assert ((&quot;sorry, no epoll, no sex&quot;,
162 ev_supported_backends () &amp; EVBACKEND_EPOLL));
163
164 </pre>
165 </dd>
166 <dt>unsigned int ev_recommended_backends ()</dt>
167 <dd>
168 <p>Return the set of all backends compiled into this binary of libev and also
169 recommended for this platform. This set is often smaller than the one
170 returned by <code>ev_supported_backends</code>, as for example kqueue is broken on
171 most BSDs and will not be autodetected unless you explicitly request it
172 (assuming you know what you are doing). This is the set of backends that
173 libev will probe for if you specify no backends explicitly.</p>
174 </dd>
175 <dt>unsigned int ev_embeddable_backends ()</dt>
176 <dd>
177 <p>Returns the set of backends that are embeddable in other event loops. This
178 is the theoretical, all-platform, value. To find which backends
179 might be supported on the current system, you would need to look at
180 <code>ev_embeddable_backends () &amp; ev_supported_backends ()</code>, likewise for
181 recommended ones.</p>
182 <p>See the description of <code>ev_embed</code> watchers for more info.</p>
183 </dd>
184 <dt>ev_set_allocator (void *(*cb)(void *ptr, long size))</dt>
185 <dd>
186 <p>Sets the allocation function to use (the prototype is similar to the
187 realloc C function, the semantics are identical). It is used to allocate
188 and free memory (no surprises here). If it returns zero when memory
189 needs to be allocated, the library might abort or take some potentially
190 destructive action. The default is your system realloc function.</p>
191 <p>You could override this function in high-availability programs to, say,
192 free some memory if it cannot allocate memory, to use a special allocator,
193 or even to sleep a while and retry until some memory is available.</p>
194 <p>Example: replace the libev allocator with one that waits a bit and then
195 retries: better than mine).</p>
196 <pre> static void *
197 persistent_realloc (void *ptr, long size)
198 {
199 for (;;)
200 {
201 void *newptr = realloc (ptr, size);
202
203 if (newptr)
204 return newptr;
205
206 sleep (60);
207 }
208 }
209
210 ...
211 ev_set_allocator (persistent_realloc);
212
213 </pre>
214 </dd>
215 <dt>ev_set_syserr_cb (void (*cb)(const char *msg));</dt>
216 <dd>
217 <p>Set the callback function to call on a retryable syscall error (such
218 as failed select, poll, epoll_wait). The message is a printable string
219 indicating the system call or subsystem causing the problem. If this
220 callback is set, then libev will expect it to remedy the sitution, no
221 matter what, when it returns. That is, libev will generally retry the
222 requested operation, or, if the condition doesn't go away, do bad stuff
223 (such as abort).</p>
224 <p>Example: do the same thing as libev does internally:</p>
225 <pre> static void
226 fatal_error (const char *msg)
227 {
228 perror (msg);
229 abort ();
230 }
231
232 ...
233 ev_set_syserr_cb (fatal_error);
234
235 </pre>
236 </dd>
237 </dl>
238
239 </div>
240 <h1 id="FUNCTIONS_CONTROLLING_THE_EVENT_LOOP">FUNCTIONS CONTROLLING THE EVENT LOOP</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
241 <div id="FUNCTIONS_CONTROLLING_THE_EVENT_LOOP-2">
242 <p>An event loop is described by a <code>struct ev_loop *</code>. The library knows two
243 types of such loops, the <i>default</i> loop, which supports signals and child
244 events, and dynamically created loops which do not.</p>
245 <p>If you use threads, a common model is to run the default event loop
246 in your main thread (or in a separate thread) and for each thread you
247 create, you also create another event loop. Libev itself does no locking
248 whatsoever, so if you mix calls to the same event loop in different
249 threads, make sure you lock (this is usually a bad idea, though, even if
250 done correctly, because it's hideous and inefficient).</p>
251 <dl>
252 <dt>struct ev_loop *ev_default_loop (unsigned int flags)</dt>
253 <dd>
254 <p>This will initialise the default event loop if it hasn't been initialised
255 yet and return it. If the default loop could not be initialised, returns
256 false. If it already was initialised it simply returns it (and ignores the
257 flags. If that is troubling you, check <code>ev_backend ()</code> afterwards).</p>
258 <p>If you don't know what event loop to use, use the one returned from this
259 function.</p>
260 <p>The flags argument can be used to specify special behaviour or specific
261 backends to use, and is usually specified as <code>0</code> (or <code>EVFLAG_AUTO</code>).</p>
262 <p>The following flags are supported:</p>
263 <p>
264 <dl>
265 <dt><code>EVFLAG_AUTO</code></dt>
266 <dd>
267 <p>The default flags value. Use this if you have no clue (it's the right
268 thing, believe me).</p>
269 </dd>
270 <dt><code>EVFLAG_NOENV</code></dt>
271 <dd>
272 <p>If this flag bit is ored into the flag value (or the program runs setuid
273 or setgid) then libev will <i>not</i> look at the environment variable
274 <code>LIBEV_FLAGS</code>. Otherwise (the default), this environment variable will
275 override the flags completely if it is found in the environment. This is
276 useful to try out specific backends to test their performance, or to work
277 around bugs.</p>
278 </dd>
279 <dt><code>EVBACKEND_SELECT</code> (value 1, portable select backend)</dt>
280 <dd>
281 <p>This is your standard select(2) backend. Not <i>completely</i> standard, as
282 libev tries to roll its own fd_set with no limits on the number of fds,
283 but if that fails, expect a fairly low limit on the number of fds when
284 using this backend. It doesn't scale too well (O(highest_fd)), but its usually
285 the fastest backend for a low number of fds.</p>
286 </dd>
287 <dt><code>EVBACKEND_POLL</code> (value 2, poll backend, available everywhere except on windows)</dt>
288 <dd>
289 <p>And this is your standard poll(2) backend. It's more complicated than
290 select, but handles sparse fds better and has no artificial limit on the
291 number of fds you can use (except it will slow down considerably with a
292 lot of inactive fds). It scales similarly to select, i.e. O(total_fds).</p>
293 </dd>
294 <dt><code>EVBACKEND_EPOLL</code> (value 4, Linux)</dt>
295 <dd>
296 <p>For few fds, this backend is a bit little slower than poll and select,
297 but it scales phenomenally better. While poll and select usually scale like
298 O(total_fds) where n is the total number of fds (or the highest fd), epoll scales
299 either O(1) or O(active_fds).</p>
300 <p>While stopping and starting an I/O watcher in the same iteration will
301 result in some caching, there is still a syscall per such incident
302 (because the fd could point to a different file description now), so its
303 best to avoid that. Also, dup()ed file descriptors might not work very
304 well if you register events for both fds.</p>
305 <p>Please note that epoll sometimes generates spurious notifications, so you
306 need to use non-blocking I/O or other means to avoid blocking when no data
307 (or space) is available.</p>
308 </dd>
309 <dt><code>EVBACKEND_KQUEUE</code> (value 8, most BSD clones)</dt>
310 <dd>
311 <p>Kqueue deserves special mention, as at the time of this writing, it
312 was broken on all BSDs except NetBSD (usually it doesn't work with
313 anything but sockets and pipes, except on Darwin, where of course its
314 completely useless). For this reason its not being &quot;autodetected&quot;
315 unless you explicitly specify it explicitly in the flags (i.e. using
316 <code>EVBACKEND_KQUEUE</code>).</p>
317 <p>It scales in the same way as the epoll backend, but the interface to the
318 kernel is more efficient (which says nothing about its actual speed, of
319 course). While starting and stopping an I/O watcher does not cause an
320 extra syscall as with epoll, it still adds up to four event changes per
321 incident, so its best to avoid that.</p>
322 </dd>
323 <dt><code>EVBACKEND_DEVPOLL</code> (value 16, Solaris 8)</dt>
324 <dd>
325 <p>This is not implemented yet (and might never be).</p>
326 </dd>
327 <dt><code>EVBACKEND_PORT</code> (value 32, Solaris 10)</dt>
328 <dd>
329 <p>This uses the Solaris 10 port mechanism. As with everything on Solaris,
330 it's really slow, but it still scales very well (O(active_fds)).</p>
331 <p>Please note that solaris ports can result in a lot of spurious
332 notifications, so you need to use non-blocking I/O or other means to avoid
333 blocking when no data (or space) is available.</p>
334 </dd>
335 <dt><code>EVBACKEND_ALL</code></dt>
336 <dd>
337 <p>Try all backends (even potentially broken ones that wouldn't be tried
338 with <code>EVFLAG_AUTO</code>). Since this is a mask, you can do stuff such as
339 <code>EVBACKEND_ALL &amp; ~EVBACKEND_KQUEUE</code>.</p>
340 </dd>
341 </dl>
342 </p>
343 <p>If one or more of these are ored into the flags value, then only these
344 backends will be tried (in the reverse order as given here). If none are
345 specified, most compiled-in backend will be tried, usually in reverse
346 order of their flag values :)</p>
347 <p>The most typical usage is like this:</p>
348 <pre> if (!ev_default_loop (0))
349 fatal (&quot;could not initialise libev, bad $LIBEV_FLAGS in environment?&quot;);
350
351 </pre>
352 <p>Restrict libev to the select and poll backends, and do not allow
353 environment settings to be taken into account:</p>
354 <pre> ev_default_loop (EVBACKEND_POLL | EVBACKEND_SELECT | EVFLAG_NOENV);
355
356 </pre>
357 <p>Use whatever libev has to offer, but make sure that kqueue is used if
358 available (warning, breaks stuff, best use only with your own private
359 event loop and only if you know the OS supports your types of fds):</p>
360 <pre> ev_default_loop (ev_recommended_backends () | EVBACKEND_KQUEUE);
361
362 </pre>
363 </dd>
364 <dt>struct ev_loop *ev_loop_new (unsigned int flags)</dt>
365 <dd>
366 <p>Similar to <code>ev_default_loop</code>, but always creates a new event loop that is
367 always distinct from the default loop. Unlike the default loop, it cannot
368 handle signal and child watchers, and attempts to do so will be greeted by
369 undefined behaviour (or a failed assertion if assertions are enabled).</p>
370 <p>Example: try to create a event loop that uses epoll and nothing else.</p>
371 <pre> struct ev_loop *epoller = ev_loop_new (EVBACKEND_EPOLL | EVFLAG_NOENV);
372 if (!epoller)
373 fatal (&quot;no epoll found here, maybe it hides under your chair&quot;);
374
375 </pre>
376 </dd>
377 <dt>ev_default_destroy ()</dt>
378 <dd>
379 <p>Destroys the default loop again (frees all memory and kernel state
380 etc.). None of the active event watchers will be stopped in the normal
381 sense, so e.g. <code>ev_is_active</code> might still return true. It is your
382 responsibility to either stop all watchers cleanly yoursef <i>before</i>
383 calling this function, or cope with the fact afterwards (which is usually
384 the easiest thing, youc na just ignore the watchers and/or <code>free ()</code> them
385 for example).</p>
386 </dd>
387 <dt>ev_loop_destroy (loop)</dt>
388 <dd>
389 <p>Like <code>ev_default_destroy</code>, but destroys an event loop created by an
390 earlier call to <code>ev_loop_new</code>.</p>
391 </dd>
392 <dt>ev_default_fork ()</dt>
393 <dd>
394 <p>This function reinitialises the kernel state for backends that have
395 one. Despite the name, you can call it anytime, but it makes most sense
396 after forking, in either the parent or child process (or both, but that
397 again makes little sense).</p>
398 <p>You <i>must</i> call this function in the child process after forking if and
399 only if you want to use the event library in both processes. If you just
400 fork+exec, you don't have to call it.</p>
401 <p>The function itself is quite fast and it's usually not a problem to call
402 it just in case after a fork. To make this easy, the function will fit in
403 quite nicely into a call to <code>pthread_atfork</code>:</p>
404 <pre> pthread_atfork (0, 0, ev_default_fork);
405
406 </pre>
407 <p>At the moment, <code>EVBACKEND_SELECT</code> and <code>EVBACKEND_POLL</code> are safe to use
408 without calling this function, so if you force one of those backends you
409 do not need to care.</p>
410 </dd>
411 <dt>ev_loop_fork (loop)</dt>
412 <dd>
413 <p>Like <code>ev_default_fork</code>, but acts on an event loop created by
414 <code>ev_loop_new</code>. Yes, you have to call this on every allocated event loop
415 after fork, and how you do this is entirely your own problem.</p>
416 </dd>
417 <dt>unsigned int ev_backend (loop)</dt>
418 <dd>
419 <p>Returns one of the <code>EVBACKEND_*</code> flags indicating the event backend in
420 use.</p>
421 </dd>
422 <dt>ev_tstamp ev_now (loop)</dt>
423 <dd>
424 <p>Returns the current &quot;event loop time&quot;, which is the time the event loop
425 received events and started processing them. This timestamp does not
426 change as long as callbacks are being processed, and this is also the base
427 time used for relative timers. You can treat it as the timestamp of the
428 event occuring (or more correctly, libev finding out about it).</p>
429 </dd>
430 <dt>ev_loop (loop, int flags)</dt>
431 <dd>
432 <p>Finally, this is it, the event handler. This function usually is called
433 after you initialised all your watchers and you want to start handling
434 events.</p>
435 <p>If the flags argument is specified as <code>0</code>, it will not return until
436 either no event watchers are active anymore or <code>ev_unloop</code> was called.</p>
437 <p>Please note that an explicit <code>ev_unloop</code> is usually better than
438 relying on all watchers to be stopped when deciding when a program has
439 finished (especially in interactive programs), but having a program that
440 automatically loops as long as it has to and no longer by virtue of
441 relying on its watchers stopping correctly is a thing of beauty.</p>
442 <p>A flags value of <code>EVLOOP_NONBLOCK</code> will look for new events, will handle
443 those events and any outstanding ones, but will not block your process in
444 case there are no events and will return after one iteration of the loop.</p>
445 <p>A flags value of <code>EVLOOP_ONESHOT</code> will look for new events (waiting if
446 neccessary) and will handle those and any outstanding ones. It will block
447 your process until at least one new event arrives, and will return after
448 one iteration of the loop. This is useful if you are waiting for some
449 external event in conjunction with something not expressible using other
450 libev watchers. However, a pair of <code>ev_prepare</code>/<code>ev_check</code> watchers is
451 usually a better approach for this kind of thing.</p>
452 <p>Here are the gory details of what <code>ev_loop</code> does:</p>
453 <pre> * If there are no active watchers (reference count is zero), return.
454 - Queue prepare watchers and then call all outstanding watchers.
455 - If we have been forked, recreate the kernel state.
456 - Update the kernel state with all outstanding changes.
457 - Update the &quot;event loop time&quot;.
458 - Calculate for how long to block.
459 - Block the process, waiting for any events.
460 - Queue all outstanding I/O (fd) events.
461 - Update the &quot;event loop time&quot; and do time jump handling.
462 - Queue all outstanding timers.
463 - Queue all outstanding periodics.
464 - If no events are pending now, queue all idle watchers.
465 - Queue all check watchers.
466 - Call all queued watchers in reverse order (i.e. check watchers first).
467 Signals and child watchers are implemented as I/O watchers, and will
468 be handled here by queueing them when their watcher gets executed.
469 - If ev_unloop has been called or EVLOOP_ONESHOT or EVLOOP_NONBLOCK
470 were used, return, otherwise continue with step *.
471
472 </pre>
473 <p>Example: queue some jobs and then loop until no events are outsanding
474 anymore.</p>
475 <pre> ... queue jobs here, make sure they register event watchers as long
476 ... as they still have work to do (even an idle watcher will do..)
477 ev_loop (my_loop, 0);
478 ... jobs done. yeah!
479
480 </pre>
481 </dd>
482 <dt>ev_unloop (loop, how)</dt>
483 <dd>
484 <p>Can be used to make a call to <code>ev_loop</code> return early (but only after it
485 has processed all outstanding events). The <code>how</code> argument must be either
486 <code>EVUNLOOP_ONE</code>, which will make the innermost <code>ev_loop</code> call return, or
487 <code>EVUNLOOP_ALL</code>, which will make all nested <code>ev_loop</code> calls return.</p>
488 </dd>
489 <dt>ev_ref (loop)</dt>
490 <dt>ev_unref (loop)</dt>
491 <dd>
492 <p>Ref/unref can be used to add or remove a reference count on the event
493 loop: Every watcher keeps one reference, and as long as the reference
494 count is nonzero, <code>ev_loop</code> will not return on its own. If you have
495 a watcher you never unregister that should not keep <code>ev_loop</code> from
496 returning, ev_unref() after starting, and ev_ref() before stopping it. For
497 example, libev itself uses this for its internal signal pipe: It is not
498 visible to the libev user and should not keep <code>ev_loop</code> from exiting if
499 no event watchers registered by it are active. It is also an excellent
500 way to do this for generic recurring timers or from within third-party
501 libraries. Just remember to <i>unref after start</i> and <i>ref before stop</i>.</p>
502 <p>Example: create a signal watcher, but keep it from keeping <code>ev_loop</code>
503 running when nothing else is active.</p>
504 <pre> struct dv_signal exitsig;
505 ev_signal_init (&amp;exitsig, sig_cb, SIGINT);
506 ev_signal_start (myloop, &amp;exitsig);
507 evf_unref (myloop);
508
509 </pre>
510 <p>Example: for some weird reason, unregister the above signal handler again.</p>
511 <pre> ev_ref (myloop);
512 ev_signal_stop (myloop, &amp;exitsig);
513
514 </pre>
515 </dd>
516 </dl>
517
518
519
520
521
522 </div>
523 <h1 id="ANATOMY_OF_A_WATCHER">ANATOMY OF A WATCHER</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
524 <div id="ANATOMY_OF_A_WATCHER_CONTENT">
525 <p>A watcher is a structure that you create and register to record your
526 interest in some event. For instance, if you want to wait for STDIN to
527 become readable, you would create an <code>ev_io</code> watcher for that:</p>
528 <pre> static void my_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, struct ev_io *w, int revents)
529 {
530 ev_io_stop (w);
531 ev_unloop (loop, EVUNLOOP_ALL);
532 }
533
534 struct ev_loop *loop = ev_default_loop (0);
535 struct ev_io stdin_watcher;
536 ev_init (&amp;stdin_watcher, my_cb);
537 ev_io_set (&amp;stdin_watcher, STDIN_FILENO, EV_READ);
538 ev_io_start (loop, &amp;stdin_watcher);
539 ev_loop (loop, 0);
540
541 </pre>
542 <p>As you can see, you are responsible for allocating the memory for your
543 watcher structures (and it is usually a bad idea to do this on the stack,
544 although this can sometimes be quite valid).</p>
545 <p>Each watcher structure must be initialised by a call to <code>ev_init
546 (watcher *, callback)</code>, which expects a callback to be provided. This
547 callback gets invoked each time the event occurs (or, in the case of io
548 watchers, each time the event loop detects that the file descriptor given
549 is readable and/or writable).</p>
550 <p>Each watcher type has its own <code>ev_&lt;type&gt;_set (watcher *, ...)</code> macro
551 with arguments specific to this watcher type. There is also a macro
552 to combine initialisation and setting in one call: <code>ev_&lt;type&gt;_init
553 (watcher *, callback, ...)</code>.</p>
554 <p>To make the watcher actually watch out for events, you have to start it
555 with a watcher-specific start function (<code>ev_&lt;type&gt;_start (loop, watcher
556 *)</code>), and you can stop watching for events at any time by calling the
557 corresponding stop function (<code>ev_&lt;type&gt;_stop (loop, watcher *)</code>.</p>
558 <p>As long as your watcher is active (has been started but not stopped) you
559 must not touch the values stored in it. Most specifically you must never
560 reinitialise it or call its <code>set</code> macro.</p>
561 <p>Each and every callback receives the event loop pointer as first, the
562 registered watcher structure as second, and a bitset of received events as
563 third argument.</p>
564 <p>The received events usually include a single bit per event type received
565 (you can receive multiple events at the same time). The possible bit masks
566 are:</p>
567 <dl>
568 <dt><code>EV_READ</code></dt>
569 <dt><code>EV_WRITE</code></dt>
570 <dd>
571 <p>The file descriptor in the <code>ev_io</code> watcher has become readable and/or
572 writable.</p>
573 </dd>
574 <dt><code>EV_TIMEOUT</code></dt>
575 <dd>
576 <p>The <code>ev_timer</code> watcher has timed out.</p>
577 </dd>
578 <dt><code>EV_PERIODIC</code></dt>
579 <dd>
580 <p>The <code>ev_periodic</code> watcher has timed out.</p>
581 </dd>
582 <dt><code>EV_SIGNAL</code></dt>
583 <dd>
584 <p>The signal specified in the <code>ev_signal</code> watcher has been received by a thread.</p>
585 </dd>
586 <dt><code>EV_CHILD</code></dt>
587 <dd>
588 <p>The pid specified in the <code>ev_child</code> watcher has received a status change.</p>
589 </dd>
590 <dt><code>EV_IDLE</code></dt>
591 <dd>
592 <p>The <code>ev_idle</code> watcher has determined that you have nothing better to do.</p>
593 </dd>
594 <dt><code>EV_PREPARE</code></dt>
595 <dt><code>EV_CHECK</code></dt>
596 <dd>
597 <p>All <code>ev_prepare</code> watchers are invoked just <i>before</i> <code>ev_loop</code> starts
598 to gather new events, and all <code>ev_check</code> watchers are invoked just after
599 <code>ev_loop</code> has gathered them, but before it invokes any callbacks for any
600 received events. Callbacks of both watcher types can start and stop as
601 many watchers as they want, and all of them will be taken into account
602 (for example, a <code>ev_prepare</code> watcher might start an idle watcher to keep
603 <code>ev_loop</code> from blocking).</p>
604 </dd>
605 <dt><code>EV_ERROR</code></dt>
606 <dd>
607 <p>An unspecified error has occured, the watcher has been stopped. This might
608 happen because the watcher could not be properly started because libev
609 ran out of memory, a file descriptor was found to be closed or any other
610 problem. You best act on it by reporting the problem and somehow coping
611 with the watcher being stopped.</p>
612 <p>Libev will usually signal a few &quot;dummy&quot; events together with an error,
613 for example it might indicate that a fd is readable or writable, and if
614 your callbacks is well-written it can just attempt the operation and cope
615 with the error from read() or write(). This will not work in multithreaded
616 programs, though, so beware.</p>
617 </dd>
618 </dl>
619
620 </div>
621 <h2 id="GENERIC_WATCHER_FUNCTIONS">GENERIC WATCHER FUNCTIONS</h2>
622 <div id="GENERIC_WATCHER_FUNCTIONS_CONTENT">
623 <p>In the following description, <code>TYPE</code> stands for the watcher type,
624 e.g. <code>timer</code> for <code>ev_timer</code> watchers and <code>io</code> for <code>ev_io</code> watchers.</p>
625 <dl>
626 <dt><code>ev_init</code> (ev_TYPE *watcher, callback)</dt>
627 <dd>
628 <p>This macro initialises the generic portion of a watcher. The contents
629 of the watcher object can be arbitrary (so <code>malloc</code> will do). Only
630 the generic parts of the watcher are initialised, you <i>need</i> to call
631 the type-specific <code>ev_TYPE_set</code> macro afterwards to initialise the
632 type-specific parts. For each type there is also a <code>ev_TYPE_init</code> macro
633 which rolls both calls into one.</p>
634 <p>You can reinitialise a watcher at any time as long as it has been stopped
635 (or never started) and there are no pending events outstanding.</p>
636 <p>The callback is always of type <code>void (*)(ev_loop *loop, ev_TYPE *watcher,
637 int revents)</code>.</p>
638 </dd>
639 <dt><code>ev_TYPE_set</code> (ev_TYPE *, [args])</dt>
640 <dd>
641 <p>This macro initialises the type-specific parts of a watcher. You need to
642 call <code>ev_init</code> at least once before you call this macro, but you can
643 call <code>ev_TYPE_set</code> any number of times. You must not, however, call this
644 macro on a watcher that is active (it can be pending, however, which is a
645 difference to the <code>ev_init</code> macro).</p>
646 <p>Although some watcher types do not have type-specific arguments
647 (e.g. <code>ev_prepare</code>) you still need to call its <code>set</code> macro.</p>
648 </dd>
649 <dt><code>ev_TYPE_init</code> (ev_TYPE *watcher, callback, [args])</dt>
650 <dd>
651 <p>This convinience macro rolls both <code>ev_init</code> and <code>ev_TYPE_set</code> macro
652 calls into a single call. This is the most convinient method to initialise
653 a watcher. The same limitations apply, of course.</p>
654 </dd>
655 <dt><code>ev_TYPE_start</code> (loop *, ev_TYPE *watcher)</dt>
656 <dd>
657 <p>Starts (activates) the given watcher. Only active watchers will receive
658 events. If the watcher is already active nothing will happen.</p>
659 </dd>
660 <dt><code>ev_TYPE_stop</code> (loop *, ev_TYPE *watcher)</dt>
661 <dd>
662 <p>Stops the given watcher again (if active) and clears the pending
663 status. It is possible that stopped watchers are pending (for example,
664 non-repeating timers are being stopped when they become pending), but
665 <code>ev_TYPE_stop</code> ensures that the watcher is neither active nor pending. If
666 you want to free or reuse the memory used by the watcher it is therefore a
667 good idea to always call its <code>ev_TYPE_stop</code> function.</p>
668 </dd>
669 <dt>bool ev_is_active (ev_TYPE *watcher)</dt>
670 <dd>
671 <p>Returns a true value iff the watcher is active (i.e. it has been started
672 and not yet been stopped). As long as a watcher is active you must not modify
673 it.</p>
674 </dd>
675 <dt>bool ev_is_pending (ev_TYPE *watcher)</dt>
676 <dd>
677 <p>Returns a true value iff the watcher is pending, (i.e. it has outstanding
678 events but its callback has not yet been invoked). As long as a watcher
679 is pending (but not active) you must not call an init function on it (but
680 <code>ev_TYPE_set</code> is safe) and you must make sure the watcher is available to
681 libev (e.g. you cnanot <code>free ()</code> it).</p>
682 </dd>
683 <dt>callback = ev_cb (ev_TYPE *watcher)</dt>
684 <dd>
685 <p>Returns the callback currently set on the watcher.</p>
686 </dd>
687 <dt>ev_cb_set (ev_TYPE *watcher, callback)</dt>
688 <dd>
689 <p>Change the callback. You can change the callback at virtually any time
690 (modulo threads).</p>
691 </dd>
692 </dl>
693
694
695
696
697
698 </div>
699 <h2 id="ASSOCIATING_CUSTOM_DATA_WITH_A_WATCH">ASSOCIATING CUSTOM DATA WITH A WATCHER</h2>
700 <div id="ASSOCIATING_CUSTOM_DATA_WITH_A_WATCH-2">
701 <p>Each watcher has, by default, a member <code>void *data</code> that you can change
702 and read at any time, libev will completely ignore it. This can be used
703 to associate arbitrary data with your watcher. If you need more data and
704 don't want to allocate memory and store a pointer to it in that data
705 member, you can also &quot;subclass&quot; the watcher type and provide your own
706 data:</p>
707 <pre> struct my_io
708 {
709 struct ev_io io;
710 int otherfd;
711 void *somedata;
712 struct whatever *mostinteresting;
713 }
714
715 </pre>
716 <p>And since your callback will be called with a pointer to the watcher, you
717 can cast it back to your own type:</p>
718 <pre> static void my_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, struct ev_io *w_, int revents)
719 {
720 struct my_io *w = (struct my_io *)w_;
721 ...
722 }
723
724 </pre>
725 <p>More interesting and less C-conformant ways of catsing your callback type
726 have been omitted....</p>
727
728
729
730
731
732 </div>
733 <h1 id="WATCHER_TYPES">WATCHER TYPES</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
734 <div id="WATCHER_TYPES_CONTENT">
735 <p>This section describes each watcher in detail, but will not repeat
736 information given in the last section.</p>
737
738
739
740
741
742 </div>
743 <h2 id="code_ev_io_code_is_this_file_descrip"><code>ev_io</code> - is this file descriptor readable or writable?</h2>
744 <div id="code_ev_io_code_is_this_file_descrip-2">
745 <p>I/O watchers check whether a file descriptor is readable or writable
746 in each iteration of the event loop, or, more precisely, when reading
747 would not block the process and writing would at least be able to write
748 some data. This behaviour is called level-triggering because you keep
749 receiving events as long as the condition persists. Remember you can stop
750 the watcher if you don't want to act on the event and neither want to
751 receive future events.</p>
752 <p>In general you can register as many read and/or write event watchers per
753 fd as you want (as long as you don't confuse yourself). Setting all file
754 descriptors to non-blocking mode is also usually a good idea (but not
755 required if you know what you are doing).</p>
756 <p>You have to be careful with dup'ed file descriptors, though. Some backends
757 (the linux epoll backend is a notable example) cannot handle dup'ed file
758 descriptors correctly if you register interest in two or more fds pointing
759 to the same underlying file/socket/etc. description (that is, they share
760 the same underlying &quot;file open&quot;).</p>
761 <p>If you must do this, then force the use of a known-to-be-good backend
762 (at the time of this writing, this includes only <code>EVBACKEND_SELECT</code> and
763 <code>EVBACKEND_POLL</code>).</p>
764 <p>Another thing you have to watch out for is that it is quite easy to
765 receive &quot;spurious&quot; readyness notifications, that is your callback might
766 be called with <code>EV_READ</code> but a subsequent <code>read</code>(2) will actually block
767 because there is no data. Not only are some backends known to create a
768 lot of those (for example solaris ports), it is very easy to get into
769 this situation even with a relatively standard program structure. Thus
770 it is best to always use non-blocking I/O: An extra <code>read</code>(2) returning
771 <code>EAGAIN</code> is far preferable to a program hanging until some data arrives.</p>
772 <p>If you cannot run the fd in non-blocking mode (for example you should not
773 play around with an Xlib connection), then you have to seperately re-test
774 wether a file descriptor is really ready with a known-to-be good interface
775 such as poll (fortunately in our Xlib example, Xlib already does this on
776 its own, so its quite safe to use).</p>
777 <dl>
778 <dt>ev_io_init (ev_io *, callback, int fd, int events)</dt>
779 <dt>ev_io_set (ev_io *, int fd, int events)</dt>
780 <dd>
781 <p>Configures an <code>ev_io</code> watcher. The <code>fd</code> is the file descriptor to
782 rceeive events for and events is either <code>EV_READ</code>, <code>EV_WRITE</code> or
783 <code>EV_READ | EV_WRITE</code> to receive the given events.</p>
784 </dd>
785 </dl>
786 <p>Example: call <code>stdin_readable_cb</code> when STDIN_FILENO has become, well
787 readable, but only once. Since it is likely line-buffered, you could
788 attempt to read a whole line in the callback:</p>
789 <pre> static void
790 stdin_readable_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, struct ev_io *w, int revents)
791 {
792 ev_io_stop (loop, w);
793 .. read from stdin here (or from w-&gt;fd) and haqndle any I/O errors
794 }
795
796 ...
797 struct ev_loop *loop = ev_default_init (0);
798 struct ev_io stdin_readable;
799 ev_io_init (&amp;stdin_readable, stdin_readable_cb, STDIN_FILENO, EV_READ);
800 ev_io_start (loop, &amp;stdin_readable);
801 ev_loop (loop, 0);
802
803
804
805
806 </pre>
807
808 </div>
809 <h2 id="code_ev_timer_code_relative_and_opti"><code>ev_timer</code> - relative and optionally repeating timeouts</h2>
810 <div id="code_ev_timer_code_relative_and_opti-2">
811 <p>Timer watchers are simple relative timers that generate an event after a
812 given time, and optionally repeating in regular intervals after that.</p>
813 <p>The timers are based on real time, that is, if you register an event that
814 times out after an hour and you reset your system clock to last years
815 time, it will still time out after (roughly) and hour. &quot;Roughly&quot; because
816 detecting time jumps is hard, and some inaccuracies are unavoidable (the
817 monotonic clock option helps a lot here).</p>
818 <p>The relative timeouts are calculated relative to the <code>ev_now ()</code>
819 time. This is usually the right thing as this timestamp refers to the time
820 of the event triggering whatever timeout you are modifying/starting. If
821 you suspect event processing to be delayed and you <i>need</i> to base the timeout
822 on the current time, use something like this to adjust for this:</p>
823 <pre> ev_timer_set (&amp;timer, after + ev_now () - ev_time (), 0.);
824
825 </pre>
826 <p>The callback is guarenteed to be invoked only when its timeout has passed,
827 but if multiple timers become ready during the same loop iteration then
828 order of execution is undefined.</p>
829 <dl>
830 <dt>ev_timer_init (ev_timer *, callback, ev_tstamp after, ev_tstamp repeat)</dt>
831 <dt>ev_timer_set (ev_timer *, ev_tstamp after, ev_tstamp repeat)</dt>
832 <dd>
833 <p>Configure the timer to trigger after <code>after</code> seconds. If <code>repeat</code> is
834 <code>0.</code>, then it will automatically be stopped. If it is positive, then the
835 timer will automatically be configured to trigger again <code>repeat</code> seconds
836 later, again, and again, until stopped manually.</p>
837 <p>The timer itself will do a best-effort at avoiding drift, that is, if you
838 configure a timer to trigger every 10 seconds, then it will trigger at
839 exactly 10 second intervals. If, however, your program cannot keep up with
840 the timer (because it takes longer than those 10 seconds to do stuff) the
841 timer will not fire more than once per event loop iteration.</p>
842 </dd>
843 <dt>ev_timer_again (loop)</dt>
844 <dd>
845 <p>This will act as if the timer timed out and restart it again if it is
846 repeating. The exact semantics are:</p>
847 <p>If the timer is started but nonrepeating, stop it.</p>
848 <p>If the timer is repeating, either start it if necessary (with the repeat
849 value), or reset the running timer to the repeat value.</p>
850 <p>This sounds a bit complicated, but here is a useful and typical
851 example: Imagine you have a tcp connection and you want a so-called idle
852 timeout, that is, you want to be called when there have been, say, 60
853 seconds of inactivity on the socket. The easiest way to do this is to
854 configure an <code>ev_timer</code> with after=repeat=60 and calling ev_timer_again each
855 time you successfully read or write some data. If you go into an idle
856 state where you do not expect data to travel on the socket, you can stop
857 the timer, and again will automatically restart it if need be.</p>
858 </dd>
859 </dl>
860 <p>Example: create a timer that fires after 60 seconds.</p>
861 <pre> static void
862 one_minute_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, struct ev_timer *w, int revents)
863 {
864 .. one minute over, w is actually stopped right here
865 }
866
867 struct ev_timer mytimer;
868 ev_timer_init (&amp;mytimer, one_minute_cb, 60., 0.);
869 ev_timer_start (loop, &amp;mytimer);
870
871 </pre>
872 <p>Example: create a timeout timer that times out after 10 seconds of
873 inactivity.</p>
874 <pre> static void
875 timeout_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, struct ev_timer *w, int revents)
876 {
877 .. ten seconds without any activity
878 }
879
880 struct ev_timer mytimer;
881 ev_timer_init (&amp;mytimer, timeout_cb, 0., 10.); /* note, only repeat used */
882 ev_timer_again (&amp;mytimer); /* start timer */
883 ev_loop (loop, 0);
884
885 // and in some piece of code that gets executed on any &quot;activity&quot;:
886 // reset the timeout to start ticking again at 10 seconds
887 ev_timer_again (&amp;mytimer);
888
889
890
891
892 </pre>
893
894 </div>
895 <h2 id="code_ev_periodic_code_to_cron_or_not"><code>ev_periodic</code> - to cron or not to cron?</h2>
896 <div id="code_ev_periodic_code_to_cron_or_not-2">
897 <p>Periodic watchers are also timers of a kind, but they are very versatile
898 (and unfortunately a bit complex).</p>
899 <p>Unlike <code>ev_timer</code>'s, they are not based on real time (or relative time)
900 but on wallclock time (absolute time). You can tell a periodic watcher
901 to trigger &quot;at&quot; some specific point in time. For example, if you tell a
902 periodic watcher to trigger in 10 seconds (by specifiying e.g. <code>ev_now ()
903 + 10.</code>) and then reset your system clock to the last year, then it will
904 take a year to trigger the event (unlike an <code>ev_timer</code>, which would trigger
905 roughly 10 seconds later and of course not if you reset your system time
906 again).</p>
907 <p>They can also be used to implement vastly more complex timers, such as
908 triggering an event on eahc midnight, local time.</p>
909 <p>As with timers, the callback is guarenteed to be invoked only when the
910 time (<code>at</code>) has been passed, but if multiple periodic timers become ready
911 during the same loop iteration then order of execution is undefined.</p>
912 <dl>
913 <dt>ev_periodic_init (ev_periodic *, callback, ev_tstamp at, ev_tstamp interval, reschedule_cb)</dt>
914 <dt>ev_periodic_set (ev_periodic *, ev_tstamp after, ev_tstamp repeat, reschedule_cb)</dt>
915 <dd>
916 <p>Lots of arguments, lets sort it out... There are basically three modes of
917 operation, and we will explain them from simplest to complex:</p>
918 <p>
919 <dl>
920 <dt>* absolute timer (interval = reschedule_cb = 0)</dt>
921 <dd>
922 <p>In this configuration the watcher triggers an event at the wallclock time
923 <code>at</code> and doesn't repeat. It will not adjust when a time jump occurs,
924 that is, if it is to be run at January 1st 2011 then it will run when the
925 system time reaches or surpasses this time.</p>
926 </dd>
927 <dt>* non-repeating interval timer (interval &gt; 0, reschedule_cb = 0)</dt>
928 <dd>
929 <p>In this mode the watcher will always be scheduled to time out at the next
930 <code>at + N * interval</code> time (for some integer N) and then repeat, regardless
931 of any time jumps.</p>
932 <p>This can be used to create timers that do not drift with respect to system
933 time:</p>
934 <pre> ev_periodic_set (&amp;periodic, 0., 3600., 0);
935
936 </pre>
937 <p>This doesn't mean there will always be 3600 seconds in between triggers,
938 but only that the the callback will be called when the system time shows a
939 full hour (UTC), or more correctly, when the system time is evenly divisible
940 by 3600.</p>
941 <p>Another way to think about it (for the mathematically inclined) is that
942 <code>ev_periodic</code> will try to run the callback in this mode at the next possible
943 time where <code>time = at (mod interval)</code>, regardless of any time jumps.</p>
944 </dd>
945 <dt>* manual reschedule mode (reschedule_cb = callback)</dt>
946 <dd>
947 <p>In this mode the values for <code>interval</code> and <code>at</code> are both being
948 ignored. Instead, each time the periodic watcher gets scheduled, the
949 reschedule callback will be called with the watcher as first, and the
950 current time as second argument.</p>
951 <p>NOTE: <i>This callback MUST NOT stop or destroy any periodic watcher,
952 ever, or make any event loop modifications</i>. If you need to stop it,
953 return <code>now + 1e30</code> (or so, fudge fudge) and stop it afterwards (e.g. by
954 starting a prepare watcher).</p>
955 <p>Its prototype is <code>ev_tstamp (*reschedule_cb)(struct ev_periodic *w,
956 ev_tstamp now)</code>, e.g.:</p>
957 <pre> static ev_tstamp my_rescheduler (struct ev_periodic *w, ev_tstamp now)
958 {
959 return now + 60.;
960 }
961
962 </pre>
963 <p>It must return the next time to trigger, based on the passed time value
964 (that is, the lowest time value larger than to the second argument). It
965 will usually be called just before the callback will be triggered, but
966 might be called at other times, too.</p>
967 <p>NOTE: <i>This callback must always return a time that is later than the
968 passed <code>now</code> value</i>. Not even <code>now</code> itself will do, it <i>must</i> be larger.</p>
969 <p>This can be used to create very complex timers, such as a timer that
970 triggers on each midnight, local time. To do this, you would calculate the
971 next midnight after <code>now</code> and return the timestamp value for this. How
972 you do this is, again, up to you (but it is not trivial, which is the main
973 reason I omitted it as an example).</p>
974 </dd>
975 </dl>
976 </p>
977 </dd>
978 <dt>ev_periodic_again (loop, ev_periodic *)</dt>
979 <dd>
980 <p>Simply stops and restarts the periodic watcher again. This is only useful
981 when you changed some parameters or the reschedule callback would return
982 a different time than the last time it was called (e.g. in a crond like
983 program when the crontabs have changed).</p>
984 </dd>
985 </dl>
986 <p>Example: call a callback every hour, or, more precisely, whenever the
987 system clock is divisible by 3600. The callback invocation times have
988 potentially a lot of jittering, but good long-term stability.</p>
989 <pre> static void
990 clock_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, struct ev_io *w, int revents)
991 {
992 ... its now a full hour (UTC, or TAI or whatever your clock follows)
993 }
994
995 struct ev_periodic hourly_tick;
996 ev_periodic_init (&amp;hourly_tick, clock_cb, 0., 3600., 0);
997 ev_periodic_start (loop, &amp;hourly_tick);
998
999 </pre>
1000 <p>Example: the same as above, but use a reschedule callback to do it:</p>
1001 <pre> #include &lt;math.h&gt;
1002
1003 static ev_tstamp
1004 my_scheduler_cb (struct ev_periodic *w, ev_tstamp now)
1005 {
1006 return fmod (now, 3600.) + 3600.;
1007 }
1008
1009 ev_periodic_init (&amp;hourly_tick, clock_cb, 0., 0., my_scheduler_cb);
1010
1011 </pre>
1012 <p>Example: call a callback every hour, starting now:</p>
1013 <pre> struct ev_periodic hourly_tick;
1014 ev_periodic_init (&amp;hourly_tick, clock_cb,
1015 fmod (ev_now (loop), 3600.), 3600., 0);
1016 ev_periodic_start (loop, &amp;hourly_tick);
1017
1018
1019
1020
1021 </pre>
1022
1023 </div>
1024 <h2 id="code_ev_signal_code_signal_me_when_a"><code>ev_signal</code> - signal me when a signal gets signalled!</h2>
1025 <div id="code_ev_signal_code_signal_me_when_a-2">
1026 <p>Signal watchers will trigger an event when the process receives a specific
1027 signal one or more times. Even though signals are very asynchronous, libev
1028 will try it's best to deliver signals synchronously, i.e. as part of the
1029 normal event processing, like any other event.</p>
1030 <p>You can configure as many watchers as you like per signal. Only when the
1031 first watcher gets started will libev actually register a signal watcher
1032 with the kernel (thus it coexists with your own signal handlers as long
1033 as you don't register any with libev). Similarly, when the last signal
1034 watcher for a signal is stopped libev will reset the signal handler to
1035 SIG_DFL (regardless of what it was set to before).</p>
1036 <dl>
1037 <dt>ev_signal_init (ev_signal *, callback, int signum)</dt>
1038 <dt>ev_signal_set (ev_signal *, int signum)</dt>
1039 <dd>
1040 <p>Configures the watcher to trigger on the given signal number (usually one
1041 of the <code>SIGxxx</code> constants).</p>
1042 </dd>
1043 </dl>
1044
1045
1046
1047
1048
1049 </div>
1050 <h2 id="code_ev_child_code_watch_out_for_pro"><code>ev_child</code> - watch out for process status changes</h2>
1051 <div id="code_ev_child_code_watch_out_for_pro-2">
1052 <p>Child watchers trigger when your process receives a SIGCHLD in response to
1053 some child status changes (most typically when a child of yours dies).</p>
1054 <dl>
1055 <dt>ev_child_init (ev_child *, callback, int pid)</dt>
1056 <dt>ev_child_set (ev_child *, int pid)</dt>
1057 <dd>
1058 <p>Configures the watcher to wait for status changes of process <code>pid</code> (or
1059 <i>any</i> process if <code>pid</code> is specified as <code>0</code>). The callback can look
1060 at the <code>rstatus</code> member of the <code>ev_child</code> watcher structure to see
1061 the status word (use the macros from <code>sys/wait.h</code> and see your systems
1062 <code>waitpid</code> documentation). The <code>rpid</code> member contains the pid of the
1063 process causing the status change.</p>
1064 </dd>
1065 </dl>
1066 <p>Example: try to exit cleanly on SIGINT and SIGTERM.</p>
1067 <pre> static void
1068 sigint_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, struct ev_signal *w, int revents)
1069 {
1070 ev_unloop (loop, EVUNLOOP_ALL);
1071 }
1072
1073 struct ev_signal signal_watcher;
1074 ev_signal_init (&amp;signal_watcher, sigint_cb, SIGINT);
1075 ev_signal_start (loop, &amp;sigint_cb);
1076
1077
1078
1079
1080 </pre>
1081
1082 </div>
1083 <h2 id="code_ev_idle_code_when_you_ve_got_no"><code>ev_idle</code> - when you've got nothing better to do...</h2>
1084 <div id="code_ev_idle_code_when_you_ve_got_no-2">
1085 <p>Idle watchers trigger events when there are no other events are pending
1086 (prepare, check and other idle watchers do not count). That is, as long
1087 as your process is busy handling sockets or timeouts (or even signals,
1088 imagine) it will not be triggered. But when your process is idle all idle
1089 watchers are being called again and again, once per event loop iteration -
1090 until stopped, that is, or your process receives more events and becomes
1091 busy.</p>
1092 <p>The most noteworthy effect is that as long as any idle watchers are
1093 active, the process will not block when waiting for new events.</p>
1094 <p>Apart from keeping your process non-blocking (which is a useful
1095 effect on its own sometimes), idle watchers are a good place to do
1096 &quot;pseudo-background processing&quot;, or delay processing stuff to after the
1097 event loop has handled all outstanding events.</p>
1098 <dl>
1099 <dt>ev_idle_init (ev_signal *, callback)</dt>
1100 <dd>
1101 <p>Initialises and configures the idle watcher - it has no parameters of any
1102 kind. There is a <code>ev_idle_set</code> macro, but using it is utterly pointless,
1103 believe me.</p>
1104 </dd>
1105 </dl>
1106 <p>Example: dynamically allocate an <code>ev_idle</code>, start it, and in the
1107 callback, free it. Alos, use no error checking, as usual.</p>
1108 <pre> static void
1109 idle_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, struct ev_idle *w, int revents)
1110 {
1111 free (w);
1112 // now do something you wanted to do when the program has
1113 // no longer asnything immediate to do.
1114 }
1115
1116 struct ev_idle *idle_watcher = malloc (sizeof (struct ev_idle));
1117 ev_idle_init (idle_watcher, idle_cb);
1118 ev_idle_start (loop, idle_cb);
1119
1120
1121
1122
1123 </pre>
1124
1125 </div>
1126 <h2 id="code_ev_prepare_code_and_code_ev_che"><code>ev_prepare</code> and <code>ev_check</code> - customise your event loop!</h2>
1127 <div id="code_ev_prepare_code_and_code_ev_che-2">
1128 <p>Prepare and check watchers are usually (but not always) used in tandem:
1129 prepare watchers get invoked before the process blocks and check watchers
1130 afterwards.</p>
1131 <p>Their main purpose is to integrate other event mechanisms into libev and
1132 their use is somewhat advanced. This could be used, for example, to track
1133 variable changes, implement your own watchers, integrate net-snmp or a
1134 coroutine library and lots more.</p>
1135 <p>This is done by examining in each prepare call which file descriptors need
1136 to be watched by the other library, registering <code>ev_io</code> watchers for
1137 them and starting an <code>ev_timer</code> watcher for any timeouts (many libraries
1138 provide just this functionality). Then, in the check watcher you check for
1139 any events that occured (by checking the pending status of all watchers
1140 and stopping them) and call back into the library. The I/O and timer
1141 callbacks will never actually be called (but must be valid nevertheless,
1142 because you never know, you know?).</p>
1143 <p>As another example, the Perl Coro module uses these hooks to integrate
1144 coroutines into libev programs, by yielding to other active coroutines
1145 during each prepare and only letting the process block if no coroutines
1146 are ready to run (it's actually more complicated: it only runs coroutines
1147 with priority higher than or equal to the event loop and one coroutine
1148 of lower priority, but only once, using idle watchers to keep the event
1149 loop from blocking if lower-priority coroutines are active, thus mapping
1150 low-priority coroutines to idle/background tasks).</p>
1151 <dl>
1152 <dt>ev_prepare_init (ev_prepare *, callback)</dt>
1153 <dt>ev_check_init (ev_check *, callback)</dt>
1154 <dd>
1155 <p>Initialises and configures the prepare or check watcher - they have no
1156 parameters of any kind. There are <code>ev_prepare_set</code> and <code>ev_check_set</code>
1157 macros, but using them is utterly, utterly and completely pointless.</p>
1158 </dd>
1159 </dl>
1160 <p>Example: *TODO*.</p>
1161
1162
1163
1164
1165
1166 </div>
1167 <h2 id="code_ev_embed_code_when_one_backend_"><code>ev_embed</code> - when one backend isn't enough...</h2>
1168 <div id="code_ev_embed_code_when_one_backend_-2">
1169 <p>This is a rather advanced watcher type that lets you embed one event loop
1170 into another (currently only <code>ev_io</code> events are supported in the embedded
1171 loop, other types of watchers might be handled in a delayed or incorrect
1172 fashion and must not be used).</p>
1173 <p>There are primarily two reasons you would want that: work around bugs and
1174 prioritise I/O.</p>
1175 <p>As an example for a bug workaround, the kqueue backend might only support
1176 sockets on some platform, so it is unusable as generic backend, but you
1177 still want to make use of it because you have many sockets and it scales
1178 so nicely. In this case, you would create a kqueue-based loop and embed it
1179 into your default loop (which might use e.g. poll). Overall operation will
1180 be a bit slower because first libev has to poll and then call kevent, but
1181 at least you can use both at what they are best.</p>
1182 <p>As for prioritising I/O: rarely you have the case where some fds have
1183 to be watched and handled very quickly (with low latency), and even
1184 priorities and idle watchers might have too much overhead. In this case
1185 you would put all the high priority stuff in one loop and all the rest in
1186 a second one, and embed the second one in the first.</p>
1187 <p>As long as the watcher is active, the callback will be invoked every time
1188 there might be events pending in the embedded loop. The callback must then
1189 call <code>ev_embed_sweep (mainloop, watcher)</code> to make a single sweep and invoke
1190 their callbacks (you could also start an idle watcher to give the embedded
1191 loop strictly lower priority for example). You can also set the callback
1192 to <code>0</code>, in which case the embed watcher will automatically execute the
1193 embedded loop sweep.</p>
1194 <p>As long as the watcher is started it will automatically handle events. The
1195 callback will be invoked whenever some events have been handled. You can
1196 set the callback to <code>0</code> to avoid having to specify one if you are not
1197 interested in that.</p>
1198 <p>Also, there have not currently been made special provisions for forking:
1199 when you fork, you not only have to call <code>ev_loop_fork</code> on both loops,
1200 but you will also have to stop and restart any <code>ev_embed</code> watchers
1201 yourself.</p>
1202 <p>Unfortunately, not all backends are embeddable, only the ones returned by
1203 <code>ev_embeddable_backends</code> are, which, unfortunately, does not include any
1204 portable one.</p>
1205 <p>So when you want to use this feature you will always have to be prepared
1206 that you cannot get an embeddable loop. The recommended way to get around
1207 this is to have a separate variables for your embeddable loop, try to
1208 create it, and if that fails, use the normal loop for everything:</p>
1209 <pre> struct ev_loop *loop_hi = ev_default_init (0);
1210 struct ev_loop *loop_lo = 0;
1211 struct ev_embed embed;
1212
1213 // see if there is a chance of getting one that works
1214 // (remember that a flags value of 0 means autodetection)
1215 loop_lo = ev_embeddable_backends () &amp; ev_recommended_backends ()
1216 ? ev_loop_new (ev_embeddable_backends () &amp; ev_recommended_backends ())
1217 : 0;
1218
1219 // if we got one, then embed it, otherwise default to loop_hi
1220 if (loop_lo)
1221 {
1222 ev_embed_init (&amp;embed, 0, loop_lo);
1223 ev_embed_start (loop_hi, &amp;embed);
1224 }
1225 else
1226 loop_lo = loop_hi;
1227
1228 </pre>
1229 <dl>
1230 <dt>ev_embed_init (ev_embed *, callback, struct ev_loop *embedded_loop)</dt>
1231 <dt>ev_embed_set (ev_embed *, callback, struct ev_loop *embedded_loop)</dt>
1232 <dd>
1233 <p>Configures the watcher to embed the given loop, which must be
1234 embeddable. If the callback is <code>0</code>, then <code>ev_embed_sweep</code> will be
1235 invoked automatically, otherwise it is the responsibility of the callback
1236 to invoke it (it will continue to be called until the sweep has been done,
1237 if you do not want thta, you need to temporarily stop the embed watcher).</p>
1238 </dd>
1239 <dt>ev_embed_sweep (loop, ev_embed *)</dt>
1240 <dd>
1241 <p>Make a single, non-blocking sweep over the embedded loop. This works
1242 similarly to <code>ev_loop (embedded_loop, EVLOOP_NONBLOCK)</code>, but in the most
1243 apropriate way for embedded loops.</p>
1244 </dd>
1245 </dl>
1246
1247
1248
1249
1250
1251 </div>
1252 <h1 id="OTHER_FUNCTIONS">OTHER FUNCTIONS</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
1253 <div id="OTHER_FUNCTIONS_CONTENT">
1254 <p>There are some other functions of possible interest. Described. Here. Now.</p>
1255 <dl>
1256 <dt>ev_once (loop, int fd, int events, ev_tstamp timeout, callback)</dt>
1257 <dd>
1258 <p>This function combines a simple timer and an I/O watcher, calls your
1259 callback on whichever event happens first and automatically stop both
1260 watchers. This is useful if you want to wait for a single event on an fd
1261 or timeout without having to allocate/configure/start/stop/free one or
1262 more watchers yourself.</p>
1263 <p>If <code>fd</code> is less than 0, then no I/O watcher will be started and events
1264 is being ignored. Otherwise, an <code>ev_io</code> watcher for the given <code>fd</code> and
1265 <code>events</code> set will be craeted and started.</p>
1266 <p>If <code>timeout</code> is less than 0, then no timeout watcher will be
1267 started. Otherwise an <code>ev_timer</code> watcher with after = <code>timeout</code> (and
1268 repeat = 0) will be started. While <code>0</code> is a valid timeout, it is of
1269 dubious value.</p>
1270 <p>The callback has the type <code>void (*cb)(int revents, void *arg)</code> and gets
1271 passed an <code>revents</code> set like normal event callbacks (a combination of
1272 <code>EV_ERROR</code>, <code>EV_READ</code>, <code>EV_WRITE</code> or <code>EV_TIMEOUT</code>) and the <code>arg</code>
1273 value passed to <code>ev_once</code>:</p>
1274 <pre> static void stdin_ready (int revents, void *arg)
1275 {
1276 if (revents &amp; EV_TIMEOUT)
1277 /* doh, nothing entered */;
1278 else if (revents &amp; EV_READ)
1279 /* stdin might have data for us, joy! */;
1280 }
1281
1282 ev_once (STDIN_FILENO, EV_READ, 10., stdin_ready, 0);
1283
1284 </pre>
1285 </dd>
1286 <dt>ev_feed_event (ev_loop *, watcher *, int revents)</dt>
1287 <dd>
1288 <p>Feeds the given event set into the event loop, as if the specified event
1289 had happened for the specified watcher (which must be a pointer to an
1290 initialised but not necessarily started event watcher).</p>
1291 </dd>
1292 <dt>ev_feed_fd_event (ev_loop *, int fd, int revents)</dt>
1293 <dd>
1294 <p>Feed an event on the given fd, as if a file descriptor backend detected
1295 the given events it.</p>
1296 </dd>
1297 <dt>ev_feed_signal_event (ev_loop *loop, int signum)</dt>
1298 <dd>
1299 <p>Feed an event as if the given signal occured (<code>loop</code> must be the default
1300 loop!).</p>
1301 </dd>
1302 </dl>
1303
1304
1305
1306
1307
1308 </div>
1309 <h1 id="LIBEVENT_EMULATION">LIBEVENT EMULATION</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
1310 <div id="LIBEVENT_EMULATION_CONTENT">
1311 <p>Libev offers a compatibility emulation layer for libevent. It cannot
1312 emulate the internals of libevent, so here are some usage hints:</p>
1313 <dl>
1314 <dt>* Use it by including &lt;event.h&gt;, as usual.</dt>
1315 <dt>* The following members are fully supported: ev_base, ev_callback,
1316 ev_arg, ev_fd, ev_res, ev_events.</dt>
1317 <dt>* Avoid using ev_flags and the EVLIST_*-macros, while it is
1318 maintained by libev, it does not work exactly the same way as in libevent (consider
1319 it a private API).</dt>
1320 <dt>* Priorities are not currently supported. Initialising priorities
1321 will fail and all watchers will have the same priority, even though there
1322 is an ev_pri field.</dt>
1323 <dt>* Other members are not supported.</dt>
1324 <dt>* The libev emulation is <i>not</i> ABI compatible to libevent, you need
1325 to use the libev header file and library.</dt>
1326 </dl>
1327
1328 </div>
1329 <h1 id="C_SUPPORT">C++ SUPPORT</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
1330 <div id="C_SUPPORT_CONTENT">
1331 <p>Libev comes with some simplistic wrapper classes for C++ that mainly allow
1332 you to use some convinience methods to start/stop watchers and also change
1333 the callback model to a model using method callbacks on objects.</p>
1334 <p>To use it,</p>
1335 <pre> #include &lt;ev++.h&gt;
1336
1337 </pre>
1338 <p>(it is not installed by default). This automatically includes <cite>ev.h</cite>
1339 and puts all of its definitions (many of them macros) into the global
1340 namespace. All C++ specific things are put into the <code>ev</code> namespace.</p>
1341 <p>It should support all the same embedding options as <cite>ev.h</cite>, most notably
1342 <code>EV_MULTIPLICITY</code>.</p>
1343 <p>Here is a list of things available in the <code>ev</code> namespace:</p>
1344 <dl>
1345 <dt><code>ev::READ</code>, <code>ev::WRITE</code> etc.</dt>
1346 <dd>
1347 <p>These are just enum values with the same values as the <code>EV_READ</code> etc.
1348 macros from <cite>ev.h</cite>.</p>
1349 </dd>
1350 <dt><code>ev::tstamp</code>, <code>ev::now</code></dt>
1351 <dd>
1352 <p>Aliases to the same types/functions as with the <code>ev_</code> prefix.</p>
1353 </dd>
1354 <dt><code>ev::io</code>, <code>ev::timer</code>, <code>ev::periodic</code>, <code>ev::idle</code>, <code>ev::sig</code> etc.</dt>
1355 <dd>
1356 <p>For each <code>ev_TYPE</code> watcher in <cite>ev.h</cite> there is a corresponding class of
1357 the same name in the <code>ev</code> namespace, with the exception of <code>ev_signal</code>
1358 which is called <code>ev::sig</code> to avoid clashes with the <code>signal</code> macro
1359 defines by many implementations.</p>
1360 <p>All of those classes have these methods:</p>
1361 <p>
1362 <dl>
1363 <dt>ev::TYPE::TYPE (object *, object::method *)</dt>
1364 <dt>ev::TYPE::TYPE (object *, object::method *, struct ev_loop *)</dt>
1365 <dt>ev::TYPE::~TYPE</dt>
1366 <dd>
1367 <p>The constructor takes a pointer to an object and a method pointer to
1368 the event handler callback to call in this class. The constructor calls
1369 <code>ev_init</code> for you, which means you have to call the <code>set</code> method
1370 before starting it. If you do not specify a loop then the constructor
1371 automatically associates the default loop with this watcher.</p>
1372 <p>The destructor automatically stops the watcher if it is active.</p>
1373 </dd>
1374 <dt>w-&gt;set (struct ev_loop *)</dt>
1375 <dd>
1376 <p>Associates a different <code>struct ev_loop</code> with this watcher. You can only
1377 do this when the watcher is inactive (and not pending either).</p>
1378 </dd>
1379 <dt>w-&gt;set ([args])</dt>
1380 <dd>
1381 <p>Basically the same as <code>ev_TYPE_set</code>, with the same args. Must be
1382 called at least once. Unlike the C counterpart, an active watcher gets
1383 automatically stopped and restarted.</p>
1384 </dd>
1385 <dt>w-&gt;start ()</dt>
1386 <dd>
1387 <p>Starts the watcher. Note that there is no <code>loop</code> argument as the
1388 constructor already takes the loop.</p>
1389 </dd>
1390 <dt>w-&gt;stop ()</dt>
1391 <dd>
1392 <p>Stops the watcher if it is active. Again, no <code>loop</code> argument.</p>
1393 </dd>
1394 <dt>w-&gt;again () <code>ev::timer</code>, <code>ev::periodic</code> only</dt>
1395 <dd>
1396 <p>For <code>ev::timer</code> and <code>ev::periodic</code>, this invokes the corresponding
1397 <code>ev_TYPE_again</code> function.</p>
1398 </dd>
1399 <dt>w-&gt;sweep () <code>ev::embed</code> only</dt>
1400 <dd>
1401 <p>Invokes <code>ev_embed_sweep</code>.</p>
1402 </dd>
1403 </dl>
1404 </p>
1405 </dd>
1406 </dl>
1407 <p>Example: Define a class with an IO and idle watcher, start one of them in
1408 the constructor.</p>
1409 <pre> class myclass
1410 {
1411 ev_io io; void io_cb (ev::io &amp;w, int revents);
1412 ev_idle idle void idle_cb (ev::idle &amp;w, int revents);
1413
1414 myclass ();
1415 }
1416
1417 myclass::myclass (int fd)
1418 : io (this, &amp;myclass::io_cb),
1419 idle (this, &amp;myclass::idle_cb)
1420 {
1421 io.start (fd, ev::READ);
1422 }
1423
1424 </pre>
1425
1426 </div>
1427 <h1 id="EMBEDDING">EMBEDDING</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
1428 <div id="EMBEDDING_CONTENT">
1429 <p>Libev can (and often is) directly embedded into host
1430 applications. Examples of applications that embed it include the Deliantra
1431 Game Server, the EV perl module, the GNU Virtual Private Ethernet (gvpe)
1432 and rxvt-unicode.</p>
1433 <p>The goal is to enable you to just copy the neecssary files into your
1434 source directory without having to change even a single line in them, so
1435 you can easily upgrade by simply copying (or having a checked-out copy of
1436 libev somewhere in your source tree).</p>
1437
1438 </div>
1439 <h2 id="FILESETS">FILESETS</h2>
1440 <div id="FILESETS_CONTENT">
1441 <p>Depending on what features you need you need to include one or more sets of files
1442 in your app.</p>
1443
1444 </div>
1445 <h3 id="CORE_EVENT_LOOP">CORE EVENT LOOP</h3>
1446 <div id="CORE_EVENT_LOOP_CONTENT">
1447 <p>To include only the libev core (all the <code>ev_*</code> functions), with manual
1448 configuration (no autoconf):</p>
1449 <pre> #define EV_STANDALONE 1
1450 #include &quot;ev.c&quot;
1451
1452 </pre>
1453 <p>This will automatically include <cite>ev.h</cite>, too, and should be done in a
1454 single C source file only to provide the function implementations. To use
1455 it, do the same for <cite>ev.h</cite> in all files wishing to use this API (best
1456 done by writing a wrapper around <cite>ev.h</cite> that you can include instead and
1457 where you can put other configuration options):</p>
1458 <pre> #define EV_STANDALONE 1
1459 #include &quot;ev.h&quot;
1460
1461 </pre>
1462 <p>Both header files and implementation files can be compiled with a C++
1463 compiler (at least, thats a stated goal, and breakage will be treated
1464 as a bug).</p>
1465 <p>You need the following files in your source tree, or in a directory
1466 in your include path (e.g. in libev/ when using -Ilibev):</p>
1467 <pre> ev.h
1468 ev.c
1469 ev_vars.h
1470 ev_wrap.h
1471
1472 ev_win32.c required on win32 platforms only
1473
1474 ev_select.c only when select backend is enabled (which is by default)
1475 ev_poll.c only when poll backend is enabled (disabled by default)
1476 ev_epoll.c only when the epoll backend is enabled (disabled by default)
1477 ev_kqueue.c only when the kqueue backend is enabled (disabled by default)
1478 ev_port.c only when the solaris port backend is enabled (disabled by default)
1479
1480 </pre>
1481 <p><cite>ev.c</cite> includes the backend files directly when enabled, so you only need
1482 to compile this single file.</p>
1483
1484 </div>
1485 <h3 id="LIBEVENT_COMPATIBILITY_API">LIBEVENT COMPATIBILITY API</h3>
1486 <div id="LIBEVENT_COMPATIBILITY_API_CONTENT">
1487 <p>To include the libevent compatibility API, also include:</p>
1488 <pre> #include &quot;event.c&quot;
1489
1490 </pre>
1491 <p>in the file including <cite>ev.c</cite>, and:</p>
1492 <pre> #include &quot;event.h&quot;
1493
1494 </pre>
1495 <p>in the files that want to use the libevent API. This also includes <cite>ev.h</cite>.</p>
1496 <p>You need the following additional files for this:</p>
1497 <pre> event.h
1498 event.c
1499
1500 </pre>
1501
1502 </div>
1503 <h3 id="AUTOCONF_SUPPORT">AUTOCONF SUPPORT</h3>
1504 <div id="AUTOCONF_SUPPORT_CONTENT">
1505 <p>Instead of using <code>EV_STANDALONE=1</code> and providing your config in
1506 whatever way you want, you can also <code>m4_include([libev.m4])</code> in your
1507 <cite>configure.ac</cite> and leave <code>EV_STANDALONE</code> undefined. <cite>ev.c</cite> will then
1508 include <cite>config.h</cite> and configure itself accordingly.</p>
1509 <p>For this of course you need the m4 file:</p>
1510 <pre> libev.m4
1511
1512 </pre>
1513
1514 </div>
1515 <h2 id="PREPROCESSOR_SYMBOLS_MACROS">PREPROCESSOR SYMBOLS/MACROS</h2>
1516 <div id="PREPROCESSOR_SYMBOLS_MACROS_CONTENT">
1517 <p>Libev can be configured via a variety of preprocessor symbols you have to define
1518 before including any of its files. The default is not to build for multiplicity
1519 and only include the select backend.</p>
1520 <dl>
1521 <dt>EV_STANDALONE</dt>
1522 <dd>
1523 <p>Must always be <code>1</code> if you do not use autoconf configuration, which
1524 keeps libev from including <cite>config.h</cite>, and it also defines dummy
1525 implementations for some libevent functions (such as logging, which is not
1526 supported). It will also not define any of the structs usually found in
1527 <cite>event.h</cite> that are not directly supported by the libev core alone.</p>
1528 </dd>
1529 <dt>EV_USE_MONOTONIC</dt>
1530 <dd>
1531 <p>If defined to be <code>1</code>, libev will try to detect the availability of the
1532 monotonic clock option at both compiletime and runtime. Otherwise no use
1533 of the monotonic clock option will be attempted. If you enable this, you
1534 usually have to link against librt or something similar. Enabling it when
1535 the functionality isn't available is safe, though, althoguh you have
1536 to make sure you link against any libraries where the <code>clock_gettime</code>
1537 function is hiding in (often <cite>-lrt</cite>).</p>
1538 </dd>
1539 <dt>EV_USE_REALTIME</dt>
1540 <dd>
1541 <p>If defined to be <code>1</code>, libev will try to detect the availability of the
1542 realtime clock option at compiletime (and assume its availability at
1543 runtime if successful). Otherwise no use of the realtime clock option will
1544 be attempted. This effectively replaces <code>gettimeofday</code> by <code>clock_get
1545 (CLOCK_REALTIME, ...)</code> and will not normally affect correctness. See tzhe note about libraries
1546 in the description of <code>EV_USE_MONOTONIC</code>, though.</p>
1547 </dd>
1548 <dt>EV_USE_SELECT</dt>
1549 <dd>
1550 <p>If undefined or defined to be <code>1</code>, libev will compile in support for the
1551 <code>select</code>(2) backend. No attempt at autodetection will be done: if no
1552 other method takes over, select will be it. Otherwise the select backend
1553 will not be compiled in.</p>
1554 </dd>
1555 <dt>EV_SELECT_USE_FD_SET</dt>
1556 <dd>
1557 <p>If defined to <code>1</code>, then the select backend will use the system <code>fd_set</code>
1558 structure. This is useful if libev doesn't compile due to a missing
1559 <code>NFDBITS</code> or <code>fd_mask</code> definition or it misguesses the bitset layout on
1560 exotic systems. This usually limits the range of file descriptors to some
1561 low limit such as 1024 or might have other limitations (winsocket only
1562 allows 64 sockets). The <code>FD_SETSIZE</code> macro, set before compilation, might
1563 influence the size of the <code>fd_set</code> used.</p>
1564 </dd>
1565 <dt>EV_SELECT_IS_WINSOCKET</dt>
1566 <dd>
1567 <p>When defined to <code>1</code>, the select backend will assume that
1568 select/socket/connect etc. don't understand file descriptors but
1569 wants osf handles on win32 (this is the case when the select to
1570 be used is the winsock select). This means that it will call
1571 <code>_get_osfhandle</code> on the fd to convert it to an OS handle. Otherwise,
1572 it is assumed that all these functions actually work on fds, even
1573 on win32. Should not be defined on non-win32 platforms.</p>
1574 </dd>
1575 <dt>EV_USE_POLL</dt>
1576 <dd>
1577 <p>If defined to be <code>1</code>, libev will compile in support for the <code>poll</code>(2)
1578 backend. Otherwise it will be enabled on non-win32 platforms. It
1579 takes precedence over select.</p>
1580 </dd>
1581 <dt>EV_USE_EPOLL</dt>
1582 <dd>
1583 <p>If defined to be <code>1</code>, libev will compile in support for the Linux
1584 <code>epoll</code>(7) backend. Its availability will be detected at runtime,
1585 otherwise another method will be used as fallback. This is the
1586 preferred backend for GNU/Linux systems.</p>
1587 </dd>
1588 <dt>EV_USE_KQUEUE</dt>
1589 <dd>
1590 <p>If defined to be <code>1</code>, libev will compile in support for the BSD style
1591 <code>kqueue</code>(2) backend. Its actual availability will be detected at runtime,
1592 otherwise another method will be used as fallback. This is the preferred
1593 backend for BSD and BSD-like systems, although on most BSDs kqueue only
1594 supports some types of fds correctly (the only platform we found that
1595 supports ptys for example was NetBSD), so kqueue might be compiled in, but
1596 not be used unless explicitly requested. The best way to use it is to find
1597 out whether kqueue supports your type of fd properly and use an embedded
1598 kqueue loop.</p>
1599 </dd>
1600 <dt>EV_USE_PORT</dt>
1601 <dd>
1602 <p>If defined to be <code>1</code>, libev will compile in support for the Solaris
1603 10 port style backend. Its availability will be detected at runtime,
1604 otherwise another method will be used as fallback. This is the preferred
1605 backend for Solaris 10 systems.</p>
1606 </dd>
1607 <dt>EV_USE_DEVPOLL</dt>
1608 <dd>
1609 <p>reserved for future expansion, works like the USE symbols above.</p>
1610 </dd>
1611 <dt>EV_H</dt>
1612 <dd>
1613 <p>The name of the <cite>ev.h</cite> header file used to include it. The default if
1614 undefined is <code>&lt;ev.h&gt;</code> in <cite>event.h</cite> and <code>&quot;ev.h&quot;</code> in <cite>ev.c</cite>. This
1615 can be used to virtually rename the <cite>ev.h</cite> header file in case of conflicts.</p>
1616 </dd>
1617 <dt>EV_CONFIG_H</dt>
1618 <dd>
1619 <p>If <code>EV_STANDALONE</code> isn't <code>1</code>, this variable can be used to override
1620 <cite>ev.c</cite>'s idea of where to find the <cite>config.h</cite> file, similarly to
1621 <code>EV_H</code>, above.</p>
1622 </dd>
1623 <dt>EV_EVENT_H</dt>
1624 <dd>
1625 <p>Similarly to <code>EV_H</code>, this macro can be used to override <cite>event.c</cite>'s idea
1626 of how the <cite>event.h</cite> header can be found.</p>
1627 </dd>
1628 <dt>EV_PROTOTYPES</dt>
1629 <dd>
1630 <p>If defined to be <code>0</code>, then <cite>ev.h</cite> will not define any function
1631 prototypes, but still define all the structs and other symbols. This is
1632 occasionally useful if you want to provide your own wrapper functions
1633 around libev functions.</p>
1634 </dd>
1635 <dt>EV_MULTIPLICITY</dt>
1636 <dd>
1637 <p>If undefined or defined to <code>1</code>, then all event-loop-specific functions
1638 will have the <code>struct ev_loop *</code> as first argument, and you can create
1639 additional independent event loops. Otherwise there will be no support
1640 for multiple event loops and there is no first event loop pointer
1641 argument. Instead, all functions act on the single default loop.</p>
1642 </dd>
1643 <dt>EV_PERIODICS</dt>
1644 <dd>
1645 <p>If undefined or defined to be <code>1</code>, then periodic timers are supported,
1646 otherwise not. This saves a few kb of code.</p>
1647 </dd>
1648 <dt>EV_COMMON</dt>
1649 <dd>
1650 <p>By default, all watchers have a <code>void *data</code> member. By redefining
1651 this macro to a something else you can include more and other types of
1652 members. You have to define it each time you include one of the files,
1653 though, and it must be identical each time.</p>
1654 <p>For example, the perl EV module uses something like this:</p>
1655 <pre> #define EV_COMMON \
1656 SV *self; /* contains this struct */ \
1657 SV *cb_sv, *fh /* note no trailing &quot;;&quot; */
1658
1659 </pre>
1660 </dd>
1661 <dt>EV_CB_DECLARE (type)</dt>
1662 <dt>EV_CB_INVOKE (watcher, revents)</dt>
1663 <dt>ev_set_cb (ev, cb)</dt>
1664 <dd>
1665 <p>Can be used to change the callback member declaration in each watcher,
1666 and the way callbacks are invoked and set. Must expand to a struct member
1667 definition and a statement, respectively. See the <cite>ev.v</cite> header file for
1668 their default definitions. One possible use for overriding these is to
1669 avoid the <code>struct ev_loop *</code> as first argument in all cases, or to use
1670 method calls instead of plain function calls in C++.</p>
1671
1672 </div>
1673 <h2 id="EXAMPLES">EXAMPLES</h2>
1674 <div id="EXAMPLES_CONTENT">
1675 <p>For a real-world example of a program the includes libev
1676 verbatim, you can have a look at the EV perl module
1677 (<a href="http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/EV.html">http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/EV.html</a>). It has the libev files in
1678 the <cite>libev/</cite> subdirectory and includes them in the <cite>EV/EVAPI.h</cite> (public
1679 interface) and <cite>EV.xs</cite> (implementation) files. Only the <cite>EV.xs</cite> file
1680 will be compiled. It is pretty complex because it provides its own header
1681 file.</p>
1682 <p>The usage in rxvt-unicode is simpler. It has a <cite>ev_cpp.h</cite> header file
1683 that everybody includes and which overrides some autoconf choices:</p>
1684 <pre> #define EV_USE_POLL 0
1685 #define EV_MULTIPLICITY 0
1686 #define EV_PERIODICS 0
1687 #define EV_CONFIG_H &lt;config.h&gt;
1688
1689 #include &quot;ev++.h&quot;
1690
1691 </pre>
1692 <p>And a <cite>ev_cpp.C</cite> implementation file that contains libev proper and is compiled:</p>
1693 <pre> #include &quot;ev_cpp.h&quot;
1694 #include &quot;ev.c&quot;
1695
1696 </pre>
1697
1698 </div>
1699 <h1 id="AUTHOR">AUTHOR</h1><p><a href="#TOP" class="toplink">Top</a></p>
1700 <div id="AUTHOR_CONTENT">
1701 <p>Marc Lehmann &lt;libev@schmorp.de&gt;.</p>
1702
1703 </div>
1704 </div></body>
1705 </html>