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# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 libev - a high performance full-featured event loop written in C
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 #include <ev.h>
8
9 =head2 EXAMPLE PROGRAM
10
11 // a single header file is required
12 #include <ev.h>
13
14 #include <stdio.h> // for puts
15
16 // every watcher type has its own typedef'd struct
17 // with the name ev_TYPE
18 ev_io stdin_watcher;
19 ev_timer timeout_watcher;
20
21 // all watcher callbacks have a similar signature
22 // this callback is called when data is readable on stdin
23 static void
24 stdin_cb (EV_P_ ev_io *w, int revents)
25 {
26 puts ("stdin ready");
27 // for one-shot events, one must manually stop the watcher
28 // with its corresponding stop function.
29 ev_io_stop (EV_A_ w);
30
31 // this causes all nested ev_run's to stop iterating
32 ev_break (EV_A_ EVBREAK_ALL);
33 }
34
35 // another callback, this time for a time-out
36 static void
37 timeout_cb (EV_P_ ev_timer *w, int revents)
38 {
39 puts ("timeout");
40 // this causes the innermost ev_run to stop iterating
41 ev_break (EV_A_ EVBREAK_ONE);
42 }
43
44 int
45 main (void)
46 {
47 // use the default event loop unless you have special needs
48 struct ev_loop *loop = EV_DEFAULT;
49
50 // initialise an io watcher, then start it
51 // this one will watch for stdin to become readable
52 ev_io_init (&stdin_watcher, stdin_cb, /*STDIN_FILENO*/ 0, EV_READ);
53 ev_io_start (loop, &stdin_watcher);
54
55 // initialise a timer watcher, then start it
56 // simple non-repeating 5.5 second timeout
57 ev_timer_init (&timeout_watcher, timeout_cb, 5.5, 0.);
58 ev_timer_start (loop, &timeout_watcher);
59
60 // now wait for events to arrive
61 ev_run (loop, 0);
62
63 // break was called, so exit
64 return 0;
65 }
66
67 =head1 ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT
68
69 This document documents the libev software package.
70
71 The newest version of this document is also available as an html-formatted
72 web page you might find easier to navigate when reading it for the first
73 time: L<http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/libev/ev.pod>.
74
75 While this document tries to be as complete as possible in documenting
76 libev, its usage and the rationale behind its design, it is not a tutorial
77 on event-based programming, nor will it introduce event-based programming
78 with libev.
79
80 Familiarity with event based programming techniques in general is assumed
81 throughout this document.
82
83 =head1 WHAT TO READ WHEN IN A HURRY
84
85 This manual tries to be very detailed, but unfortunately, this also makes
86 it very long. If you just want to know the basics of libev, I suggest
87 reading L<ANATOMY OF A WATCHER>, then the L<EXAMPLE PROGRAM> above and
88 look up the missing functions in L<GLOBAL FUNCTIONS> and the C<ev_io> and
89 C<ev_timer> sections in L<WATCHER TYPES>.
90
91 =head1 ABOUT LIBEV
92
93 Libev is an event loop: you register interest in certain events (such as a
94 file descriptor being readable or a timeout occurring), and it will manage
95 these event sources and provide your program with events.
96
97 To do this, it must take more or less complete control over your process
98 (or thread) by executing the I<event loop> handler, and will then
99 communicate events via a callback mechanism.
100
101 You register interest in certain events by registering so-called I<event
102 watchers>, which are relatively small C structures you initialise with the
103 details of the event, and then hand it over to libev by I<starting> the
104 watcher.
105
106 =head2 FEATURES
107
108 Libev supports C<select>, C<poll>, the Linux-specific C<epoll>, the
109 BSD-specific C<kqueue> and the Solaris-specific event port mechanisms
110 for file descriptor events (C<ev_io>), the Linux C<inotify> interface
111 (for C<ev_stat>), Linux eventfd/signalfd (for faster and cleaner
112 inter-thread wakeup (C<ev_async>)/signal handling (C<ev_signal>)) relative
113 timers (C<ev_timer>), absolute timers with customised rescheduling
114 (C<ev_periodic>), synchronous signals (C<ev_signal>), process status
115 change events (C<ev_child>), and event watchers dealing with the event
116 loop mechanism itself (C<ev_idle>, C<ev_embed>, C<ev_prepare> and
117 C<ev_check> watchers) as well as file watchers (C<ev_stat>) and even
118 limited support for fork events (C<ev_fork>).
119
120 It also is quite fast (see this
121 L<benchmark|http://libev.schmorp.de/bench.html> comparing it to libevent
122 for example).
123
124 =head2 CONVENTIONS
125
126 Libev is very configurable. In this manual the default (and most common)
127 configuration will be described, which supports multiple event loops. For
128 more info about various configuration options please have a look at
129 B<EMBED> section in this manual. If libev was configured without support
130 for multiple event loops, then all functions taking an initial argument of
131 name C<loop> (which is always of type C<struct ev_loop *>) will not have
132 this argument.
133
134 =head2 TIME REPRESENTATION
135
136 Libev represents time as a single floating point number, representing
137 the (fractional) number of seconds since the (POSIX) epoch (in practice
138 somewhere near the beginning of 1970, details are complicated, don't
139 ask). This type is called C<ev_tstamp>, which is what you should use
140 too. It usually aliases to the C<double> type in C. When you need to do
141 any calculations on it, you should treat it as some floating point value.
142
143 Unlike the name component C<stamp> might indicate, it is also used for
144 time differences (e.g. delays) throughout libev.
145
146 =head1 ERROR HANDLING
147
148 Libev knows three classes of errors: operating system errors, usage errors
149 and internal errors (bugs).
150
151 When libev catches an operating system error it cannot handle (for example
152 a system call indicating a condition libev cannot fix), it calls the callback
153 set via C<ev_set_syserr_cb>, which is supposed to fix the problem or
154 abort. The default is to print a diagnostic message and to call C<abort
155 ()>.
156
157 When libev detects a usage error such as a negative timer interval, then
158 it will print a diagnostic message and abort (via the C<assert> mechanism,
159 so C<NDEBUG> will disable this checking): these are programming errors in
160 the libev caller and need to be fixed there.
161
162 Libev also has a few internal error-checking C<assert>ions, and also has
163 extensive consistency checking code. These do not trigger under normal
164 circumstances, as they indicate either a bug in libev or worse.
165
166
167 =head1 GLOBAL FUNCTIONS
168
169 These functions can be called anytime, even before initialising the
170 library in any way.
171
172 =over 4
173
174 =item ev_tstamp ev_time ()
175
176 Returns the current time as libev would use it. Please note that the
177 C<ev_now> function is usually faster and also often returns the timestamp
178 you actually want to know. Also interesting is the combination of
179 C<ev_update_now> and C<ev_now>.
180
181 =item ev_sleep (ev_tstamp interval)
182
183 Sleep for the given interval: The current thread will be blocked until
184 either it is interrupted or the given time interval has passed. Basically
185 this is a sub-second-resolution C<sleep ()>.
186
187 =item int ev_version_major ()
188
189 =item int ev_version_minor ()
190
191 You can find out the major and minor ABI version numbers of the library
192 you linked against by calling the functions C<ev_version_major> and
193 C<ev_version_minor>. If you want, you can compare against the global
194 symbols C<EV_VERSION_MAJOR> and C<EV_VERSION_MINOR>, which specify the
195 version of the library your program was compiled against.
196
197 These version numbers refer to the ABI version of the library, not the
198 release version.
199
200 Usually, it's a good idea to terminate if the major versions mismatch,
201 as this indicates an incompatible change. Minor versions are usually
202 compatible to older versions, so a larger minor version alone is usually
203 not a problem.
204
205 Example: Make sure we haven't accidentally been linked against the wrong
206 version (note, however, that this will not detect other ABI mismatches,
207 such as LFS or reentrancy).
208
209 assert (("libev version mismatch",
210 ev_version_major () == EV_VERSION_MAJOR
211 && ev_version_minor () >= EV_VERSION_MINOR));
212
213 =item unsigned int ev_supported_backends ()
214
215 Return the set of all backends (i.e. their corresponding C<EV_BACKEND_*>
216 value) compiled into this binary of libev (independent of their
217 availability on the system you are running on). See C<ev_default_loop> for
218 a description of the set values.
219
220 Example: make sure we have the epoll method, because yeah this is cool and
221 a must have and can we have a torrent of it please!!!11
222
223 assert (("sorry, no epoll, no sex",
224 ev_supported_backends () & EVBACKEND_EPOLL));
225
226 =item unsigned int ev_recommended_backends ()
227
228 Return the set of all backends compiled into this binary of libev and
229 also recommended for this platform, meaning it will work for most file
230 descriptor types. This set is often smaller than the one returned by
231 C<ev_supported_backends>, as for example kqueue is broken on most BSDs
232 and will not be auto-detected unless you explicitly request it (assuming
233 you know what you are doing). This is the set of backends that libev will
234 probe for if you specify no backends explicitly.
235
236 =item unsigned int ev_embeddable_backends ()
237
238 Returns the set of backends that are embeddable in other event loops. This
239 value is platform-specific but can include backends not available on the
240 current system. To find which embeddable backends might be supported on
241 the current system, you would need to look at C<ev_embeddable_backends ()
242 & ev_supported_backends ()>, likewise for recommended ones.
243
244 See the description of C<ev_embed> watchers for more info.
245
246 =item ev_set_allocator (void *(*cb)(void *ptr, long size))
247
248 Sets the allocation function to use (the prototype is similar - the
249 semantics are identical to the C<realloc> C89/SuS/POSIX function). It is
250 used to allocate and free memory (no surprises here). If it returns zero
251 when memory needs to be allocated (C<size != 0>), the library might abort
252 or take some potentially destructive action.
253
254 Since some systems (at least OpenBSD and Darwin) fail to implement
255 correct C<realloc> semantics, libev will use a wrapper around the system
256 C<realloc> and C<free> functions by default.
257
258 You could override this function in high-availability programs to, say,
259 free some memory if it cannot allocate memory, to use a special allocator,
260 or even to sleep a while and retry until some memory is available.
261
262 Example: Replace the libev allocator with one that waits a bit and then
263 retries (example requires a standards-compliant C<realloc>).
264
265 static void *
266 persistent_realloc (void *ptr, size_t size)
267 {
268 for (;;)
269 {
270 void *newptr = realloc (ptr, size);
271
272 if (newptr)
273 return newptr;
274
275 sleep (60);
276 }
277 }
278
279 ...
280 ev_set_allocator (persistent_realloc);
281
282 =item ev_set_syserr_cb (void (*cb)(const char *msg))
283
284 Set the callback function to call on a retryable system call error (such
285 as failed select, poll, epoll_wait). The message is a printable string
286 indicating the system call or subsystem causing the problem. If this
287 callback is set, then libev will expect it to remedy the situation, no
288 matter what, when it returns. That is, libev will generally retry the
289 requested operation, or, if the condition doesn't go away, do bad stuff
290 (such as abort).
291
292 Example: This is basically the same thing that libev does internally, too.
293
294 static void
295 fatal_error (const char *msg)
296 {
297 perror (msg);
298 abort ();
299 }
300
301 ...
302 ev_set_syserr_cb (fatal_error);
303
304 =item ev_feed_signal (int signum)
305
306 This function can be used to "simulate" a signal receive. It is completely
307 safe to call this function at any time, from any context, including signal
308 handlers or random threads.
309
310 Its main use is to customise signal handling in your process, especially
311 in the presence of threads. For example, you could block signals
312 by default in all threads (and specifying C<EVFLAG_NOSIGMASK> when
313 creating any loops), and in one thread, use C<sigwait> or any other
314 mechanism to wait for signals, then "deliver" them to libev by calling
315 C<ev_feed_signal>.
316
317 =back
318
319 =head1 FUNCTIONS CONTROLLING EVENT LOOPS
320
321 An event loop is described by a C<struct ev_loop *> (the C<struct> is
322 I<not> optional in this case unless libev 3 compatibility is disabled, as
323 libev 3 had an C<ev_loop> function colliding with the struct name).
324
325 The library knows two types of such loops, the I<default> loop, which
326 supports child process events, and dynamically created event loops which
327 do not.
328
329 =over 4
330
331 =item struct ev_loop *ev_default_loop (unsigned int flags)
332
333 This returns the "default" event loop object, which is what you should
334 normally use when you just need "the event loop". Event loop objects and
335 the C<flags> parameter are described in more detail in the entry for
336 C<ev_loop_new>.
337
338 If the default loop is already initialised then this function simply
339 returns it (and ignores the flags. If that is troubling you, check
340 C<ev_backend ()> afterwards). Otherwise it will create it with the given
341 flags, which should almost always be C<0>, unless the caller is also the
342 one calling C<ev_run> or otherwise qualifies as "the main program".
343
344 If you don't know what event loop to use, use the one returned from this
345 function (or via the C<EV_DEFAULT> macro).
346
347 Note that this function is I<not> thread-safe, so if you want to use it
348 from multiple threads, you have to employ some kind of mutex (note also
349 that this case is unlikely, as loops cannot be shared easily between
350 threads anyway).
351
352 The default loop is the only loop that can handle C<ev_child> watchers,
353 and to do this, it always registers a handler for C<SIGCHLD>. If this is
354 a problem for your application you can either create a dynamic loop with
355 C<ev_loop_new> which doesn't do that, or you can simply overwrite the
356 C<SIGCHLD> signal handler I<after> calling C<ev_default_init>.
357
358 Example: This is the most typical usage.
359
360 if (!ev_default_loop (0))
361 fatal ("could not initialise libev, bad $LIBEV_FLAGS in environment?");
362
363 Example: Restrict libev to the select and poll backends, and do not allow
364 environment settings to be taken into account:
365
366 ev_default_loop (EVBACKEND_POLL | EVBACKEND_SELECT | EVFLAG_NOENV);
367
368 =item struct ev_loop *ev_loop_new (unsigned int flags)
369
370 This will create and initialise a new event loop object. If the loop
371 could not be initialised, returns false.
372
373 This function is thread-safe, and one common way to use libev with
374 threads is indeed to create one loop per thread, and using the default
375 loop in the "main" or "initial" thread.
376
377 The flags argument can be used to specify special behaviour or specific
378 backends to use, and is usually specified as C<0> (or C<EVFLAG_AUTO>).
379
380 The following flags are supported:
381
382 =over 4
383
384 =item C<EVFLAG_AUTO>
385
386 The default flags value. Use this if you have no clue (it's the right
387 thing, believe me).
388
389 =item C<EVFLAG_NOENV>
390
391 If this flag bit is or'ed into the flag value (or the program runs setuid
392 or setgid) then libev will I<not> look at the environment variable
393 C<LIBEV_FLAGS>. Otherwise (the default), this environment variable will
394 override the flags completely if it is found in the environment. This is
395 useful to try out specific backends to test their performance, or to work
396 around bugs.
397
398 =item C<EVFLAG_FORKCHECK>
399
400 Instead of calling C<ev_loop_fork> manually after a fork, you can also
401 make libev check for a fork in each iteration by enabling this flag.
402
403 This works by calling C<getpid ()> on every iteration of the loop,
404 and thus this might slow down your event loop if you do a lot of loop
405 iterations and little real work, but is usually not noticeable (on my
406 GNU/Linux system for example, C<getpid> is actually a simple 5-insn sequence
407 without a system call and thus I<very> fast, but my GNU/Linux system also has
408 C<pthread_atfork> which is even faster).
409
410 The big advantage of this flag is that you can forget about fork (and
411 forget about forgetting to tell libev about forking) when you use this
412 flag.
413
414 This flag setting cannot be overridden or specified in the C<LIBEV_FLAGS>
415 environment variable.
416
417 =item C<EVFLAG_NOINOTIFY>
418
419 When this flag is specified, then libev will not attempt to use the
420 I<inotify> API for its C<ev_stat> watchers. Apart from debugging and
421 testing, this flag can be useful to conserve inotify file descriptors, as
422 otherwise each loop using C<ev_stat> watchers consumes one inotify handle.
423
424 =item C<EVFLAG_SIGNALFD>
425
426 When this flag is specified, then libev will attempt to use the
427 I<signalfd> API for its C<ev_signal> (and C<ev_child>) watchers. This API
428 delivers signals synchronously, which makes it both faster and might make
429 it possible to get the queued signal data. It can also simplify signal
430 handling with threads, as long as you properly block signals in your
431 threads that are not interested in handling them.
432
433 Signalfd will not be used by default as this changes your signal mask, and
434 there are a lot of shoddy libraries and programs (glib's threadpool for
435 example) that can't properly initialise their signal masks.
436
437 =item C<EVFLAG_NOSIGMASK>
438
439 When this flag is specified, then libev will avoid to modify the signal
440 mask. Specifically, this means you ahve to make sure signals are unblocked
441 when you want to receive them.
442
443 This behaviour is useful when you want to do your own signal handling, or
444 want to handle signals only in specific threads and want to avoid libev
445 unblocking the signals.
446
447 It's also required by POSIX in a threaded program, as libev calls
448 C<sigprocmask>, whose behaviour is officially unspecified.
449
450 This flag's behaviour will become the default in future versions of libev.
451
452 =item C<EVBACKEND_SELECT> (value 1, portable select backend)
453
454 This is your standard select(2) backend. Not I<completely> standard, as
455 libev tries to roll its own fd_set with no limits on the number of fds,
456 but if that fails, expect a fairly low limit on the number of fds when
457 using this backend. It doesn't scale too well (O(highest_fd)), but its
458 usually the fastest backend for a low number of (low-numbered :) fds.
459
460 To get good performance out of this backend you need a high amount of
461 parallelism (most of the file descriptors should be busy). If you are
462 writing a server, you should C<accept ()> in a loop to accept as many
463 connections as possible during one iteration. You might also want to have
464 a look at C<ev_set_io_collect_interval ()> to increase the amount of
465 readiness notifications you get per iteration.
466
467 This backend maps C<EV_READ> to the C<readfds> set and C<EV_WRITE> to the
468 C<writefds> set (and to work around Microsoft Windows bugs, also onto the
469 C<exceptfds> set on that platform).
470
471 =item C<EVBACKEND_POLL> (value 2, poll backend, available everywhere except on windows)
472
473 And this is your standard poll(2) backend. It's more complicated
474 than select, but handles sparse fds better and has no artificial
475 limit on the number of fds you can use (except it will slow down
476 considerably with a lot of inactive fds). It scales similarly to select,
477 i.e. O(total_fds). See the entry for C<EVBACKEND_SELECT>, above, for
478 performance tips.
479
480 This backend maps C<EV_READ> to C<POLLIN | POLLERR | POLLHUP>, and
481 C<EV_WRITE> to C<POLLOUT | POLLERR | POLLHUP>.
482
483 =item C<EVBACKEND_EPOLL> (value 4, Linux)
484
485 Use the linux-specific epoll(7) interface (for both pre- and post-2.6.9
486 kernels).
487
488 For few fds, this backend is a bit little slower than poll and select, but
489 it scales phenomenally better. While poll and select usually scale like
490 O(total_fds) where total_fds is the total number of fds (or the highest
491 fd), epoll scales either O(1) or O(active_fds).
492
493 The epoll mechanism deserves honorable mention as the most misdesigned
494 of the more advanced event mechanisms: mere annoyances include silently
495 dropping file descriptors, requiring a system call per change per file
496 descriptor (and unnecessary guessing of parameters), problems with dup,
497 returning before the timeout value, resulting in additional iterations
498 (and only giving 5ms accuracy while select on the same platform gives
499 0.1ms) and so on. The biggest issue is fork races, however - if a program
500 forks then I<both> parent and child process have to recreate the epoll
501 set, which can take considerable time (one syscall per file descriptor)
502 and is of course hard to detect.
503
504 Epoll is also notoriously buggy - embedding epoll fds I<should> work,
505 but of course I<doesn't>, and epoll just loves to report events for
506 totally I<different> file descriptors (even already closed ones, so
507 one cannot even remove them from the set) than registered in the set
508 (especially on SMP systems). Libev tries to counter these spurious
509 notifications by employing an additional generation counter and comparing
510 that against the events to filter out spurious ones, recreating the set
511 when required. Epoll also errornously rounds down timeouts, but gives you
512 no way to know when and by how much, so sometimes you have to busy-wait
513 because epoll returns immediately despite a nonzero timeout. And last
514 not least, it also refuses to work with some file descriptors which work
515 perfectly fine with C<select> (files, many character devices...).
516
517 Epoll is truly the train wreck among event poll mechanisms, a frankenpoll,
518 cobbled together in a hurry, no thought to design or interaction with
519 others. Oh, the pain, will it ever stop...
520
521 While stopping, setting and starting an I/O watcher in the same iteration
522 will result in some caching, there is still a system call per such
523 incident (because the same I<file descriptor> could point to a different
524 I<file description> now), so its best to avoid that. Also, C<dup ()>'ed
525 file descriptors might not work very well if you register events for both
526 file descriptors.
527
528 Best performance from this backend is achieved by not unregistering all
529 watchers for a file descriptor until it has been closed, if possible,
530 i.e. keep at least one watcher active per fd at all times. Stopping and
531 starting a watcher (without re-setting it) also usually doesn't cause
532 extra overhead. A fork can both result in spurious notifications as well
533 as in libev having to destroy and recreate the epoll object, which can
534 take considerable time and thus should be avoided.
535
536 All this means that, in practice, C<EVBACKEND_SELECT> can be as fast or
537 faster than epoll for maybe up to a hundred file descriptors, depending on
538 the usage. So sad.
539
540 While nominally embeddable in other event loops, this feature is broken in
541 all kernel versions tested so far.
542
543 This backend maps C<EV_READ> and C<EV_WRITE> in the same way as
544 C<EVBACKEND_POLL>.
545
546 =item C<EVBACKEND_KQUEUE> (value 8, most BSD clones)
547
548 Kqueue deserves special mention, as at the time of this writing, it
549 was broken on all BSDs except NetBSD (usually it doesn't work reliably
550 with anything but sockets and pipes, except on Darwin, where of course
551 it's completely useless). Unlike epoll, however, whose brokenness
552 is by design, these kqueue bugs can (and eventually will) be fixed
553 without API changes to existing programs. For this reason it's not being
554 "auto-detected" unless you explicitly specify it in the flags (i.e. using
555 C<EVBACKEND_KQUEUE>) or libev was compiled on a known-to-be-good (-enough)
556 system like NetBSD.
557
558 You still can embed kqueue into a normal poll or select backend and use it
559 only for sockets (after having made sure that sockets work with kqueue on
560 the target platform). See C<ev_embed> watchers for more info.
561
562 It scales in the same way as the epoll backend, but the interface to the
563 kernel is more efficient (which says nothing about its actual speed, of
564 course). While stopping, setting and starting an I/O watcher does never
565 cause an extra system call as with C<EVBACKEND_EPOLL>, it still adds up to
566 two event changes per incident. Support for C<fork ()> is very bad (but
567 sane, unlike epoll) and it drops fds silently in similarly hard-to-detect
568 cases
569
570 This backend usually performs well under most conditions.
571
572 While nominally embeddable in other event loops, this doesn't work
573 everywhere, so you might need to test for this. And since it is broken
574 almost everywhere, you should only use it when you have a lot of sockets
575 (for which it usually works), by embedding it into another event loop
576 (e.g. C<EVBACKEND_SELECT> or C<EVBACKEND_POLL> (but C<poll> is of course
577 also broken on OS X)) and, did I mention it, using it only for sockets.
578
579 This backend maps C<EV_READ> into an C<EVFILT_READ> kevent with
580 C<NOTE_EOF>, and C<EV_WRITE> into an C<EVFILT_WRITE> kevent with
581 C<NOTE_EOF>.
582
583 =item C<EVBACKEND_DEVPOLL> (value 16, Solaris 8)
584
585 This is not implemented yet (and might never be, unless you send me an
586 implementation). According to reports, C</dev/poll> only supports sockets
587 and is not embeddable, which would limit the usefulness of this backend
588 immensely.
589
590 =item C<EVBACKEND_PORT> (value 32, Solaris 10)
591
592 This uses the Solaris 10 event port mechanism. As with everything on Solaris,
593 it's really slow, but it still scales very well (O(active_fds)).
594
595 While this backend scales well, it requires one system call per active
596 file descriptor per loop iteration. For small and medium numbers of file
597 descriptors a "slow" C<EVBACKEND_SELECT> or C<EVBACKEND_POLL> backend
598 might perform better.
599
600 On the positive side, this backend actually performed fully to
601 specification in all tests and is fully embeddable, which is a rare feat
602 among the OS-specific backends (I vastly prefer correctness over speed
603 hacks).
604
605 On the negative side, the interface is I<bizarre> - so bizarre that
606 even sun itself gets it wrong in their code examples: The event polling
607 function sometimes returning events to the caller even though an error
608 occurred, but with no indication whether it has done so or not (yes, it's
609 even documented that way) - deadly for edge-triggered interfaces where
610 you absolutely have to know whether an event occurred or not because you
611 have to re-arm the watcher.
612
613 Fortunately libev seems to be able to work around these idiocies.
614
615 This backend maps C<EV_READ> and C<EV_WRITE> in the same way as
616 C<EVBACKEND_POLL>.
617
618 =item C<EVBACKEND_ALL>
619
620 Try all backends (even potentially broken ones that wouldn't be tried
621 with C<EVFLAG_AUTO>). Since this is a mask, you can do stuff such as
622 C<EVBACKEND_ALL & ~EVBACKEND_KQUEUE>.
623
624 It is definitely not recommended to use this flag, use whatever
625 C<ev_recommended_backends ()> returns, or simply do not specify a backend
626 at all.
627
628 =item C<EVBACKEND_MASK>
629
630 Not a backend at all, but a mask to select all backend bits from a
631 C<flags> value, in case you want to mask out any backends from a flags
632 value (e.g. when modifying the C<LIBEV_FLAGS> environment variable).
633
634 =back
635
636 If one or more of the backend flags are or'ed into the flags value,
637 then only these backends will be tried (in the reverse order as listed
638 here). If none are specified, all backends in C<ev_recommended_backends
639 ()> will be tried.
640
641 Example: Try to create a event loop that uses epoll and nothing else.
642
643 struct ev_loop *epoller = ev_loop_new (EVBACKEND_EPOLL | EVFLAG_NOENV);
644 if (!epoller)
645 fatal ("no epoll found here, maybe it hides under your chair");
646
647 Example: Use whatever libev has to offer, but make sure that kqueue is
648 used if available.
649
650 struct ev_loop *loop = ev_loop_new (ev_recommended_backends () | EVBACKEND_KQUEUE);
651
652 =item ev_loop_destroy (loop)
653
654 Destroys an event loop object (frees all memory and kernel state
655 etc.). None of the active event watchers will be stopped in the normal
656 sense, so e.g. C<ev_is_active> might still return true. It is your
657 responsibility to either stop all watchers cleanly yourself I<before>
658 calling this function, or cope with the fact afterwards (which is usually
659 the easiest thing, you can just ignore the watchers and/or C<free ()> them
660 for example).
661
662 Note that certain global state, such as signal state (and installed signal
663 handlers), will not be freed by this function, and related watchers (such
664 as signal and child watchers) would need to be stopped manually.
665
666 This function is normally used on loop objects allocated by
667 C<ev_loop_new>, but it can also be used on the default loop returned by
668 C<ev_default_loop>, in which case it is not thread-safe.
669
670 Note that it is not advisable to call this function on the default loop
671 except in the rare occasion where you really need to free its resources.
672 If you need dynamically allocated loops it is better to use C<ev_loop_new>
673 and C<ev_loop_destroy>.
674
675 =item ev_loop_fork (loop)
676
677 This function sets a flag that causes subsequent C<ev_run> iterations to
678 reinitialise the kernel state for backends that have one. Despite the
679 name, you can call it anytime, but it makes most sense after forking, in
680 the child process. You I<must> call it (or use C<EVFLAG_FORKCHECK>) in the
681 child before resuming or calling C<ev_run>.
682
683 Again, you I<have> to call it on I<any> loop that you want to re-use after
684 a fork, I<even if you do not plan to use the loop in the parent>. This is
685 because some kernel interfaces *cough* I<kqueue> *cough* do funny things
686 during fork.
687
688 On the other hand, you only need to call this function in the child
689 process if and only if you want to use the event loop in the child. If
690 you just fork+exec or create a new loop in the child, you don't have to
691 call it at all (in fact, C<epoll> is so badly broken that it makes a
692 difference, but libev will usually detect this case on its own and do a
693 costly reset of the backend).
694
695 The function itself is quite fast and it's usually not a problem to call
696 it just in case after a fork.
697
698 Example: Automate calling C<ev_loop_fork> on the default loop when
699 using pthreads.
700
701 static void
702 post_fork_child (void)
703 {
704 ev_loop_fork (EV_DEFAULT);
705 }
706
707 ...
708 pthread_atfork (0, 0, post_fork_child);
709
710 =item int ev_is_default_loop (loop)
711
712 Returns true when the given loop is, in fact, the default loop, and false
713 otherwise.
714
715 =item unsigned int ev_iteration (loop)
716
717 Returns the current iteration count for the event loop, which is identical
718 to the number of times libev did poll for new events. It starts at C<0>
719 and happily wraps around with enough iterations.
720
721 This value can sometimes be useful as a generation counter of sorts (it
722 "ticks" the number of loop iterations), as it roughly corresponds with
723 C<ev_prepare> and C<ev_check> calls - and is incremented between the
724 prepare and check phases.
725
726 =item unsigned int ev_depth (loop)
727
728 Returns the number of times C<ev_run> was entered minus the number of
729 times C<ev_run> was exited normally, in other words, the recursion depth.
730
731 Outside C<ev_run>, this number is zero. In a callback, this number is
732 C<1>, unless C<ev_run> was invoked recursively (or from another thread),
733 in which case it is higher.
734
735 Leaving C<ev_run> abnormally (setjmp/longjmp, cancelling the thread,
736 throwing an exception etc.), doesn't count as "exit" - consider this
737 as a hint to avoid such ungentleman-like behaviour unless it's really
738 convenient, in which case it is fully supported.
739
740 =item unsigned int ev_backend (loop)
741
742 Returns one of the C<EVBACKEND_*> flags indicating the event backend in
743 use.
744
745 =item ev_tstamp ev_now (loop)
746
747 Returns the current "event loop time", which is the time the event loop
748 received events and started processing them. This timestamp does not
749 change as long as callbacks are being processed, and this is also the base
750 time used for relative timers. You can treat it as the timestamp of the
751 event occurring (or more correctly, libev finding out about it).
752
753 =item ev_now_update (loop)
754
755 Establishes the current time by querying the kernel, updating the time
756 returned by C<ev_now ()> in the progress. This is a costly operation and
757 is usually done automatically within C<ev_run ()>.
758
759 This function is rarely useful, but when some event callback runs for a
760 very long time without entering the event loop, updating libev's idea of
761 the current time is a good idea.
762
763 See also L<The special problem of time updates> in the C<ev_timer> section.
764
765 =item ev_suspend (loop)
766
767 =item ev_resume (loop)
768
769 These two functions suspend and resume an event loop, for use when the
770 loop is not used for a while and timeouts should not be processed.
771
772 A typical use case would be an interactive program such as a game: When
773 the user presses C<^Z> to suspend the game and resumes it an hour later it
774 would be best to handle timeouts as if no time had actually passed while
775 the program was suspended. This can be achieved by calling C<ev_suspend>
776 in your C<SIGTSTP> handler, sending yourself a C<SIGSTOP> and calling
777 C<ev_resume> directly afterwards to resume timer processing.
778
779 Effectively, all C<ev_timer> watchers will be delayed by the time spend
780 between C<ev_suspend> and C<ev_resume>, and all C<ev_periodic> watchers
781 will be rescheduled (that is, they will lose any events that would have
782 occurred while suspended).
783
784 After calling C<ev_suspend> you B<must not> call I<any> function on the
785 given loop other than C<ev_resume>, and you B<must not> call C<ev_resume>
786 without a previous call to C<ev_suspend>.
787
788 Calling C<ev_suspend>/C<ev_resume> has the side effect of updating the
789 event loop time (see C<ev_now_update>).
790
791 =item ev_run (loop, int flags)
792
793 Finally, this is it, the event handler. This function usually is called
794 after you have initialised all your watchers and you want to start
795 handling events. It will ask the operating system for any new events, call
796 the watcher callbacks, an then repeat the whole process indefinitely: This
797 is why event loops are called I<loops>.
798
799 If the flags argument is specified as C<0>, it will keep handling events
800 until either no event watchers are active anymore or C<ev_break> was
801 called.
802
803 Please note that an explicit C<ev_break> is usually better than
804 relying on all watchers to be stopped when deciding when a program has
805 finished (especially in interactive programs), but having a program
806 that automatically loops as long as it has to and no longer by virtue
807 of relying on its watchers stopping correctly, that is truly a thing of
808 beauty.
809
810 This function is also I<mostly> exception-safe - you can break out of
811 a C<ev_run> call by calling C<longjmp> in a callback, throwing a C++
812 exception and so on. This does not decrement the C<ev_depth> value, nor
813 will it clear any outstanding C<EVBREAK_ONE> breaks.
814
815 A flags value of C<EVRUN_NOWAIT> will look for new events, will handle
816 those events and any already outstanding ones, but will not wait and
817 block your process in case there are no events and will return after one
818 iteration of the loop. This is sometimes useful to poll and handle new
819 events while doing lengthy calculations, to keep the program responsive.
820
821 A flags value of C<EVRUN_ONCE> will look for new events (waiting if
822 necessary) and will handle those and any already outstanding ones. It
823 will block your process until at least one new event arrives (which could
824 be an event internal to libev itself, so there is no guarantee that a
825 user-registered callback will be called), and will return after one
826 iteration of the loop.
827
828 This is useful if you are waiting for some external event in conjunction
829 with something not expressible using other libev watchers (i.e. "roll your
830 own C<ev_run>"). However, a pair of C<ev_prepare>/C<ev_check> watchers is
831 usually a better approach for this kind of thing.
832
833 Here are the gory details of what C<ev_run> does (this is for your
834 understanding, not a guarantee that things will work exactly like this in
835 future versions):
836
837 - Increment loop depth.
838 - Reset the ev_break status.
839 - Before the first iteration, call any pending watchers.
840 LOOP:
841 - If EVFLAG_FORKCHECK was used, check for a fork.
842 - If a fork was detected (by any means), queue and call all fork watchers.
843 - Queue and call all prepare watchers.
844 - If ev_break was called, goto FINISH.
845 - If we have been forked, detach and recreate the kernel state
846 as to not disturb the other process.
847 - Update the kernel state with all outstanding changes.
848 - Update the "event loop time" (ev_now ()).
849 - Calculate for how long to sleep or block, if at all
850 (active idle watchers, EVRUN_NOWAIT or not having
851 any active watchers at all will result in not sleeping).
852 - Sleep if the I/O and timer collect interval say so.
853 - Increment loop iteration counter.
854 - Block the process, waiting for any events.
855 - Queue all outstanding I/O (fd) events.
856 - Update the "event loop time" (ev_now ()), and do time jump adjustments.
857 - Queue all expired timers.
858 - Queue all expired periodics.
859 - Queue all idle watchers with priority higher than that of pending events.
860 - Queue all check watchers.
861 - Call all queued watchers in reverse order (i.e. check watchers first).
862 Signals and child watchers are implemented as I/O watchers, and will
863 be handled here by queueing them when their watcher gets executed.
864 - If ev_break has been called, or EVRUN_ONCE or EVRUN_NOWAIT
865 were used, or there are no active watchers, goto FINISH, otherwise
866 continue with step LOOP.
867 FINISH:
868 - Reset the ev_break status iff it was EVBREAK_ONE.
869 - Decrement the loop depth.
870 - Return.
871
872 Example: Queue some jobs and then loop until no events are outstanding
873 anymore.
874
875 ... queue jobs here, make sure they register event watchers as long
876 ... as they still have work to do (even an idle watcher will do..)
877 ev_run (my_loop, 0);
878 ... jobs done or somebody called break. yeah!
879
880 =item ev_break (loop, how)
881
882 Can be used to make a call to C<ev_run> return early (but only after it
883 has processed all outstanding events). The C<how> argument must be either
884 C<EVBREAK_ONE>, which will make the innermost C<ev_run> call return, or
885 C<EVBREAK_ALL>, which will make all nested C<ev_run> calls return.
886
887 This "break state" will be cleared on the next call to C<ev_run>.
888
889 It is safe to call C<ev_break> from outside any C<ev_run> calls, too, in
890 which case it will have no effect.
891
892 =item ev_ref (loop)
893
894 =item ev_unref (loop)
895
896 Ref/unref can be used to add or remove a reference count on the event
897 loop: Every watcher keeps one reference, and as long as the reference
898 count is nonzero, C<ev_run> will not return on its own.
899
900 This is useful when you have a watcher that you never intend to
901 unregister, but that nevertheless should not keep C<ev_run> from
902 returning. In such a case, call C<ev_unref> after starting, and C<ev_ref>
903 before stopping it.
904
905 As an example, libev itself uses this for its internal signal pipe: It
906 is not visible to the libev user and should not keep C<ev_run> from
907 exiting if no event watchers registered by it are active. It is also an
908 excellent way to do this for generic recurring timers or from within
909 third-party libraries. Just remember to I<unref after start> and I<ref
910 before stop> (but only if the watcher wasn't active before, or was active
911 before, respectively. Note also that libev might stop watchers itself
912 (e.g. non-repeating timers) in which case you have to C<ev_ref>
913 in the callback).
914
915 Example: Create a signal watcher, but keep it from keeping C<ev_run>
916 running when nothing else is active.
917
918 ev_signal exitsig;
919 ev_signal_init (&exitsig, sig_cb, SIGINT);
920 ev_signal_start (loop, &exitsig);
921 ev_unref (loop);
922
923 Example: For some weird reason, unregister the above signal handler again.
924
925 ev_ref (loop);
926 ev_signal_stop (loop, &exitsig);
927
928 =item ev_set_io_collect_interval (loop, ev_tstamp interval)
929
930 =item ev_set_timeout_collect_interval (loop, ev_tstamp interval)
931
932 These advanced functions influence the time that libev will spend waiting
933 for events. Both time intervals are by default C<0>, meaning that libev
934 will try to invoke timer/periodic callbacks and I/O callbacks with minimum
935 latency.
936
937 Setting these to a higher value (the C<interval> I<must> be >= C<0>)
938 allows libev to delay invocation of I/O and timer/periodic callbacks
939 to increase efficiency of loop iterations (or to increase power-saving
940 opportunities).
941
942 The idea is that sometimes your program runs just fast enough to handle
943 one (or very few) event(s) per loop iteration. While this makes the
944 program responsive, it also wastes a lot of CPU time to poll for new
945 events, especially with backends like C<select ()> which have a high
946 overhead for the actual polling but can deliver many events at once.
947
948 By setting a higher I<io collect interval> you allow libev to spend more
949 time collecting I/O events, so you can handle more events per iteration,
950 at the cost of increasing latency. Timeouts (both C<ev_periodic> and
951 C<ev_timer>) will be not affected. Setting this to a non-null value will
952 introduce an additional C<ev_sleep ()> call into most loop iterations. The
953 sleep time ensures that libev will not poll for I/O events more often then
954 once per this interval, on average.
955
956 Likewise, by setting a higher I<timeout collect interval> you allow libev
957 to spend more time collecting timeouts, at the expense of increased
958 latency/jitter/inexactness (the watcher callback will be called
959 later). C<ev_io> watchers will not be affected. Setting this to a non-null
960 value will not introduce any overhead in libev.
961
962 Many (busy) programs can usually benefit by setting the I/O collect
963 interval to a value near C<0.1> or so, which is often enough for
964 interactive servers (of course not for games), likewise for timeouts. It
965 usually doesn't make much sense to set it to a lower value than C<0.01>,
966 as this approaches the timing granularity of most systems. Note that if
967 you do transactions with the outside world and you can't increase the
968 parallelity, then this setting will limit your transaction rate (if you
969 need to poll once per transaction and the I/O collect interval is 0.01,
970 then you can't do more than 100 transactions per second).
971
972 Setting the I<timeout collect interval> can improve the opportunity for
973 saving power, as the program will "bundle" timer callback invocations that
974 are "near" in time together, by delaying some, thus reducing the number of
975 times the process sleeps and wakes up again. Another useful technique to
976 reduce iterations/wake-ups is to use C<ev_periodic> watchers and make sure
977 they fire on, say, one-second boundaries only.
978
979 Example: we only need 0.1s timeout granularity, and we wish not to poll
980 more often than 100 times per second:
981
982 ev_set_timeout_collect_interval (EV_DEFAULT_UC_ 0.1);
983 ev_set_io_collect_interval (EV_DEFAULT_UC_ 0.01);
984
985 =item ev_invoke_pending (loop)
986
987 This call will simply invoke all pending watchers while resetting their
988 pending state. Normally, C<ev_run> does this automatically when required,
989 but when overriding the invoke callback this call comes handy. This
990 function can be invoked from a watcher - this can be useful for example
991 when you want to do some lengthy calculation and want to pass further
992 event handling to another thread (you still have to make sure only one
993 thread executes within C<ev_invoke_pending> or C<ev_run> of course).
994
995 =item int ev_pending_count (loop)
996
997 Returns the number of pending watchers - zero indicates that no watchers
998 are pending.
999
1000 =item ev_set_invoke_pending_cb (loop, void (*invoke_pending_cb)(EV_P))
1001
1002 This overrides the invoke pending functionality of the loop: Instead of
1003 invoking all pending watchers when there are any, C<ev_run> will call
1004 this callback instead. This is useful, for example, when you want to
1005 invoke the actual watchers inside another context (another thread etc.).
1006
1007 If you want to reset the callback, use C<ev_invoke_pending> as new
1008 callback.
1009
1010 =item ev_set_loop_release_cb (loop, void (*release)(EV_P), void (*acquire)(EV_P))
1011
1012 Sometimes you want to share the same loop between multiple threads. This
1013 can be done relatively simply by putting mutex_lock/unlock calls around
1014 each call to a libev function.
1015
1016 However, C<ev_run> can run an indefinite time, so it is not feasible
1017 to wait for it to return. One way around this is to wake up the event
1018 loop via C<ev_break> and C<av_async_send>, another way is to set these
1019 I<release> and I<acquire> callbacks on the loop.
1020
1021 When set, then C<release> will be called just before the thread is
1022 suspended waiting for new events, and C<acquire> is called just
1023 afterwards.
1024
1025 Ideally, C<release> will just call your mutex_unlock function, and
1026 C<acquire> will just call the mutex_lock function again.
1027
1028 While event loop modifications are allowed between invocations of
1029 C<release> and C<acquire> (that's their only purpose after all), no
1030 modifications done will affect the event loop, i.e. adding watchers will
1031 have no effect on the set of file descriptors being watched, or the time
1032 waited. Use an C<ev_async> watcher to wake up C<ev_run> when you want it
1033 to take note of any changes you made.
1034
1035 In theory, threads executing C<ev_run> will be async-cancel safe between
1036 invocations of C<release> and C<acquire>.
1037
1038 See also the locking example in the C<THREADS> section later in this
1039 document.
1040
1041 =item ev_set_userdata (loop, void *data)
1042
1043 =item void *ev_userdata (loop)
1044
1045 Set and retrieve a single C<void *> associated with a loop. When
1046 C<ev_set_userdata> has never been called, then C<ev_userdata> returns
1047 C<0>.
1048
1049 These two functions can be used to associate arbitrary data with a loop,
1050 and are intended solely for the C<invoke_pending_cb>, C<release> and
1051 C<acquire> callbacks described above, but of course can be (ab-)used for
1052 any other purpose as well.
1053
1054 =item ev_verify (loop)
1055
1056 This function only does something when C<EV_VERIFY> support has been
1057 compiled in, which is the default for non-minimal builds. It tries to go
1058 through all internal structures and checks them for validity. If anything
1059 is found to be inconsistent, it will print an error message to standard
1060 error and call C<abort ()>.
1061
1062 This can be used to catch bugs inside libev itself: under normal
1063 circumstances, this function will never abort as of course libev keeps its
1064 data structures consistent.
1065
1066 =back
1067
1068
1069 =head1 ANATOMY OF A WATCHER
1070
1071 In the following description, uppercase C<TYPE> in names stands for the
1072 watcher type, e.g. C<ev_TYPE_start> can mean C<ev_timer_start> for timer
1073 watchers and C<ev_io_start> for I/O watchers.
1074
1075 A watcher is an opaque structure that you allocate and register to record
1076 your interest in some event. To make a concrete example, imagine you want
1077 to wait for STDIN to become readable, you would create an C<ev_io> watcher
1078 for that:
1079
1080 static void my_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, ev_io *w, int revents)
1081 {
1082 ev_io_stop (w);
1083 ev_break (loop, EVBREAK_ALL);
1084 }
1085
1086 struct ev_loop *loop = ev_default_loop (0);
1087
1088 ev_io stdin_watcher;
1089
1090 ev_init (&stdin_watcher, my_cb);
1091 ev_io_set (&stdin_watcher, STDIN_FILENO, EV_READ);
1092 ev_io_start (loop, &stdin_watcher);
1093
1094 ev_run (loop, 0);
1095
1096 As you can see, you are responsible for allocating the memory for your
1097 watcher structures (and it is I<usually> a bad idea to do this on the
1098 stack).
1099
1100 Each watcher has an associated watcher structure (called C<struct ev_TYPE>
1101 or simply C<ev_TYPE>, as typedefs are provided for all watcher structs).
1102
1103 Each watcher structure must be initialised by a call to C<ev_init (watcher
1104 *, callback)>, which expects a callback to be provided. This callback is
1105 invoked each time the event occurs (or, in the case of I/O watchers, each
1106 time the event loop detects that the file descriptor given is readable
1107 and/or writable).
1108
1109 Each watcher type further has its own C<< ev_TYPE_set (watcher *, ...) >>
1110 macro to configure it, with arguments specific to the watcher type. There
1111 is also a macro to combine initialisation and setting in one call: C<<
1112 ev_TYPE_init (watcher *, callback, ...) >>.
1113
1114 To make the watcher actually watch out for events, you have to start it
1115 with a watcher-specific start function (C<< ev_TYPE_start (loop, watcher
1116 *) >>), and you can stop watching for events at any time by calling the
1117 corresponding stop function (C<< ev_TYPE_stop (loop, watcher *) >>.
1118
1119 As long as your watcher is active (has been started but not stopped) you
1120 must not touch the values stored in it. Most specifically you must never
1121 reinitialise it or call its C<ev_TYPE_set> macro.
1122
1123 Each and every callback receives the event loop pointer as first, the
1124 registered watcher structure as second, and a bitset of received events as
1125 third argument.
1126
1127 The received events usually include a single bit per event type received
1128 (you can receive multiple events at the same time). The possible bit masks
1129 are:
1130
1131 =over 4
1132
1133 =item C<EV_READ>
1134
1135 =item C<EV_WRITE>
1136
1137 The file descriptor in the C<ev_io> watcher has become readable and/or
1138 writable.
1139
1140 =item C<EV_TIMER>
1141
1142 The C<ev_timer> watcher has timed out.
1143
1144 =item C<EV_PERIODIC>
1145
1146 The C<ev_periodic> watcher has timed out.
1147
1148 =item C<EV_SIGNAL>
1149
1150 The signal specified in the C<ev_signal> watcher has been received by a thread.
1151
1152 =item C<EV_CHILD>
1153
1154 The pid specified in the C<ev_child> watcher has received a status change.
1155
1156 =item C<EV_STAT>
1157
1158 The path specified in the C<ev_stat> watcher changed its attributes somehow.
1159
1160 =item C<EV_IDLE>
1161
1162 The C<ev_idle> watcher has determined that you have nothing better to do.
1163
1164 =item C<EV_PREPARE>
1165
1166 =item C<EV_CHECK>
1167
1168 All C<ev_prepare> watchers are invoked just I<before> C<ev_run> starts
1169 to gather new events, and all C<ev_check> watchers are invoked just after
1170 C<ev_run> has gathered them, but before it invokes any callbacks for any
1171 received events. Callbacks of both watcher types can start and stop as
1172 many watchers as they want, and all of them will be taken into account
1173 (for example, a C<ev_prepare> watcher might start an idle watcher to keep
1174 C<ev_run> from blocking).
1175
1176 =item C<EV_EMBED>
1177
1178 The embedded event loop specified in the C<ev_embed> watcher needs attention.
1179
1180 =item C<EV_FORK>
1181
1182 The event loop has been resumed in the child process after fork (see
1183 C<ev_fork>).
1184
1185 =item C<EV_CLEANUP>
1186
1187 The event loop is about to be destroyed (see C<ev_cleanup>).
1188
1189 =item C<EV_ASYNC>
1190
1191 The given async watcher has been asynchronously notified (see C<ev_async>).
1192
1193 =item C<EV_CUSTOM>
1194
1195 Not ever sent (or otherwise used) by libev itself, but can be freely used
1196 by libev users to signal watchers (e.g. via C<ev_feed_event>).
1197
1198 =item C<EV_ERROR>
1199
1200 An unspecified error has occurred, the watcher has been stopped. This might
1201 happen because the watcher could not be properly started because libev
1202 ran out of memory, a file descriptor was found to be closed or any other
1203 problem. Libev considers these application bugs.
1204
1205 You best act on it by reporting the problem and somehow coping with the
1206 watcher being stopped. Note that well-written programs should not receive
1207 an error ever, so when your watcher receives it, this usually indicates a
1208 bug in your program.
1209
1210 Libev will usually signal a few "dummy" events together with an error, for
1211 example it might indicate that a fd is readable or writable, and if your
1212 callbacks is well-written it can just attempt the operation and cope with
1213 the error from read() or write(). This will not work in multi-threaded
1214 programs, though, as the fd could already be closed and reused for another
1215 thing, so beware.
1216
1217 =back
1218
1219 =head2 GENERIC WATCHER FUNCTIONS
1220
1221 =over 4
1222
1223 =item C<ev_init> (ev_TYPE *watcher, callback)
1224
1225 This macro initialises the generic portion of a watcher. The contents
1226 of the watcher object can be arbitrary (so C<malloc> will do). Only
1227 the generic parts of the watcher are initialised, you I<need> to call
1228 the type-specific C<ev_TYPE_set> macro afterwards to initialise the
1229 type-specific parts. For each type there is also a C<ev_TYPE_init> macro
1230 which rolls both calls into one.
1231
1232 You can reinitialise a watcher at any time as long as it has been stopped
1233 (or never started) and there are no pending events outstanding.
1234
1235 The callback is always of type C<void (*)(struct ev_loop *loop, ev_TYPE *watcher,
1236 int revents)>.
1237
1238 Example: Initialise an C<ev_io> watcher in two steps.
1239
1240 ev_io w;
1241 ev_init (&w, my_cb);
1242 ev_io_set (&w, STDIN_FILENO, EV_READ);
1243
1244 =item C<ev_TYPE_set> (ev_TYPE *watcher, [args])
1245
1246 This macro initialises the type-specific parts of a watcher. You need to
1247 call C<ev_init> at least once before you call this macro, but you can
1248 call C<ev_TYPE_set> any number of times. You must not, however, call this
1249 macro on a watcher that is active (it can be pending, however, which is a
1250 difference to the C<ev_init> macro).
1251
1252 Although some watcher types do not have type-specific arguments
1253 (e.g. C<ev_prepare>) you still need to call its C<set> macro.
1254
1255 See C<ev_init>, above, for an example.
1256
1257 =item C<ev_TYPE_init> (ev_TYPE *watcher, callback, [args])
1258
1259 This convenience macro rolls both C<ev_init> and C<ev_TYPE_set> macro
1260 calls into a single call. This is the most convenient method to initialise
1261 a watcher. The same limitations apply, of course.
1262
1263 Example: Initialise and set an C<ev_io> watcher in one step.
1264
1265 ev_io_init (&w, my_cb, STDIN_FILENO, EV_READ);
1266
1267 =item C<ev_TYPE_start> (loop, ev_TYPE *watcher)
1268
1269 Starts (activates) the given watcher. Only active watchers will receive
1270 events. If the watcher is already active nothing will happen.
1271
1272 Example: Start the C<ev_io> watcher that is being abused as example in this
1273 whole section.
1274
1275 ev_io_start (EV_DEFAULT_UC, &w);
1276
1277 =item C<ev_TYPE_stop> (loop, ev_TYPE *watcher)
1278
1279 Stops the given watcher if active, and clears the pending status (whether
1280 the watcher was active or not).
1281
1282 It is possible that stopped watchers are pending - for example,
1283 non-repeating timers are being stopped when they become pending - but
1284 calling C<ev_TYPE_stop> ensures that the watcher is neither active nor
1285 pending. If you want to free or reuse the memory used by the watcher it is
1286 therefore a good idea to always call its C<ev_TYPE_stop> function.
1287
1288 =item bool ev_is_active (ev_TYPE *watcher)
1289
1290 Returns a true value iff the watcher is active (i.e. it has been started
1291 and not yet been stopped). As long as a watcher is active you must not modify
1292 it.
1293
1294 =item bool ev_is_pending (ev_TYPE *watcher)
1295
1296 Returns a true value iff the watcher is pending, (i.e. it has outstanding
1297 events but its callback has not yet been invoked). As long as a watcher
1298 is pending (but not active) you must not call an init function on it (but
1299 C<ev_TYPE_set> is safe), you must not change its priority, and you must
1300 make sure the watcher is available to libev (e.g. you cannot C<free ()>
1301 it).
1302
1303 =item callback ev_cb (ev_TYPE *watcher)
1304
1305 Returns the callback currently set on the watcher.
1306
1307 =item ev_cb_set (ev_TYPE *watcher, callback)
1308
1309 Change the callback. You can change the callback at virtually any time
1310 (modulo threads).
1311
1312 =item ev_set_priority (ev_TYPE *watcher, int priority)
1313
1314 =item int ev_priority (ev_TYPE *watcher)
1315
1316 Set and query the priority of the watcher. The priority is a small
1317 integer between C<EV_MAXPRI> (default: C<2>) and C<EV_MINPRI>
1318 (default: C<-2>). Pending watchers with higher priority will be invoked
1319 before watchers with lower priority, but priority will not keep watchers
1320 from being executed (except for C<ev_idle> watchers).
1321
1322 If you need to suppress invocation when higher priority events are pending
1323 you need to look at C<ev_idle> watchers, which provide this functionality.
1324
1325 You I<must not> change the priority of a watcher as long as it is active or
1326 pending.
1327
1328 Setting a priority outside the range of C<EV_MINPRI> to C<EV_MAXPRI> is
1329 fine, as long as you do not mind that the priority value you query might
1330 or might not have been clamped to the valid range.
1331
1332 The default priority used by watchers when no priority has been set is
1333 always C<0>, which is supposed to not be too high and not be too low :).
1334
1335 See L<WATCHER PRIORITY MODELS>, below, for a more thorough treatment of
1336 priorities.
1337
1338 =item ev_invoke (loop, ev_TYPE *watcher, int revents)
1339
1340 Invoke the C<watcher> with the given C<loop> and C<revents>. Neither
1341 C<loop> nor C<revents> need to be valid as long as the watcher callback
1342 can deal with that fact, as both are simply passed through to the
1343 callback.
1344
1345 =item int ev_clear_pending (loop, ev_TYPE *watcher)
1346
1347 If the watcher is pending, this function clears its pending status and
1348 returns its C<revents> bitset (as if its callback was invoked). If the
1349 watcher isn't pending it does nothing and returns C<0>.
1350
1351 Sometimes it can be useful to "poll" a watcher instead of waiting for its
1352 callback to be invoked, which can be accomplished with this function.
1353
1354 =item ev_feed_event (loop, ev_TYPE *watcher, int revents)
1355
1356 Feeds the given event set into the event loop, as if the specified event
1357 had happened for the specified watcher (which must be a pointer to an
1358 initialised but not necessarily started event watcher). Obviously you must
1359 not free the watcher as long as it has pending events.
1360
1361 Stopping the watcher, letting libev invoke it, or calling
1362 C<ev_clear_pending> will clear the pending event, even if the watcher was
1363 not started in the first place.
1364
1365 See also C<ev_feed_fd_event> and C<ev_feed_signal_event> for related
1366 functions that do not need a watcher.
1367
1368 =back
1369
1370 See also the L<ASSOCIATING CUSTOM DATA WITH A WATCHER> and L<BUILDING YOUR
1371 OWN COMPOSITE WATCHERS> idioms.
1372
1373 =head2 WATCHER STATES
1374
1375 There are various watcher states mentioned throughout this manual -
1376 active, pending and so on. In this section these states and the rules to
1377 transition between them will be described in more detail - and while these
1378 rules might look complicated, they usually do "the right thing".
1379
1380 =over 4
1381
1382 =item initialiased
1383
1384 Before a watcher can be registered with the event looop it has to be
1385 initialised. This can be done with a call to C<ev_TYPE_init>, or calls to
1386 C<ev_init> followed by the watcher-specific C<ev_TYPE_set> function.
1387
1388 In this state it is simply some block of memory that is suitable for
1389 use in an event loop. It can be moved around, freed, reused etc. at
1390 will - as long as you either keep the memory contents intact, or call
1391 C<ev_TYPE_init> again.
1392
1393 =item started/running/active
1394
1395 Once a watcher has been started with a call to C<ev_TYPE_start> it becomes
1396 property of the event loop, and is actively waiting for events. While in
1397 this state it cannot be accessed (except in a few documented ways), moved,
1398 freed or anything else - the only legal thing is to keep a pointer to it,
1399 and call libev functions on it that are documented to work on active watchers.
1400
1401 =item pending
1402
1403 If a watcher is active and libev determines that an event it is interested
1404 in has occurred (such as a timer expiring), it will become pending. It will
1405 stay in this pending state until either it is stopped or its callback is
1406 about to be invoked, so it is not normally pending inside the watcher
1407 callback.
1408
1409 The watcher might or might not be active while it is pending (for example,
1410 an expired non-repeating timer can be pending but no longer active). If it
1411 is stopped, it can be freely accessed (e.g. by calling C<ev_TYPE_set>),
1412 but it is still property of the event loop at this time, so cannot be
1413 moved, freed or reused. And if it is active the rules described in the
1414 previous item still apply.
1415
1416 It is also possible to feed an event on a watcher that is not active (e.g.
1417 via C<ev_feed_event>), in which case it becomes pending without being
1418 active.
1419
1420 =item stopped
1421
1422 A watcher can be stopped implicitly by libev (in which case it might still
1423 be pending), or explicitly by calling its C<ev_TYPE_stop> function. The
1424 latter will clear any pending state the watcher might be in, regardless
1425 of whether it was active or not, so stopping a watcher explicitly before
1426 freeing it is often a good idea.
1427
1428 While stopped (and not pending) the watcher is essentially in the
1429 initialised state, that is, it can be reused, moved, modified in any way
1430 you wish (but when you trash the memory block, you need to C<ev_TYPE_init>
1431 it again).
1432
1433 =back
1434
1435 =head2 WATCHER PRIORITY MODELS
1436
1437 Many event loops support I<watcher priorities>, which are usually small
1438 integers that influence the ordering of event callback invocation
1439 between watchers in some way, all else being equal.
1440
1441 In libev, Watcher priorities can be set using C<ev_set_priority>. See its
1442 description for the more technical details such as the actual priority
1443 range.
1444
1445 There are two common ways how these these priorities are being interpreted
1446 by event loops:
1447
1448 In the more common lock-out model, higher priorities "lock out" invocation
1449 of lower priority watchers, which means as long as higher priority
1450 watchers receive events, lower priority watchers are not being invoked.
1451
1452 The less common only-for-ordering model uses priorities solely to order
1453 callback invocation within a single event loop iteration: Higher priority
1454 watchers are invoked before lower priority ones, but they all get invoked
1455 before polling for new events.
1456
1457 Libev uses the second (only-for-ordering) model for all its watchers
1458 except for idle watchers (which use the lock-out model).
1459
1460 The rationale behind this is that implementing the lock-out model for
1461 watchers is not well supported by most kernel interfaces, and most event
1462 libraries will just poll for the same events again and again as long as
1463 their callbacks have not been executed, which is very inefficient in the
1464 common case of one high-priority watcher locking out a mass of lower
1465 priority ones.
1466
1467 Static (ordering) priorities are most useful when you have two or more
1468 watchers handling the same resource: a typical usage example is having an
1469 C<ev_io> watcher to receive data, and an associated C<ev_timer> to handle
1470 timeouts. Under load, data might be received while the program handles
1471 other jobs, but since timers normally get invoked first, the timeout
1472 handler will be executed before checking for data. In that case, giving
1473 the timer a lower priority than the I/O watcher ensures that I/O will be
1474 handled first even under adverse conditions (which is usually, but not
1475 always, what you want).
1476
1477 Since idle watchers use the "lock-out" model, meaning that idle watchers
1478 will only be executed when no same or higher priority watchers have
1479 received events, they can be used to implement the "lock-out" model when
1480 required.
1481
1482 For example, to emulate how many other event libraries handle priorities,
1483 you can associate an C<ev_idle> watcher to each such watcher, and in
1484 the normal watcher callback, you just start the idle watcher. The real
1485 processing is done in the idle watcher callback. This causes libev to
1486 continuously poll and process kernel event data for the watcher, but when
1487 the lock-out case is known to be rare (which in turn is rare :), this is
1488 workable.
1489
1490 Usually, however, the lock-out model implemented that way will perform
1491 miserably under the type of load it was designed to handle. In that case,
1492 it might be preferable to stop the real watcher before starting the
1493 idle watcher, so the kernel will not have to process the event in case
1494 the actual processing will be delayed for considerable time.
1495
1496 Here is an example of an I/O watcher that should run at a strictly lower
1497 priority than the default, and which should only process data when no
1498 other events are pending:
1499
1500 ev_idle idle; // actual processing watcher
1501 ev_io io; // actual event watcher
1502
1503 static void
1504 io_cb (EV_P_ ev_io *w, int revents)
1505 {
1506 // stop the I/O watcher, we received the event, but
1507 // are not yet ready to handle it.
1508 ev_io_stop (EV_A_ w);
1509
1510 // start the idle watcher to handle the actual event.
1511 // it will not be executed as long as other watchers
1512 // with the default priority are receiving events.
1513 ev_idle_start (EV_A_ &idle);
1514 }
1515
1516 static void
1517 idle_cb (EV_P_ ev_idle *w, int revents)
1518 {
1519 // actual processing
1520 read (STDIN_FILENO, ...);
1521
1522 // have to start the I/O watcher again, as
1523 // we have handled the event
1524 ev_io_start (EV_P_ &io);
1525 }
1526
1527 // initialisation
1528 ev_idle_init (&idle, idle_cb);
1529 ev_io_init (&io, io_cb, STDIN_FILENO, EV_READ);
1530 ev_io_start (EV_DEFAULT_ &io);
1531
1532 In the "real" world, it might also be beneficial to start a timer, so that
1533 low-priority connections can not be locked out forever under load. This
1534 enables your program to keep a lower latency for important connections
1535 during short periods of high load, while not completely locking out less
1536 important ones.
1537
1538
1539 =head1 WATCHER TYPES
1540
1541 This section describes each watcher in detail, but will not repeat
1542 information given in the last section. Any initialisation/set macros,
1543 functions and members specific to the watcher type are explained.
1544
1545 Members are additionally marked with either I<[read-only]>, meaning that,
1546 while the watcher is active, you can look at the member and expect some
1547 sensible content, but you must not modify it (you can modify it while the
1548 watcher is stopped to your hearts content), or I<[read-write]>, which
1549 means you can expect it to have some sensible content while the watcher
1550 is active, but you can also modify it. Modifying it may not do something
1551 sensible or take immediate effect (or do anything at all), but libev will
1552 not crash or malfunction in any way.
1553
1554
1555 =head2 C<ev_io> - is this file descriptor readable or writable?
1556
1557 I/O watchers check whether a file descriptor is readable or writable
1558 in each iteration of the event loop, or, more precisely, when reading
1559 would not block the process and writing would at least be able to write
1560 some data. This behaviour is called level-triggering because you keep
1561 receiving events as long as the condition persists. Remember you can stop
1562 the watcher if you don't want to act on the event and neither want to
1563 receive future events.
1564
1565 In general you can register as many read and/or write event watchers per
1566 fd as you want (as long as you don't confuse yourself). Setting all file
1567 descriptors to non-blocking mode is also usually a good idea (but not
1568 required if you know what you are doing).
1569
1570 Another thing you have to watch out for is that it is quite easy to
1571 receive "spurious" readiness notifications, that is, your callback might
1572 be called with C<EV_READ> but a subsequent C<read>(2) will actually block
1573 because there is no data. It is very easy to get into this situation even
1574 with a relatively standard program structure. Thus it is best to always
1575 use non-blocking I/O: An extra C<read>(2) returning C<EAGAIN> is far
1576 preferable to a program hanging until some data arrives.
1577
1578 If you cannot run the fd in non-blocking mode (for example you should
1579 not play around with an Xlib connection), then you have to separately
1580 re-test whether a file descriptor is really ready with a known-to-be good
1581 interface such as poll (fortunately in the case of Xlib, it already does
1582 this on its own, so its quite safe to use). Some people additionally
1583 use C<SIGALRM> and an interval timer, just to be sure you won't block
1584 indefinitely.
1585
1586 But really, best use non-blocking mode.
1587
1588 =head3 The special problem of disappearing file descriptors
1589
1590 Some backends (e.g. kqueue, epoll) need to be told about closing a file
1591 descriptor (either due to calling C<close> explicitly or any other means,
1592 such as C<dup2>). The reason is that you register interest in some file
1593 descriptor, but when it goes away, the operating system will silently drop
1594 this interest. If another file descriptor with the same number then is
1595 registered with libev, there is no efficient way to see that this is, in
1596 fact, a different file descriptor.
1597
1598 To avoid having to explicitly tell libev about such cases, libev follows
1599 the following policy: Each time C<ev_io_set> is being called, libev
1600 will assume that this is potentially a new file descriptor, otherwise
1601 it is assumed that the file descriptor stays the same. That means that
1602 you I<have> to call C<ev_io_set> (or C<ev_io_init>) when you change the
1603 descriptor even if the file descriptor number itself did not change.
1604
1605 This is how one would do it normally anyway, the important point is that
1606 the libev application should not optimise around libev but should leave
1607 optimisations to libev.
1608
1609 =head3 The special problem of dup'ed file descriptors
1610
1611 Some backends (e.g. epoll), cannot register events for file descriptors,
1612 but only events for the underlying file descriptions. That means when you
1613 have C<dup ()>'ed file descriptors or weirder constellations, and register
1614 events for them, only one file descriptor might actually receive events.
1615
1616 There is no workaround possible except not registering events
1617 for potentially C<dup ()>'ed file descriptors, or to resort to
1618 C<EVBACKEND_SELECT> or C<EVBACKEND_POLL>.
1619
1620 =head3 The special problem of files
1621
1622 Many people try to use C<select> (or libev) on file descriptors
1623 representing files, and expect it to become ready when their program
1624 doesn't block on disk accesses (which can take a long time on their own).
1625
1626 However, this cannot ever work in the "expected" way - you get a readiness
1627 notification as soon as the kernel knows whether and how much data is
1628 there, and in the case of open files, that's always the case, so you
1629 always get a readiness notification instantly, and your read (or possibly
1630 write) will still block on the disk I/O.
1631
1632 Another way to view it is that in the case of sockets, pipes, character
1633 devices and so on, there is another party (the sender) that delivers data
1634 on its own, but in the case of files, there is no such thing: the disk
1635 will not send data on its own, simply because it doesn't know what you
1636 wish to read - you would first have to request some data.
1637
1638 Since files are typically not-so-well supported by advanced notification
1639 mechanism, libev tries hard to emulate POSIX behaviour with respect
1640 to files, even though you should not use it. The reason for this is
1641 convenience: sometimes you want to watch STDIN or STDOUT, which is
1642 usually a tty, often a pipe, but also sometimes files or special devices
1643 (for example, C<epoll> on Linux works with F</dev/random> but not with
1644 F</dev/urandom>), and even though the file might better be served with
1645 asynchronous I/O instead of with non-blocking I/O, it is still useful when
1646 it "just works" instead of freezing.
1647
1648 So avoid file descriptors pointing to files when you know it (e.g. use
1649 libeio), but use them when it is convenient, e.g. for STDIN/STDOUT, or
1650 when you rarely read from a file instead of from a socket, and want to
1651 reuse the same code path.
1652
1653 =head3 The special problem of fork
1654
1655 Some backends (epoll, kqueue) do not support C<fork ()> at all or exhibit
1656 useless behaviour. Libev fully supports fork, but needs to be told about
1657 it in the child if you want to continue to use it in the child.
1658
1659 To support fork in your child processes, you have to call C<ev_loop_fork
1660 ()> after a fork in the child, enable C<EVFLAG_FORKCHECK>, or resort to
1661 C<EVBACKEND_SELECT> or C<EVBACKEND_POLL>.
1662
1663 =head3 The special problem of SIGPIPE
1664
1665 While not really specific to libev, it is easy to forget about C<SIGPIPE>:
1666 when writing to a pipe whose other end has been closed, your program gets
1667 sent a SIGPIPE, which, by default, aborts your program. For most programs
1668 this is sensible behaviour, for daemons, this is usually undesirable.
1669
1670 So when you encounter spurious, unexplained daemon exits, make sure you
1671 ignore SIGPIPE (and maybe make sure you log the exit status of your daemon
1672 somewhere, as that would have given you a big clue).
1673
1674 =head3 The special problem of accept()ing when you can't
1675
1676 Many implementations of the POSIX C<accept> function (for example,
1677 found in post-2004 Linux) have the peculiar behaviour of not removing a
1678 connection from the pending queue in all error cases.
1679
1680 For example, larger servers often run out of file descriptors (because
1681 of resource limits), causing C<accept> to fail with C<ENFILE> but not
1682 rejecting the connection, leading to libev signalling readiness on
1683 the next iteration again (the connection still exists after all), and
1684 typically causing the program to loop at 100% CPU usage.
1685
1686 Unfortunately, the set of errors that cause this issue differs between
1687 operating systems, there is usually little the app can do to remedy the
1688 situation, and no known thread-safe method of removing the connection to
1689 cope with overload is known (to me).
1690
1691 One of the easiest ways to handle this situation is to just ignore it
1692 - when the program encounters an overload, it will just loop until the
1693 situation is over. While this is a form of busy waiting, no OS offers an
1694 event-based way to handle this situation, so it's the best one can do.
1695
1696 A better way to handle the situation is to log any errors other than
1697 C<EAGAIN> and C<EWOULDBLOCK>, making sure not to flood the log with such
1698 messages, and continue as usual, which at least gives the user an idea of
1699 what could be wrong ("raise the ulimit!"). For extra points one could stop
1700 the C<ev_io> watcher on the listening fd "for a while", which reduces CPU
1701 usage.
1702
1703 If your program is single-threaded, then you could also keep a dummy file
1704 descriptor for overload situations (e.g. by opening F</dev/null>), and
1705 when you run into C<ENFILE> or C<EMFILE>, close it, run C<accept>,
1706 close that fd, and create a new dummy fd. This will gracefully refuse
1707 clients under typical overload conditions.
1708
1709 The last way to handle it is to simply log the error and C<exit>, as
1710 is often done with C<malloc> failures, but this results in an easy
1711 opportunity for a DoS attack.
1712
1713 =head3 Watcher-Specific Functions
1714
1715 =over 4
1716
1717 =item ev_io_init (ev_io *, callback, int fd, int events)
1718
1719 =item ev_io_set (ev_io *, int fd, int events)
1720
1721 Configures an C<ev_io> watcher. The C<fd> is the file descriptor to
1722 receive events for and C<events> is either C<EV_READ>, C<EV_WRITE> or
1723 C<EV_READ | EV_WRITE>, to express the desire to receive the given events.
1724
1725 =item int fd [read-only]
1726
1727 The file descriptor being watched.
1728
1729 =item int events [read-only]
1730
1731 The events being watched.
1732
1733 =back
1734
1735 =head3 Examples
1736
1737 Example: Call C<stdin_readable_cb> when STDIN_FILENO has become, well
1738 readable, but only once. Since it is likely line-buffered, you could
1739 attempt to read a whole line in the callback.
1740
1741 static void
1742 stdin_readable_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, ev_io *w, int revents)
1743 {
1744 ev_io_stop (loop, w);
1745 .. read from stdin here (or from w->fd) and handle any I/O errors
1746 }
1747
1748 ...
1749 struct ev_loop *loop = ev_default_init (0);
1750 ev_io stdin_readable;
1751 ev_io_init (&stdin_readable, stdin_readable_cb, STDIN_FILENO, EV_READ);
1752 ev_io_start (loop, &stdin_readable);
1753 ev_run (loop, 0);
1754
1755
1756 =head2 C<ev_timer> - relative and optionally repeating timeouts
1757
1758 Timer watchers are simple relative timers that generate an event after a
1759 given time, and optionally repeating in regular intervals after that.
1760
1761 The timers are based on real time, that is, if you register an event that
1762 times out after an hour and you reset your system clock to January last
1763 year, it will still time out after (roughly) one hour. "Roughly" because
1764 detecting time jumps is hard, and some inaccuracies are unavoidable (the
1765 monotonic clock option helps a lot here).
1766
1767 The callback is guaranteed to be invoked only I<after> its timeout has
1768 passed (not I<at>, so on systems with very low-resolution clocks this
1769 might introduce a small delay). If multiple timers become ready during the
1770 same loop iteration then the ones with earlier time-out values are invoked
1771 before ones of the same priority with later time-out values (but this is
1772 no longer true when a callback calls C<ev_run> recursively).
1773
1774 =head3 Be smart about timeouts
1775
1776 Many real-world problems involve some kind of timeout, usually for error
1777 recovery. A typical example is an HTTP request - if the other side hangs,
1778 you want to raise some error after a while.
1779
1780 What follows are some ways to handle this problem, from obvious and
1781 inefficient to smart and efficient.
1782
1783 In the following, a 60 second activity timeout is assumed - a timeout that
1784 gets reset to 60 seconds each time there is activity (e.g. each time some
1785 data or other life sign was received).
1786
1787 =over 4
1788
1789 =item 1. Use a timer and stop, reinitialise and start it on activity.
1790
1791 This is the most obvious, but not the most simple way: In the beginning,
1792 start the watcher:
1793
1794 ev_timer_init (timer, callback, 60., 0.);
1795 ev_timer_start (loop, timer);
1796
1797 Then, each time there is some activity, C<ev_timer_stop> it, initialise it
1798 and start it again:
1799
1800 ev_timer_stop (loop, timer);
1801 ev_timer_set (timer, 60., 0.);
1802 ev_timer_start (loop, timer);
1803
1804 This is relatively simple to implement, but means that each time there is
1805 some activity, libev will first have to remove the timer from its internal
1806 data structure and then add it again. Libev tries to be fast, but it's
1807 still not a constant-time operation.
1808
1809 =item 2. Use a timer and re-start it with C<ev_timer_again> inactivity.
1810
1811 This is the easiest way, and involves using C<ev_timer_again> instead of
1812 C<ev_timer_start>.
1813
1814 To implement this, configure an C<ev_timer> with a C<repeat> value
1815 of C<60> and then call C<ev_timer_again> at start and each time you
1816 successfully read or write some data. If you go into an idle state where
1817 you do not expect data to travel on the socket, you can C<ev_timer_stop>
1818 the timer, and C<ev_timer_again> will automatically restart it if need be.
1819
1820 That means you can ignore both the C<ev_timer_start> function and the
1821 C<after> argument to C<ev_timer_set>, and only ever use the C<repeat>
1822 member and C<ev_timer_again>.
1823
1824 At start:
1825
1826 ev_init (timer, callback);
1827 timer->repeat = 60.;
1828 ev_timer_again (loop, timer);
1829
1830 Each time there is some activity:
1831
1832 ev_timer_again (loop, timer);
1833
1834 It is even possible to change the time-out on the fly, regardless of
1835 whether the watcher is active or not:
1836
1837 timer->repeat = 30.;
1838 ev_timer_again (loop, timer);
1839
1840 This is slightly more efficient then stopping/starting the timer each time
1841 you want to modify its timeout value, as libev does not have to completely
1842 remove and re-insert the timer from/into its internal data structure.
1843
1844 It is, however, even simpler than the "obvious" way to do it.
1845
1846 =item 3. Let the timer time out, but then re-arm it as required.
1847
1848 This method is more tricky, but usually most efficient: Most timeouts are
1849 relatively long compared to the intervals between other activity - in
1850 our example, within 60 seconds, there are usually many I/O events with
1851 associated activity resets.
1852
1853 In this case, it would be more efficient to leave the C<ev_timer> alone,
1854 but remember the time of last activity, and check for a real timeout only
1855 within the callback:
1856
1857 ev_tstamp last_activity; // time of last activity
1858
1859 static void
1860 callback (EV_P_ ev_timer *w, int revents)
1861 {
1862 ev_tstamp now = ev_now (EV_A);
1863 ev_tstamp timeout = last_activity + 60.;
1864
1865 // if last_activity + 60. is older than now, we did time out
1866 if (timeout < now)
1867 {
1868 // timeout occurred, take action
1869 }
1870 else
1871 {
1872 // callback was invoked, but there was some activity, re-arm
1873 // the watcher to fire in last_activity + 60, which is
1874 // guaranteed to be in the future, so "again" is positive:
1875 w->repeat = timeout - now;
1876 ev_timer_again (EV_A_ w);
1877 }
1878 }
1879
1880 To summarise the callback: first calculate the real timeout (defined
1881 as "60 seconds after the last activity"), then check if that time has
1882 been reached, which means something I<did>, in fact, time out. Otherwise
1883 the callback was invoked too early (C<timeout> is in the future), so
1884 re-schedule the timer to fire at that future time, to see if maybe we have
1885 a timeout then.
1886
1887 Note how C<ev_timer_again> is used, taking advantage of the
1888 C<ev_timer_again> optimisation when the timer is already running.
1889
1890 This scheme causes more callback invocations (about one every 60 seconds
1891 minus half the average time between activity), but virtually no calls to
1892 libev to change the timeout.
1893
1894 To start the timer, simply initialise the watcher and set C<last_activity>
1895 to the current time (meaning we just have some activity :), then call the
1896 callback, which will "do the right thing" and start the timer:
1897
1898 ev_init (timer, callback);
1899 last_activity = ev_now (loop);
1900 callback (loop, timer, EV_TIMER);
1901
1902 And when there is some activity, simply store the current time in
1903 C<last_activity>, no libev calls at all:
1904
1905 last_activity = ev_now (loop);
1906
1907 This technique is slightly more complex, but in most cases where the
1908 time-out is unlikely to be triggered, much more efficient.
1909
1910 Changing the timeout is trivial as well (if it isn't hard-coded in the
1911 callback :) - just change the timeout and invoke the callback, which will
1912 fix things for you.
1913
1914 =item 4. Wee, just use a double-linked list for your timeouts.
1915
1916 If there is not one request, but many thousands (millions...), all
1917 employing some kind of timeout with the same timeout value, then one can
1918 do even better:
1919
1920 When starting the timeout, calculate the timeout value and put the timeout
1921 at the I<end> of the list.
1922
1923 Then use an C<ev_timer> to fire when the timeout at the I<beginning> of
1924 the list is expected to fire (for example, using the technique #3).
1925
1926 When there is some activity, remove the timer from the list, recalculate
1927 the timeout, append it to the end of the list again, and make sure to
1928 update the C<ev_timer> if it was taken from the beginning of the list.
1929
1930 This way, one can manage an unlimited number of timeouts in O(1) time for
1931 starting, stopping and updating the timers, at the expense of a major
1932 complication, and having to use a constant timeout. The constant timeout
1933 ensures that the list stays sorted.
1934
1935 =back
1936
1937 So which method the best?
1938
1939 Method #2 is a simple no-brain-required solution that is adequate in most
1940 situations. Method #3 requires a bit more thinking, but handles many cases
1941 better, and isn't very complicated either. In most case, choosing either
1942 one is fine, with #3 being better in typical situations.
1943
1944 Method #1 is almost always a bad idea, and buys you nothing. Method #4 is
1945 rather complicated, but extremely efficient, something that really pays
1946 off after the first million or so of active timers, i.e. it's usually
1947 overkill :)
1948
1949 =head3 The special problem of time updates
1950
1951 Establishing the current time is a costly operation (it usually takes at
1952 least two system calls): EV therefore updates its idea of the current
1953 time only before and after C<ev_run> collects new events, which causes a
1954 growing difference between C<ev_now ()> and C<ev_time ()> when handling
1955 lots of events in one iteration.
1956
1957 The relative timeouts are calculated relative to the C<ev_now ()>
1958 time. This is usually the right thing as this timestamp refers to the time
1959 of the event triggering whatever timeout you are modifying/starting. If
1960 you suspect event processing to be delayed and you I<need> to base the
1961 timeout on the current time, use something like this to adjust for this:
1962
1963 ev_timer_set (&timer, after + ev_now () - ev_time (), 0.);
1964
1965 If the event loop is suspended for a long time, you can also force an
1966 update of the time returned by C<ev_now ()> by calling C<ev_now_update
1967 ()>.
1968
1969 =head3 The special problems of suspended animation
1970
1971 When you leave the server world it is quite customary to hit machines that
1972 can suspend/hibernate - what happens to the clocks during such a suspend?
1973
1974 Some quick tests made with a Linux 2.6.28 indicate that a suspend freezes
1975 all processes, while the clocks (C<times>, C<CLOCK_MONOTONIC>) continue
1976 to run until the system is suspended, but they will not advance while the
1977 system is suspended. That means, on resume, it will be as if the program
1978 was frozen for a few seconds, but the suspend time will not be counted
1979 towards C<ev_timer> when a monotonic clock source is used. The real time
1980 clock advanced as expected, but if it is used as sole clocksource, then a
1981 long suspend would be detected as a time jump by libev, and timers would
1982 be adjusted accordingly.
1983
1984 I would not be surprised to see different behaviour in different between
1985 operating systems, OS versions or even different hardware.
1986
1987 The other form of suspend (job control, or sending a SIGSTOP) will see a
1988 time jump in the monotonic clocks and the realtime clock. If the program
1989 is suspended for a very long time, and monotonic clock sources are in use,
1990 then you can expect C<ev_timer>s to expire as the full suspension time
1991 will be counted towards the timers. When no monotonic clock source is in
1992 use, then libev will again assume a timejump and adjust accordingly.
1993
1994 It might be beneficial for this latter case to call C<ev_suspend>
1995 and C<ev_resume> in code that handles C<SIGTSTP>, to at least get
1996 deterministic behaviour in this case (you can do nothing against
1997 C<SIGSTOP>).
1998
1999 =head3 Watcher-Specific Functions and Data Members
2000
2001 =over 4
2002
2003 =item ev_timer_init (ev_timer *, callback, ev_tstamp after, ev_tstamp repeat)
2004
2005 =item ev_timer_set (ev_timer *, ev_tstamp after, ev_tstamp repeat)
2006
2007 Configure the timer to trigger after C<after> seconds. If C<repeat>
2008 is C<0.>, then it will automatically be stopped once the timeout is
2009 reached. If it is positive, then the timer will automatically be
2010 configured to trigger again C<repeat> seconds later, again, and again,
2011 until stopped manually.
2012
2013 The timer itself will do a best-effort at avoiding drift, that is, if
2014 you configure a timer to trigger every 10 seconds, then it will normally
2015 trigger at exactly 10 second intervals. If, however, your program cannot
2016 keep up with the timer (because it takes longer than those 10 seconds to
2017 do stuff) the timer will not fire more than once per event loop iteration.
2018
2019 =item ev_timer_again (loop, ev_timer *)
2020
2021 This will act as if the timer timed out and restart it again if it is
2022 repeating. The exact semantics are:
2023
2024 If the timer is pending, its pending status is cleared.
2025
2026 If the timer is started but non-repeating, stop it (as if it timed out).
2027
2028 If the timer is repeating, either start it if necessary (with the
2029 C<repeat> value), or reset the running timer to the C<repeat> value.
2030
2031 This sounds a bit complicated, see L<Be smart about timeouts>, above, for a
2032 usage example.
2033
2034 =item ev_tstamp ev_timer_remaining (loop, ev_timer *)
2035
2036 Returns the remaining time until a timer fires. If the timer is active,
2037 then this time is relative to the current event loop time, otherwise it's
2038 the timeout value currently configured.
2039
2040 That is, after an C<ev_timer_set (w, 5, 7)>, C<ev_timer_remaining> returns
2041 C<5>. When the timer is started and one second passes, C<ev_timer_remaining>
2042 will return C<4>. When the timer expires and is restarted, it will return
2043 roughly C<7> (likely slightly less as callback invocation takes some time,
2044 too), and so on.
2045
2046 =item ev_tstamp repeat [read-write]
2047
2048 The current C<repeat> value. Will be used each time the watcher times out
2049 or C<ev_timer_again> is called, and determines the next timeout (if any),
2050 which is also when any modifications are taken into account.
2051
2052 =back
2053
2054 =head3 Examples
2055
2056 Example: Create a timer that fires after 60 seconds.
2057
2058 static void
2059 one_minute_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, ev_timer *w, int revents)
2060 {
2061 .. one minute over, w is actually stopped right here
2062 }
2063
2064 ev_timer mytimer;
2065 ev_timer_init (&mytimer, one_minute_cb, 60., 0.);
2066 ev_timer_start (loop, &mytimer);
2067
2068 Example: Create a timeout timer that times out after 10 seconds of
2069 inactivity.
2070
2071 static void
2072 timeout_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, ev_timer *w, int revents)
2073 {
2074 .. ten seconds without any activity
2075 }
2076
2077 ev_timer mytimer;
2078 ev_timer_init (&mytimer, timeout_cb, 0., 10.); /* note, only repeat used */
2079 ev_timer_again (&mytimer); /* start timer */
2080 ev_run (loop, 0);
2081
2082 // and in some piece of code that gets executed on any "activity":
2083 // reset the timeout to start ticking again at 10 seconds
2084 ev_timer_again (&mytimer);
2085
2086
2087 =head2 C<ev_periodic> - to cron or not to cron?
2088
2089 Periodic watchers are also timers of a kind, but they are very versatile
2090 (and unfortunately a bit complex).
2091
2092 Unlike C<ev_timer>, periodic watchers are not based on real time (or
2093 relative time, the physical time that passes) but on wall clock time
2094 (absolute time, the thing you can read on your calender or clock). The
2095 difference is that wall clock time can run faster or slower than real
2096 time, and time jumps are not uncommon (e.g. when you adjust your
2097 wrist-watch).
2098
2099 You can tell a periodic watcher to trigger after some specific point
2100 in time: for example, if you tell a periodic watcher to trigger "in 10
2101 seconds" (by specifying e.g. C<ev_now () + 10.>, that is, an absolute time
2102 not a delay) and then reset your system clock to January of the previous
2103 year, then it will take a year or more to trigger the event (unlike an
2104 C<ev_timer>, which would still trigger roughly 10 seconds after starting
2105 it, as it uses a relative timeout).
2106
2107 C<ev_periodic> watchers can also be used to implement vastly more complex
2108 timers, such as triggering an event on each "midnight, local time", or
2109 other complicated rules. This cannot be done with C<ev_timer> watchers, as
2110 those cannot react to time jumps.
2111
2112 As with timers, the callback is guaranteed to be invoked only when the
2113 point in time where it is supposed to trigger has passed. If multiple
2114 timers become ready during the same loop iteration then the ones with
2115 earlier time-out values are invoked before ones with later time-out values
2116 (but this is no longer true when a callback calls C<ev_run> recursively).
2117
2118 =head3 Watcher-Specific Functions and Data Members
2119
2120 =over 4
2121
2122 =item ev_periodic_init (ev_periodic *, callback, ev_tstamp offset, ev_tstamp interval, reschedule_cb)
2123
2124 =item ev_periodic_set (ev_periodic *, ev_tstamp offset, ev_tstamp interval, reschedule_cb)
2125
2126 Lots of arguments, let's sort it out... There are basically three modes of
2127 operation, and we will explain them from simplest to most complex:
2128
2129 =over 4
2130
2131 =item * absolute timer (offset = absolute time, interval = 0, reschedule_cb = 0)
2132
2133 In this configuration the watcher triggers an event after the wall clock
2134 time C<offset> has passed. It will not repeat and will not adjust when a
2135 time jump occurs, that is, if it is to be run at January 1st 2011 then it
2136 will be stopped and invoked when the system clock reaches or surpasses
2137 this point in time.
2138
2139 =item * repeating interval timer (offset = offset within interval, interval > 0, reschedule_cb = 0)
2140
2141 In this mode the watcher will always be scheduled to time out at the next
2142 C<offset + N * interval> time (for some integer N, which can also be
2143 negative) and then repeat, regardless of any time jumps. The C<offset>
2144 argument is merely an offset into the C<interval> periods.
2145
2146 This can be used to create timers that do not drift with respect to the
2147 system clock, for example, here is an C<ev_periodic> that triggers each
2148 hour, on the hour (with respect to UTC):
2149
2150 ev_periodic_set (&periodic, 0., 3600., 0);
2151
2152 This doesn't mean there will always be 3600 seconds in between triggers,
2153 but only that the callback will be called when the system time shows a
2154 full hour (UTC), or more correctly, when the system time is evenly divisible
2155 by 3600.
2156
2157 Another way to think about it (for the mathematically inclined) is that
2158 C<ev_periodic> will try to run the callback in this mode at the next possible
2159 time where C<time = offset (mod interval)>, regardless of any time jumps.
2160
2161 The C<interval> I<MUST> be positive, and for numerical stability, the
2162 interval value should be higher than C<1/8192> (which is around 100
2163 microseconds) and C<offset> should be higher than C<0> and should have
2164 at most a similar magnitude as the current time (say, within a factor of
2165 ten). Typical values for offset are, in fact, C<0> or something between
2166 C<0> and C<interval>, which is also the recommended range.
2167
2168 Note also that there is an upper limit to how often a timer can fire (CPU
2169 speed for example), so if C<interval> is very small then timing stability
2170 will of course deteriorate. Libev itself tries to be exact to be about one
2171 millisecond (if the OS supports it and the machine is fast enough).
2172
2173 =item * manual reschedule mode (offset ignored, interval ignored, reschedule_cb = callback)
2174
2175 In this mode the values for C<interval> and C<offset> are both being
2176 ignored. Instead, each time the periodic watcher gets scheduled, the
2177 reschedule callback will be called with the watcher as first, and the
2178 current time as second argument.
2179
2180 NOTE: I<This callback MUST NOT stop or destroy any periodic watcher, ever,
2181 or make ANY other event loop modifications whatsoever, unless explicitly
2182 allowed by documentation here>.
2183
2184 If you need to stop it, return C<now + 1e30> (or so, fudge fudge) and stop
2185 it afterwards (e.g. by starting an C<ev_prepare> watcher, which is the
2186 only event loop modification you are allowed to do).
2187
2188 The callback prototype is C<ev_tstamp (*reschedule_cb)(ev_periodic
2189 *w, ev_tstamp now)>, e.g.:
2190
2191 static ev_tstamp
2192 my_rescheduler (ev_periodic *w, ev_tstamp now)
2193 {
2194 return now + 60.;
2195 }
2196
2197 It must return the next time to trigger, based on the passed time value
2198 (that is, the lowest time value larger than to the second argument). It
2199 will usually be called just before the callback will be triggered, but
2200 might be called at other times, too.
2201
2202 NOTE: I<< This callback must always return a time that is higher than or
2203 equal to the passed C<now> value >>.
2204
2205 This can be used to create very complex timers, such as a timer that
2206 triggers on "next midnight, local time". To do this, you would calculate the
2207 next midnight after C<now> and return the timestamp value for this. How
2208 you do this is, again, up to you (but it is not trivial, which is the main
2209 reason I omitted it as an example).
2210
2211 =back
2212
2213 =item ev_periodic_again (loop, ev_periodic *)
2214
2215 Simply stops and restarts the periodic watcher again. This is only useful
2216 when you changed some parameters or the reschedule callback would return
2217 a different time than the last time it was called (e.g. in a crond like
2218 program when the crontabs have changed).
2219
2220 =item ev_tstamp ev_periodic_at (ev_periodic *)
2221
2222 When active, returns the absolute time that the watcher is supposed
2223 to trigger next. This is not the same as the C<offset> argument to
2224 C<ev_periodic_set>, but indeed works even in interval and manual
2225 rescheduling modes.
2226
2227 =item ev_tstamp offset [read-write]
2228
2229 When repeating, this contains the offset value, otherwise this is the
2230 absolute point in time (the C<offset> value passed to C<ev_periodic_set>,
2231 although libev might modify this value for better numerical stability).
2232
2233 Can be modified any time, but changes only take effect when the periodic
2234 timer fires or C<ev_periodic_again> is being called.
2235
2236 =item ev_tstamp interval [read-write]
2237
2238 The current interval value. Can be modified any time, but changes only
2239 take effect when the periodic timer fires or C<ev_periodic_again> is being
2240 called.
2241
2242 =item ev_tstamp (*reschedule_cb)(ev_periodic *w, ev_tstamp now) [read-write]
2243
2244 The current reschedule callback, or C<0>, if this functionality is
2245 switched off. Can be changed any time, but changes only take effect when
2246 the periodic timer fires or C<ev_periodic_again> is being called.
2247
2248 =back
2249
2250 =head3 Examples
2251
2252 Example: Call a callback every hour, or, more precisely, whenever the
2253 system time is divisible by 3600. The callback invocation times have
2254 potentially a lot of jitter, but good long-term stability.
2255
2256 static void
2257 clock_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, ev_periodic *w, int revents)
2258 {
2259 ... its now a full hour (UTC, or TAI or whatever your clock follows)
2260 }
2261
2262 ev_periodic hourly_tick;
2263 ev_periodic_init (&hourly_tick, clock_cb, 0., 3600., 0);
2264 ev_periodic_start (loop, &hourly_tick);
2265
2266 Example: The same as above, but use a reschedule callback to do it:
2267
2268 #include <math.h>
2269
2270 static ev_tstamp
2271 my_scheduler_cb (ev_periodic *w, ev_tstamp now)
2272 {
2273 return now + (3600. - fmod (now, 3600.));
2274 }
2275
2276 ev_periodic_init (&hourly_tick, clock_cb, 0., 0., my_scheduler_cb);
2277
2278 Example: Call a callback every hour, starting now:
2279
2280 ev_periodic hourly_tick;
2281 ev_periodic_init (&hourly_tick, clock_cb,
2282 fmod (ev_now (loop), 3600.), 3600., 0);
2283 ev_periodic_start (loop, &hourly_tick);
2284
2285
2286 =head2 C<ev_signal> - signal me when a signal gets signalled!
2287
2288 Signal watchers will trigger an event when the process receives a specific
2289 signal one or more times. Even though signals are very asynchronous, libev
2290 will try its best to deliver signals synchronously, i.e. as part of the
2291 normal event processing, like any other event.
2292
2293 If you want signals to be delivered truly asynchronously, just use
2294 C<sigaction> as you would do without libev and forget about sharing
2295 the signal. You can even use C<ev_async> from a signal handler to
2296 synchronously wake up an event loop.
2297
2298 You can configure as many watchers as you like for the same signal, but
2299 only within the same loop, i.e. you can watch for C<SIGINT> in your
2300 default loop and for C<SIGIO> in another loop, but you cannot watch for
2301 C<SIGINT> in both the default loop and another loop at the same time. At
2302 the moment, C<SIGCHLD> is permanently tied to the default loop.
2303
2304 When the first watcher gets started will libev actually register something
2305 with the kernel (thus it coexists with your own signal handlers as long as
2306 you don't register any with libev for the same signal).
2307
2308 If possible and supported, libev will install its handlers with
2309 C<SA_RESTART> (or equivalent) behaviour enabled, so system calls should
2310 not be unduly interrupted. If you have a problem with system calls getting
2311 interrupted by signals you can block all signals in an C<ev_check> watcher
2312 and unblock them in an C<ev_prepare> watcher.
2313
2314 =head3 The special problem of inheritance over fork/execve/pthread_create
2315
2316 Both the signal mask (C<sigprocmask>) and the signal disposition
2317 (C<sigaction>) are unspecified after starting a signal watcher (and after
2318 stopping it again), that is, libev might or might not block the signal,
2319 and might or might not set or restore the installed signal handler (but
2320 see C<EVFLAG_NOSIGMASK>).
2321
2322 While this does not matter for the signal disposition (libev never
2323 sets signals to C<SIG_IGN>, so handlers will be reset to C<SIG_DFL> on
2324 C<execve>), this matters for the signal mask: many programs do not expect
2325 certain signals to be blocked.
2326
2327 This means that before calling C<exec> (from the child) you should reset
2328 the signal mask to whatever "default" you expect (all clear is a good
2329 choice usually).
2330
2331 The simplest way to ensure that the signal mask is reset in the child is
2332 to install a fork handler with C<pthread_atfork> that resets it. That will
2333 catch fork calls done by libraries (such as the libc) as well.
2334
2335 In current versions of libev, the signal will not be blocked indefinitely
2336 unless you use the C<signalfd> API (C<EV_SIGNALFD>). While this reduces
2337 the window of opportunity for problems, it will not go away, as libev
2338 I<has> to modify the signal mask, at least temporarily.
2339
2340 So I can't stress this enough: I<If you do not reset your signal mask when
2341 you expect it to be empty, you have a race condition in your code>. This
2342 is not a libev-specific thing, this is true for most event libraries.
2343
2344 =head3 The special problem of threads signal handling
2345
2346 POSIX threads has problematic signal handling semantics, specifically,
2347 a lot of functionality (sigfd, sigwait etc.) only really works if all
2348 threads in a process block signals, which is hard to achieve.
2349
2350 When you want to use sigwait (or mix libev signal handling with your own
2351 for the same signals), you can tackle this problem by globally blocking
2352 all signals before creating any threads (or creating them with a fully set
2353 sigprocmask) and also specifying the C<EVFLAG_NOSIGMASK> when creating
2354 loops. Then designate one thread as "signal receiver thread" which handles
2355 these signals. You can pass on any signals that libev might be interested
2356 in by calling C<ev_feed_signal>.
2357
2358 =head3 Watcher-Specific Functions and Data Members
2359
2360 =over 4
2361
2362 =item ev_signal_init (ev_signal *, callback, int signum)
2363
2364 =item ev_signal_set (ev_signal *, int signum)
2365
2366 Configures the watcher to trigger on the given signal number (usually one
2367 of the C<SIGxxx> constants).
2368
2369 =item int signum [read-only]
2370
2371 The signal the watcher watches out for.
2372
2373 =back
2374
2375 =head3 Examples
2376
2377 Example: Try to exit cleanly on SIGINT.
2378
2379 static void
2380 sigint_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, ev_signal *w, int revents)
2381 {
2382 ev_break (loop, EVBREAK_ALL);
2383 }
2384
2385 ev_signal signal_watcher;
2386 ev_signal_init (&signal_watcher, sigint_cb, SIGINT);
2387 ev_signal_start (loop, &signal_watcher);
2388
2389
2390 =head2 C<ev_child> - watch out for process status changes
2391
2392 Child watchers trigger when your process receives a SIGCHLD in response to
2393 some child status changes (most typically when a child of yours dies or
2394 exits). It is permissible to install a child watcher I<after> the child
2395 has been forked (which implies it might have already exited), as long
2396 as the event loop isn't entered (or is continued from a watcher), i.e.,
2397 forking and then immediately registering a watcher for the child is fine,
2398 but forking and registering a watcher a few event loop iterations later or
2399 in the next callback invocation is not.
2400
2401 Only the default event loop is capable of handling signals, and therefore
2402 you can only register child watchers in the default event loop.
2403
2404 Due to some design glitches inside libev, child watchers will always be
2405 handled at maximum priority (their priority is set to C<EV_MAXPRI> by
2406 libev)
2407
2408 =head3 Process Interaction
2409
2410 Libev grabs C<SIGCHLD> as soon as the default event loop is
2411 initialised. This is necessary to guarantee proper behaviour even if the
2412 first child watcher is started after the child exits. The occurrence
2413 of C<SIGCHLD> is recorded asynchronously, but child reaping is done
2414 synchronously as part of the event loop processing. Libev always reaps all
2415 children, even ones not watched.
2416
2417 =head3 Overriding the Built-In Processing
2418
2419 Libev offers no special support for overriding the built-in child
2420 processing, but if your application collides with libev's default child
2421 handler, you can override it easily by installing your own handler for
2422 C<SIGCHLD> after initialising the default loop, and making sure the
2423 default loop never gets destroyed. You are encouraged, however, to use an
2424 event-based approach to child reaping and thus use libev's support for
2425 that, so other libev users can use C<ev_child> watchers freely.
2426
2427 =head3 Stopping the Child Watcher
2428
2429 Currently, the child watcher never gets stopped, even when the
2430 child terminates, so normally one needs to stop the watcher in the
2431 callback. Future versions of libev might stop the watcher automatically
2432 when a child exit is detected (calling C<ev_child_stop> twice is not a
2433 problem).
2434
2435 =head3 Watcher-Specific Functions and Data Members
2436
2437 =over 4
2438
2439 =item ev_child_init (ev_child *, callback, int pid, int trace)
2440
2441 =item ev_child_set (ev_child *, int pid, int trace)
2442
2443 Configures the watcher to wait for status changes of process C<pid> (or
2444 I<any> process if C<pid> is specified as C<0>). The callback can look
2445 at the C<rstatus> member of the C<ev_child> watcher structure to see
2446 the status word (use the macros from C<sys/wait.h> and see your systems
2447 C<waitpid> documentation). The C<rpid> member contains the pid of the
2448 process causing the status change. C<trace> must be either C<0> (only
2449 activate the watcher when the process terminates) or C<1> (additionally
2450 activate the watcher when the process is stopped or continued).
2451
2452 =item int pid [read-only]
2453
2454 The process id this watcher watches out for, or C<0>, meaning any process id.
2455
2456 =item int rpid [read-write]
2457
2458 The process id that detected a status change.
2459
2460 =item int rstatus [read-write]
2461
2462 The process exit/trace status caused by C<rpid> (see your systems
2463 C<waitpid> and C<sys/wait.h> documentation for details).
2464
2465 =back
2466
2467 =head3 Examples
2468
2469 Example: C<fork()> a new process and install a child handler to wait for
2470 its completion.
2471
2472 ev_child cw;
2473
2474 static void
2475 child_cb (EV_P_ ev_child *w, int revents)
2476 {
2477 ev_child_stop (EV_A_ w);
2478 printf ("process %d exited with status %x\n", w->rpid, w->rstatus);
2479 }
2480
2481 pid_t pid = fork ();
2482
2483 if (pid < 0)
2484 // error
2485 else if (pid == 0)
2486 {
2487 // the forked child executes here
2488 exit (1);
2489 }
2490 else
2491 {
2492 ev_child_init (&cw, child_cb, pid, 0);
2493 ev_child_start (EV_DEFAULT_ &cw);
2494 }
2495
2496
2497 =head2 C<ev_stat> - did the file attributes just change?
2498
2499 This watches a file system path for attribute changes. That is, it calls
2500 C<stat> on that path in regular intervals (or when the OS says it changed)
2501 and sees if it changed compared to the last time, invoking the callback if
2502 it did.
2503
2504 The path does not need to exist: changing from "path exists" to "path does
2505 not exist" is a status change like any other. The condition "path does not
2506 exist" (or more correctly "path cannot be stat'ed") is signified by the
2507 C<st_nlink> field being zero (which is otherwise always forced to be at
2508 least one) and all the other fields of the stat buffer having unspecified
2509 contents.
2510
2511 The path I<must not> end in a slash or contain special components such as
2512 C<.> or C<..>. The path I<should> be absolute: If it is relative and
2513 your working directory changes, then the behaviour is undefined.
2514
2515 Since there is no portable change notification interface available, the
2516 portable implementation simply calls C<stat(2)> regularly on the path
2517 to see if it changed somehow. You can specify a recommended polling
2518 interval for this case. If you specify a polling interval of C<0> (highly
2519 recommended!) then a I<suitable, unspecified default> value will be used
2520 (which you can expect to be around five seconds, although this might
2521 change dynamically). Libev will also impose a minimum interval which is
2522 currently around C<0.1>, but that's usually overkill.
2523
2524 This watcher type is not meant for massive numbers of stat watchers,
2525 as even with OS-supported change notifications, this can be
2526 resource-intensive.
2527
2528 At the time of this writing, the only OS-specific interface implemented
2529 is the Linux inotify interface (implementing kqueue support is left as an
2530 exercise for the reader. Note, however, that the author sees no way of
2531 implementing C<ev_stat> semantics with kqueue, except as a hint).
2532
2533 =head3 ABI Issues (Largefile Support)
2534
2535 Libev by default (unless the user overrides this) uses the default
2536 compilation environment, which means that on systems with large file
2537 support disabled by default, you get the 32 bit version of the stat
2538 structure. When using the library from programs that change the ABI to
2539 use 64 bit file offsets the programs will fail. In that case you have to
2540 compile libev with the same flags to get binary compatibility. This is
2541 obviously the case with any flags that change the ABI, but the problem is
2542 most noticeably displayed with ev_stat and large file support.
2543
2544 The solution for this is to lobby your distribution maker to make large
2545 file interfaces available by default (as e.g. FreeBSD does) and not
2546 optional. Libev cannot simply switch on large file support because it has
2547 to exchange stat structures with application programs compiled using the
2548 default compilation environment.
2549
2550 =head3 Inotify and Kqueue
2551
2552 When C<inotify (7)> support has been compiled into libev and present at
2553 runtime, it will be used to speed up change detection where possible. The
2554 inotify descriptor will be created lazily when the first C<ev_stat>
2555 watcher is being started.
2556
2557 Inotify presence does not change the semantics of C<ev_stat> watchers
2558 except that changes might be detected earlier, and in some cases, to avoid
2559 making regular C<stat> calls. Even in the presence of inotify support
2560 there are many cases where libev has to resort to regular C<stat> polling,
2561 but as long as kernel 2.6.25 or newer is used (2.6.24 and older have too
2562 many bugs), the path exists (i.e. stat succeeds), and the path resides on
2563 a local filesystem (libev currently assumes only ext2/3, jfs, reiserfs and
2564 xfs are fully working) libev usually gets away without polling.
2565
2566 There is no support for kqueue, as apparently it cannot be used to
2567 implement this functionality, due to the requirement of having a file
2568 descriptor open on the object at all times, and detecting renames, unlinks
2569 etc. is difficult.
2570
2571 =head3 C<stat ()> is a synchronous operation
2572
2573 Libev doesn't normally do any kind of I/O itself, and so is not blocking
2574 the process. The exception are C<ev_stat> watchers - those call C<stat
2575 ()>, which is a synchronous operation.
2576
2577 For local paths, this usually doesn't matter: unless the system is very
2578 busy or the intervals between stat's are large, a stat call will be fast,
2579 as the path data is usually in memory already (except when starting the
2580 watcher).
2581
2582 For networked file systems, calling C<stat ()> can block an indefinite
2583 time due to network issues, and even under good conditions, a stat call
2584 often takes multiple milliseconds.
2585
2586 Therefore, it is best to avoid using C<ev_stat> watchers on networked
2587 paths, although this is fully supported by libev.
2588
2589 =head3 The special problem of stat time resolution
2590
2591 The C<stat ()> system call only supports full-second resolution portably,
2592 and even on systems where the resolution is higher, most file systems
2593 still only support whole seconds.
2594
2595 That means that, if the time is the only thing that changes, you can
2596 easily miss updates: on the first update, C<ev_stat> detects a change and
2597 calls your callback, which does something. When there is another update
2598 within the same second, C<ev_stat> will be unable to detect unless the
2599 stat data does change in other ways (e.g. file size).
2600
2601 The solution to this is to delay acting on a change for slightly more
2602 than a second (or till slightly after the next full second boundary), using
2603 a roughly one-second-delay C<ev_timer> (e.g. C<ev_timer_set (w, 0., 1.02);
2604 ev_timer_again (loop, w)>).
2605
2606 The C<.02> offset is added to work around small timing inconsistencies
2607 of some operating systems (where the second counter of the current time
2608 might be be delayed. One such system is the Linux kernel, where a call to
2609 C<gettimeofday> might return a timestamp with a full second later than
2610 a subsequent C<time> call - if the equivalent of C<time ()> is used to
2611 update file times then there will be a small window where the kernel uses
2612 the previous second to update file times but libev might already execute
2613 the timer callback).
2614
2615 =head3 Watcher-Specific Functions and Data Members
2616
2617 =over 4
2618
2619 =item ev_stat_init (ev_stat *, callback, const char *path, ev_tstamp interval)
2620
2621 =item ev_stat_set (ev_stat *, const char *path, ev_tstamp interval)
2622
2623 Configures the watcher to wait for status changes of the given
2624 C<path>. The C<interval> is a hint on how quickly a change is expected to
2625 be detected and should normally be specified as C<0> to let libev choose
2626 a suitable value. The memory pointed to by C<path> must point to the same
2627 path for as long as the watcher is active.
2628
2629 The callback will receive an C<EV_STAT> event when a change was detected,
2630 relative to the attributes at the time the watcher was started (or the
2631 last change was detected).
2632
2633 =item ev_stat_stat (loop, ev_stat *)
2634
2635 Updates the stat buffer immediately with new values. If you change the
2636 watched path in your callback, you could call this function to avoid
2637 detecting this change (while introducing a race condition if you are not
2638 the only one changing the path). Can also be useful simply to find out the
2639 new values.
2640
2641 =item ev_statdata attr [read-only]
2642
2643 The most-recently detected attributes of the file. Although the type is
2644 C<ev_statdata>, this is usually the (or one of the) C<struct stat> types
2645 suitable for your system, but you can only rely on the POSIX-standardised
2646 members to be present. If the C<st_nlink> member is C<0>, then there was
2647 some error while C<stat>ing the file.
2648
2649 =item ev_statdata prev [read-only]
2650
2651 The previous attributes of the file. The callback gets invoked whenever
2652 C<prev> != C<attr>, or, more precisely, one or more of these members
2653 differ: C<st_dev>, C<st_ino>, C<st_mode>, C<st_nlink>, C<st_uid>,
2654 C<st_gid>, C<st_rdev>, C<st_size>, C<st_atime>, C<st_mtime>, C<st_ctime>.
2655
2656 =item ev_tstamp interval [read-only]
2657
2658 The specified interval.
2659
2660 =item const char *path [read-only]
2661
2662 The file system path that is being watched.
2663
2664 =back
2665
2666 =head3 Examples
2667
2668 Example: Watch C</etc/passwd> for attribute changes.
2669
2670 static void
2671 passwd_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, ev_stat *w, int revents)
2672 {
2673 /* /etc/passwd changed in some way */
2674 if (w->attr.st_nlink)
2675 {
2676 printf ("passwd current size %ld\n", (long)w->attr.st_size);
2677 printf ("passwd current atime %ld\n", (long)w->attr.st_mtime);
2678 printf ("passwd current mtime %ld\n", (long)w->attr.st_mtime);
2679 }
2680 else
2681 /* you shalt not abuse printf for puts */
2682 puts ("wow, /etc/passwd is not there, expect problems. "
2683 "if this is windows, they already arrived\n");
2684 }
2685
2686 ...
2687 ev_stat passwd;
2688
2689 ev_stat_init (&passwd, passwd_cb, "/etc/passwd", 0.);
2690 ev_stat_start (loop, &passwd);
2691
2692 Example: Like above, but additionally use a one-second delay so we do not
2693 miss updates (however, frequent updates will delay processing, too, so
2694 one might do the work both on C<ev_stat> callback invocation I<and> on
2695 C<ev_timer> callback invocation).
2696
2697 static ev_stat passwd;
2698 static ev_timer timer;
2699
2700 static void
2701 timer_cb (EV_P_ ev_timer *w, int revents)
2702 {
2703 ev_timer_stop (EV_A_ w);
2704
2705 /* now it's one second after the most recent passwd change */
2706 }
2707
2708 static void
2709 stat_cb (EV_P_ ev_stat *w, int revents)
2710 {
2711 /* reset the one-second timer */
2712 ev_timer_again (EV_A_ &timer);
2713 }
2714
2715 ...
2716 ev_stat_init (&passwd, stat_cb, "/etc/passwd", 0.);
2717 ev_stat_start (loop, &passwd);
2718 ev_timer_init (&timer, timer_cb, 0., 1.02);
2719
2720
2721 =head2 C<ev_idle> - when you've got nothing better to do...
2722
2723 Idle watchers trigger events when no other events of the same or higher
2724 priority are pending (prepare, check and other idle watchers do not count
2725 as receiving "events").
2726
2727 That is, as long as your process is busy handling sockets or timeouts
2728 (or even signals, imagine) of the same or higher priority it will not be
2729 triggered. But when your process is idle (or only lower-priority watchers
2730 are pending), the idle watchers are being called once per event loop
2731 iteration - until stopped, that is, or your process receives more events
2732 and becomes busy again with higher priority stuff.
2733
2734 The most noteworthy effect is that as long as any idle watchers are
2735 active, the process will not block when waiting for new events.
2736
2737 Apart from keeping your process non-blocking (which is a useful
2738 effect on its own sometimes), idle watchers are a good place to do
2739 "pseudo-background processing", or delay processing stuff to after the
2740 event loop has handled all outstanding events.
2741
2742 =head3 Watcher-Specific Functions and Data Members
2743
2744 =over 4
2745
2746 =item ev_idle_init (ev_idle *, callback)
2747
2748 Initialises and configures the idle watcher - it has no parameters of any
2749 kind. There is a C<ev_idle_set> macro, but using it is utterly pointless,
2750 believe me.
2751
2752 =back
2753
2754 =head3 Examples
2755
2756 Example: Dynamically allocate an C<ev_idle> watcher, start it, and in the
2757 callback, free it. Also, use no error checking, as usual.
2758
2759 static void
2760 idle_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, ev_idle *w, int revents)
2761 {
2762 free (w);
2763 // now do something you wanted to do when the program has
2764 // no longer anything immediate to do.
2765 }
2766
2767 ev_idle *idle_watcher = malloc (sizeof (ev_idle));
2768 ev_idle_init (idle_watcher, idle_cb);
2769 ev_idle_start (loop, idle_watcher);
2770
2771
2772 =head2 C<ev_prepare> and C<ev_check> - customise your event loop!
2773
2774 Prepare and check watchers are usually (but not always) used in pairs:
2775 prepare watchers get invoked before the process blocks and check watchers
2776 afterwards.
2777
2778 You I<must not> call C<ev_run> or similar functions that enter
2779 the current event loop from either C<ev_prepare> or C<ev_check>
2780 watchers. Other loops than the current one are fine, however. The
2781 rationale behind this is that you do not need to check for recursion in
2782 those watchers, i.e. the sequence will always be C<ev_prepare>, blocking,
2783 C<ev_check> so if you have one watcher of each kind they will always be
2784 called in pairs bracketing the blocking call.
2785
2786 Their main purpose is to integrate other event mechanisms into libev and
2787 their use is somewhat advanced. They could be used, for example, to track
2788 variable changes, implement your own watchers, integrate net-snmp or a
2789 coroutine library and lots more. They are also occasionally useful if
2790 you cache some data and want to flush it before blocking (for example,
2791 in X programs you might want to do an C<XFlush ()> in an C<ev_prepare>
2792 watcher).
2793
2794 This is done by examining in each prepare call which file descriptors
2795 need to be watched by the other library, registering C<ev_io> watchers
2796 for them and starting an C<ev_timer> watcher for any timeouts (many
2797 libraries provide exactly this functionality). Then, in the check watcher,
2798 you check for any events that occurred (by checking the pending status
2799 of all watchers and stopping them) and call back into the library. The
2800 I/O and timer callbacks will never actually be called (but must be valid
2801 nevertheless, because you never know, you know?).
2802
2803 As another example, the Perl Coro module uses these hooks to integrate
2804 coroutines into libev programs, by yielding to other active coroutines
2805 during each prepare and only letting the process block if no coroutines
2806 are ready to run (it's actually more complicated: it only runs coroutines
2807 with priority higher than or equal to the event loop and one coroutine
2808 of lower priority, but only once, using idle watchers to keep the event
2809 loop from blocking if lower-priority coroutines are active, thus mapping
2810 low-priority coroutines to idle/background tasks).
2811
2812 It is recommended to give C<ev_check> watchers highest (C<EV_MAXPRI>)
2813 priority, to ensure that they are being run before any other watchers
2814 after the poll (this doesn't matter for C<ev_prepare> watchers).
2815
2816 Also, C<ev_check> watchers (and C<ev_prepare> watchers, too) should not
2817 activate ("feed") events into libev. While libev fully supports this, they
2818 might get executed before other C<ev_check> watchers did their job. As
2819 C<ev_check> watchers are often used to embed other (non-libev) event
2820 loops those other event loops might be in an unusable state until their
2821 C<ev_check> watcher ran (always remind yourself to coexist peacefully with
2822 others).
2823
2824 =head3 Watcher-Specific Functions and Data Members
2825
2826 =over 4
2827
2828 =item ev_prepare_init (ev_prepare *, callback)
2829
2830 =item ev_check_init (ev_check *, callback)
2831
2832 Initialises and configures the prepare or check watcher - they have no
2833 parameters of any kind. There are C<ev_prepare_set> and C<ev_check_set>
2834 macros, but using them is utterly, utterly, utterly and completely
2835 pointless.
2836
2837 =back
2838
2839 =head3 Examples
2840
2841 There are a number of principal ways to embed other event loops or modules
2842 into libev. Here are some ideas on how to include libadns into libev
2843 (there is a Perl module named C<EV::ADNS> that does this, which you could
2844 use as a working example. Another Perl module named C<EV::Glib> embeds a
2845 Glib main context into libev, and finally, C<Glib::EV> embeds EV into the
2846 Glib event loop).
2847
2848 Method 1: Add IO watchers and a timeout watcher in a prepare handler,
2849 and in a check watcher, destroy them and call into libadns. What follows
2850 is pseudo-code only of course. This requires you to either use a low
2851 priority for the check watcher or use C<ev_clear_pending> explicitly, as
2852 the callbacks for the IO/timeout watchers might not have been called yet.
2853
2854 static ev_io iow [nfd];
2855 static ev_timer tw;
2856
2857 static void
2858 io_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, ev_io *w, int revents)
2859 {
2860 }
2861
2862 // create io watchers for each fd and a timer before blocking
2863 static void
2864 adns_prepare_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, ev_prepare *w, int revents)
2865 {
2866 int timeout = 3600000;
2867 struct pollfd fds [nfd];
2868 // actual code will need to loop here and realloc etc.
2869 adns_beforepoll (ads, fds, &nfd, &timeout, timeval_from (ev_time ()));
2870
2871 /* the callback is illegal, but won't be called as we stop during check */
2872 ev_timer_init (&tw, 0, timeout * 1e-3, 0.);
2873 ev_timer_start (loop, &tw);
2874
2875 // create one ev_io per pollfd
2876 for (int i = 0; i < nfd; ++i)
2877 {
2878 ev_io_init (iow + i, io_cb, fds [i].fd,
2879 ((fds [i].events & POLLIN ? EV_READ : 0)
2880 | (fds [i].events & POLLOUT ? EV_WRITE : 0)));
2881
2882 fds [i].revents = 0;
2883 ev_io_start (loop, iow + i);
2884 }
2885 }
2886
2887 // stop all watchers after blocking
2888 static void
2889 adns_check_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, ev_check *w, int revents)
2890 {
2891 ev_timer_stop (loop, &tw);
2892
2893 for (int i = 0; i < nfd; ++i)
2894 {
2895 // set the relevant poll flags
2896 // could also call adns_processreadable etc. here
2897 struct pollfd *fd = fds + i;
2898 int revents = ev_clear_pending (iow + i);
2899 if (revents & EV_READ ) fd->revents |= fd->events & POLLIN;
2900 if (revents & EV_WRITE) fd->revents |= fd->events & POLLOUT;
2901
2902 // now stop the watcher
2903 ev_io_stop (loop, iow + i);
2904 }
2905
2906 adns_afterpoll (adns, fds, nfd, timeval_from (ev_now (loop));
2907 }
2908
2909 Method 2: This would be just like method 1, but you run C<adns_afterpoll>
2910 in the prepare watcher and would dispose of the check watcher.
2911
2912 Method 3: If the module to be embedded supports explicit event
2913 notification (libadns does), you can also make use of the actual watcher
2914 callbacks, and only destroy/create the watchers in the prepare watcher.
2915
2916 static void
2917 timer_cb (EV_P_ ev_timer *w, int revents)
2918 {
2919 adns_state ads = (adns_state)w->data;
2920 update_now (EV_A);
2921
2922 adns_processtimeouts (ads, &tv_now);
2923 }
2924
2925 static void
2926 io_cb (EV_P_ ev_io *w, int revents)
2927 {
2928 adns_state ads = (adns_state)w->data;
2929 update_now (EV_A);
2930
2931 if (revents & EV_READ ) adns_processreadable (ads, w->fd, &tv_now);
2932 if (revents & EV_WRITE) adns_processwriteable (ads, w->fd, &tv_now);
2933 }
2934
2935 // do not ever call adns_afterpoll
2936
2937 Method 4: Do not use a prepare or check watcher because the module you
2938 want to embed is not flexible enough to support it. Instead, you can
2939 override their poll function. The drawback with this solution is that the
2940 main loop is now no longer controllable by EV. The C<Glib::EV> module uses
2941 this approach, effectively embedding EV as a client into the horrible
2942 libglib event loop.
2943
2944 static gint
2945 event_poll_func (GPollFD *fds, guint nfds, gint timeout)
2946 {
2947 int got_events = 0;
2948
2949 for (n = 0; n < nfds; ++n)
2950 // create/start io watcher that sets the relevant bits in fds[n] and increment got_events
2951
2952 if (timeout >= 0)
2953 // create/start timer
2954
2955 // poll
2956 ev_run (EV_A_ 0);
2957
2958 // stop timer again
2959 if (timeout >= 0)
2960 ev_timer_stop (EV_A_ &to);
2961
2962 // stop io watchers again - their callbacks should have set
2963 for (n = 0; n < nfds; ++n)
2964 ev_io_stop (EV_A_ iow [n]);
2965
2966 return got_events;
2967 }
2968
2969
2970 =head2 C<ev_embed> - when one backend isn't enough...
2971
2972 This is a rather advanced watcher type that lets you embed one event loop
2973 into another (currently only C<ev_io> events are supported in the embedded
2974 loop, other types of watchers might be handled in a delayed or incorrect
2975 fashion and must not be used).
2976
2977 There are primarily two reasons you would want that: work around bugs and
2978 prioritise I/O.
2979
2980 As an example for a bug workaround, the kqueue backend might only support
2981 sockets on some platform, so it is unusable as generic backend, but you
2982 still want to make use of it because you have many sockets and it scales
2983 so nicely. In this case, you would create a kqueue-based loop and embed
2984 it into your default loop (which might use e.g. poll). Overall operation
2985 will be a bit slower because first libev has to call C<poll> and then
2986 C<kevent>, but at least you can use both mechanisms for what they are
2987 best: C<kqueue> for scalable sockets and C<poll> if you want it to work :)
2988
2989 As for prioritising I/O: under rare circumstances you have the case where
2990 some fds have to be watched and handled very quickly (with low latency),
2991 and even priorities and idle watchers might have too much overhead. In
2992 this case you would put all the high priority stuff in one loop and all
2993 the rest in a second one, and embed the second one in the first.
2994
2995 As long as the watcher is active, the callback will be invoked every
2996 time there might be events pending in the embedded loop. The callback
2997 must then call C<ev_embed_sweep (mainloop, watcher)> to make a single
2998 sweep and invoke their callbacks (the callback doesn't need to invoke the
2999 C<ev_embed_sweep> function directly, it could also start an idle watcher
3000 to give the embedded loop strictly lower priority for example).
3001
3002 You can also set the callback to C<0>, in which case the embed watcher
3003 will automatically execute the embedded loop sweep whenever necessary.
3004
3005 Fork detection will be handled transparently while the C<ev_embed> watcher
3006 is active, i.e., the embedded loop will automatically be forked when the
3007 embedding loop forks. In other cases, the user is responsible for calling
3008 C<ev_loop_fork> on the embedded loop.
3009
3010 Unfortunately, not all backends are embeddable: only the ones returned by
3011 C<ev_embeddable_backends> are, which, unfortunately, does not include any
3012 portable one.
3013
3014 So when you want to use this feature you will always have to be prepared
3015 that you cannot get an embeddable loop. The recommended way to get around
3016 this is to have a separate variables for your embeddable loop, try to
3017 create it, and if that fails, use the normal loop for everything.
3018
3019 =head3 C<ev_embed> and fork
3020
3021 While the C<ev_embed> watcher is running, forks in the embedding loop will
3022 automatically be applied to the embedded loop as well, so no special
3023 fork handling is required in that case. When the watcher is not running,
3024 however, it is still the task of the libev user to call C<ev_loop_fork ()>
3025 as applicable.
3026
3027 =head3 Watcher-Specific Functions and Data Members
3028
3029 =over 4
3030
3031 =item ev_embed_init (ev_embed *, callback, struct ev_loop *embedded_loop)
3032
3033 =item ev_embed_set (ev_embed *, callback, struct ev_loop *embedded_loop)
3034
3035 Configures the watcher to embed the given loop, which must be
3036 embeddable. If the callback is C<0>, then C<ev_embed_sweep> will be
3037 invoked automatically, otherwise it is the responsibility of the callback
3038 to invoke it (it will continue to be called until the sweep has been done,
3039 if you do not want that, you need to temporarily stop the embed watcher).
3040
3041 =item ev_embed_sweep (loop, ev_embed *)
3042
3043 Make a single, non-blocking sweep over the embedded loop. This works
3044 similarly to C<ev_run (embedded_loop, EVRUN_NOWAIT)>, but in the most
3045 appropriate way for embedded loops.
3046
3047 =item struct ev_loop *other [read-only]
3048
3049 The embedded event loop.
3050
3051 =back
3052
3053 =head3 Examples
3054
3055 Example: Try to get an embeddable event loop and embed it into the default
3056 event loop. If that is not possible, use the default loop. The default
3057 loop is stored in C<loop_hi>, while the embeddable loop is stored in
3058 C<loop_lo> (which is C<loop_hi> in the case no embeddable loop can be
3059 used).
3060
3061 struct ev_loop *loop_hi = ev_default_init (0);
3062 struct ev_loop *loop_lo = 0;
3063 ev_embed embed;
3064
3065 // see if there is a chance of getting one that works
3066 // (remember that a flags value of 0 means autodetection)
3067 loop_lo = ev_embeddable_backends () & ev_recommended_backends ()
3068 ? ev_loop_new (ev_embeddable_backends () & ev_recommended_backends ())
3069 : 0;
3070
3071 // if we got one, then embed it, otherwise default to loop_hi
3072 if (loop_lo)
3073 {
3074 ev_embed_init (&embed, 0, loop_lo);
3075 ev_embed_start (loop_hi, &embed);
3076 }
3077 else
3078 loop_lo = loop_hi;
3079
3080 Example: Check if kqueue is available but not recommended and create
3081 a kqueue backend for use with sockets (which usually work with any
3082 kqueue implementation). Store the kqueue/socket-only event loop in
3083 C<loop_socket>. (One might optionally use C<EVFLAG_NOENV>, too).
3084
3085 struct ev_loop *loop = ev_default_init (0);
3086 struct ev_loop *loop_socket = 0;
3087 ev_embed embed;
3088
3089 if (ev_supported_backends () & ~ev_recommended_backends () & EVBACKEND_KQUEUE)
3090 if ((loop_socket = ev_loop_new (EVBACKEND_KQUEUE))
3091 {
3092 ev_embed_init (&embed, 0, loop_socket);
3093 ev_embed_start (loop, &embed);
3094 }
3095
3096 if (!loop_socket)
3097 loop_socket = loop;
3098
3099 // now use loop_socket for all sockets, and loop for everything else
3100
3101
3102 =head2 C<ev_fork> - the audacity to resume the event loop after a fork
3103
3104 Fork watchers are called when a C<fork ()> was detected (usually because
3105 whoever is a good citizen cared to tell libev about it by calling
3106 C<ev_default_fork> or C<ev_loop_fork>). The invocation is done before the
3107 event loop blocks next and before C<ev_check> watchers are being called,
3108 and only in the child after the fork. If whoever good citizen calling
3109 C<ev_default_fork> cheats and calls it in the wrong process, the fork
3110 handlers will be invoked, too, of course.
3111
3112 =head3 The special problem of life after fork - how is it possible?
3113
3114 Most uses of C<fork()> consist of forking, then some simple calls to set
3115 up/change the process environment, followed by a call to C<exec()>. This
3116 sequence should be handled by libev without any problems.
3117
3118 This changes when the application actually wants to do event handling
3119 in the child, or both parent in child, in effect "continuing" after the
3120 fork.
3121
3122 The default mode of operation (for libev, with application help to detect
3123 forks) is to duplicate all the state in the child, as would be expected
3124 when I<either> the parent I<or> the child process continues.
3125
3126 When both processes want to continue using libev, then this is usually the
3127 wrong result. In that case, usually one process (typically the parent) is
3128 supposed to continue with all watchers in place as before, while the other
3129 process typically wants to start fresh, i.e. without any active watchers.
3130
3131 The cleanest and most efficient way to achieve that with libev is to
3132 simply create a new event loop, which of course will be "empty", and
3133 use that for new watchers. This has the advantage of not touching more
3134 memory than necessary, and thus avoiding the copy-on-write, and the
3135 disadvantage of having to use multiple event loops (which do not support
3136 signal watchers).
3137
3138 When this is not possible, or you want to use the default loop for
3139 other reasons, then in the process that wants to start "fresh", call
3140 C<ev_loop_destroy (EV_DEFAULT)> followed by C<ev_default_loop (...)>.
3141 Destroying the default loop will "orphan" (not stop) all registered
3142 watchers, so you have to be careful not to execute code that modifies
3143 those watchers. Note also that in that case, you have to re-register any
3144 signal watchers.
3145
3146 =head3 Watcher-Specific Functions and Data Members
3147
3148 =over 4
3149
3150 =item ev_fork_init (ev_fork *, callback)
3151
3152 Initialises and configures the fork watcher - it has no parameters of any
3153 kind. There is a C<ev_fork_set> macro, but using it is utterly pointless,
3154 really.
3155
3156 =back
3157
3158
3159 =head2 C<ev_cleanup> - even the best things end
3160
3161 Cleanup watchers are called just before the event loop is being destroyed
3162 by a call to C<ev_loop_destroy>.
3163
3164 While there is no guarantee that the event loop gets destroyed, cleanup
3165 watchers provide a convenient method to install cleanup hooks for your
3166 program, worker threads and so on - you just to make sure to destroy the
3167 loop when you want them to be invoked.
3168
3169 Cleanup watchers are invoked in the same way as any other watcher. Unlike
3170 all other watchers, they do not keep a reference to the event loop (which
3171 makes a lot of sense if you think about it). Like all other watchers, you
3172 can call libev functions in the callback, except C<ev_cleanup_start>.
3173
3174 =head3 Watcher-Specific Functions and Data Members
3175
3176 =over 4
3177
3178 =item ev_cleanup_init (ev_cleanup *, callback)
3179
3180 Initialises and configures the cleanup watcher - it has no parameters of
3181 any kind. There is a C<ev_cleanup_set> macro, but using it is utterly
3182 pointless, I assure you.
3183
3184 =back
3185
3186 Example: Register an atexit handler to destroy the default loop, so any
3187 cleanup functions are called.
3188
3189 static void
3190 program_exits (void)
3191 {
3192 ev_loop_destroy (EV_DEFAULT_UC);
3193 }
3194
3195 ...
3196 atexit (program_exits);
3197
3198
3199 =head2 C<ev_async> - how to wake up an event loop
3200
3201 In general, you cannot use an C<ev_loop> from multiple threads or other
3202 asynchronous sources such as signal handlers (as opposed to multiple event
3203 loops - those are of course safe to use in different threads).
3204
3205 Sometimes, however, you need to wake up an event loop you do not control,
3206 for example because it belongs to another thread. This is what C<ev_async>
3207 watchers do: as long as the C<ev_async> watcher is active, you can signal
3208 it by calling C<ev_async_send>, which is thread- and signal safe.
3209
3210 This functionality is very similar to C<ev_signal> watchers, as signals,
3211 too, are asynchronous in nature, and signals, too, will be compressed
3212 (i.e. the number of callback invocations may be less than the number of
3213 C<ev_async_sent> calls). In fact, you could use signal watchers as a kind
3214 of "global async watchers" by using a watcher on an otherwise unused
3215 signal, and C<ev_feed_signal> to signal this watcher from another thread,
3216 even without knowing which loop owns the signal.
3217
3218 Unlike C<ev_signal> watchers, C<ev_async> works with any event loop, not
3219 just the default loop.
3220
3221 =head3 Queueing
3222
3223 C<ev_async> does not support queueing of data in any way. The reason
3224 is that the author does not know of a simple (or any) algorithm for a
3225 multiple-writer-single-reader queue that works in all cases and doesn't
3226 need elaborate support such as pthreads or unportable memory access
3227 semantics.
3228
3229 That means that if you want to queue data, you have to provide your own
3230 queue. But at least I can tell you how to implement locking around your
3231 queue:
3232
3233 =over 4
3234
3235 =item queueing from a signal handler context
3236
3237 To implement race-free queueing, you simply add to the queue in the signal
3238 handler but you block the signal handler in the watcher callback. Here is
3239 an example that does that for some fictitious SIGUSR1 handler:
3240
3241 static ev_async mysig;
3242
3243 static void
3244 sigusr1_handler (void)
3245 {
3246 sometype data;
3247
3248 // no locking etc.
3249 queue_put (data);
3250 ev_async_send (EV_DEFAULT_ &mysig);
3251 }
3252
3253 static void
3254 mysig_cb (EV_P_ ev_async *w, int revents)
3255 {
3256 sometype data;
3257 sigset_t block, prev;
3258
3259 sigemptyset (&block);
3260 sigaddset (&block, SIGUSR1);
3261 sigprocmask (SIG_BLOCK, &block, &prev);
3262
3263 while (queue_get (&data))
3264 process (data);
3265
3266 if (sigismember (&prev, SIGUSR1)
3267 sigprocmask (SIG_UNBLOCK, &block, 0);
3268 }
3269
3270 (Note: pthreads in theory requires you to use C<pthread_setmask>
3271 instead of C<sigprocmask> when you use threads, but libev doesn't do it
3272 either...).
3273
3274 =item queueing from a thread context
3275
3276 The strategy for threads is different, as you cannot (easily) block
3277 threads but you can easily preempt them, so to queue safely you need to
3278 employ a traditional mutex lock, such as in this pthread example:
3279
3280 static ev_async mysig;
3281 static pthread_mutex_t mymutex = PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER;
3282
3283 static void
3284 otherthread (void)
3285 {
3286 // only need to lock the actual queueing operation
3287 pthread_mutex_lock (&mymutex);
3288 queue_put (data);
3289 pthread_mutex_unlock (&mymutex);
3290
3291 ev_async_send (EV_DEFAULT_ &mysig);
3292 }
3293
3294 static void
3295 mysig_cb (EV_P_ ev_async *w, int revents)
3296 {
3297 pthread_mutex_lock (&mymutex);
3298
3299 while (queue_get (&data))
3300 process (data);
3301
3302 pthread_mutex_unlock (&mymutex);
3303 }
3304
3305 =back
3306
3307
3308 =head3 Watcher-Specific Functions and Data Members
3309
3310 =over 4
3311
3312 =item ev_async_init (ev_async *, callback)
3313
3314 Initialises and configures the async watcher - it has no parameters of any
3315 kind. There is a C<ev_async_set> macro, but using it is utterly pointless,
3316 trust me.
3317
3318 =item ev_async_send (loop, ev_async *)
3319
3320 Sends/signals/activates the given C<ev_async> watcher, that is, feeds
3321 an C<EV_ASYNC> event on the watcher into the event loop, and instantly
3322 returns.
3323
3324 Unlike C<ev_feed_event>, this call is safe to do from other threads,
3325 signal or similar contexts (see the discussion of C<EV_ATOMIC_T> in the
3326 embedding section below on what exactly this means).
3327
3328 Note that, as with other watchers in libev, multiple events might get
3329 compressed into a single callback invocation (another way to look at this
3330 is that C<ev_async> watchers are level-triggered, set on C<ev_async_send>,
3331 reset when the event loop detects that).
3332
3333 This call incurs the overhead of a system call only once per event loop
3334 iteration, so while the overhead might be noticeable, it doesn't apply to
3335 repeated calls to C<ev_async_send> for the same event loop.
3336
3337 =item bool = ev_async_pending (ev_async *)
3338
3339 Returns a non-zero value when C<ev_async_send> has been called on the
3340 watcher but the event has not yet been processed (or even noted) by the
3341 event loop.
3342
3343 C<ev_async_send> sets a flag in the watcher and wakes up the loop. When
3344 the loop iterates next and checks for the watcher to have become active,
3345 it will reset the flag again. C<ev_async_pending> can be used to very
3346 quickly check whether invoking the loop might be a good idea.
3347
3348 Not that this does I<not> check whether the watcher itself is pending,
3349 only whether it has been requested to make this watcher pending: there
3350 is a time window between the event loop checking and resetting the async
3351 notification, and the callback being invoked.
3352
3353 =back
3354
3355
3356 =head1 OTHER FUNCTIONS
3357
3358 There are some other functions of possible interest. Described. Here. Now.
3359
3360 =over 4
3361
3362 =item ev_once (loop, int fd, int events, ev_tstamp timeout, callback)
3363
3364 This function combines a simple timer and an I/O watcher, calls your
3365 callback on whichever event happens first and automatically stops both
3366 watchers. This is useful if you want to wait for a single event on an fd
3367 or timeout without having to allocate/configure/start/stop/free one or
3368 more watchers yourself.
3369
3370 If C<fd> is less than 0, then no I/O watcher will be started and the
3371 C<events> argument is being ignored. Otherwise, an C<ev_io> watcher for
3372 the given C<fd> and C<events> set will be created and started.
3373
3374 If C<timeout> is less than 0, then no timeout watcher will be
3375 started. Otherwise an C<ev_timer> watcher with after = C<timeout> (and
3376 repeat = 0) will be started. C<0> is a valid timeout.
3377
3378 The callback has the type C<void (*cb)(int revents, void *arg)> and is
3379 passed an C<revents> set like normal event callbacks (a combination of
3380 C<EV_ERROR>, C<EV_READ>, C<EV_WRITE> or C<EV_TIMER>) and the C<arg>
3381 value passed to C<ev_once>. Note that it is possible to receive I<both>
3382 a timeout and an io event at the same time - you probably should give io
3383 events precedence.
3384
3385 Example: wait up to ten seconds for data to appear on STDIN_FILENO.
3386
3387 static void stdin_ready (int revents, void *arg)
3388 {
3389 if (revents & EV_READ)
3390 /* stdin might have data for us, joy! */;
3391 else if (revents & EV_TIMER)
3392 /* doh, nothing entered */;
3393 }
3394
3395 ev_once (STDIN_FILENO, EV_READ, 10., stdin_ready, 0);
3396
3397 =item ev_feed_fd_event (loop, int fd, int revents)
3398
3399 Feed an event on the given fd, as if a file descriptor backend detected
3400 the given events it.
3401
3402 =item ev_feed_signal_event (loop, int signum)
3403
3404 Feed an event as if the given signal occurred. See also C<ev_feed_signal>,
3405 which is async-safe.
3406
3407 =back
3408
3409
3410 =head1 COMMON OR USEFUL IDIOMS (OR BOTH)
3411
3412 This section explains some common idioms that are not immediately
3413 obvious. Note that examples are sprinkled over the whole manual, and this
3414 section only contains stuff that wouldn't fit anywhere else.
3415
3416 =head2 ASSOCIATING CUSTOM DATA WITH A WATCHER
3417
3418 Each watcher has, by default, a C<void *data> member that you can read
3419 or modify at any time: libev will completely ignore it. This can be used
3420 to associate arbitrary data with your watcher. If you need more data and
3421 don't want to allocate memory separately and store a pointer to it in that
3422 data member, you can also "subclass" the watcher type and provide your own
3423 data:
3424
3425 struct my_io
3426 {
3427 ev_io io;
3428 int otherfd;
3429 void *somedata;
3430 struct whatever *mostinteresting;
3431 };
3432
3433 ...
3434 struct my_io w;
3435 ev_io_init (&w.io, my_cb, fd, EV_READ);
3436
3437 And since your callback will be called with a pointer to the watcher, you
3438 can cast it back to your own type:
3439
3440 static void my_cb (struct ev_loop *loop, ev_io *w_, int revents)
3441 {
3442 struct my_io *w = (struct my_io *)w_;
3443 ...
3444 }
3445
3446 More interesting and less C-conformant ways of casting your callback
3447 function type instead have been omitted.
3448
3449 =head2 BUILDING YOUR OWN COMPOSITE WATCHERS
3450
3451 Another common scenario is to use some data structure with multiple
3452 embedded watchers, in effect creating your own watcher that combines
3453 multiple libev event sources into one "super-watcher":
3454
3455 struct my_biggy
3456 {
3457 int some_data;
3458 ev_timer t1;
3459 ev_timer t2;
3460 }
3461
3462 In this case getting the pointer to C<my_biggy> is a bit more
3463 complicated: Either you store the address of your C<my_biggy> struct in
3464 the C<data> member of the watcher (for woozies or C++ coders), or you need
3465 to use some pointer arithmetic using C<offsetof> inside your watchers (for
3466 real programmers):
3467
3468 #include <stddef.h>
3469
3470 static void
3471 t1_cb (EV_P_ ev_timer *w, int revents)
3472 {
3473 struct my_biggy big = (struct my_biggy *)
3474 (((char *)w) - offsetof (struct my_biggy, t1));
3475 }
3476
3477 static void
3478 t2_cb (EV_P_ ev_timer *w, int revents)
3479 {
3480 struct my_biggy big = (struct my_biggy *)
3481 (((char *)w) - offsetof (struct my_biggy, t2));
3482 }
3483
3484 =head2 MODEL/NESTED EVENT LOOP INVOCATIONS AND EXIT CONDITIONS
3485
3486 Often (especially in GUI toolkits) there are places where you have
3487 I<modal> interaction, which is most easily implemented by recursively
3488 invoking C<ev_run>.
3489
3490 This brings the problem of exiting - a callback might want to finish the
3491 main C<ev_run> call, but not the nested one (e.g. user clicked "Quit", but
3492 a modal "Are you sure?" dialog is still waiting), or just the nested one
3493 and not the main one (e.g. user clocked "Ok" in a modal dialog), or some
3494 other combination: In these cases, C<ev_break> will not work alone.
3495
3496 The solution is to maintain "break this loop" variable for each C<ev_run>
3497 invocation, and use a loop around C<ev_run> until the condition is
3498 triggered, using C<EVRUN_ONCE>:
3499
3500 // main loop
3501 int exit_main_loop = 0;
3502
3503 while (!exit_main_loop)
3504 ev_run (EV_DEFAULT_ EVRUN_ONCE);
3505
3506 // in a model watcher
3507 int exit_nested_loop = 0;
3508
3509 while (!exit_nested_loop)
3510 ev_run (EV_A_ EVRUN_ONCE);
3511
3512 To exit from any of these loops, just set the corresponding exit variable:
3513
3514 // exit modal loop
3515 exit_nested_loop = 1;
3516
3517 // exit main program, after modal loop is finished
3518 exit_main_loop = 1;
3519
3520 // exit both
3521 exit_main_loop = exit_nested_loop = 1;
3522
3523 =head2 THREAD LOCKING EXAMPLE
3524
3525 Here is a fictitious example of how to run an event loop in a different
3526 thread from where callbacks are being invoked and watchers are
3527 created/added/removed.
3528
3529 For a real-world example, see the C<EV::Loop::Async> perl module,
3530 which uses exactly this technique (which is suited for many high-level
3531 languages).
3532
3533 The example uses a pthread mutex to protect the loop data, a condition
3534 variable to wait for callback invocations, an async watcher to notify the
3535 event loop thread and an unspecified mechanism to wake up the main thread.
3536
3537 First, you need to associate some data with the event loop:
3538
3539 typedef struct {
3540 mutex_t lock; /* global loop lock */
3541 ev_async async_w;
3542 thread_t tid;
3543 cond_t invoke_cv;
3544 } userdata;
3545
3546 void prepare_loop (EV_P)
3547 {
3548 // for simplicity, we use a static userdata struct.
3549 static userdata u;
3550
3551 ev_async_init (&u->async_w, async_cb);
3552 ev_async_start (EV_A_ &u->async_w);
3553
3554 pthread_mutex_init (&u->lock, 0);
3555 pthread_cond_init (&u->invoke_cv, 0);
3556
3557 // now associate this with the loop
3558 ev_set_userdata (EV_A_ u);
3559 ev_set_invoke_pending_cb (EV_A_ l_invoke);
3560 ev_set_loop_release_cb (EV_A_ l_release, l_acquire);
3561
3562 // then create the thread running ev_run
3563 pthread_create (&u->tid, 0, l_run, EV_A);
3564 }
3565
3566 The callback for the C<ev_async> watcher does nothing: the watcher is used
3567 solely to wake up the event loop so it takes notice of any new watchers
3568 that might have been added:
3569
3570 static void
3571 async_cb (EV_P_ ev_async *w, int revents)
3572 {
3573 // just used for the side effects
3574 }
3575
3576 The C<l_release> and C<l_acquire> callbacks simply unlock/lock the mutex
3577 protecting the loop data, respectively.
3578
3579 static void
3580 l_release (EV_P)
3581 {
3582 userdata *u = ev_userdata (EV_A);
3583 pthread_mutex_unlock (&u->lock);
3584 }
3585
3586 static void
3587 l_acquire (EV_P)
3588 {
3589 userdata *u = ev_userdata (EV_A);
3590 pthread_mutex_lock (&u->lock);
3591 }
3592
3593 The event loop thread first acquires the mutex, and then jumps straight
3594 into C<ev_run>:
3595
3596 void *
3597 l_run (void *thr_arg)
3598 {
3599 struct ev_loop *loop = (struct ev_loop *)thr_arg;
3600
3601 l_acquire (EV_A);
3602 pthread_setcanceltype (PTHREAD_CANCEL_ASYNCHRONOUS, 0);
3603 ev_run (EV_A_ 0);
3604 l_release (EV_A);
3605
3606 return 0;
3607 }
3608
3609 Instead of invoking all pending watchers, the C<l_invoke> callback will
3610 signal the main thread via some unspecified mechanism (signals? pipe
3611 writes? C<Async::Interrupt>?) and then waits until all pending watchers
3612 have been called (in a while loop because a) spurious wakeups are possible
3613 and b) skipping inter-thread-communication when there are no pending
3614 watchers is very beneficial):
3615
3616 static void
3617 l_invoke (EV_P)
3618 {
3619 userdata *u = ev_userdata (EV_A);
3620
3621 while (ev_pending_count (EV_A))
3622 {
3623 wake_up_other_thread_in_some_magic_or_not_so_magic_way ();
3624 pthread_cond_wait (&u->invoke_cv, &u->lock);
3625 }
3626 }
3627
3628 Now, whenever the main thread gets told to invoke pending watchers, it
3629 will grab the lock, call C<ev_invoke_pending> and then signal the loop
3630 thread to continue:
3631
3632 static void
3633 real_invoke_pending (EV_P)
3634 {
3635 userdata *u = ev_userdata (EV_A);
3636
3637 pthread_mutex_lock (&u->lock);
3638 ev_invoke_pending (EV_A);
3639 pthread_cond_signal (&u->invoke_cv);
3640 pthread_mutex_unlock (&u->lock);
3641 }
3642
3643 Whenever you want to start/stop a watcher or do other modifications to an
3644 event loop, you will now have to lock:
3645
3646 ev_timer timeout_watcher;
3647 userdata *u = ev_userdata (EV_A);
3648
3649 ev_timer_init (&timeout_watcher, timeout_cb, 5.5, 0.);
3650
3651 pthread_mutex_lock (&u->lock);
3652 ev_timer_start (EV_A_ &timeout_watcher);
3653 ev_async_send (EV_A_ &u->async_w);
3654 pthread_mutex_unlock (&u->lock);
3655
3656 Note that sending the C<ev_async> watcher is required because otherwise
3657 an event loop currently blocking in the kernel will have no knowledge
3658 about the newly added timer. By waking up the loop it will pick up any new
3659 watchers in the next event loop iteration.
3660
3661 =head2 THREADS, COROUTINES, CONTINUATIONS, QUEUES... INSTEAD OF CALLBACKS
3662
3663 While the overhead of a callback that e.g. schedules a thread is small, it
3664 is still an overhead. If you embed libev, and your main usage is with some
3665 kind of threads or coroutines, you might want to customise libev so that
3666 doesn't need callbacks anymore.
3667
3668 Imagine you have coroutines that you can switch to using a function
3669 C<switch_to (coro)>, that libev runs in a coroutine called C<libev_coro>
3670 and that due to some magic, the currently active coroutine is stored in a
3671 global called C<current_coro>. Then you can build your own "wait for libev
3672 event" primitive by changing C<EV_CB_DECLARE> and C<EV_CB_INVOKE> (note
3673 the differing C<;> conventions):
3674
3675 #define EV_CB_DECLARE(type) struct my_coro *cb;
3676 #define EV_CB_INVOKE(watcher) switch_to ((watcher)->cb)
3677
3678 That means instead of having a C callback function, you store the
3679 coroutine to switch to in each watcher, and instead of having libev call
3680 your callback, you instead have it switch to that coroutine.
3681
3682 A coroutine might now wait for an event with a function called
3683 C<wait_for_event>. (the watcher needs to be started, as always, but it doesn't
3684 matter when, or whether the watcher is active or not when this function is
3685 called):
3686
3687 void
3688 wait_for_event (ev_watcher *w)
3689 {
3690 ev_cb_set (w) = current_coro;
3691 switch_to (libev_coro);
3692 }
3693
3694 That basically suspends the coroutine inside C<wait_for_event> and
3695 continues the libev coroutine, which, when appropriate, switches back to
3696 this or any other coroutine. I am sure if you sue this your own :)
3697
3698 You can do similar tricks if you have, say, threads with an event queue -
3699 instead of storing a coroutine, you store the queue object and instead of
3700 switching to a coroutine, you push the watcher onto the queue and notify
3701 any waiters.
3702
3703 To embed libev, see L<EMBEDDING>, but in short, it's easiest to create two
3704 files, F<my_ev.h> and F<my_ev.c> that include the respective libev files:
3705
3706 // my_ev.h
3707 #define EV_CB_DECLARE(type) struct my_coro *cb;
3708 #define EV_CB_INVOKE(watcher) switch_to ((watcher)->cb);
3709 #include "../libev/ev.h"
3710
3711 // my_ev.c
3712 #define EV_H "my_ev.h"
3713 #include "../libev/ev.c"
3714
3715 And then use F<my_ev.h> when you would normally use F<ev.h>, and compile
3716 F<my_ev.c> into your project. When properly specifying include paths, you
3717 can even use F<ev.h> as header file name directly.
3718
3719
3720 =head1 LIBEVENT EMULATION
3721
3722 Libev offers a compatibility emulation layer for libevent. It cannot
3723 emulate the internals of libevent, so here are some usage hints:
3724
3725 =over 4
3726
3727 =item * Only the libevent-1.4.1-beta API is being emulated.
3728
3729 This was the newest libevent version available when libev was implemented,
3730 and is still mostly unchanged in 2010.
3731
3732 =item * Use it by including <event.h>, as usual.
3733
3734 =item * The following members are fully supported: ev_base, ev_callback,
3735 ev_arg, ev_fd, ev_res, ev_events.
3736
3737 =item * Avoid using ev_flags and the EVLIST_*-macros, while it is
3738 maintained by libev, it does not work exactly the same way as in libevent (consider
3739 it a private API).
3740
3741 =item * Priorities are not currently supported. Initialising priorities
3742 will fail and all watchers will have the same priority, even though there
3743 is an ev_pri field.
3744
3745 =item * In libevent, the last base created gets the signals, in libev, the
3746 base that registered the signal gets the signals.
3747
3748 =item * Other members are not supported.
3749
3750 =item * The libev emulation is I<not> ABI compatible to libevent, you need
3751 to use the libev header file and library.
3752
3753 =back
3754
3755 =head1 C++ SUPPORT
3756
3757 Libev comes with some simplistic wrapper classes for C++ that mainly allow
3758 you to use some convenience methods to start/stop watchers and also change
3759 the callback model to a model using method callbacks on objects.
3760
3761 To use it,
3762
3763 #include <ev++.h>
3764
3765 This automatically includes F<ev.h> and puts all of its definitions (many
3766 of them macros) into the global namespace. All C++ specific things are
3767 put into the C<ev> namespace. It should support all the same embedding
3768 options as F<ev.h>, most notably C<EV_MULTIPLICITY>.
3769
3770 Care has been taken to keep the overhead low. The only data member the C++
3771 classes add (compared to plain C-style watchers) is the event loop pointer
3772 that the watcher is associated with (or no additional members at all if
3773 you disable C<EV_MULTIPLICITY> when embedding libev).
3774
3775 Currently, functions, static and non-static member functions and classes
3776 with C<operator ()> can be used as callbacks. Other types should be easy
3777 to add as long as they only need one additional pointer for context. If
3778 you need support for other types of functors please contact the author
3779 (preferably after implementing it).
3780
3781 Here is a list of things available in the C<ev> namespace:
3782
3783 =over 4
3784
3785 =item C<ev::READ>, C<ev::WRITE> etc.
3786
3787 These are just enum values with the same values as the C<EV_READ> etc.
3788 macros from F<ev.h>.
3789
3790 =item C<ev::tstamp>, C<ev::now>
3791
3792 Aliases to the same types/functions as with the C<ev_> prefix.
3793
3794 =item C<ev::io>, C<ev::timer>, C<ev::periodic>, C<ev::idle>, C<ev::sig> etc.
3795
3796 For each C<ev_TYPE> watcher in F<ev.h> there is a corresponding class of
3797 the same name in the C<ev> namespace, with the exception of C<ev_signal>
3798 which is called C<ev::sig> to avoid clashes with the C<signal> macro
3799 defines by many implementations.
3800
3801 All of those classes have these methods:
3802
3803 =over 4
3804
3805 =item ev::TYPE::TYPE ()
3806
3807 =item ev::TYPE::TYPE (loop)
3808
3809 =item ev::TYPE::~TYPE
3810
3811 The constructor (optionally) takes an event loop to associate the watcher
3812 with. If it is omitted, it will use C<EV_DEFAULT>.
3813
3814 The constructor calls C<ev_init> for you, which means you have to call the
3815 C<set> method before starting it.
3816
3817 It will not set a callback, however: You have to call the templated C<set>
3818 method to set a callback before you can start the watcher.
3819
3820 (The reason why you have to use a method is a limitation in C++ which does
3821 not allow explicit template arguments for constructors).
3822
3823 The destructor automatically stops the watcher if it is active.
3824
3825 =item w->set<class, &class::method> (object *)
3826
3827 This method sets the callback method to call. The method has to have a
3828 signature of C<void (*)(ev_TYPE &, int)>, it receives the watcher as
3829 first argument and the C<revents> as second. The object must be given as
3830 parameter and is stored in the C<data> member of the watcher.
3831
3832 This method synthesizes efficient thunking code to call your method from
3833 the C callback that libev requires. If your compiler can inline your
3834 callback (i.e. it is visible to it at the place of the C<set> call and
3835 your compiler is good :), then the method will be fully inlined into the
3836 thunking function, making it as fast as a direct C callback.
3837
3838 Example: simple class declaration and watcher initialisation
3839
3840 struct myclass
3841 {
3842 void io_cb (ev::io &w, int revents) { }
3843 }
3844
3845 myclass obj;
3846 ev::io iow;
3847 iow.set <myclass, &myclass::io_cb> (&obj);
3848
3849 =item w->set (object *)
3850
3851 This is a variation of a method callback - leaving out the method to call
3852 will default the method to C<operator ()>, which makes it possible to use
3853 functor objects without having to manually specify the C<operator ()> all
3854 the time. Incidentally, you can then also leave out the template argument
3855 list.
3856
3857 The C<operator ()> method prototype must be C<void operator ()(watcher &w,
3858 int revents)>.
3859
3860 See the method-C<set> above for more details.
3861
3862 Example: use a functor object as callback.
3863
3864 struct myfunctor
3865 {
3866 void operator() (ev::io &w, int revents)
3867 {
3868 ...
3869 }
3870 }
3871
3872 myfunctor f;
3873
3874 ev::io w;
3875 w.set (&f);
3876
3877 =item w->set<function> (void *data = 0)
3878
3879 Also sets a callback, but uses a static method or plain function as
3880 callback. The optional C<data> argument will be stored in the watcher's
3881 C<data> member and is free for you to use.
3882
3883 The prototype of the C<function> must be C<void (*)(ev::TYPE &w, int)>.
3884
3885 See the method-C<set> above for more details.
3886
3887 Example: Use a plain function as callback.
3888
3889 static void io_cb (ev::io &w, int revents) { }
3890 iow.set <io_cb> ();
3891
3892 =item w->set (loop)
3893
3894 Associates a different C<struct ev_loop> with this watcher. You can only
3895 do this when the watcher is inactive (and not pending either).
3896
3897 =item w->set ([arguments])
3898
3899 Basically the same as C<ev_TYPE_set>, with the same arguments. Either this
3900 method or a suitable start method must be called at least once. Unlike the
3901 C counterpart, an active watcher gets automatically stopped and restarted
3902 when reconfiguring it with this method.
3903
3904 =item w->start ()
3905
3906 Starts the watcher. Note that there is no C<loop> argument, as the
3907 constructor already stores the event loop.
3908
3909 =item w->start ([arguments])
3910
3911 Instead of calling C<set> and C<start> methods separately, it is often
3912 convenient to wrap them in one call. Uses the same type of arguments as
3913 the configure C<set> method of the watcher.
3914
3915 =item w->stop ()
3916
3917 Stops the watcher if it is active. Again, no C<loop> argument.
3918
3919 =item w->again () (C<ev::timer>, C<ev::periodic> only)
3920
3921 For C<ev::timer> and C<ev::periodic>, this invokes the corresponding
3922 C<ev_TYPE_again> function.
3923
3924 =item w->sweep () (C<ev::embed> only)
3925
3926 Invokes C<ev_embed_sweep>.
3927
3928 =item w->update () (C<ev::stat> only)
3929
3930 Invokes C<ev_stat_stat>.
3931
3932 =back
3933
3934 =back
3935
3936 Example: Define a class with two I/O and idle watchers, start the I/O
3937 watchers in the constructor.
3938
3939 class myclass
3940 {
3941 ev::io io ; void io_cb (ev::io &w, int revents);
3942 ev::io2 io2 ; void io2_cb (ev::io &w, int revents);
3943 ev::idle idle; void idle_cb (ev::idle &w, int revents);
3944
3945 myclass (int fd)
3946 {
3947 io .set <myclass, &myclass::io_cb > (this);
3948 io2 .set <myclass, &myclass::io2_cb > (this);
3949 idle.set <myclass, &myclass::idle_cb> (this);
3950
3951 io.set (fd, ev::WRITE); // configure the watcher
3952 io.start (); // start it whenever convenient
3953
3954 io2.start (fd, ev::READ); // set + start in one call
3955 }
3956 };
3957
3958
3959 =head1 OTHER LANGUAGE BINDINGS
3960
3961 Libev does not offer other language bindings itself, but bindings for a
3962 number of languages exist in the form of third-party packages. If you know
3963 any interesting language binding in addition to the ones listed here, drop
3964 me a note.
3965
3966 =over 4
3967
3968 =item Perl
3969
3970 The EV module implements the full libev API and is actually used to test
3971 libev. EV is developed together with libev. Apart from the EV core module,
3972 there are additional modules that implement libev-compatible interfaces
3973 to C<libadns> (C<EV::ADNS>, but C<AnyEvent::DNS> is preferred nowadays),
3974 C<Net::SNMP> (C<Net::SNMP::EV>) and the C<libglib> event core (C<Glib::EV>
3975 and C<EV::Glib>).
3976
3977 It can be found and installed via CPAN, its homepage is at
3978 L<http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/EV>.
3979
3980 =item Python
3981
3982 Python bindings can be found at L<http://code.google.com/p/pyev/>. It
3983 seems to be quite complete and well-documented.
3984
3985 =item Ruby
3986
3987 Tony Arcieri has written a ruby extension that offers access to a subset
3988 of the libev API and adds file handle abstractions, asynchronous DNS and
3989 more on top of it. It can be found via gem servers. Its homepage is at
3990 L<http://rev.rubyforge.org/>.
3991
3992 Roger Pack reports that using the link order C<-lws2_32 -lmsvcrt-ruby-190>
3993 makes rev work even on mingw.
3994
3995 =item Haskell
3996
3997 A haskell binding to libev is available at
3998 L<http://hackage.haskell.org/cgi-bin/hackage-scripts/package/hlibev>.
3999
4000 =item D
4001
4002 Leandro Lucarella has written a D language binding (F<ev.d>) for libev, to
4003 be found at L<http://proj.llucax.com.ar/wiki/evd>.
4004
4005 =item Ocaml
4006
4007 Erkki Seppala has written Ocaml bindings for libev, to be found at
4008 L<http://modeemi.cs.tut.fi/~flux/software/ocaml-ev/>.
4009
4010 =item Lua
4011
4012 Brian Maher has written a partial interface to libev for lua (at the
4013 time of this writing, only C<ev_io> and C<ev_timer>), to be found at
4014 L<http://github.com/brimworks/lua-ev>.
4015
4016 =back
4017
4018
4019 =head1 MACRO MAGIC
4020
4021 Libev can be compiled with a variety of options, the most fundamental
4022 of which is C<EV_MULTIPLICITY>. This option determines whether (most)
4023 functions and callbacks have an initial C<struct ev_loop *> argument.
4024
4025 To make it easier to write programs that cope with either variant, the
4026 following macros are defined:
4027
4028 =over 4
4029
4030 =item C<EV_A>, C<EV_A_>
4031
4032 This provides the loop I<argument> for functions, if one is required ("ev
4033 loop argument"). The C<EV_A> form is used when this is the sole argument,
4034 C<EV_A_> is used when other arguments are following. Example:
4035
4036 ev_unref (EV_A);
4037 ev_timer_add (EV_A_ watcher);
4038 ev_run (EV_A_ 0);
4039
4040 It assumes the variable C<loop> of type C<struct ev_loop *> is in scope,
4041 which is often provided by the following macro.
4042
4043 =item C<EV_P>, C<EV_P_>
4044
4045 This provides the loop I<parameter> for functions, if one is required ("ev
4046 loop parameter"). The C<EV_P> form is used when this is the sole parameter,
4047 C<EV_P_> is used when other parameters are following. Example:
4048
4049 // this is how ev_unref is being declared
4050 static void ev_unref (EV_P);
4051
4052 // this is how you can declare your typical callback
4053 static void cb (EV_P_ ev_timer *w, int revents)
4054
4055 It declares a parameter C<loop> of type C<struct ev_loop *>, quite
4056 suitable for use with C<EV_A>.
4057
4058 =item C<EV_DEFAULT>, C<EV_DEFAULT_>
4059
4060 Similar to the other two macros, this gives you the value of the default
4061 loop, if multiple loops are supported ("ev loop default").
4062
4063 =item C<EV_DEFAULT_UC>, C<EV_DEFAULT_UC_>
4064
4065 Usage identical to C<EV_DEFAULT> and C<EV_DEFAULT_>, but requires that the
4066 default loop has been initialised (C<UC> == unchecked). Their behaviour
4067 is undefined when the default loop has not been initialised by a previous
4068 execution of C<EV_DEFAULT>, C<EV_DEFAULT_> or C<ev_default_init (...)>.
4069
4070 It is often prudent to use C<EV_DEFAULT> when initialising the first
4071 watcher in a function but use C<EV_DEFAULT_UC> afterwards.
4072
4073 =back
4074
4075 Example: Declare and initialise a check watcher, utilising the above
4076 macros so it will work regardless of whether multiple loops are supported
4077 or not.
4078
4079 static void
4080 check_cb (EV_P_ ev_timer *w, int revents)
4081 {
4082 ev_check_stop (EV_A_ w);
4083 }
4084
4085 ev_check check;
4086 ev_check_init (&check, check_cb);
4087 ev_check_start (EV_DEFAULT_ &check);
4088 ev_run (EV_DEFAULT_ 0);
4089
4090 =head1 EMBEDDING
4091
4092 Libev can (and often is) directly embedded into host
4093 applications. Examples of applications that embed it include the Deliantra
4094 Game Server, the EV perl module, the GNU Virtual Private Ethernet (gvpe)
4095 and rxvt-unicode.
4096
4097 The goal is to enable you to just copy the necessary files into your
4098 source directory without having to change even a single line in them, so
4099 you can easily upgrade by simply copying (or having a checked-out copy of
4100 libev somewhere in your source tree).
4101
4102 =head2 FILESETS
4103
4104 Depending on what features you need you need to include one or more sets of files
4105 in your application.
4106
4107 =head3 CORE EVENT LOOP
4108
4109 To include only the libev core (all the C<ev_*> functions), with manual
4110 configuration (no autoconf):
4111
4112 #define EV_STANDALONE 1
4113 #include "ev.c"
4114
4115 This will automatically include F<ev.h>, too, and should be done in a
4116 single C source file only to provide the function implementations. To use
4117 it, do the same for F<ev.h> in all files wishing to use this API (best
4118 done by writing a wrapper around F<ev.h> that you can include instead and
4119 where you can put other configuration options):
4120
4121 #define EV_STANDALONE 1
4122 #include "ev.h"
4123
4124 Both header files and implementation files can be compiled with a C++
4125 compiler (at least, that's a stated goal, and breakage will be treated
4126 as a bug).
4127
4128 You need the following files in your source tree, or in a directory
4129 in your include path (e.g. in libev/ when using -Ilibev):
4130
4131 ev.h
4132 ev.c
4133 ev_vars.h
4134 ev_wrap.h
4135
4136 ev_win32.c required on win32 platforms only
4137
4138 ev_select.c only when select backend is enabled (which is enabled by default)
4139 ev_poll.c only when poll backend is enabled (disabled by default)
4140 ev_epoll.c only when the epoll backend is enabled (disabled by default)
4141 ev_kqueue.c only when the kqueue backend is enabled (disabled by default)
4142 ev_port.c only when the solaris port backend is enabled (disabled by default)
4143
4144 F<ev.c> includes the backend files directly when enabled, so you only need
4145 to compile this single file.
4146
4147 =head3 LIBEVENT COMPATIBILITY API
4148
4149 To include the libevent compatibility API, also include:
4150
4151 #include "event.c"
4152
4153 in the file including F<ev.c>, and:
4154
4155 #include "event.h"
4156
4157 in the files that want to use the libevent API. This also includes F<ev.h>.
4158
4159 You need the following additional files for this:
4160
4161 event.h
4162 event.c
4163
4164 =head3 AUTOCONF SUPPORT
4165
4166 Instead of using C<EV_STANDALONE=1> and providing your configuration in
4167 whatever way you want, you can also C<m4_include([libev.m4])> in your
4168 F<configure.ac> and leave C<EV_STANDALONE> undefined. F<ev.c> will then
4169 include F<config.h> and configure itself accordingly.
4170
4171 For this of course you need the m4 file:
4172
4173 libev.m4
4174
4175 =head2 PREPROCESSOR SYMBOLS/MACROS
4176
4177 Libev can be configured via a variety of preprocessor symbols you have to
4178 define before including (or compiling) any of its files. The default in
4179 the absence of autoconf is documented for every option.
4180
4181 Symbols marked with "(h)" do not change the ABI, and can have different
4182 values when compiling libev vs. including F<ev.h>, so it is permissible
4183 to redefine them before including F<ev.h> without breaking compatibility
4184 to a compiled library. All other symbols change the ABI, which means all
4185 users of libev and the libev code itself must be compiled with compatible
4186 settings.
4187
4188 =over 4
4189
4190 =item EV_COMPAT3 (h)
4191
4192 Backwards compatibility is a major concern for libev. This is why this
4193 release of libev comes with wrappers for the functions and symbols that
4194 have been renamed between libev version 3 and 4.
4195
4196 You can disable these wrappers (to test compatibility with future
4197 versions) by defining C<EV_COMPAT3> to C<0> when compiling your
4198 sources. This has the additional advantage that you can drop the C<struct>
4199 from C<struct ev_loop> declarations, as libev will provide an C<ev_loop>
4200 typedef in that case.
4201
4202 In some future version, the default for C<EV_COMPAT3> will become C<0>,
4203 and in some even more future version the compatibility code will be
4204 removed completely.
4205
4206 =item EV_STANDALONE (h)
4207
4208 Must always be C<1> if you do not use autoconf configuration, which
4209 keeps libev from including F<config.h>, and it also defines dummy
4210 implementations for some libevent functions (such as logging, which is not
4211 supported). It will also not define any of the structs usually found in
4212 F<event.h> that are not directly supported by the libev core alone.
4213
4214 In standalone mode, libev will still try to automatically deduce the
4215 configuration, but has to be more conservative.
4216
4217 =item EV_USE_FLOOR
4218
4219 If defined to be C<1>, libev will use the C<floor ()> function for its
4220 periodic reschedule calculations, otherwise libev will fall back on a
4221 portable (slower) implementation. If you enable this, you usually have to
4222 link against libm or something equivalent. Enabling this when the C<floor>
4223 function is not available will fail, so the safe default is to not enable
4224 this.
4225
4226 =item EV_USE_MONOTONIC
4227
4228 If defined to be C<1>, libev will try to detect the availability of the
4229 monotonic clock option at both compile time and runtime. Otherwise no
4230 use of the monotonic clock option will be attempted. If you enable this,
4231 you usually have to link against librt or something similar. Enabling it
4232 when the functionality isn't available is safe, though, although you have
4233 to make sure you link against any libraries where the C<clock_gettime>
4234 function is hiding in (often F<-lrt>). See also C<EV_USE_CLOCK_SYSCALL>.
4235
4236 =item EV_USE_REALTIME
4237
4238 If defined to be C<1>, libev will try to detect the availability of the
4239 real-time clock option at compile time (and assume its availability
4240 at runtime if successful). Otherwise no use of the real-time clock
4241 option will be attempted. This effectively replaces C<gettimeofday>
4242 by C<clock_get (CLOCK_REALTIME, ...)> and will not normally affect
4243 correctness. See the note about libraries in the description of
4244 C<EV_USE_MONOTONIC>, though. Defaults to the opposite value of
4245 C<EV_USE_CLOCK_SYSCALL>.
4246
4247 =item EV_USE_CLOCK_SYSCALL
4248
4249 If defined to be C<1>, libev will try to use a direct syscall instead
4250 of calling the system-provided C<clock_gettime> function. This option
4251 exists because on GNU/Linux, C<clock_gettime> is in C<librt>, but C<librt>
4252 unconditionally pulls in C<libpthread>, slowing down single-threaded
4253 programs needlessly. Using a direct syscall is slightly slower (in
4254 theory), because no optimised vdso implementation can be used, but avoids
4255 the pthread dependency. Defaults to C<1> on GNU/Linux with glibc 2.x or
4256 higher, as it simplifies linking (no need for C<-lrt>).
4257
4258 =item EV_USE_NANOSLEEP
4259
4260 If defined to be C<1>, libev will assume that C<nanosleep ()> is available
4261 and will use it for delays. Otherwise it will use C<select ()>.
4262
4263 =item EV_USE_EVENTFD
4264
4265 If defined to be C<1>, then libev will assume that C<eventfd ()> is
4266 available and will probe for kernel support at runtime. This will improve
4267 C<ev_signal> and C<ev_async> performance and reduce resource consumption.
4268 If undefined, it will be enabled if the headers indicate GNU/Linux + Glibc
4269 2.7 or newer, otherwise disabled.
4270
4271 =item EV_USE_SELECT
4272
4273 If undefined or defined to be C<1>, libev will compile in support for the
4274 C<select>(2) backend. No attempt at auto-detection will be done: if no
4275 other method takes over, select will be it. Otherwise the select backend
4276 will not be compiled in.
4277
4278 =item EV_SELECT_USE_FD_SET
4279
4280 If defined to C<1>, then the select backend will use the system C<fd_set>
4281 structure. This is useful if libev doesn't compile due to a missing
4282 C<NFDBITS> or C<fd_mask> definition or it mis-guesses the bitset layout
4283 on exotic systems. This usually limits the range of file descriptors to
4284 some low limit such as 1024 or might have other limitations (winsocket
4285 only allows 64 sockets). The C<FD_SETSIZE> macro, set before compilation,
4286 configures the maximum size of the C<fd_set>.
4287
4288 =item EV_SELECT_IS_WINSOCKET
4289
4290 When defined to C<1>, the select backend will assume that
4291 select/socket/connect etc. don't understand file descriptors but
4292 wants osf handles on win32 (this is the case when the select to
4293 be used is the winsock select). This means that it will call
4294 C<_get_osfhandle> on the fd to convert it to an OS handle. Otherwise,
4295 it is assumed that all these functions actually work on fds, even
4296 on win32. Should not be defined on non-win32 platforms.
4297
4298 =item EV_FD_TO_WIN32_HANDLE(fd)
4299
4300 If C<EV_SELECT_IS_WINSOCKET> is enabled, then libev needs a way to map
4301 file descriptors to socket handles. When not defining this symbol (the
4302 default), then libev will call C<_get_osfhandle>, which is usually
4303 correct. In some cases, programs use their own file descriptor management,
4304 in which case they can provide this function to map fds to socket handles.
4305
4306 =item EV_WIN32_HANDLE_TO_FD(handle)
4307
4308 If C<EV_SELECT_IS_WINSOCKET> then libev maps handles to file descriptors
4309 using the standard C<_open_osfhandle> function. For programs implementing
4310 their own fd to handle mapping, overwriting this function makes it easier
4311 to do so. This can be done by defining this macro to an appropriate value.
4312
4313 =item EV_WIN32_CLOSE_FD(fd)
4314
4315 If programs implement their own fd to handle mapping on win32, then this
4316 macro can be used to override the C<close> function, useful to unregister
4317 file descriptors again. Note that the replacement function has to close
4318 the underlying OS handle.
4319
4320 =item EV_USE_POLL
4321
4322 If defined to be C<1>, libev will compile in support for the C<poll>(2)
4323 backend. Otherwise it will be enabled on non-win32 platforms. It
4324 takes precedence over select.
4325
4326 =item EV_USE_EPOLL
4327
4328 If defined to be C<1>, libev will compile in support for the Linux
4329 C<epoll>(7) backend. Its availability will be detected at runtime,
4330 otherwise another method will be used as fallback. This is the preferred
4331 backend for GNU/Linux systems. If undefined, it will be enabled if the
4332 headers indicate GNU/Linux + Glibc 2.4 or newer, otherwise disabled.
4333
4334 =item EV_USE_KQUEUE
4335
4336 If defined to be C<1>, libev will compile in support for the BSD style
4337 C<kqueue>(2) backend. Its actual availability will be detected at runtime,
4338 otherwise another method will be used as fallback. This is the preferred
4339 backend for BSD and BSD-like systems, although on most BSDs kqueue only
4340 supports some types of fds correctly (the only platform we found that
4341 supports ptys for example was NetBSD), so kqueue might be compiled in, but
4342 not be used unless explicitly requested. The best way to use it is to find
4343 out whether kqueue supports your type of fd properly and use an embedded
4344 kqueue loop.
4345
4346 =item EV_USE_PORT
4347
4348 If defined to be C<1>, libev will compile in support for the Solaris
4349 10 port style backend. Its availability will be detected at runtime,
4350 otherwise another method will be used as fallback. This is the preferred
4351 backend for Solaris 10 systems.
4352
4353 =item EV_USE_DEVPOLL
4354
4355 Reserved for future expansion, works like the USE symbols above.
4356
4357 =item EV_USE_INOTIFY
4358
4359 If defined to be C<1>, libev will compile in support for the Linux inotify
4360 interface to speed up C<ev_stat> watchers. Its actual availability will
4361 be detected at runtime. If undefined, it will be enabled if the headers
4362 indicate GNU/Linux + Glibc 2.4 or newer, otherwise disabled.
4363
4364 =item EV_ATOMIC_T
4365
4366 Libev requires an integer type (suitable for storing C<0> or C<1>) whose
4367 access is atomic with respect to other threads or signal contexts. No such
4368 type is easily found in the C language, so you can provide your own type
4369 that you know is safe for your purposes. It is used both for signal handler "locking"
4370 as well as for signal and thread safety in C<ev_async> watchers.
4371
4372 In the absence of this define, libev will use C<sig_atomic_t volatile>
4373 (from F<signal.h>), which is usually good enough on most platforms.
4374
4375 =item EV_H (h)
4376
4377 The name of the F<ev.h> header file used to include it. The default if
4378 undefined is C<"ev.h"> in F<event.h>, F<ev.c> and F<ev++.h>. This can be
4379 used to virtually rename the F<ev.h> header file in case of conflicts.
4380
4381 =item EV_CONFIG_H (h)
4382
4383 If C<EV_STANDALONE> isn't C<1>, this variable can be used to override
4384 F<ev.c>'s idea of where to find the F<config.h> file, similarly to
4385 C<EV_H>, above.
4386
4387 =item EV_EVENT_H (h)
4388
4389 Similarly to C<EV_H>, this macro can be used to override F<event.c>'s idea
4390 of how the F<event.h> header can be found, the default is C<"event.h">.
4391
4392 =item EV_PROTOTYPES (h)
4393
4394 If defined to be C<0>, then F<ev.h> will not define any function
4395 prototypes, but still define all the structs and other symbols. This is
4396 occasionally useful if you want to provide your own wrapper functions
4397 around libev functions.
4398
4399 =item EV_MULTIPLICITY
4400
4401 If undefined or defined to C<1>, then all event-loop-specific functions
4402 will have the C<struct ev_loop *> as first argument, and you can create
4403 additional independent event loops. Otherwise there will be no support
4404 for multiple event loops and there is no first event loop pointer
4405 argument. Instead, all functions act on the single default loop.
4406
4407 =item EV_MINPRI
4408
4409 =item EV_MAXPRI
4410
4411 The range of allowed priorities. C<EV_MINPRI> must be smaller or equal to
4412 C<EV_MAXPRI>, but otherwise there are no non-obvious limitations. You can
4413 provide for more priorities by overriding those symbols (usually defined
4414 to be C<-2> and C<2>, respectively).
4415
4416 When doing priority-based operations, libev usually has to linearly search
4417 all the priorities, so having many of them (hundreds) uses a lot of space
4418 and time, so using the defaults of five priorities (-2 .. +2) is usually
4419 fine.
4420
4421 If your embedding application does not need any priorities, defining these
4422 both to C<0> will save some memory and CPU.
4423
4424 =item EV_PERIODIC_ENABLE, EV_IDLE_ENABLE, EV_EMBED_ENABLE, EV_STAT_ENABLE,
4425 EV_PREPARE_ENABLE, EV_CHECK_ENABLE, EV_FORK_ENABLE, EV_SIGNAL_ENABLE,
4426 EV_ASYNC_ENABLE, EV_CHILD_ENABLE.
4427
4428 If undefined or defined to be C<1> (and the platform supports it), then
4429 the respective watcher type is supported. If defined to be C<0>, then it
4430 is not. Disabling watcher types mainly saves code size.
4431
4432 =item EV_FEATURES
4433
4434 If you need to shave off some kilobytes of code at the expense of some
4435 speed (but with the full API), you can define this symbol to request
4436 certain subsets of functionality. The default is to enable all features
4437 that can be enabled on the platform.
4438
4439 A typical way to use this symbol is to define it to C<0> (or to a bitset
4440 with some broad features you want) and then selectively re-enable
4441 additional parts you want, for example if you want everything minimal,
4442 but multiple event loop support, async and child watchers and the poll
4443 backend, use this:
4444
4445 #define EV_FEATURES 0
4446 #define EV_MULTIPLICITY 1
4447 #define EV_USE_POLL 1
4448 #define EV_CHILD_ENABLE 1
4449 #define EV_ASYNC_ENABLE 1
4450
4451 The actual value is a bitset, it can be a combination of the following
4452 values:
4453
4454 =over 4
4455
4456 =item C<1> - faster/larger code
4457
4458 Use larger code to speed up some operations.
4459
4460 Currently this is used to override some inlining decisions (enlarging the
4461 code size by roughly 30% on amd64).
4462
4463 When optimising for size, use of compiler flags such as C<-Os> with
4464 gcc is recommended, as well as C<-DNDEBUG>, as libev contains a number of
4465 assertions.
4466
4467 =item C<2> - faster/larger data structures
4468
4469 Replaces the small 2-heap for timer management by a faster 4-heap, larger
4470 hash table sizes and so on. This will usually further increase code size
4471 and can additionally have an effect on the size of data structures at
4472 runtime.
4473
4474 =item C<4> - full API configuration
4475
4476 This enables priorities (sets C<EV_MAXPRI>=2 and C<EV_MINPRI>=-2), and
4477 enables multiplicity (C<EV_MULTIPLICITY>=1).
4478
4479 =item C<8> - full API
4480
4481 This enables a lot of the "lesser used" API functions. See C<ev.h> for
4482 details on which parts of the API are still available without this
4483 feature, and do not complain if this subset changes over time.
4484
4485 =item C<16> - enable all optional watcher types
4486
4487 Enables all optional watcher types. If you want to selectively enable
4488 only some watcher types other than I/O and timers (e.g. prepare,
4489 embed, async, child...) you can enable them manually by defining
4490 C<EV_watchertype_ENABLE> to C<1> instead.
4491
4492 =item C<32> - enable all backends
4493
4494 This enables all backends - without this feature, you need to enable at
4495 least one backend manually (C<EV_USE_SELECT> is a good choice).
4496
4497 =item C<64> - enable OS-specific "helper" APIs
4498
4499 Enable inotify, eventfd, signalfd and similar OS-specific helper APIs by
4500 default.
4501
4502 =back
4503
4504 Compiling with C<gcc -Os -DEV_STANDALONE -DEV_USE_EPOLL=1 -DEV_FEATURES=0>
4505 reduces the compiled size of libev from 24.7Kb code/2.8Kb data to 6.5Kb
4506 code/0.3Kb data on my GNU/Linux amd64 system, while still giving you I/O
4507 watchers, timers and monotonic clock support.
4508
4509 With an intelligent-enough linker (gcc+binutils are intelligent enough
4510 when you use C<-Wl,--gc-sections -ffunction-sections>) functions unused by
4511 your program might be left out as well - a binary starting a timer and an
4512 I/O watcher then might come out at only 5Kb.
4513
4514 =item EV_AVOID_STDIO
4515
4516 If this is set to C<1> at compiletime, then libev will avoid using stdio
4517 functions (printf, scanf, perror etc.). This will increase the code size
4518 somewhat, but if your program doesn't otherwise depend on stdio and your
4519 libc allows it, this avoids linking in the stdio library which is quite
4520 big.
4521
4522 Note that error messages might become less precise when this option is
4523 enabled.
4524
4525 =item EV_NSIG
4526
4527 The highest supported signal number, +1 (or, the number of
4528 signals): Normally, libev tries to deduce the maximum number of signals
4529 automatically, but sometimes this fails, in which case it can be
4530 specified. Also, using a lower number than detected (C<32> should be
4531 good for about any system in existence) can save some memory, as libev
4532 statically allocates some 12-24 bytes per signal number.
4533
4534 =item EV_PID_HASHSIZE
4535
4536 C<ev_child> watchers use a small hash table to distribute workload by
4537 pid. The default size is C<16> (or C<1> with C<EV_FEATURES> disabled),
4538 usually more than enough. If you need to manage thousands of children you
4539 might want to increase this value (I<must> be a power of two).
4540
4541 =item EV_INOTIFY_HASHSIZE
4542
4543 C<ev_stat> watchers use a small hash table to distribute workload by
4544 inotify watch id. The default size is C<16> (or C<1> with C<EV_FEATURES>
4545 disabled), usually more than enough. If you need to manage thousands of
4546 C<ev_stat> watchers you might want to increase this value (I<must> be a
4547 power of two).
4548
4549 =item EV_USE_4HEAP
4550
4551 Heaps are not very cache-efficient. To improve the cache-efficiency of the
4552 timer and periodics heaps, libev uses a 4-heap when this symbol is defined
4553 to C<1>. The 4-heap uses more complicated (longer) code but has noticeably
4554 faster performance with many (thousands) of watchers.
4555
4556 The default is C<1>, unless C<EV_FEATURES> overrides it, in which case it
4557 will be C<0>.
4558
4559 =item EV_HEAP_CACHE_AT
4560
4561 Heaps are not very cache-efficient. To improve the cache-efficiency of the
4562 timer and periodics heaps, libev can cache the timestamp (I<at>) within
4563 the heap structure (selected by defining C<EV_HEAP_CACHE_AT> to C<1>),
4564 which uses 8-12 bytes more per watcher and a few hundred bytes more code,
4565 but avoids random read accesses on heap changes. This improves performance
4566 noticeably with many (hundreds) of watchers.
4567
4568 The default is C<1>, unless C<EV_FEATURES> overrides it, in which case it
4569 will be C<0>.
4570
4571 =item EV_VERIFY
4572
4573 Controls how much internal verification (see C<ev_verify ()>) will
4574 be done: If set to C<0>, no internal verification code will be compiled
4575 in. If set to C<1>, then verification code will be compiled in, but not
4576 called. If set to C<2>, then the internal verification code will be
4577 called once per loop, which can slow down libev. If set to C<3>, then the
4578 verification code will be called very frequently, which will slow down
4579 libev considerably.
4580
4581 The default is C<1>, unless C<EV_FEATURES> overrides it, in which case it
4582 will be C<0>.
4583
4584 =item EV_COMMON
4585
4586 By default, all watchers have a C<void *data> member. By redefining
4587 this macro to something else you can include more and other types of
4588 members. You have to define it each time you include one of the files,
4589 though, and it must be identical each time.
4590
4591 For example, the perl EV module uses something like this:
4592
4593 #define EV_COMMON \
4594 SV *self; /* contains this struct */ \
4595 SV *cb_sv, *fh /* note no trailing ";" */
4596
4597 =item EV_CB_DECLARE (type)
4598
4599 =item EV_CB_INVOKE (watcher, revents)
4600
4601 =item ev_set_cb (ev, cb)
4602
4603 Can be used to change the callback member declaration in each watcher,
4604 and the way callbacks are invoked and set. Must expand to a struct member
4605 definition and a statement, respectively. See the F<ev.h> header file for
4606 their default definitions. One possible use for overriding these is to
4607 avoid the C<struct ev_loop *> as first argument in all cases, or to use
4608 method calls instead of plain function calls in C++.
4609
4610 =back
4611
4612 =head2 EXPORTED API SYMBOLS
4613
4614 If you need to re-export the API (e.g. via a DLL) and you need a list of
4615 exported symbols, you can use the provided F<Symbol.*> files which list
4616 all public symbols, one per line:
4617
4618 Symbols.ev for libev proper
4619 Symbols.event for the libevent emulation
4620
4621 This can also be used to rename all public symbols to avoid clashes with
4622 multiple versions of libev linked together (which is obviously bad in
4623 itself, but sometimes it is inconvenient to avoid this).
4624
4625 A sed command like this will create wrapper C<#define>'s that you need to
4626 include before including F<ev.h>:
4627
4628 <Symbols.ev sed -e "s/.*/#define & myprefix_&/" >wrap.h
4629
4630 This would create a file F<wrap.h> which essentially looks like this:
4631
4632 #define ev_backend myprefix_ev_backend
4633 #define ev_check_start myprefix_ev_check_start
4634 #define ev_check_stop myprefix_ev_check_stop
4635 ...
4636
4637 =head2 EXAMPLES
4638
4639 For a real-world example of a program the includes libev
4640 verbatim, you can have a look at the EV perl module
4641 (L<http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/EV.html>). It has the libev files in
4642 the F<libev/> subdirectory and includes them in the F<EV/EVAPI.h> (public
4643 interface) and F<EV.xs> (implementation) files. Only the F<EV.xs> file
4644 will be compiled. It is pretty complex because it provides its own header
4645 file.
4646
4647 The usage in rxvt-unicode is simpler. It has a F<ev_cpp.h> header file
4648 that everybody includes and which overrides some configure choices:
4649
4650 #define EV_FEATURES 8
4651 #define EV_USE_SELECT 1
4652 #define EV_PREPARE_ENABLE 1
4653 #define EV_IDLE_ENABLE 1
4654 #define EV_SIGNAL_ENABLE 1
4655 #define EV_CHILD_ENABLE 1
4656 #define EV_USE_STDEXCEPT 0
4657 #define EV_CONFIG_H <config.h>
4658
4659 #include "ev++.h"
4660
4661 And a F<ev_cpp.C> implementation file that contains libev proper and is compiled:
4662
4663 #include "ev_cpp.h"
4664 #include "ev.c"
4665
4666 =head1 INTERACTION WITH OTHER PROGRAMS, LIBRARIES OR THE ENVIRONMENT
4667
4668 =head2 THREADS AND COROUTINES
4669
4670 =head3 THREADS
4671
4672 All libev functions are reentrant and thread-safe unless explicitly
4673 documented otherwise, but libev implements no locking itself. This means
4674 that you can use as many loops as you want in parallel, as long as there
4675 are no concurrent calls into any libev function with the same loop
4676 parameter (C<ev_default_*> calls have an implicit default loop parameter,
4677 of course): libev guarantees that different event loops share no data
4678 structures that need any locking.
4679
4680 Or to put it differently: calls with different loop parameters can be done
4681 concurrently from multiple threads, calls with the same loop parameter
4682 must be done serially (but can be done from different threads, as long as
4683 only one thread ever is inside a call at any point in time, e.g. by using
4684 a mutex per loop).
4685
4686 Specifically to support threads (and signal handlers), libev implements
4687 so-called C<ev_async> watchers, which allow some limited form of
4688 concurrency on the same event loop, namely waking it up "from the
4689 outside".
4690
4691 If you want to know which design (one loop, locking, or multiple loops
4692 without or something else still) is best for your problem, then I cannot
4693 help you, but here is some generic advice:
4694
4695 =over 4
4696
4697 =item * most applications have a main thread: use the default libev loop
4698 in that thread, or create a separate thread running only the default loop.
4699
4700 This helps integrating other libraries or software modules that use libev
4701 themselves and don't care/know about threading.
4702
4703 =item * one loop per thread is usually a good model.
4704
4705 Doing this is almost never wrong, sometimes a better-performance model
4706 exists, but it is always a good start.
4707
4708 =item * other models exist, such as the leader/follower pattern, where one
4709 loop is handed through multiple threads in a kind of round-robin fashion.
4710
4711 Choosing a model is hard - look around, learn, know that usually you can do
4712 better than you currently do :-)
4713
4714 =item * often you need to talk to some other thread which blocks in the
4715 event loop.
4716
4717 C<ev_async> watchers can be used to wake them up from other threads safely
4718 (or from signal contexts...).
4719
4720 An example use would be to communicate signals or other events that only
4721 work in the default loop by registering the signal watcher with the
4722 default loop and triggering an C<ev_async> watcher from the default loop
4723 watcher callback into the event loop interested in the signal.
4724
4725 =back
4726
4727 See also L<THREAD LOCKING EXAMPLE>.
4728
4729 =head3 COROUTINES
4730
4731 Libev is very accommodating to coroutines ("cooperative threads"):
4732 libev fully supports nesting calls to its functions from different
4733 coroutines (e.g. you can call C<ev_run> on the same loop from two
4734 different coroutines, and switch freely between both coroutines running
4735 the loop, as long as you don't confuse yourself). The only exception is
4736 that you must not do this from C<ev_periodic> reschedule callbacks.
4737
4738 Care has been taken to ensure that libev does not keep local state inside
4739 C<ev_run>, and other calls do not usually allow for coroutine switches as
4740 they do not call any callbacks.
4741
4742 =head2 COMPILER WARNINGS
4743
4744 Depending on your compiler and compiler settings, you might get no or a
4745 lot of warnings when compiling libev code. Some people are apparently
4746 scared by this.
4747
4748 However, these are unavoidable for many reasons. For one, each compiler
4749 has different warnings, and each user has different tastes regarding
4750 warning options. "Warn-free" code therefore cannot be a goal except when
4751 targeting a specific compiler and compiler-version.
4752
4753 Another reason is that some compiler warnings require elaborate
4754 workarounds, or other changes to the code that make it less clear and less
4755 maintainable.
4756
4757 And of course, some compiler warnings are just plain stupid, or simply
4758 wrong (because they don't actually warn about the condition their message
4759 seems to warn about). For example, certain older gcc versions had some
4760 warnings that resulted in an extreme number of false positives. These have
4761 been fixed, but some people still insist on making code warn-free with
4762 such buggy versions.
4763
4764 While libev is written to generate as few warnings as possible,
4765 "warn-free" code is not a goal, and it is recommended not to build libev
4766 with any compiler warnings enabled unless you are prepared to cope with
4767 them (e.g. by ignoring them). Remember that warnings are just that:
4768 warnings, not errors, or proof of bugs.
4769
4770
4771 =head2 VALGRIND
4772
4773 Valgrind has a special section here because it is a popular tool that is
4774 highly useful. Unfortunately, valgrind reports are very hard to interpret.
4775
4776 If you think you found a bug (memory leak, uninitialised data access etc.)
4777 in libev, then check twice: If valgrind reports something like:
4778
4779 ==2274== definitely lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks.
4780 ==2274== possibly lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks.
4781 ==2274== still reachable: 256 bytes in 1 blocks.
4782
4783 Then there is no memory leak, just as memory accounted to global variables
4784 is not a memleak - the memory is still being referenced, and didn't leak.
4785
4786 Similarly, under some circumstances, valgrind might report kernel bugs
4787 as if it were a bug in libev (e.g. in realloc or in the poll backend,
4788 although an acceptable workaround has been found here), or it might be
4789 confused.
4790
4791 Keep in mind that valgrind is a very good tool, but only a tool. Don't
4792 make it into some kind of religion.
4793
4794 If you are unsure about something, feel free to contact the mailing list
4795 with the full valgrind report and an explanation on why you think this
4796 is a bug in libev (best check the archives, too :). However, don't be
4797 annoyed when you get a brisk "this is no bug" answer and take the chance
4798 of learning how to interpret valgrind properly.
4799
4800 If you need, for some reason, empty reports from valgrind for your project
4801 I suggest using suppression lists.
4802
4803
4804 =head1 PORTABILITY NOTES
4805
4806 =head2 GNU/LINUX 32 BIT LIMITATIONS
4807
4808 GNU/Linux is the only common platform that supports 64 bit file/large file
4809 interfaces but I<disables> them by default.
4810
4811 That means that libev compiled in the default environment doesn't support
4812 files larger than 2GiB or so, which mainly affects C<ev_stat> watchers.
4813
4814 Unfortunately, many programs try to work around this GNU/Linux issue
4815 by enabling the large file API, which makes them incompatible with the
4816 standard libev compiled for their system.
4817
4818 Likewise, libev cannot enable the large file API itself as this would
4819 suddenly make it incompatible to the default compile time environment,
4820 i.e. all programs not using special compile switches.
4821
4822 =head2 OS/X AND DARWIN BUGS
4823
4824 The whole thing is a bug if you ask me - basically any system interface
4825 you touch is broken, whether it is locales, poll, kqueue or even the
4826 OpenGL drivers.
4827
4828 =head3 C<kqueue> is buggy
4829
4830 The kqueue syscall is broken in all known versions - most versions support
4831 only sockets, many support pipes.
4832
4833 Libev tries to work around this by not using C<kqueue> by default on this
4834 rotten platform, but of course you can still ask for it when creating a
4835 loop - embedding a socket-only kqueue loop into a select-based one is
4836 probably going to work well.
4837
4838 =head3 C<poll> is buggy
4839
4840 Instead of fixing C<kqueue>, Apple replaced their (working) C<poll>
4841 implementation by something calling C<kqueue> internally around the 10.5.6
4842 release, so now C<kqueue> I<and> C<poll> are broken.
4843
4844 Libev tries to work around this by not using C<poll> by default on
4845 this rotten platform, but of course you can still ask for it when creating
4846 a loop.
4847
4848 =head3 C<select> is buggy
4849
4850 All that's left is C<select>, and of course Apple found a way to fuck this
4851 one up as well: On OS/X, C<select> actively limits the number of file
4852 descriptors you can pass in to 1024 - your program suddenly crashes when
4853 you use more.
4854
4855 There is an undocumented "workaround" for this - defining
4856 C<_DARWIN_UNLIMITED_SELECT>, which libev tries to use, so select I<should>
4857 work on OS/X.
4858
4859 =head2 SOLARIS PROBLEMS AND WORKAROUNDS
4860
4861 =head3 C<errno> reentrancy
4862
4863 The default compile environment on Solaris is unfortunately so
4864 thread-unsafe that you can't even use components/libraries compiled
4865 without C<-D_REENTRANT> in a threaded program, which, of course, isn't
4866 defined by default. A valid, if stupid, implementation choice.
4867
4868 If you want to use libev in threaded environments you have to make sure
4869 it's compiled with C<_REENTRANT> defined.
4870
4871 =head3 Event port backend
4872
4873 The scalable event interface for Solaris is called "event
4874 ports". Unfortunately, this mechanism is very buggy in all major
4875 releases. If you run into high CPU usage, your program freezes or you get
4876 a large number of spurious wakeups, make sure you have all the relevant
4877 and latest kernel patches applied. No, I don't know which ones, but there
4878 are multiple ones to apply, and afterwards, event ports actually work
4879 great.
4880
4881 If you can't get it to work, you can try running the program by setting
4882 the environment variable C<LIBEV_FLAGS=3> to only allow C<poll> and
4883 C<select> backends.
4884
4885 =head2 AIX POLL BUG
4886
4887 AIX unfortunately has a broken C<poll.h> header. Libev works around
4888 this by trying to avoid the poll backend altogether (i.e. it's not even
4889 compiled in), which normally isn't a big problem as C<select> works fine
4890 with large bitsets on AIX, and AIX is dead anyway.
4891
4892 =head2 WIN32 PLATFORM LIMITATIONS AND WORKAROUNDS
4893
4894 =head3 General issues
4895
4896 Win32 doesn't support any of the standards (e.g. POSIX) that libev
4897 requires, and its I/O model is fundamentally incompatible with the POSIX
4898 model. Libev still offers limited functionality on this platform in
4899 the form of the C<EVBACKEND_SELECT> backend, and only supports socket
4900 descriptors. This only applies when using Win32 natively, not when using
4901 e.g. cygwin. Actually, it only applies to the microsofts own compilers,
4902 as every compielr comes with a slightly differently broken/incompatible
4903 environment.
4904
4905 Lifting these limitations would basically require the full
4906 re-implementation of the I/O system. If you are into this kind of thing,
4907 then note that glib does exactly that for you in a very portable way (note
4908 also that glib is the slowest event library known to man).
4909
4910 There is no supported compilation method available on windows except
4911 embedding it into other applications.
4912
4913 Sensible signal handling is officially unsupported by Microsoft - libev
4914 tries its best, but under most conditions, signals will simply not work.
4915
4916 Not a libev limitation but worth mentioning: windows apparently doesn't
4917 accept large writes: instead of resulting in a partial write, windows will
4918 either accept everything or return C<ENOBUFS> if the buffer is too large,
4919 so make sure you only write small amounts into your sockets (less than a
4920 megabyte seems safe, but this apparently depends on the amount of memory
4921 available).
4922
4923 Due to the many, low, and arbitrary limits on the win32 platform and
4924 the abysmal performance of winsockets, using a large number of sockets
4925 is not recommended (and not reasonable). If your program needs to use
4926 more than a hundred or so sockets, then likely it needs to use a totally
4927 different implementation for windows, as libev offers the POSIX readiness
4928 notification model, which cannot be implemented efficiently on windows
4929 (due to Microsoft monopoly games).
4930
4931 A typical way to use libev under windows is to embed it (see the embedding
4932 section for details) and use the following F<evwrap.h> header file instead
4933 of F<ev.h>:
4934
4935 #define EV_STANDALONE /* keeps ev from requiring config.h */
4936 #define EV_SELECT_IS_WINSOCKET 1 /* configure libev for windows select */
4937
4938 #include "ev.h"
4939
4940 And compile the following F<evwrap.c> file into your project (make sure
4941 you do I<not> compile the F<ev.c> or any other embedded source files!):
4942
4943 #include "evwrap.h"
4944 #include "ev.c"
4945
4946 =head3 The winsocket C<select> function
4947
4948 The winsocket C<select> function doesn't follow POSIX in that it
4949 requires socket I<handles> and not socket I<file descriptors> (it is
4950 also extremely buggy). This makes select very inefficient, and also
4951 requires a mapping from file descriptors to socket handles (the Microsoft
4952 C runtime provides the function C<_open_osfhandle> for this). See the
4953 discussion of the C<EV_SELECT_USE_FD_SET>, C<EV_SELECT_IS_WINSOCKET> and
4954 C<EV_FD_TO_WIN32_HANDLE> preprocessor symbols for more info.
4955
4956 The configuration for a "naked" win32 using the Microsoft runtime
4957 libraries and raw winsocket select is:
4958
4959 #define EV_USE_SELECT 1
4960 #define EV_SELECT_IS_WINSOCKET 1 /* forces EV_SELECT_USE_FD_SET, too */
4961
4962 Note that winsockets handling of fd sets is O(n), so you can easily get a
4963 complexity in the O(n²) range when using win32.
4964
4965 =head3 Limited number of file descriptors
4966
4967 Windows has numerous arbitrary (and low) limits on things.
4968
4969 Early versions of winsocket's select only supported waiting for a maximum
4970 of C<64> handles (probably owning to the fact that all windows kernels
4971 can only wait for C<64> things at the same time internally; Microsoft
4972 recommends spawning a chain of threads and wait for 63 handles and the
4973 previous thread in each. Sounds great!).
4974
4975 Newer versions support more handles, but you need to define C<FD_SETSIZE>
4976 to some high number (e.g. C<2048>) before compiling the winsocket select
4977 call (which might be in libev or elsewhere, for example, perl and many
4978 other interpreters do their own select emulation on windows).
4979
4980 Another limit is the number of file descriptors in the Microsoft runtime
4981 libraries, which by default is C<64> (there must be a hidden I<64>
4982 fetish or something like this inside Microsoft). You can increase this
4983 by calling C<_setmaxstdio>, which can increase this limit to C<2048>
4984 (another arbitrary limit), but is broken in many versions of the Microsoft
4985 runtime libraries. This might get you to about C<512> or C<2048> sockets
4986 (depending on windows version and/or the phase of the moon). To get more,
4987 you need to wrap all I/O functions and provide your own fd management, but
4988 the cost of calling select (O(n²)) will likely make this unworkable.
4989
4990 =head2 PORTABILITY REQUIREMENTS
4991
4992 In addition to a working ISO-C implementation and of course the
4993 backend-specific APIs, libev relies on a few additional extensions:
4994
4995 =over 4
4996
4997 =item C<void (*)(ev_watcher_type *, int revents)> must have compatible
4998 calling conventions regardless of C<ev_watcher_type *>.
4999
5000 Libev assumes not only that all watcher pointers have the same internal
5001 structure (guaranteed by POSIX but not by ISO C for example), but it also
5002 assumes that the same (machine) code can be used to call any watcher
5003 callback: The watcher callbacks have different type signatures, but libev
5004 calls them using an C<ev_watcher *> internally.
5005
5006 =item pointer accesses must be thread-atomic
5007
5008 Accessing a pointer value must be atomic, it must both be readable and
5009 writable in one piece - this is the case on all current architectures.
5010
5011 =item C<sig_atomic_t volatile> must be thread-atomic as well
5012
5013 The type C<sig_atomic_t volatile> (or whatever is defined as
5014 C<EV_ATOMIC_T>) must be atomic with respect to accesses from different
5015 threads. This is not part of the specification for C<sig_atomic_t>, but is
5016 believed to be sufficiently portable.
5017
5018 =item C<sigprocmask> must work in a threaded environment
5019
5020 Libev uses C<sigprocmask> to temporarily block signals. This is not
5021 allowed in a threaded program (C<pthread_sigmask> has to be used). Typical
5022 pthread implementations will either allow C<sigprocmask> in the "main
5023 thread" or will block signals process-wide, both behaviours would
5024 be compatible with libev. Interaction between C<sigprocmask> and
5025 C<pthread_sigmask> could complicate things, however.
5026
5027 The most portable way to handle signals is to block signals in all threads
5028 except the initial one, and run the default loop in the initial thread as
5029 well.
5030
5031 =item C<long> must be large enough for common memory allocation sizes
5032
5033 To improve portability and simplify its API, libev uses C<long> internally
5034 instead of C<size_t> when allocating its data structures. On non-POSIX
5035 systems (Microsoft...) this might be unexpectedly low, but is still at
5036 least 31 bits everywhere, which is enough for hundreds of millions of
5037 watchers.
5038
5039 =item C<double> must hold a time value in seconds with enough accuracy
5040
5041 The type C<double> is used to represent timestamps. It is required to
5042 have at least 51 bits of mantissa (and 9 bits of exponent), which is
5043 good enough for at least into the year 4000 with millisecond accuracy
5044 (the design goal for libev). This requirement is overfulfilled by
5045 implementations using IEEE 754, which is basically all existing ones. With
5046 IEEE 754 doubles, you get microsecond accuracy until at least 2200.
5047
5048 =back
5049
5050 If you know of other additional requirements drop me a note.
5051
5052
5053 =head1 ALGORITHMIC COMPLEXITIES
5054
5055 In this section the complexities of (many of) the algorithms used inside
5056 libev will be documented. For complexity discussions about backends see
5057 the documentation for C<ev_default_init>.
5058
5059 All of the following are about amortised time: If an array needs to be
5060 extended, libev needs to realloc and move the whole array, but this
5061 happens asymptotically rarer with higher number of elements, so O(1) might
5062 mean that libev does a lengthy realloc operation in rare cases, but on
5063 average it is much faster and asymptotically approaches constant time.
5064
5065 =over 4
5066
5067 =item Starting and stopping timer/periodic watchers: O(log skipped_other_timers)
5068
5069 This means that, when you have a watcher that triggers in one hour and
5070 there are 100 watchers that would trigger before that, then inserting will
5071 have to skip roughly seven (C<ld 100>) of these watchers.
5072
5073 =item Changing timer/periodic watchers (by autorepeat or calling again): O(log skipped_other_timers)
5074
5075 That means that changing a timer costs less than removing/adding them,
5076 as only the relative motion in the event queue has to be paid for.
5077
5078 =item Starting io/check/prepare/idle/signal/child/fork/async watchers: O(1)
5079
5080 These just add the watcher into an array or at the head of a list.
5081
5082 =item Stopping check/prepare/idle/fork/async watchers: O(1)
5083
5084 =item Stopping an io/signal/child watcher: O(number_of_watchers_for_this_(fd/signal/pid % EV_PID_HASHSIZE))
5085
5086 These watchers are stored in lists, so they need to be walked to find the
5087 correct watcher to remove. The lists are usually short (you don't usually
5088 have many watchers waiting for the same fd or signal: one is typical, two
5089 is rare).
5090
5091 =item Finding the next timer in each loop iteration: O(1)
5092
5093 By virtue of using a binary or 4-heap, the next timer is always found at a
5094 fixed position in the storage array.
5095
5096 =item Each change on a file descriptor per loop iteration: O(number_of_watchers_for_this_fd)
5097
5098 A change means an I/O watcher gets started or stopped, which requires
5099 libev to recalculate its status (and possibly tell the kernel, depending
5100 on backend and whether C<ev_io_set> was used).
5101
5102 =item Activating one watcher (putting it into the pending state): O(1)
5103
5104 =item Priority handling: O(number_of_priorities)
5105
5106 Priorities are implemented by allocating some space for each
5107 priority. When doing priority-based operations, libev usually has to
5108 linearly search all the priorities, but starting/stopping and activating
5109 watchers becomes O(1) with respect to priority handling.
5110
5111 =item Sending an ev_async: O(1)
5112
5113 =item Processing ev_async_send: O(number_of_async_watchers)
5114
5115 =item Processing signals: O(max_signal_number)
5116
5117 Sending involves a system call I<iff> there were no other C<ev_async_send>
5118 calls in the current loop iteration. Checking for async and signal events
5119 involves iterating over all running async watchers or all signal numbers.
5120
5121 =back
5122
5123
5124 =head1 PORTING FROM LIBEV 3.X TO 4.X
5125
5126 The major version 4 introduced some incompatible changes to the API.
5127
5128 At the moment, the C<ev.h> header file provides compatibility definitions
5129 for all changes, so most programs should still compile. The compatibility
5130 layer might be removed in later versions of libev, so better update to the
5131 new API early than late.
5132
5133 =over 4
5134
5135 =item C<EV_COMPAT3> backwards compatibility mechanism
5136
5137 The backward compatibility mechanism can be controlled by
5138 C<EV_COMPAT3>. See L<PREPROCESSOR SYMBOLS/MACROS> in the L<EMBEDDING>
5139 section.
5140
5141 =item C<ev_default_destroy> and C<ev_default_fork> have been removed
5142
5143 These calls can be replaced easily by their C<ev_loop_xxx> counterparts:
5144
5145 ev_loop_destroy (EV_DEFAULT_UC);
5146 ev_loop_fork (EV_DEFAULT);
5147
5148 =item function/symbol renames
5149
5150 A number of functions and symbols have been renamed:
5151
5152 ev_loop => ev_run
5153 EVLOOP_NONBLOCK => EVRUN_NOWAIT
5154 EVLOOP_ONESHOT => EVRUN_ONCE
5155
5156 ev_unloop => ev_break
5157 EVUNLOOP_CANCEL => EVBREAK_CANCEL
5158 EVUNLOOP_ONE => EVBREAK_ONE
5159 EVUNLOOP_ALL => EVBREAK_ALL
5160
5161 EV_TIMEOUT => EV_TIMER
5162
5163 ev_loop_count => ev_iteration
5164 ev_loop_depth => ev_depth
5165 ev_loop_verify => ev_verify
5166
5167 Most functions working on C<struct ev_loop> objects don't have an
5168 C<ev_loop_> prefix, so it was removed; C<ev_loop>, C<ev_unloop> and
5169 associated constants have been renamed to not collide with the C<struct
5170 ev_loop> anymore and C<EV_TIMER> now follows the same naming scheme
5171 as all other watcher types. Note that C<ev_loop_fork> is still called
5172 C<ev_loop_fork> because it would otherwise clash with the C<ev_fork>
5173 typedef.
5174
5175 =item C<EV_MINIMAL> mechanism replaced by C<EV_FEATURES>
5176
5177 The preprocessor symbol C<EV_MINIMAL> has been replaced by a different
5178 mechanism, C<EV_FEATURES>. Programs using C<EV_MINIMAL> usually compile
5179 and work, but the library code will of course be larger.
5180
5181 =back
5182
5183
5184 =head1 GLOSSARY
5185
5186 =over 4
5187
5188 =item active
5189
5190 A watcher is active as long as it has been started and not yet stopped.
5191 See L<WATCHER STATES> for details.
5192
5193 =item application
5194
5195 In this document, an application is whatever is using libev.
5196
5197 =item backend
5198
5199 The part of the code dealing with the operating system interfaces.
5200
5201 =item callback
5202
5203 The address of a function that is called when some event has been
5204 detected. Callbacks are being passed the event loop, the watcher that
5205 received the event, and the actual event bitset.
5206
5207 =item callback/watcher invocation
5208
5209 The act of calling the callback associated with a watcher.
5210
5211 =item event
5212
5213 A change of state of some external event, such as data now being available
5214 for reading on a file descriptor, time having passed or simply not having
5215 any other events happening anymore.
5216
5217 In libev, events are represented as single bits (such as C<EV_READ> or
5218 C<EV_TIMER>).
5219
5220 =item event library
5221
5222 A software package implementing an event model and loop.
5223
5224 =item event loop
5225
5226 An entity that handles and processes external events and converts them
5227 into callback invocations.
5228
5229 =item event model
5230
5231 The model used to describe how an event loop handles and processes
5232 watchers and events.
5233
5234 =item pending
5235
5236 A watcher is pending as soon as the corresponding event has been
5237 detected. See L<WATCHER STATES> for details.
5238
5239 =item real time
5240
5241 The physical time that is observed. It is apparently strictly monotonic :)
5242
5243 =item wall-clock time
5244
5245 The time and date as shown on clocks. Unlike real time, it can actually
5246 be wrong and jump forwards and backwards, e.g. when you adjust your
5247 clock.
5248
5249 =item watcher
5250
5251 A data structure that describes interest in certain events. Watchers need
5252 to be started (attached to an event loop) before they can receive events.
5253
5254 =back
5255
5256 =head1 AUTHOR
5257
5258 Marc Lehmann <libev@schmorp.de>, with repeated corrections by Mikael
5259 Magnusson and Emanuele Giaquinta, and minor corrections by many others.
5260