| 1 |
=head1 NAME |
| 2 |
|
| 3 |
EV - perl interface to libev, a high performance full-featured event loop |
| 4 |
|
| 5 |
=head1 SYNOPSIS |
| 6 |
|
| 7 |
use EV; |
| 8 |
|
| 9 |
# TIMERS |
| 10 |
|
| 11 |
my $w = EV::timer 2, 0, sub { |
| 12 |
warn "is called after 2s"; |
| 13 |
}; |
| 14 |
|
| 15 |
my $w = EV::timer 0, 3, sub { |
| 16 |
warn "is called as soon as possible, then every 3s"; |
| 17 |
}; |
| 18 |
|
| 19 |
undef $w; # destroy event watcher again |
| 20 |
|
| 21 |
my $w = EV::periodic 0, 60, 0, sub { |
| 22 |
warn "is called every minute, on the minute, exactly"; |
| 23 |
}; |
| 24 |
|
| 25 |
# IO |
| 26 |
|
| 27 |
my $w = EV::io *STDIN, EV::READ, sub { |
| 28 |
my ($w, $revents) = @_; # all callbacks receive the watcher and event mask |
| 29 |
warn "stdin is readable, you entered: ", <STDIN>; |
| 30 |
}; |
| 31 |
|
| 32 |
# SIGNALS |
| 33 |
|
| 34 |
my $w = EV::signal 'QUIT', sub { |
| 35 |
warn "sigquit received\n"; |
| 36 |
}; |
| 37 |
|
| 38 |
# CHILD/PID STATUS CHANGES |
| 39 |
|
| 40 |
my $w = EV::child $pid, 0, sub { |
| 41 |
my ($w, $revents) = @_; |
| 42 |
my $status = $w->rstatus; |
| 43 |
}; |
| 44 |
|
| 45 |
# STAT CHANGES |
| 46 |
my $w = EV::stat "/etc/passwd", 10, sub { |
| 47 |
my ($w, $revents) = @_; |
| 48 |
warn $w->path, " has changed somehow.\n"; |
| 49 |
}; |
| 50 |
|
| 51 |
# MAINLOOP |
| 52 |
EV::run; # loop until EV::break is called or all watchers stop |
| 53 |
EV::run EV::RUN_ONCE; # block until at least one event could be handled |
| 54 |
EV::run EV::RUN_NOWAIT; # try to handle same events, but do not block |
| 55 |
|
| 56 |
=head1 BEFORE YOU START USING THIS MODULE |
| 57 |
|
| 58 |
If you only need timer, I/O, signal, child and idle watchers and not the |
| 59 |
advanced functionality of this module, consider using L<AnyEvent> instead, |
| 60 |
specifically the simplified API described in L<AE>. |
| 61 |
|
| 62 |
When used with EV as backend, the L<AE> API is as fast as the native L<EV> |
| 63 |
API, but your programs/modules will still run with many other event loops. |
| 64 |
|
| 65 |
=head1 DESCRIPTION |
| 66 |
|
| 67 |
This module provides an interface to libev |
| 68 |
(L<http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/libev.html>). While the documentation |
| 69 |
below is comprehensive, one might also consult the documentation of |
| 70 |
libev itself (L<http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/libev/ev.pod> or |
| 71 |
F<perldoc EV::libev>) for more subtle details on watcher semantics or some |
| 72 |
discussion on the available backends, or how to force a specific backend |
| 73 |
with C<LIBEV_FLAGS>, or just about in any case because it has much more |
| 74 |
detailed information. |
| 75 |
|
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This module is very fast and scalable. It is actually so fast that you |
| 77 |
can use it through the L<AnyEvent> module, stay portable to other event |
| 78 |
loops (if you don't rely on any watcher types not available through it) |
| 79 |
and still be faster than with any other event loop currently supported in |
| 80 |
Perl. |
| 81 |
|
| 82 |
=head2 PORTING FROM EV 3.X to 4.X |
| 83 |
|
| 84 |
EV version 4 introduces a number of incompatible changes summarised |
| 85 |
here. According to the depreciation strategy used by libev, there is a |
| 86 |
compatibility layer in place so programs should continue to run unchanged |
| 87 |
(the XS interface lacks this layer, so programs using that one need to be |
| 88 |
updated). |
| 89 |
|
| 90 |
This compatibility layer will be switched off in some future release. |
| 91 |
|
| 92 |
All changes relevant to Perl are renames of symbols, functions and |
| 93 |
methods: |
| 94 |
|
| 95 |
EV::loop => EV::run |
| 96 |
EV::LOOP_NONBLOCK => EV::RUN_NOWAIT |
| 97 |
EV::LOOP_ONESHOT => EV::RUN_ONCE |
| 98 |
|
| 99 |
EV::unloop => EV::break |
| 100 |
EV::UNLOOP_CANCEL => EV::BREAK_CANCEL |
| 101 |
EV::UNLOOP_ONE => EV::BREAK_ONE |
| 102 |
EV::UNLOOP_ALL => EV::BREAK_ALL |
| 103 |
|
| 104 |
EV::TIMEOUT => EV::TIMER |
| 105 |
|
| 106 |
EV::loop_count => EV::iteration |
| 107 |
EV::loop_depth => EV::depth |
| 108 |
EV::loop_verify => EV::verify |
| 109 |
|
| 110 |
The loop object methods corresponding to the functions above have been |
| 111 |
similarly renamed. |
| 112 |
|
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=head2 MODULE EXPORTS |
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|
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This module does not export any symbols. |
| 116 |
|
| 117 |
=cut |
| 118 |
|
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package EV; |
| 120 |
|
| 121 |
use common::sense; |
| 122 |
|
| 123 |
BEGIN { |
| 124 |
our $VERSION = '4.36'; |
| 125 |
use XSLoader; |
| 126 |
local $^W = 0; # avoid spurious warning |
| 127 |
XSLoader::load "EV", $VERSION; |
| 128 |
} |
| 129 |
|
| 130 |
@EV::IO::ISA = |
| 131 |
@EV::Timer::ISA = |
| 132 |
@EV::Periodic::ISA = |
| 133 |
@EV::Signal::ISA = |
| 134 |
@EV::Child::ISA = |
| 135 |
@EV::Stat::ISA = |
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@EV::Idle::ISA = |
| 137 |
@EV::Prepare::ISA = |
| 138 |
@EV::Check::ISA = |
| 139 |
@EV::Embed::ISA = |
| 140 |
@EV::Fork::ISA = |
| 141 |
@EV::Async::ISA = |
| 142 |
"EV::Watcher"; |
| 143 |
|
| 144 |
@EV::Loop::Default::ISA = "EV::Loop"; |
| 145 |
|
| 146 |
=head1 EVENT LOOPS |
| 147 |
|
| 148 |
EV supports multiple event loops: There is a single "default event loop" |
| 149 |
that can handle everything including signals and child watchers, and any |
| 150 |
number of "dynamic event loops" that can use different backends (with |
| 151 |
various limitations), but no child and signal watchers. |
| 152 |
|
| 153 |
You do not have to do anything to create the default event loop: When |
| 154 |
the module is loaded a suitable backend is selected on the premise of |
| 155 |
selecting a working backend (which for example rules out kqueue on most |
| 156 |
BSDs). Modules should, unless they have "special needs" always use the |
| 157 |
default loop as this is fastest (perl-wise), best supported by other |
| 158 |
modules (e.g. AnyEvent or Coro) and most portable event loop. |
| 159 |
|
| 160 |
For specific programs you can create additional event loops dynamically. |
| 161 |
|
| 162 |
If you want to take advantage of kqueue (which often works properly for |
| 163 |
sockets only) even though the default loop doesn't enable it, you can |
| 164 |
I<embed> a kqueue loop into the default loop: running the default loop |
| 165 |
will then also service the kqueue loop to some extent. See the example in |
| 166 |
the section about embed watchers for an example on how to achieve that. |
| 167 |
|
| 168 |
=over 4 |
| 169 |
|
| 170 |
=item $loop = new EV::Loop [$flags] |
| 171 |
|
| 172 |
Create a new event loop as per the specified flags. Please refer to |
| 173 |
the C<ev_loop_new ()> function description in the libev documentation |
| 174 |
(L<http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/libev/ev.pod#GLOBAL_FUNCTIONS>, |
| 175 |
or locally-installed as F<EV::libev> manpage) for more info. |
| 176 |
|
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The loop will automatically be destroyed when it is no longer referenced |
| 178 |
by any watcher and the loop object goes out of scope. |
| 179 |
|
| 180 |
If you are not embedding the loop, then using C<EV::FLAG_FORKCHECK> |
| 181 |
is recommended, as only the default event loop is protected by this |
| 182 |
module. If you I<are> embedding this loop in the default loop, this is not |
| 183 |
necessary, as C<EV::embed> automatically does the right thing on fork. |
| 184 |
|
| 185 |
=item $loop->loop_fork |
| 186 |
|
| 187 |
Must be called after a fork in the child, before entering or continuing |
| 188 |
the event loop. An alternative is to use C<EV::FLAG_FORKCHECK> which calls |
| 189 |
this function automatically, at some performance loss (refer to the libev |
| 190 |
documentation). |
| 191 |
|
| 192 |
=item $loop->verify |
| 193 |
|
| 194 |
Calls C<ev_verify> to make internal consistency checks (for debugging |
| 195 |
libev) and abort the program if any data structures were found to be |
| 196 |
corrupted. |
| 197 |
|
| 198 |
=item $loop = EV::default_loop [$flags] |
| 199 |
|
| 200 |
Return the default loop (which is a singleton object). Since this module |
| 201 |
already creates the default loop with default flags, specifying flags here |
| 202 |
will not have any effect unless you destroy the default loop first, which |
| 203 |
isn't supported. So in short: don't do it, and if you break it, you get to |
| 204 |
keep the pieces. |
| 205 |
|
| 206 |
=back |
| 207 |
|
| 208 |
|
| 209 |
=head1 BASIC INTERFACE |
| 210 |
|
| 211 |
=over 4 |
| 212 |
|
| 213 |
=item $EV::DIED |
| 214 |
|
| 215 |
Must contain a reference to a function that is called when a callback |
| 216 |
throws an exception (with $@ containing the error). The default prints an |
| 217 |
informative message and continues. |
| 218 |
|
| 219 |
If this callback throws an exception it will be silently ignored. |
| 220 |
|
| 221 |
=item $flags = EV::supported_backends |
| 222 |
|
| 223 |
=item $flags = EV::recommended_backends |
| 224 |
|
| 225 |
=item $flags = EV::embeddable_backends |
| 226 |
|
| 227 |
Returns the set (see C<EV::BACKEND_*> flags) of backends supported by this |
| 228 |
instance of EV, the set of recommended backends (supposed to be good) for |
| 229 |
this platform and the set of embeddable backends (see EMBED WATCHERS). |
| 230 |
|
| 231 |
=item EV::sleep $seconds |
| 232 |
|
| 233 |
Block the process for the given number of (fractional) seconds. |
| 234 |
|
| 235 |
=item $time = EV::time |
| 236 |
|
| 237 |
Returns the current time in (fractional) seconds since the epoch. |
| 238 |
|
| 239 |
=item $time = EV::now |
| 240 |
|
| 241 |
=item $time = $loop->now |
| 242 |
|
| 243 |
Returns the time the last event loop iteration has been started. This |
| 244 |
is the time that (relative) timers are based on, and referring to it is |
| 245 |
usually faster then calling EV::time. |
| 246 |
|
| 247 |
=item EV::now_update |
| 248 |
|
| 249 |
=item $loop->now_update |
| 250 |
|
| 251 |
Establishes the current time by querying the kernel, updating the time |
| 252 |
returned by C<EV::now> in the progress. This is a costly operation and |
| 253 |
is usually done automatically within C<EV::run>. |
| 254 |
|
| 255 |
This function is rarely useful, but when some event callback runs for a |
| 256 |
very long time without entering the event loop, updating libev's idea of |
| 257 |
the current time is a good idea. |
| 258 |
|
| 259 |
=item EV::suspend |
| 260 |
|
| 261 |
=item $loop->suspend |
| 262 |
|
| 263 |
=item EV::resume |
| 264 |
|
| 265 |
=item $loop->resume |
| 266 |
|
| 267 |
These two functions suspend and resume a loop, for use when the loop is |
| 268 |
not used for a while and timeouts should not be processed. |
| 269 |
|
| 270 |
A typical use case would be an interactive program such as a game: When |
| 271 |
the user presses C<^Z> to suspend the game and resumes it an hour later it |
| 272 |
would be best to handle timeouts as if no time had actually passed while |
| 273 |
the program was suspended. This can be achieved by calling C<suspend> |
| 274 |
in your C<SIGTSTP> handler, sending yourself a C<SIGSTOP> and calling |
| 275 |
C<resume> directly afterwards to resume timer processing. |
| 276 |
|
| 277 |
Effectively, all C<timer> watchers will be delayed by the time spend |
| 278 |
between C<suspend> and C<resume>, and all C<periodic> watchers |
| 279 |
will be rescheduled (that is, they will lose any events that would have |
| 280 |
occured while suspended). |
| 281 |
|
| 282 |
After calling C<suspend> you B<must not> call I<any> function on the given |
| 283 |
loop other than C<resume>, and you B<must not> call C<resume> |
| 284 |
without a previous call to C<suspend>. |
| 285 |
|
| 286 |
Calling C<suspend>/C<resume> has the side effect of updating the event |
| 287 |
loop time (see C<now_update>). |
| 288 |
|
| 289 |
=item $backend = EV::backend |
| 290 |
|
| 291 |
=item $backend = $loop->backend |
| 292 |
|
| 293 |
Returns an integer describing the backend used by libev (EV::BACKEND_SELECT |
| 294 |
or EV::BACKEND_EPOLL). |
| 295 |
|
| 296 |
=item $active = EV::run [$flags] |
| 297 |
|
| 298 |
=item $active = $loop->run ([$flags]) |
| 299 |
|
| 300 |
Begin checking for events and calling callbacks. It returns when a |
| 301 |
callback calls EV::break or the flags are nonzero (in which case the |
| 302 |
return value is true) or when there are no active watchers which reference |
| 303 |
the loop (keepalive is true), in which case the return value will be |
| 304 |
false. The return value can generally be interpreted as "if true, there is |
| 305 |
more work left to do". |
| 306 |
|
| 307 |
The $flags argument can be one of the following: |
| 308 |
|
| 309 |
0 as above |
| 310 |
EV::RUN_ONCE block at most once (wait, but do not loop) |
| 311 |
EV::RUN_NOWAIT do not block at all (fetch/handle events but do not wait) |
| 312 |
|
| 313 |
=item EV::break [$how] |
| 314 |
|
| 315 |
=item $loop->break ([$how]) |
| 316 |
|
| 317 |
When called with no arguments or an argument of EV::BREAK_ONE, makes the |
| 318 |
innermost call to EV::run return. |
| 319 |
|
| 320 |
When called with an argument of EV::BREAK_ALL, all calls to EV::run will |
| 321 |
return as fast as possible. |
| 322 |
|
| 323 |
When called with an argument of EV::BREAK_CANCEL, any pending break will |
| 324 |
be cancelled. |
| 325 |
|
| 326 |
=item $count = EV::iteration |
| 327 |
|
| 328 |
=item $count = $loop->iteration |
| 329 |
|
| 330 |
Return the number of times the event loop has polled for new |
| 331 |
events. Sometimes useful as a generation counter. |
| 332 |
|
| 333 |
=item EV::once $fh_or_undef, $events, $timeout, $cb->($revents) |
| 334 |
|
| 335 |
=item $loop->once ($fh_or_undef, $events, $timeout, $cb->($revents)) |
| 336 |
|
| 337 |
This function rolls together an I/O and a timer watcher for a single |
| 338 |
one-shot event without the need for managing a watcher object. |
| 339 |
|
| 340 |
If C<$fh_or_undef> is a filehandle or file descriptor, then C<$events> |
| 341 |
must be a bitset containing either C<EV::READ>, C<EV::WRITE> or C<EV::READ |
| 342 |
| EV::WRITE>, indicating the type of I/O event you want to wait for. If |
| 343 |
you do not want to wait for some I/O event, specify C<undef> for |
| 344 |
C<$fh_or_undef> and C<0> for C<$events>). |
| 345 |
|
| 346 |
If timeout is C<undef> or negative, then there will be no |
| 347 |
timeout. Otherwise an C<EV::timer> with this value will be started. |
| 348 |
|
| 349 |
When an error occurs or either the timeout or I/O watcher triggers, then |
| 350 |
the callback will be called with the received event set (in general |
| 351 |
you can expect it to be a combination of C<EV::ERROR>, C<EV::READ>, |
| 352 |
C<EV::WRITE> and C<EV::TIMER>). |
| 353 |
|
| 354 |
EV::once doesn't return anything: the watchers stay active till either |
| 355 |
of them triggers, then they will be stopped and freed, and the callback |
| 356 |
invoked. |
| 357 |
|
| 358 |
=item EV::feed_fd_event $fd, $revents |
| 359 |
|
| 360 |
=item $loop->feed_fd_event ($fd, $revents) |
| 361 |
|
| 362 |
Feed an event on a file descriptor into EV. EV will react to this call as |
| 363 |
if the readyness notifications specified by C<$revents> (a combination of |
| 364 |
C<EV::READ> and C<EV::WRITE>) happened on the file descriptor C<$fd>. |
| 365 |
|
| 366 |
=item EV::feed_signal_event $signal |
| 367 |
|
| 368 |
Feed a signal event into the default loop. EV will react to this call as |
| 369 |
if the signal specified by C<$signal> had occured. |
| 370 |
|
| 371 |
=item EV::feed_signal $signal |
| 372 |
|
| 373 |
Feed a signal event into EV - unlike C<EV::feed_signal_event>, this works |
| 374 |
regardless of which loop has registered the signal, and is mainly useful |
| 375 |
for custom signal implementations. |
| 376 |
|
| 377 |
=item EV::set_io_collect_interval $time |
| 378 |
|
| 379 |
=item $loop->set_io_collect_interval ($time) |
| 380 |
|
| 381 |
=item EV::set_timeout_collect_interval $time |
| 382 |
|
| 383 |
=item $loop->set_timeout_collect_interval ($time) |
| 384 |
|
| 385 |
These advanced functions set the minimum block interval when polling for I/O events and the minimum |
| 386 |
wait interval for timer events. See the libev documentation at |
| 387 |
L<http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/libev/ev.pod#FUNCTIONS_CONTROLLING_THE_EVENT_LOOP> |
| 388 |
(locally installed as F<EV::libev>) for a more detailed discussion. |
| 389 |
|
| 390 |
=item $count = EV::pending_count |
| 391 |
|
| 392 |
=item $count = $loop->pending_count |
| 393 |
|
| 394 |
Returns the number of currently pending watchers. |
| 395 |
|
| 396 |
=item EV::invoke_pending |
| 397 |
|
| 398 |
=item $loop->invoke_pending |
| 399 |
|
| 400 |
Invoke all currently pending watchers. |
| 401 |
|
| 402 |
=back |
| 403 |
|
| 404 |
|
| 405 |
=head1 WATCHER OBJECTS |
| 406 |
|
| 407 |
A watcher is an object that gets created to record your interest in some |
| 408 |
event. For instance, if you want to wait for STDIN to become readable, you |
| 409 |
would create an EV::io watcher for that: |
| 410 |
|
| 411 |
my $watcher = EV::io *STDIN, EV::READ, sub { |
| 412 |
my ($watcher, $revents) = @_; |
| 413 |
warn "yeah, STDIN should now be readable without blocking!\n" |
| 414 |
}; |
| 415 |
|
| 416 |
All watchers can be active (waiting for events) or inactive (paused). Only |
| 417 |
active watchers will have their callbacks invoked. All callbacks will be |
| 418 |
called with at least two arguments: the watcher and a bitmask of received |
| 419 |
events. |
| 420 |
|
| 421 |
Each watcher type has its associated bit in revents, so you can use the |
| 422 |
same callback for multiple watchers. The event mask is named after the |
| 423 |
type, i.e. EV::child sets EV::CHILD, EV::prepare sets EV::PREPARE, |
| 424 |
EV::periodic sets EV::PERIODIC and so on, with the exception of I/O events |
| 425 |
(which can set both EV::READ and EV::WRITE bits). |
| 426 |
|
| 427 |
In the rare case where one wants to create a watcher but not start it at |
| 428 |
the same time, each constructor has a variant with a trailing C<_ns> in |
| 429 |
its name, e.g. EV::io has a non-starting variant EV::io_ns and so on. |
| 430 |
|
| 431 |
Please note that a watcher will automatically be stopped when the watcher |
| 432 |
object is destroyed, so you I<need> to keep the watcher objects returned by |
| 433 |
the constructors. |
| 434 |
|
| 435 |
Also, all methods changing some aspect of a watcher (->set, ->priority, |
| 436 |
->fh and so on) automatically stop and start it again if it is active, |
| 437 |
which means pending events get lost. |
| 438 |
|
| 439 |
=head2 COMMON WATCHER METHODS |
| 440 |
|
| 441 |
This section lists methods common to all watchers. |
| 442 |
|
| 443 |
=over 4 |
| 444 |
|
| 445 |
=item $w->start |
| 446 |
|
| 447 |
Starts a watcher if it isn't active already. Does nothing to an already |
| 448 |
active watcher. By default, all watchers start out in the active state |
| 449 |
(see the description of the C<_ns> variants if you need stopped watchers). |
| 450 |
|
| 451 |
=item $w->stop |
| 452 |
|
| 453 |
Stop a watcher if it is active. Also clear any pending events (events that |
| 454 |
have been received but that didn't yet result in a callback invocation), |
| 455 |
regardless of whether the watcher was active or not. |
| 456 |
|
| 457 |
=item $bool = $w->is_active |
| 458 |
|
| 459 |
Returns true if the watcher is active, false otherwise. |
| 460 |
|
| 461 |
=item $current_data = $w->data |
| 462 |
|
| 463 |
=item $old_data = $w->data ($new_data) |
| 464 |
|
| 465 |
Queries a freely usable data scalar on the watcher and optionally changes |
| 466 |
it. This is a way to associate custom data with a watcher: |
| 467 |
|
| 468 |
my $w = EV::timer 60, 0, sub { |
| 469 |
warn $_[0]->data; |
| 470 |
}; |
| 471 |
$w->data ("print me!"); |
| 472 |
|
| 473 |
=item $current_cb = $w->cb |
| 474 |
|
| 475 |
=item $old_cb = $w->cb ($new_cb) |
| 476 |
|
| 477 |
Queries the callback on the watcher and optionally changes it. You can do |
| 478 |
this at any time without the watcher restarting. |
| 479 |
|
| 480 |
=item $current_priority = $w->priority |
| 481 |
|
| 482 |
=item $old_priority = $w->priority ($new_priority) |
| 483 |
|
| 484 |
Queries the priority on the watcher and optionally changes it. Pending |
| 485 |
watchers with higher priority will be invoked first. The valid range of |
| 486 |
priorities lies between EV::MAXPRI (default 2) and EV::MINPRI (default |
| 487 |
-2). If the priority is outside this range it will automatically be |
| 488 |
normalised to the nearest valid priority. |
| 489 |
|
| 490 |
The default priority of any newly-created watcher is 0. |
| 491 |
|
| 492 |
Note that the priority semantics have not yet been fleshed out and are |
| 493 |
subject to almost certain change. |
| 494 |
|
| 495 |
=item $w->invoke ($revents) |
| 496 |
|
| 497 |
Call the callback *now* with the given event mask. |
| 498 |
|
| 499 |
=item $w->feed_event ($revents) |
| 500 |
|
| 501 |
Feed some events on this watcher into EV. EV will react to this call as if |
| 502 |
the watcher had received the given C<$revents> mask. |
| 503 |
|
| 504 |
=item $revents = $w->clear_pending |
| 505 |
|
| 506 |
If the watcher is pending, this function clears its pending status and |
| 507 |
returns its C<$revents> bitset (as if its callback was invoked). If the |
| 508 |
watcher isn't pending it does nothing and returns C<0>. |
| 509 |
|
| 510 |
=item $previous_state = $w->keepalive ($bool) |
| 511 |
|
| 512 |
Normally, C<EV::run> will return when there are no active watchers |
| 513 |
(which is a "deadlock" because no progress can be made anymore). This is |
| 514 |
convenient because it allows you to start your watchers (and your jobs), |
| 515 |
call C<EV::run> once and when it returns you know that all your jobs are |
| 516 |
finished (or they forgot to register some watchers for their task :). |
| 517 |
|
| 518 |
Sometimes, however, this gets in your way, for example when the module |
| 519 |
that calls C<EV::run> (usually the main program) is not the same module |
| 520 |
as a long-living watcher (for example a DNS client module written by |
| 521 |
somebody else even). Then you might want any outstanding requests to be |
| 522 |
handled, but you would not want to keep C<EV::run> from returning just |
| 523 |
because you happen to have this long-running UDP port watcher. |
| 524 |
|
| 525 |
In this case you can clear the keepalive status, which means that even |
| 526 |
though your watcher is active, it won't keep C<EV::run> from returning. |
| 527 |
|
| 528 |
The initial value for keepalive is true (enabled), and you can change it |
| 529 |
any time. |
| 530 |
|
| 531 |
Example: Register an I/O watcher for some UDP socket but do not keep the |
| 532 |
event loop from running just because of that watcher. |
| 533 |
|
| 534 |
my $udp_socket = ... |
| 535 |
my $udp_watcher = EV::io $udp_socket, EV::READ, sub { ... }; |
| 536 |
$udp_watcher->keepalive (0); |
| 537 |
|
| 538 |
=item $loop = $w->loop |
| 539 |
|
| 540 |
Return the loop that this watcher is attached to. |
| 541 |
|
| 542 |
=back |
| 543 |
|
| 544 |
|
| 545 |
=head1 WATCHER TYPES |
| 546 |
|
| 547 |
Each of the following subsections describes a single watcher type. |
| 548 |
|
| 549 |
=head3 I/O WATCHERS - is this file descriptor readable or writable? |
| 550 |
|
| 551 |
=over 4 |
| 552 |
|
| 553 |
=item $w = EV::io $fileno_or_fh, $eventmask, $callback |
| 554 |
|
| 555 |
=item $w = EV::io_ns $fileno_or_fh, $eventmask, $callback |
| 556 |
|
| 557 |
=item $w = $loop->io ($fileno_or_fh, $eventmask, $callback) |
| 558 |
|
| 559 |
=item $w = $loop->io_ns ($fileno_or_fh, $eventmask, $callback) |
| 560 |
|
| 561 |
As long as the returned watcher object is alive, call the C<$callback> |
| 562 |
when at least one of events specified in C<$eventmask> occurs. |
| 563 |
|
| 564 |
The $eventmask can be one or more of these constants ORed together: |
| 565 |
|
| 566 |
EV::READ wait until read() wouldn't block anymore |
| 567 |
EV::WRITE wait until write() wouldn't block anymore |
| 568 |
|
| 569 |
The C<io_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher. |
| 570 |
|
| 571 |
=item $w->set ($fileno_or_fh, $eventmask) |
| 572 |
|
| 573 |
Reconfigures the watcher, see the constructor above for details. Can be |
| 574 |
called at any time. |
| 575 |
|
| 576 |
=item $current_fh = $w->fh |
| 577 |
|
| 578 |
=item $old_fh = $w->fh ($new_fh) |
| 579 |
|
| 580 |
Returns the previously set filehandle and optionally set a new one. |
| 581 |
|
| 582 |
=item $current_eventmask = $w->events |
| 583 |
|
| 584 |
=item $old_eventmask = $w->events ($new_eventmask) |
| 585 |
|
| 586 |
Returns the previously set event mask and optionally set a new one. |
| 587 |
|
| 588 |
=back |
| 589 |
|
| 590 |
|
| 591 |
=head3 TIMER WATCHERS - relative and optionally repeating timeouts |
| 592 |
|
| 593 |
=over 4 |
| 594 |
|
| 595 |
=item $w = EV::timer $after, $repeat, $callback |
| 596 |
|
| 597 |
=item $w = EV::timer_ns $after, $repeat, $callback |
| 598 |
|
| 599 |
=item $w = $loop->timer ($after, $repeat, $callback) |
| 600 |
|
| 601 |
=item $w = $loop->timer_ns ($after, $repeat, $callback) |
| 602 |
|
| 603 |
Calls the callback after C<$after> seconds (which may be fractional or |
| 604 |
negative). If C<$repeat> is non-zero, the timer will be restarted (with |
| 605 |
the $repeat value as $after) after the callback returns. |
| 606 |
|
| 607 |
This means that the callback would be called roughly after C<$after> |
| 608 |
seconds, and then every C<$repeat> seconds. The timer does his best not |
| 609 |
to drift, but it will not invoke the timer more often then once per event |
| 610 |
loop iteration, and might drift in other cases. If that isn't acceptable, |
| 611 |
look at EV::periodic, which can provide long-term stable timers. |
| 612 |
|
| 613 |
The timer is based on a monotonic clock, that is, if somebody is sitting |
| 614 |
in front of the machine while the timer is running and changes the system |
| 615 |
clock, the timer will nevertheless run (roughly) the same time. |
| 616 |
|
| 617 |
The C<timer_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher. |
| 618 |
|
| 619 |
=item $w->set ($after, $repeat = 0) |
| 620 |
|
| 621 |
Reconfigures the watcher, see the constructor above for details. Can be called at |
| 622 |
any time. |
| 623 |
|
| 624 |
=item $w->again |
| 625 |
|
| 626 |
=item $w->again ($repeat) |
| 627 |
|
| 628 |
Similar to the C<start> method, but has special semantics for repeating timers: |
| 629 |
|
| 630 |
If the timer is active and non-repeating, it will be stopped. |
| 631 |
|
| 632 |
If the timer is active and repeating, reset the timeout to occur |
| 633 |
C<$repeat> seconds after now. |
| 634 |
|
| 635 |
If the timer is inactive and repeating, start it using the repeat value. |
| 636 |
|
| 637 |
Otherwise do nothing. |
| 638 |
|
| 639 |
This behaviour is useful when you have a timeout for some IO |
| 640 |
operation. You create a timer object with the same value for C<$after> and |
| 641 |
C<$repeat>, and then, in the read/write watcher, run the C<again> method |
| 642 |
on the timeout. |
| 643 |
|
| 644 |
If called with a C<$repeat> argument, then it uses this a timer repeat |
| 645 |
value. |
| 646 |
|
| 647 |
=item $after = $w->remaining |
| 648 |
|
| 649 |
Calculates and returns the remaining time till the timer will fire. |
| 650 |
|
| 651 |
=item $repeat = $w->repeat |
| 652 |
|
| 653 |
=item $old_repeat = $w->repeat ($new_repeat) |
| 654 |
|
| 655 |
Returns the current value of the repeat attribute and optionally sets a |
| 656 |
new one. Setting the new one will not restart the watcher - if the watcher |
| 657 |
is active, the new repeat value is used whenever it expires next. |
| 658 |
|
| 659 |
=back |
| 660 |
|
| 661 |
|
| 662 |
=head3 PERIODIC WATCHERS - to cron or not to cron? |
| 663 |
|
| 664 |
=over 4 |
| 665 |
|
| 666 |
=item $w = EV::periodic $at, $interval, $reschedule_cb, $callback |
| 667 |
|
| 668 |
=item $w = EV::periodic_ns $at, $interval, $reschedule_cb, $callback |
| 669 |
|
| 670 |
=item $w = $loop->periodic ($at, $interval, $reschedule_cb, $callback) |
| 671 |
|
| 672 |
=item $w = $loop->periodic_ns ($at, $interval, $reschedule_cb, $callback) |
| 673 |
|
| 674 |
Similar to EV::timer, but is not based on relative timeouts but on |
| 675 |
absolute times. Apart from creating "simple" timers that trigger "at" the |
| 676 |
specified time, it can also be used for non-drifting absolute timers and |
| 677 |
more complex, cron-like, setups that are not adversely affected by time |
| 678 |
jumps (i.e. when the system clock is changed by explicit date -s or other |
| 679 |
means such as ntpd). It is also the most complex watcher type in EV. |
| 680 |
|
| 681 |
It has three distinct "modes": |
| 682 |
|
| 683 |
=over 4 |
| 684 |
|
| 685 |
=item * absolute timer ($interval = $reschedule_cb = 0) |
| 686 |
|
| 687 |
This time simply fires at the wallclock time C<$at> and doesn't repeat. It |
| 688 |
will not adjust when a time jump occurs, that is, if it is to be run |
| 689 |
at January 1st 2011 then it will run when the system time reaches or |
| 690 |
surpasses this time. |
| 691 |
|
| 692 |
=item * repeating interval timer ($interval > 0, $reschedule_cb = 0) |
| 693 |
|
| 694 |
In this mode the watcher will always be scheduled to time out at the |
| 695 |
next C<$at + N * $interval> time (for the lowest integer N) and then repeat, |
| 696 |
regardless of any time jumps. Note that, since C<N> can be negative, the |
| 697 |
first trigger can happen before C<$at>. |
| 698 |
|
| 699 |
This can be used to create timers that do not drift with respect to system |
| 700 |
time: |
| 701 |
|
| 702 |
my $hourly = EV::periodic 0, 3600, 0, sub { print "once/hour\n" }; |
| 703 |
|
| 704 |
That doesn't mean there will always be 3600 seconds in between triggers, |
| 705 |
but only that the the callback will be called when the system time shows a |
| 706 |
full hour (UTC). |
| 707 |
|
| 708 |
Another way to think about it (for the mathematically inclined) is that |
| 709 |
EV::periodic will try to run the callback in this mode at the next |
| 710 |
possible time where C<$time = $at (mod $interval)>, regardless of any time |
| 711 |
jumps. |
| 712 |
|
| 713 |
=item * manual reschedule mode ($reschedule_cb = coderef) |
| 714 |
|
| 715 |
In this mode $interval and $at are both being ignored. Instead, each |
| 716 |
time the periodic watcher gets scheduled, the reschedule callback |
| 717 |
($reschedule_cb) will be called with the watcher as first, and the current |
| 718 |
time as second argument. |
| 719 |
|
| 720 |
I<This callback MUST NOT stop or destroy this or any other periodic |
| 721 |
watcher, ever, and MUST NOT call any event loop functions or methods>. If |
| 722 |
you need to stop it, return 1e30 and stop it afterwards. You may create |
| 723 |
and start an C<EV::prepare> watcher for this task. |
| 724 |
|
| 725 |
It must return the next time to trigger, based on the passed time value |
| 726 |
(that is, the lowest time value larger than or equal to to the second |
| 727 |
argument). It will usually be called just before the callback will be |
| 728 |
triggered, but might be called at other times, too. |
| 729 |
|
| 730 |
This can be used to create very complex timers, such as a timer that |
| 731 |
triggers on each midnight, local time (actually one day after the last |
| 732 |
midnight, to keep the example simple): |
| 733 |
|
| 734 |
my $daily = EV::periodic 0, 0, sub { |
| 735 |
my ($w, $now) = @_; |
| 736 |
|
| 737 |
use Time::Local (); |
| 738 |
my (undef, undef, undef, $d, $m, $y) = localtime $now; |
| 739 |
Time::Local::timelocal_nocheck 0, 0, 0, $d + 1, $m, $y |
| 740 |
}, sub { |
| 741 |
print "it's midnight or likely shortly after, now\n"; |
| 742 |
}; |
| 743 |
|
| 744 |
=back |
| 745 |
|
| 746 |
The C<periodic_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher. |
| 747 |
|
| 748 |
=item $w->set ($at, $interval, $reschedule_cb) |
| 749 |
|
| 750 |
Reconfigures the watcher, see the constructor above for details. Can be called at |
| 751 |
any time. |
| 752 |
|
| 753 |
=item $w->again |
| 754 |
|
| 755 |
Simply stops and starts the watcher again. |
| 756 |
|
| 757 |
=item $time = $w->at |
| 758 |
|
| 759 |
Return the time that the watcher is expected to trigger next. |
| 760 |
|
| 761 |
=item $offset = $w->offset |
| 762 |
|
| 763 |
=item $old_offset = $w->offset ($new_offset) |
| 764 |
|
| 765 |
Returns the current value of the offset attribute and optionally sets a |
| 766 |
new one. Setting the new one will not restart the watcher - if the watcher |
| 767 |
is active, the new offset value is used whenever it expires next. |
| 768 |
|
| 769 |
=item $interval = $w->interval |
| 770 |
|
| 771 |
=item $old_interval = $w->interval ($new_interval) |
| 772 |
|
| 773 |
See above, for the interval attribute. |
| 774 |
|
| 775 |
=item $reschedule_cb = $w->reschedule_cb |
| 776 |
|
| 777 |
=item $old_reschedule_cb = $w->reschedule_cb ($new_reschedule_cb) |
| 778 |
|
| 779 |
See above, for the reschedule callback. |
| 780 |
|
| 781 |
=back |
| 782 |
|
| 783 |
|
| 784 |
=head3 SIGNAL WATCHERS - signal me when a signal gets signalled! |
| 785 |
|
| 786 |
=over 4 |
| 787 |
|
| 788 |
=item $w = EV::signal $signal, $callback |
| 789 |
|
| 790 |
=item $w = EV::signal_ns $signal, $callback |
| 791 |
|
| 792 |
=item $w = $loop->signal ($signal, $callback) |
| 793 |
|
| 794 |
=item $w = $loop->signal_ns ($signal, $callback) |
| 795 |
|
| 796 |
Call the callback when $signal is received (the signal can be specified by |
| 797 |
number or by name, just as with C<kill> or C<%SIG>). |
| 798 |
|
| 799 |
Only one event loop can grab a given signal - attempting to grab the same |
| 800 |
signal from two EV loops will crash the program immediately or cause data |
| 801 |
corruption. |
| 802 |
|
| 803 |
EV will grab the signal for the process (the kernel only allows one |
| 804 |
component to receive a signal at a time) when you start a signal watcher, |
| 805 |
and removes it again when you stop it. Perl does the same when you |
| 806 |
add/remove callbacks to C<%SIG>, so watch out. |
| 807 |
|
| 808 |
You can have as many signal watchers per signal as you want. |
| 809 |
|
| 810 |
The C<signal_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher. |
| 811 |
|
| 812 |
=item $w->set ($signal) |
| 813 |
|
| 814 |
Reconfigures the watcher, see the constructor above for details. Can be |
| 815 |
called at any time. |
| 816 |
|
| 817 |
=item $current_signum = $w->signal |
| 818 |
|
| 819 |
=item $old_signum = $w->signal ($new_signal) |
| 820 |
|
| 821 |
Returns the previously set signal (always as a number not name) and |
| 822 |
optionally set a new one. |
| 823 |
|
| 824 |
=back |
| 825 |
|
| 826 |
|
| 827 |
=head3 CHILD WATCHERS - watch out for process status changes |
| 828 |
|
| 829 |
=over 4 |
| 830 |
|
| 831 |
=item $w = EV::child $pid, $trace, $callback |
| 832 |
|
| 833 |
=item $w = EV::child_ns $pid, $trace, $callback |
| 834 |
|
| 835 |
=item $w = $loop->child ($pid, $trace, $callback) |
| 836 |
|
| 837 |
=item $w = $loop->child_ns ($pid, $trace, $callback) |
| 838 |
|
| 839 |
Call the callback when a status change for pid C<$pid> (or any pid |
| 840 |
if C<$pid> is 0) has been received (a status change happens when the |
| 841 |
process terminates or is killed, or, when trace is true, additionally when |
| 842 |
it is stopped or continued). More precisely: when the process receives |
| 843 |
a C<SIGCHLD>, EV will fetch the outstanding exit/wait status for all |
| 844 |
changed/zombie children and call the callback. |
| 845 |
|
| 846 |
It is valid (and fully supported) to install a child watcher after a child |
| 847 |
has exited but before the event loop has started its next iteration (for |
| 848 |
example, first you C<fork>, then the new child process might exit, and |
| 849 |
only then do you install a child watcher in the parent for the new pid). |
| 850 |
|
| 851 |
You can access both exit (or tracing) status and pid by using the |
| 852 |
C<rstatus> and C<rpid> methods on the watcher object. |
| 853 |
|
| 854 |
You can have as many pid watchers per pid as you want, they will all be |
| 855 |
called. |
| 856 |
|
| 857 |
The C<child_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher. |
| 858 |
|
| 859 |
=item $w->set ($pid, $trace) |
| 860 |
|
| 861 |
Reconfigures the watcher, see the constructor above for details. Can be called at |
| 862 |
any time. |
| 863 |
|
| 864 |
=item $current_pid = $w->pid |
| 865 |
|
| 866 |
Returns the previously set process id and optionally set a new one. |
| 867 |
|
| 868 |
=item $exit_status = $w->rstatus |
| 869 |
|
| 870 |
Return the exit/wait status (as returned by waitpid, see the waitpid entry |
| 871 |
in perlfunc). |
| 872 |
|
| 873 |
=item $pid = $w->rpid |
| 874 |
|
| 875 |
Return the pid of the awaited child (useful when you have installed a |
| 876 |
watcher for all pids). |
| 877 |
|
| 878 |
=item EV::Child::reinit [EXPERIMENTAL] |
| 879 |
|
| 880 |
Internally, libev installs a signal handler for C<SIGCHLD>. Unfortunately, |
| 881 |
a lot of Perl code does soemthing like C<< local $SIG{CHLD} >>, which, |
| 882 |
unfortunately, is broken and will not restore the signal handler. |
| 883 |
|
| 884 |
If this has happened, you can call this function to stop/rrestart the |
| 885 |
internal libev watcher, which will reset the signal handler. |
| 886 |
|
| 887 |
Note that this is an experimental function, whose interface might change. |
| 888 |
|
| 889 |
=back |
| 890 |
|
| 891 |
|
| 892 |
=head3 STAT WATCHERS - did the file attributes just change? |
| 893 |
|
| 894 |
=over 4 |
| 895 |
|
| 896 |
=item $w = EV::stat $path, $interval, $callback |
| 897 |
|
| 898 |
=item $w = EV::stat_ns $path, $interval, $callback |
| 899 |
|
| 900 |
=item $w = $loop->stat ($path, $interval, $callback) |
| 901 |
|
| 902 |
=item $w = $loop->stat_ns ($path, $interval, $callback) |
| 903 |
|
| 904 |
Call the callback when a file status change has been detected on |
| 905 |
C<$path>. The C<$path> does not need to exist, changing from "path exists" |
| 906 |
to "path does not exist" is a status change like any other. |
| 907 |
|
| 908 |
The C<$interval> is a recommended polling interval for systems where |
| 909 |
OS-supported change notifications don't exist or are not supported. If |
| 910 |
you use C<0> then an unspecified default is used (which is highly |
| 911 |
recommended!), which is to be expected to be around five seconds usually. |
| 912 |
|
| 913 |
This watcher type is not meant for massive numbers of stat watchers, |
| 914 |
as even with OS-supported change notifications, this can be |
| 915 |
resource-intensive. |
| 916 |
|
| 917 |
The C<stat_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher. |
| 918 |
|
| 919 |
=item ... = $w->stat |
| 920 |
|
| 921 |
This call is very similar to the perl C<stat> built-in: It stats (using |
| 922 |
C<lstat>) the path specified in the watcher and sets perls stat cache (as |
| 923 |
well as EV's idea of the current stat values) to the values found. |
| 924 |
|
| 925 |
In scalar context, a boolean is return indicating success or failure of |
| 926 |
the stat. In list context, the same 13-value list as with stat is returned |
| 927 |
(except that the blksize and blocks fields are not reliable). |
| 928 |
|
| 929 |
In the case of an error, errno is set to C<ENOENT> (regardless of the |
| 930 |
actual error value) and the C<nlink> value is forced to zero (if the stat |
| 931 |
was successful then nlink is guaranteed to be non-zero). |
| 932 |
|
| 933 |
See also the next two entries for more info. |
| 934 |
|
| 935 |
=item ... = $w->attr |
| 936 |
|
| 937 |
Just like C<< $w->stat >>, but without the initial stat'ing: this returns |
| 938 |
the values most recently detected by EV. See the next entry for more info. |
| 939 |
|
| 940 |
=item ... = $w->prev |
| 941 |
|
| 942 |
Just like C<< $w->stat >>, but without the initial stat'ing: this returns |
| 943 |
the previous set of values, before the change. |
| 944 |
|
| 945 |
That is, when the watcher callback is invoked, C<< $w->prev >> will be set |
| 946 |
to the values found I<before> a change was detected, while C<< $w->attr >> |
| 947 |
returns the values found leading to the change detection. The difference (if any) |
| 948 |
between C<prev> and C<attr> is what triggered the callback. |
| 949 |
|
| 950 |
If you did something to the filesystem object and do not want to trigger |
| 951 |
yet another change, you can call C<stat> to update EV's idea of what the |
| 952 |
current attributes are. |
| 953 |
|
| 954 |
=item $w->set ($path, $interval) |
| 955 |
|
| 956 |
Reconfigures the watcher, see the constructor above for details. Can be |
| 957 |
called at any time. |
| 958 |
|
| 959 |
=item $current_path = $w->path |
| 960 |
|
| 961 |
=item $old_path = $w->path ($new_path) |
| 962 |
|
| 963 |
Returns the previously set path and optionally set a new one. |
| 964 |
|
| 965 |
=item $current_interval = $w->interval |
| 966 |
|
| 967 |
=item $old_interval = $w->interval ($new_interval) |
| 968 |
|
| 969 |
Returns the previously set interval and optionally set a new one. Can be |
| 970 |
used to query the actual interval used. |
| 971 |
|
| 972 |
=back |
| 973 |
|
| 974 |
|
| 975 |
=head3 IDLE WATCHERS - when you've got nothing better to do... |
| 976 |
|
| 977 |
=over 4 |
| 978 |
|
| 979 |
=item $w = EV::idle $callback |
| 980 |
|
| 981 |
=item $w = EV::idle_ns $callback |
| 982 |
|
| 983 |
=item $w = $loop->idle ($callback) |
| 984 |
|
| 985 |
=item $w = $loop->idle_ns ($callback) |
| 986 |
|
| 987 |
Call the callback when there are no other pending watchers of the same or |
| 988 |
higher priority (excluding check, prepare and other idle watchers of the |
| 989 |
same or lower priority, of course). They are called idle watchers because |
| 990 |
when the watcher is the highest priority pending event in the process, the |
| 991 |
process is considered to be idle at that priority. |
| 992 |
|
| 993 |
If you want a watcher that is only ever called when I<no> other events are |
| 994 |
outstanding you have to set the priority to C<EV::MINPRI>. |
| 995 |
|
| 996 |
The process will not block as long as any idle watchers are active, and |
| 997 |
they will be called repeatedly until stopped. |
| 998 |
|
| 999 |
For example, if you have idle watchers at priority C<0> and C<1>, and |
| 1000 |
an I/O watcher at priority C<0>, then the idle watcher at priority C<1> |
| 1001 |
and the I/O watcher will always run when ready. Only when the idle watcher |
| 1002 |
at priority C<1> is stopped and the I/O watcher at priority C<0> is not |
| 1003 |
pending with the C<0>-priority idle watcher be invoked. |
| 1004 |
|
| 1005 |
The C<idle_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher. |
| 1006 |
|
| 1007 |
=back |
| 1008 |
|
| 1009 |
|
| 1010 |
=head3 PREPARE WATCHERS - customise your event loop! |
| 1011 |
|
| 1012 |
=over 4 |
| 1013 |
|
| 1014 |
=item $w = EV::prepare $callback |
| 1015 |
|
| 1016 |
=item $w = EV::prepare_ns $callback |
| 1017 |
|
| 1018 |
=item $w = $loop->prepare ($callback) |
| 1019 |
|
| 1020 |
=item $w = $loop->prepare_ns ($callback) |
| 1021 |
|
| 1022 |
Call the callback just before the process would block. You can still |
| 1023 |
create/modify any watchers at this point. |
| 1024 |
|
| 1025 |
See the EV::check watcher, below, for explanations and an example. |
| 1026 |
|
| 1027 |
The C<prepare_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher. |
| 1028 |
|
| 1029 |
=back |
| 1030 |
|
| 1031 |
|
| 1032 |
=head3 CHECK WATCHERS - customise your event loop even more! |
| 1033 |
|
| 1034 |
=over 4 |
| 1035 |
|
| 1036 |
=item $w = EV::check $callback |
| 1037 |
|
| 1038 |
=item $w = EV::check_ns $callback |
| 1039 |
|
| 1040 |
=item $w = $loop->check ($callback) |
| 1041 |
|
| 1042 |
=item $w = $loop->check_ns ($callback) |
| 1043 |
|
| 1044 |
Call the callback just after the process wakes up again (after it has |
| 1045 |
gathered events), but before any other callbacks have been invoked. |
| 1046 |
|
| 1047 |
This can be used to integrate other event-based software into the EV |
| 1048 |
mainloop: You register a prepare callback and in there, you create io and |
| 1049 |
timer watchers as required by the other software. Here is a real-world |
| 1050 |
example of integrating Net::SNMP (with some details left out): |
| 1051 |
|
| 1052 |
our @snmp_watcher; |
| 1053 |
|
| 1054 |
our $snmp_prepare = EV::prepare sub { |
| 1055 |
# do nothing unless active |
| 1056 |
$dispatcher->{_event_queue_h} |
| 1057 |
or return; |
| 1058 |
|
| 1059 |
# make the dispatcher handle any outstanding stuff |
| 1060 |
... not shown |
| 1061 |
|
| 1062 |
# create an I/O watcher for each and every socket |
| 1063 |
@snmp_watcher = ( |
| 1064 |
(map { EV::io $_, EV::READ, sub { } } |
| 1065 |
keys %{ $dispatcher->{_descriptors} }), |
| 1066 |
|
| 1067 |
EV::timer +($event->[Net::SNMP::Dispatcher::_ACTIVE] |
| 1068 |
? $event->[Net::SNMP::Dispatcher::_TIME] - EV::now : 0), |
| 1069 |
0, sub { }, |
| 1070 |
); |
| 1071 |
}; |
| 1072 |
|
| 1073 |
The callbacks are irrelevant (and are not even being called), the |
| 1074 |
only purpose of those watchers is to wake up the process as soon as |
| 1075 |
one of those events occurs (socket readable, or timer timed out). The |
| 1076 |
corresponding EV::check watcher will then clean up: |
| 1077 |
|
| 1078 |
our $snmp_check = EV::check sub { |
| 1079 |
# destroy all watchers |
| 1080 |
@snmp_watcher = (); |
| 1081 |
|
| 1082 |
# make the dispatcher handle any new stuff |
| 1083 |
... not shown |
| 1084 |
}; |
| 1085 |
|
| 1086 |
The callbacks of the created watchers will not be called as the watchers |
| 1087 |
are destroyed before this can happen (remember EV::check gets called |
| 1088 |
first). |
| 1089 |
|
| 1090 |
The C<check_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher. |
| 1091 |
|
| 1092 |
=item EV::CHECK constant issues |
| 1093 |
|
| 1094 |
Like all other watcher types, there is a bitmask constant for use in |
| 1095 |
C<$revents> and other places. The C<EV::CHECK> is special as it has |
| 1096 |
the same name as the C<CHECK> sub called by Perl. This doesn't cause |
| 1097 |
big issues on newer perls (beginning with 5.8.9), but it means thatthe |
| 1098 |
constant must be I<inlined>, i.e. runtime calls will not work. That means |
| 1099 |
that as long as you always C<use EV> and then C<EV::CHECK> you are on the |
| 1100 |
safe side. |
| 1101 |
|
| 1102 |
=back |
| 1103 |
|
| 1104 |
|
| 1105 |
=head3 FORK WATCHERS - the audacity to resume the event loop after a fork |
| 1106 |
|
| 1107 |
Fork watchers are called when a C<fork ()> was detected. The invocation |
| 1108 |
is done before the event loop blocks next and before C<check> watchers |
| 1109 |
are being called, and only in the child after the fork. |
| 1110 |
|
| 1111 |
=over 4 |
| 1112 |
|
| 1113 |
=item $w = EV::fork $callback |
| 1114 |
|
| 1115 |
=item $w = EV::fork_ns $callback |
| 1116 |
|
| 1117 |
=item $w = $loop->fork ($callback) |
| 1118 |
|
| 1119 |
=item $w = $loop->fork_ns ($callback) |
| 1120 |
|
| 1121 |
Call the callback before the event loop is resumed in the child process |
| 1122 |
after a fork. |
| 1123 |
|
| 1124 |
The C<fork_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher. |
| 1125 |
|
| 1126 |
=back |
| 1127 |
|
| 1128 |
|
| 1129 |
=head3 EMBED WATCHERS - when one backend isn't enough... |
| 1130 |
|
| 1131 |
This is a rather advanced watcher type that lets you embed one event loop |
| 1132 |
into another (currently only IO events are supported in the embedded |
| 1133 |
loop, other types of watchers might be handled in a delayed or incorrect |
| 1134 |
fashion and must not be used). |
| 1135 |
|
| 1136 |
See the libev documentation at |
| 1137 |
L<http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/libev/ev.pod#code_ev_embed_code_when_one_backend_> |
| 1138 |
(locally installed as F<EV::libev>) for more details. |
| 1139 |
|
| 1140 |
In short, this watcher is most useful on BSD systems without working |
| 1141 |
kqueue to still be able to handle a large number of sockets: |
| 1142 |
|
| 1143 |
my $socket_loop; |
| 1144 |
|
| 1145 |
# check wether we use SELECT or POLL _and_ KQUEUE is supported |
| 1146 |
if ( |
| 1147 |
(EV::backend & (EV::BACKEND_POLL | EV::BACKEND_SELECT)) |
| 1148 |
&& (EV::supported_backends & EV::embeddable_backends & EV::BACKEND_KQUEUE) |
| 1149 |
) { |
| 1150 |
# use kqueue for sockets |
| 1151 |
$socket_loop = new EV::Loop EV::BACKEND_KQUEUE | EV::FLAG_NOENV; |
| 1152 |
} |
| 1153 |
|
| 1154 |
# use the default loop otherwise |
| 1155 |
$socket_loop ||= EV::default_loop; |
| 1156 |
|
| 1157 |
=over 4 |
| 1158 |
|
| 1159 |
=item $w = EV::embed $otherloop[, $callback] |
| 1160 |
|
| 1161 |
=item $w = EV::embed_ns $otherloop[, $callback] |
| 1162 |
|
| 1163 |
=item $w = $loop->embed ($otherloop[, $callback]) |
| 1164 |
|
| 1165 |
=item $w = $loop->embed_ns ($otherloop[, $callback]) |
| 1166 |
|
| 1167 |
Call the callback when the embedded event loop (C<$otherloop>) has any |
| 1168 |
I/O activity. The C<$callback> is optional: if it is missing, then the |
| 1169 |
embedded event loop will be managed automatically (which is recommended), |
| 1170 |
otherwise you have to invoke C<sweep> yourself. |
| 1171 |
|
| 1172 |
The C<embed_ns> variant doesn't start (activate) the newly created watcher. |
| 1173 |
|
| 1174 |
=back |
| 1175 |
|
| 1176 |
=head3 ASYNC WATCHERS - how to wake up another event loop |
| 1177 |
|
| 1178 |
Async watchers are provided by EV, but have little use in perl directly, |
| 1179 |
as perl neither supports threads running in parallel nor direct access to |
| 1180 |
signal handlers or other contexts where they could be of value. |
| 1181 |
|
| 1182 |
It is, however, possible to use them from the XS level. |
| 1183 |
|
| 1184 |
Please see the libev documentation for further details. |
| 1185 |
|
| 1186 |
=over 4 |
| 1187 |
|
| 1188 |
=item $w = EV::async $callback |
| 1189 |
|
| 1190 |
=item $w = EV::async_ns $callback |
| 1191 |
|
| 1192 |
=item $w = $loop->async ($callback) |
| 1193 |
|
| 1194 |
=item $w = $loop->async_ns ($callback) |
| 1195 |
|
| 1196 |
=item $w->send |
| 1197 |
|
| 1198 |
=item $bool = $w->async_pending |
| 1199 |
|
| 1200 |
=back |
| 1201 |
|
| 1202 |
=head3 CLEANUP WATCHERS - how to clean up when the event loop goes away |
| 1203 |
|
| 1204 |
Cleanup watchers are not supported on the Perl level, they can only be |
| 1205 |
used via XS currently. |
| 1206 |
|
| 1207 |
|
| 1208 |
=head1 PERL SIGNALS |
| 1209 |
|
| 1210 |
While Perl signal handling (C<%SIG>) is not affected by EV, the behaviour |
| 1211 |
with EV is as the same as any other C library: Perl-signals will only be |
| 1212 |
handled when Perl runs, which means your signal handler might be invoked |
| 1213 |
only the next time an event callback is invoked. |
| 1214 |
|
| 1215 |
The solution is to use EV signal watchers (see C<EV::signal>), which will |
| 1216 |
ensure proper operations with regards to other event watchers. |
| 1217 |
|
| 1218 |
If you cannot do this for whatever reason, you can also force a watcher |
| 1219 |
to be called on every event loop iteration by installing a C<EV::check> |
| 1220 |
watcher: |
| 1221 |
|
| 1222 |
my $async_check = EV::check sub { }; |
| 1223 |
|
| 1224 |
This ensures that perl gets into control for a short time to handle any |
| 1225 |
pending signals, and also ensures (slightly) slower overall operation. |
| 1226 |
|
| 1227 |
=head1 ITHREADS |
| 1228 |
|
| 1229 |
Ithreads are not supported by this module in any way. Perl pseudo-threads |
| 1230 |
is evil stuff and must die. Real threads as provided by Coro are fully |
| 1231 |
supported (and enhanced support is available via L<Coro::EV>). |
| 1232 |
|
| 1233 |
=head1 FORK |
| 1234 |
|
| 1235 |
Most of the "improved" event delivering mechanisms of modern operating |
| 1236 |
systems have quite a few problems with fork(2) (to put it bluntly: it is |
| 1237 |
not supported and usually destructive). Libev makes it possible to work |
| 1238 |
around this by having a function that recreates the kernel state after |
| 1239 |
fork in the child. |
| 1240 |
|
| 1241 |
On non-win32 platforms, this module requires the pthread_atfork |
| 1242 |
functionality to do this automatically for you. This function is quite |
| 1243 |
buggy on most BSDs, though, so YMMV. The overhead for this is quite |
| 1244 |
negligible, because everything the function currently does is set a flag |
| 1245 |
that is checked only when the event loop gets used the next time, so when |
| 1246 |
you do fork but not use EV, the overhead is minimal. |
| 1247 |
|
| 1248 |
On win32, there is no notion of fork so all this doesn't apply, of course. |
| 1249 |
|
| 1250 |
=cut |
| 1251 |
|
| 1252 |
our $DIED = sub { |
| 1253 |
warn "EV: error in callback (ignoring): $@"; |
| 1254 |
}; |
| 1255 |
|
| 1256 |
default_loop |
| 1257 |
or die 'EV: cannot initialise libev backend. bad $ENV{LIBEV_FLAGS}?'; |
| 1258 |
|
| 1259 |
1; |
| 1260 |
|
| 1261 |
=head1 SEE ALSO |
| 1262 |
|
| 1263 |
L<EV::MakeMaker> - MakeMaker interface to XS API, L<EV::ADNS> |
| 1264 |
(asynchronous DNS), L<Glib::EV> (makes Glib/Gtk2 use EV as event |
| 1265 |
loop), L<EV::Glib> (embed Glib into EV), L<Coro::EV> (efficient thread |
| 1266 |
integration), L<Net::SNMP::EV> (asynchronous SNMP), L<AnyEvent> for |
| 1267 |
event-loop agnostic and portable event driven programming. |
| 1268 |
|
| 1269 |
=head1 AUTHOR |
| 1270 |
|
| 1271 |
Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de> |
| 1272 |
http://home.schmorp.de/ |
| 1273 |
|
| 1274 |
=cut |
| 1275 |
|