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local/lib/perl5/IO/Async/Loop.pm view on Meta::CPAN
A synonym for C<stop>, though this method does not pass any results.
=cut
sub loop_stop
{
my $self = shift;
$self->stop;
}
=head2 post_fork
$loop->post_fork
The base implementation of this method does nothing. It is provided in case
some Loop subclasses should take special measures after a C<fork()> system
call if the main body of the program should survive in both running processes.
This may be required, for example, in a long-running server daemon that forks
multiple copies on startup after opening initial listening sockets. A loop
implementation that uses some in-kernel resource that becomes shared after
forking (for example, a Linux C<epoll> or a BSD C<kqueue> filehandle) would
need recreating in the new child process before the program can continue.
=cut
sub post_fork
{
# empty
}
###########
# Futures #
###########
=head1 FUTURE SUPPORT
local/lib/perl5/IO/Async/Loop/Poll.pm view on Meta::CPAN
use IO::Async::Loop::Poll;
my $poll = IO::Poll->new;
my $loop = IO::Async::Loop::Poll->new( poll => $poll );
$loop->add( ... );
while(1) {
my $timeout = ...
my $ret = $poll->poll( $timeout );
$loop->post_poll;
}
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This subclass of L<IO::Async::Loop> uses the C<poll(2)> system call to perform
read-ready and write-ready tests.
By default, this loop will use the underlying C<poll()> system call directly,
bypassing the usual L<IO::Poll> object wrapper around it because of a number
of bugs and design flaws in that class; namely
local/lib/perl5/IO/Async/Loop/Poll.pm view on Meta::CPAN
stable stringification of IO handles
=item *
L<https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=25049> - IO::Poll->poll() with no
handles always returns immediately
=back
However, to integrate with existing code that uses an C<IO::Poll> object, a
C<post_poll> can be called immediately after the C<poll> method that
C<IO::Poll> object. The appropriate mask bits are maintained on the
C<IO::Poll> object when notifiers are added or removed from the loop, or when
they change their C<want_*> status. The C<post_poll> method inspects the
result bits and invokes the C<on_read_ready> or C<on_write_ready> methods on
the notifiers.
=cut
=head1 CONSTRUCTOR
=cut
=head2 new
local/lib/perl5/IO/Async/Loop/Poll.pm view on Meta::CPAN
$self->{poll} = $poll;
$self->{pollmask} = {};
return $self;
}
=head1 METHODS
=cut
=head2 post_poll
$count = $loop->post_poll
This method checks the returned event list from a C<IO::Poll::poll> call,
and calls any of the notification methods or callbacks that are appropriate.
It returns the total number of callbacks that were invoked; that is, the
total number of C<on_read_ready> and C<on_write_ready> callbacks for
C<watch_io>, and C<watch_time> event callbacks.
=cut
sub post_poll
{
my $self = shift;
my $iowatches = $self->{iowatches};
my $poll = $self->{poll};
my $count = 0;
alarm( IO::Async::Loop->WATCHDOG_INTERVAL ) if WATCHDOG_ENABLE;
local/lib/perl5/IO/Async/Loop/Poll.pm view on Meta::CPAN
alarm( 0 ) if WATCHDOG_ENABLE;
return $count;
}
=head2 loop_once
$count = $loop->loop_once( $timeout )
This method calls the C<poll> method on the stored C<IO::Poll> object,
passing in the value of C<$timeout>, and then runs the C<post_poll> method
on itself. It returns the total number of callbacks invoked by the
C<post_poll> method, or C<undef> if the underlying C<poll> method returned
an error.
=cut
sub loop_once
{
my $self = shift;
my ( $timeout ) = @_;
$self->_adjust_timeout( \$timeout );
local/lib/perl5/IO/Async/Loop/Poll.pm view on Meta::CPAN
my $secondattempt = $poll->poll( 0 );
$pollret = $secondattempt if $secondattempt > 0;
}
}
else {
# Workaround - we'll use select to fake a millisecond-accurate sleep
$pollret = select( undef, undef, undef, $timeout );
}
return undef unless defined $pollret;
return $self->post_poll;
}
else {
my @pollmasks = %{ $self->{pollmask} };
# Perl 5.8.x's IO::Poll::_poll gets confused with no masks
my $pollret;
if( @pollmasks ) {
my $msec = defined $timeout ? $timeout * 1000 : -1;
$pollret = IO::Poll::_poll( $msec, @pollmasks );
if( $pollret == -1 and $! == EINTR or
local/lib/perl5/IO/Async/Loop/Poll.pm view on Meta::CPAN
}
else {
# Workaround - we'll use select to fake a millisecond-accurate sleep
$pollret = select( undef, undef, undef, $timeout );
}
return undef unless defined $pollret;
$self->{pollevents} = { @pollmasks };
return $self->post_poll;
}
}
sub watch_io
{
my $self = shift;
my %params = @_;
$self->__watch_io( %params );
local/lib/perl5/IO/Async/Loop/Select.pm view on Meta::CPAN
$loop->add( ... );
while(1) {
my ( $rvec, $wvec, $evec ) = ('') x 3;
my $timeout;
$loop->pre_select( \$rvec, \$wvec, \$evec, \$timeout );
...
my $ret = select( $rvec, $wvec, $evec, $timeout );
...
$loop->post_select( $rvec, $evec, $wvec );
}
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This subclass of L<IO::Async::Loop> uses the C<select(2)> syscall to perform
read-ready and write-ready tests.
To integrate with an existing C<select>-based event loop, a pair of methods
C<pre_select> and C<post_select> can be called immediately before and
after a C<select> call. The relevant bits in the read-ready, write-ready and
exceptional-state bitvectors are set by the C<pre_select> method, and tested
by the C<post_select> method to pick which event callbacks to invoke.
=cut
=head1 CONSTRUCTOR
=cut
=head2 new
$loop = IO::Async::Loop::Select->new
local/lib/perl5/IO/Async/Loop/Select.pm view on Meta::CPAN
# Round up to nearest millisecond
if( $$timeref ) {
my $mils = $$timeref * 1000;
my $fraction = $mils - int $mils;
$$timeref += ( 1 - $fraction ) / 1000 if $fraction;
}
return;
}
=head2 post_select
$loop->post_select( $readvec, $writevec, $exceptvec )
This method checks the returned bitvectors from a C<select> call, and calls
any of the callbacks that are appropriate.
=over 8
=item $readvec
=item $writevec
=item $exceptvec
Scalars containing the read-ready, write-ready and exception bitvectors
=back
=cut
sub post_select
{
my $self = shift;
my ( $readvec, $writevec, $exceptvec ) = @_;
my $iowatches = $self->{iowatches};
my $count = 0;
alarm( IO::Async::Loop->WATCHDOG_INTERVAL ) if WATCHDOG_ENABLE;
local/lib/perl5/IO/Async/Loop/Select.pm view on Meta::CPAN
$self->_manage_queues;
alarm( 0 ) if WATCHDOG_ENABLE;
}
=head2 loop_once
$count = $loop->loop_once( $timeout )
This method calls the C<pre_select> method to prepare the bitvectors for a
C<select> syscall, performs it, then calls C<post_select> to process the
result. It returns the total number of callbacks invoked by the
C<post_select> method, or C<undef> if the underlying C<select(2)> syscall
returned an error.
=cut
sub loop_once
{
my $self = shift;
my ( $timeout ) = @_;
my ( $rvec, $wvec, $evec ) = ('') x 3;
local/lib/perl5/IO/Async/Loop/Select.pm view on Meta::CPAN
my $ret = select( $rvec, $wvec, $evec, $timeout );
if( $ret < 0 ) {
# r/w/e vec can't be trusted
$rvec = $wvec = $evec = '';
}
{
local $!;
$self->post_select( $rvec, $wvec, $evec );
}
return $ret;
}
sub watch_io
{
my $self = shift;
my %params = @_;
local/lib/perl5/Module/Build/API.pod view on Meta::CPAN
=item config_data($name => $value)
[version 0.26]
With a single argument, returns the value of the configuration
variable C<$name>. With two arguments, sets the given configuration
variable to the given value. The value may be any Perl scalar that's
serializable with C<Data::Dumper>. For instance, if you write a
module that can use a MySQL or PostgreSQL back-end, you might create
configuration variables called C<mysql_connect> and
C<postgres_connect>, and set each to an array of connection parameters
for C<< DBI->connect() >>.
Configuration values set in this way using the Module::Build object
will be available for querying during the build/test process and after
installation via the generated C<...::ConfigData> module, as
C<< ...::ConfigData->config($name) >>.
The L<feature()|/"feature($name)"> and C<config_data()> methods represent
Module::Build's main support for configuration of installed modules.
See also L<Module::Build::Authoring/"SAVING CONFIGURATION INFORMATION">.
local/lib/perl5/Module/Build/API.pod view on Meta::CPAN
=item feature($name => $value)
[version 0.26]
With a single argument, returns true if the given feature is set.
With two arguments, sets the given feature to the given boolean value.
In this context, a "feature" is any optional functionality of an
installed module. For instance, if you write a module that could
optionally support a MySQL or PostgreSQL backend, you might create
features called C<mysql_support> and C<postgres_support>, and set them
to true/false depending on whether the user has the proper databases
installed and configured.
Features set in this way using the Module::Build object will be
available for querying during the build/test process and after
installation via the generated C<...::ConfigData> module, as
C<< ...::ConfigData->feature($name) >>.
The C<feature()> and C<config_data()> methods represent
Module::Build's main support for configuration of installed modules.
local/lib/perl5/Module/Build/Base.pm view on Meta::CPAN
# Strip leading and trailing newlines
$cmd =~ s{^\n+}{};
$cmd =~ s{\n+$}{};
my $perl = ref($self) ? $self->perl : $self->find_perl_interpreter;
return $self->_quote_args($perl, @$switches, '-e', $cmd, @$args);
}
sub run_perl_script {
my ($self, $script, $preargs, $postargs) = @_;
foreach ($preargs, $postargs) {
$_ = [ $self->split_like_shell($_) ] unless ref();
}
return $self->run_perl_command([@$preargs, $script, @$postargs]);
}
sub run_perl_command {
# XXX Maybe we should accept @args instead of $args? Must resolve
# this before documenting.
my ($self, $args) = @_;
$args = [ $self->split_like_shell($args) ] unless ref($args);
my $perl = ref($self) ? $self->perl : $self->find_perl_interpreter;
# Make sure our local additions to @INC are propagated to the subprocess