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Event::RPC::Loop(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Event::RPC::Loop(3pm) |
NAME¶
Event::RPC::Loop - Mainloop Abstraction layer for Event::RPC
SYNOPSIS¶
use Event::RPC::Server; use Event::RPC::Loop::Glib; my $server = Event::RPC::Server->new ( ... loop => Event::RPC::Loop::Glib->new(), ... ); $server->start;
DESCRIPTION¶
This modules defines the interface of Event::RPC's mainloop abstraction layer. It's a virtual class all mainloop modules should inherit from.
INTERFACE¶
The following methods need to be implemented:
- $loop->enter ()
- Enter resp. start a mainloop.
- $loop->leave ()
- Leave the mainloop, which was started with the enter() method.
- $watcher = $loop->add_io_watcher ( %options )
- Add an I/O watcher. Options are passed as a hash of key/value pairs. The following options are known:
- fh
- The filehandle to be watched.
- cb
- This callback is called, without any parameters, if an event occurred on the filehandle above.
- desc
- A description of the watcher. Not necessarily implemented by all modules, so it may be ignored.
- poll
- Either 'r', if your program reads from the filehandle, or 'w' if it writes to it.
A watcher object is returned. What this exactly is depends on the implementation, so you can't do anything useful with it besides passing it back to del_io_watcher().
- $loop->del_io_watcher ( $watcher )
- Deletes an I/O watcher which was added with $loop->add_io_watcher().
- $timer = $loop->add_timer ( %options )
- This sets a timer, a subroutine called after a specific timeout or on a
regularly basis with a fixed time interval.
Options are passed as a hash of key/value pairs. The following options are known:
A timer object is returned. What this exactly is depends on the implementation, so you can't do anything useful with it besides passing it back to del_io_timer().
- $loop->del_timer ( $timer )
- Deletes a timer which was added with $loop->add_timer().
DIRECT USAGE IN YOUR SERVER¶
You may use the methods of Event::RPC::Loop by yourself if you like. This way your program keeps independent of the actual mainloop module in use, if the simplified interface of Event::RPC::Loop is sufficient for you.
In your server program you access the actual mainloop object this way:
my $loop = Event::RPC::Server->instance->get_loop;
Naturally nothing speaks against making your program to work only with a specific mainloop implementation, if you need its features. In that case you may use the corresponding API directly (e.g. of Event or Glib), no need to access it through Event::RPC::Loop.
AUTHORS¶
Jörn Reder <joern AT zyn.de>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
Copyright (C) 2005-2015 by Jörn Reder <joern AT zyn.de>.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
2022-12-12 | perl v5.36.0 |