Danga::Socket(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Danga::Socket(3)NAMEDanga::Socket - Event loop and event-driven async socket base class
SYNOPSIS
package My::Socket
use Danga::Socket;
use base ('Danga::Socket');
use fields ('my_attribute');
sub new {
my My::Socket $self = shift;
$self = fields::new($self) unless ref $self;
$self->SUPER::new( @_ );
$self->{my_attribute} = 1234;
return $self;
}
sub event_err { ... }
sub event_hup { ... }
sub event_write { ... }
sub event_read { ... }
sub close { ... }
$my_sock->tcp_cork($bool);
# write returns 1 if all writes have gone through, or 0 if there
# are writes in queue
$my_sock->write($scalar);
$my_sock->write($scalarref);
$my_sock->write(sub { ... }); # run when previous data written
$my_sock->write(undef); # kick-starts
# read max $bytecount bytes, or undef on connection closed
$scalar_ref = $my_sock->read($bytecount);
# watch for writability. not needed with ->write(). write()
# will automatically turn on watch_write when you wrote too much
# and turn it off when done
$my_sock->watch_write($bool);
# watch for readability
$my_sock->watch_read($bool);
# if you read too much and want to push some back on
# readable queue. (not incredibly well-tested)
$my_sock->push_back_read($buf); # scalar or scalar ref
Danga::Socket->AddOtherFds(..);
Danga::Socket->SetLoopTimeout($millisecs);
Danga::Socket->DescriptorMap();
Danga::Socket->WatchedSockets(); # count of DescriptorMap keys
Danga::Socket->SetPostLoopCallback($code);
Danga::Socket->EventLoop();
DESCRIPTION
This is an abstract base class for objects backed by a socket which
provides the basic framework for event-driven asynchronous IO, designed
to be fast. Danga::Socket is both a base class for objects, and an
event loop.
Callers subclass Danga::Socket. Danga::Socket's constructor registers
itself with the Danga::Socket event loop, and invokes callbacks on the
object for readability, writability, errors, and other conditions.
Because Danga::Socket uses the "fields" module, your subclasses must
too.
MORE INFO
For now, see servers using Danga::Socket for guidance. For example:
perlbal, mogilefsd, or ddlockd.
API
Note where ""CLASS"" is used below, normally you would call these
methods as:
Danga::Socket->method(...);
However using a subclass works too.
The CLASS methods are all methods for the event loop part of
Danga::Socket, whereas the object methods are all used on your
subclasses.
"CLASS->Reset()"
Reset all state
"CLASS->HaveEpoll()"
Returns a true value if this class will use IO::Epoll for async IO.
"CLASS->WatchedSockets()"
Returns the number of file descriptors which are registered with the
global poll object.
"CLASS->EnableProfiling()"
Turns profiling on, clearing current profiling data.
"CLASS->DisableProfiling()"
Turns off profiling, but retains data up to this point
"CLASS->ProfilingData()"
Returns reference to a hash of data in format:
ITEM => [ utime, stime, #calls ]
"CLASS->ToClose()"
Return the list of sockets that are awaiting close() at the end of the
current event loop.
"CLASS->OtherFds( [%fdmap] )"
Get/set the hash of file descriptors that need processing in parallel
with the registered Danga::Socket objects.
"CLASS->AddOtherFds( [%fdmap] )"
Add fds to the OtherFds hash for processing.
"CLASS->SetLoopTimeout( $timeout )"
Set the loop timeout for the event loop to some value in milliseconds.
A timeout of 0 (zero) means poll forever. A timeout of -1 means poll
and return immediately.
"CLASS->DebugMsg( $format, @args )"
Print the debugging message specified by the "sprintf"-style format and
args
"CLASS->AddTimer( $seconds, $coderef )"
Add a timer to occur $seconds from now. $seconds may be fractional, but
timers are not guaranteed to fire at the exact time you ask for.
Returns a timer object which you can call "$timer->cancel" on if you
need to.
"CLASS->DescriptorMap()"
Get the hash of Danga::Socket objects keyed by the file descriptor
(fileno) they are wrapping.
Returns a hash in list context or a hashref in scalar context.
"CLASS->EventLoop()"
Start processing IO events. In most daemon programs this never exits.
See "PostLoopCallback" below for how to exit the loop.
"CLASS->SetPostLoopCallback( CODEREF )"
Sets post loop callback function. Pass a subref and it will be called
every time the event loop finishes.
Return 1 (or any true value) from the sub to make the loop continue, 0
or false and it will exit.
The callback function will be passed two parameters: \%DescriptorMap,
\%OtherFds.
OBJECT METHODS
"CLASS->new( $socket )"
Create a new Danga::Socket subclass object for the given socket which
will react to events on it during the "EventLoop".
This is normally (always?) called from your subclass via:
$class->SUPER::new($socket);
"$obj->tcp_cork( $boolean )"
Turn TCP_CORK on or off depending on the value of boolean.
"$obj->steal_socket()"
Basically returns our socket and makes it so that we don't try to close
it, but we do remove it from epoll handlers. THIS CLOSES $self. It is
the same thing as calling close, except it gives you the socket to use.
"$obj->close( [$reason] )"
Close the socket. The reason argument will be used in debugging
messages.
"$obj->sock()"
Returns the underlying IO::Handle for the object.
"$obj->set_writer_func( CODEREF )"
Sets a function to use instead of "syswrite()" when writing data to the
socket.
"$obj->write( $data )"
Write the specified data to the underlying handle. data may be scalar,
scalar ref, code ref (to run when there), or undef just to kick-start.
Returns 1 if writes all went through, or 0 if there are writes in
queue. If it returns 1, caller should stop waiting for 'writable'
events)
"$obj->push_back_read( $buf )"
Push back buf (a scalar or scalarref) into the read stream. Useful if
you read more than you need to and want to return this data on the next
"read".
"$obj->read( $bytecount )"
Read at most bytecount bytes from the underlying handle; returns scalar
ref on read, or undef on connection closed.
(VIRTUAL) "$obj->event_read()"
Readable event handler. Concrete deriviatives of Danga::Socket should
provide an implementation of this. The default implementation will die
if called.
(VIRTUAL) "$obj->event_err()"
Error event handler. Concrete deriviatives of Danga::Socket should
provide an implementation of this. The default implementation will die
if called.
(VIRTUAL) "$obj->event_hup()"
'Hangup' event handler. Concrete deriviatives of Danga::Socket should
provide an implementation of this. The default implementation will die
if called.
"$obj->event_write()"
Writable event handler. Concrete deriviatives of Danga::Socket may wish
to provide an implementation of this. The default implementation calls
"write()" with an "undef".
"$obj->watch_read( $boolean )"
Turn 'readable' event notification on or off.
"$obj->watch_write( $boolean )"
Turn 'writable' event notification on or off.
"$obj->dump_error( $message )"
Prints to STDERR a backtrace with information about this socket and
what lead up to the dump_error call.
"$obj->debugmsg( $format, @args )"
Print the debugging message specified by the "sprintf"-style format and
args.
"$obj->peer_ip_string()"
Returns the string describing the peer's IP
"$obj->peer_addr_string()"
Returns the string describing the peer for the socket which underlies
this object in form "ip:port"
"$obj->local_ip_string()"
Returns the string describing the local IP
"$obj->local_addr_string()"
Returns the string describing the local end of the socket which
underlies this object in form "ip:port"
"$obj->as_string()"
Returns a string describing this socket.
AUTHORS
Brad Fitzpatrick <brad@danga.com> - author
Michael Granger <ged@danga.com> - docs, testing
Mark Smith <junior@danga.com> - contributor, heavy user, testing
Matt Sergeant <matt@sergeant.org> - kqueue support, docs, timers, other
bits
BUGS
Not documented enough (but isn't that true of every project?).
tcp_cork only works on Linux for now. No BSD push/nopush support.
LICENSE
License is granted to use and distribute this module under the same
terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.14.0 2008-11-28 Danga::Socket(3)