AE (3)
Leading comments
Automatically generated by Pod::Man 4.09 (Pod::Simple 3.35) Standard preamble: ========================================================================
NAME
AE - simpler/faster/newer/cooler AnyEvent APISYNOPSIS
use AnyEvent; # not AE # file handle or descriptor readable my $w = AE::io $fh, 0, sub { ... }; # one-shot or repeating timers my $w = AE::timer $seconds, 0, sub { ... }; # once my $w = AE::timer $seconds, $interval, sub { ... }; # repeated print AE::now; # prints current event loop time print AE::time; # think Time::HiRes::time or simply CORE::time. # POSIX signal my $w = AE::signal TERM => sub { ... }; # child process exit my $w = AE::child $pid, sub { my ($pid, $status) = @_; ... }; # called when event loop idle (if applicable) my $w = AE::idle sub { ... }; my $cv = AE::cv; # stores whether a condition was flagged $cv->send; # wake up current and all future recv's $cv->recv; # enters "main loop" till $condvar gets ->send # use a condvar in callback mode: $cv->cb (sub { $_[0]->recv });
DESCRIPTION
This module documents the new simpler AnyEventThe rationale for the new
The main differences from AnyEvent is that function calls are used instead of method calls, and that no named arguments are used.
This makes calls to watcher creation functions really short, which can make a program more readable despite the lack of named parameters. Function calls also allow more static type checking than method calls, so many mistakes are caught at compile-time with this
Also, some backends (Perl and
Note that the "AE"
As the
At the moment, these functions will become slower then their method-call counterparts when using AnyEvent::Strict or AnyEvent::Debug::wrap.
FUNCTIONS
This section briefly describes the alternative watcher constructors and
other functions available inside the "AE" namespace. Semantics are not
described here; please refer to the description of the function or method
with the same name in the AnyEvent manpage for the details.
- $w = AE::io $fh_or_fd, $watch_write, $cb
-
Creates an I/O watcher that listens for read events ($watch_write
false) or write events ($watch_write is true) on the file handle or
file descriptor $fh_or_fd.
The callback $cb is invoked as soon and as long as I/O of the type specified by $watch_write) can be done on the file handle/descriptor.
Example: wait until
STDINbecomes readable.$stdin_ready = AE::io *STDIN, 0, sub { scalar <STDIN> };
Example: wait until
STDOUTbecomes writable and print something.$stdout_ready = AE::io *STDOUT, 1, sub { print STDOUT "woaw\n" };
- $w = AE::timer $after, $interval, $cb
-
Creates a timer watcher that invokes the callback $cb after at least
$after second have passed ($after can be negative or 0).
If $interval is 0, then the callback will only be invoked once, otherwise it must be a positive number of seconds that specifies the interval between successive invocations of the callback.
Example: print ``too late'' after at least one second has passed.
$timer_once = AE::timer 1, 0, sub { print "too late\n" };
Example: print ``blubb'' once a second, starting as soon as possible.
$timer_repeated = AE::timer 0, 1, sub { print "blubb\n" };
- $w = AE::signal $signame, $cb
- Invoke the callback $cb each time one or more occurrences of the named signal $signame are detected.
- $w = AE::child $pid, $cb
-
Invokes the callback $cb when the child with the given $pid exits
(or all children, when $pid is zero).
The callback will get the actual pid and exit status as arguments.
- $w = AE::idle $cb
- Invoke the callback $cb each time the event loop is ``idle'' (has no events outstanding), but do not prevent the event loop from polling for more events.
- $cv = AE::cv
- $cv = AE::cv { BLOCK}
- Create a new condition variable. The first form is identical to "AnyEvent->condvar", the second form additionally sets the callback (as if the "cb" method is called on the condition variable).
- AE::now
- Returns the current event loop time (may be cached by the event loop).
- AE::now_update
- Ensures that the current event loop time is up to date.
- AE::time
- Return the current time (not cached, always consults a hardware clock).
- AE::postpone { BLOCK}
- Exactly the same as "AnyEvent:::postpone".
- AE::log $level, $msg[, @args]
- Exactly the same as "AnyEvent::log" (or "AnyEvent::Log::log").
AUTHOR
Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de> anyevent.schmorp.de