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Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Complex Event Processing RSS News A Short History of Complex Event Processing. Part 1: Beginnings Post 302163747 by Linux Bot on Saturday 2nd of February 2008 05:10:15 AM
Old 02-02-2008
A Short History of Complex Event Processing. Part 1: Beginnings

by David Luckham First of two articles on the development of complex event processing Event processing has been going on for more than fifty years. So, you might well ask, what's new about Complex Event Processing? Well, its different from what was going on fifty or thirty or even fifteen years ago. This article is about how [...]

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EVENT(3)								 1								  EVENT(3)

The Event class

INTRODUCTION
Event class represents and event firing on a file descriptor being ready to read from or write to; a file descriptor becoming ready to read from or write to(edge-triggered I/O only); a timeout expiring; a signal occuring; a user-triggered event. Every event is associated with EventBase . However, event will never fire until it is added (via Event::add ). An added event remains in pending state until the registered event occurs, thus turning it to active state. To handle events user may register a callback which is called when event becomes active. If event is configured persistent , it remains pending. If it is not persistent, it stops being pending when it's callback runs. Event::del method deletes event, thus making it non-pending. By means of Event::add method it could be added again. CLASS SYNOPSIS
Event final Event Constants o const integer$Event::ET32 o const integer$Event::PERSIST16 o const integer$Event::READ2 o const integer$Event::WRITE4 o const integer$Event::SIGNAL8 o const integer$Event::TIMEOUT1 Properties o publicreadonly bool$pending Methods o public bool Event::add ([double $timeout]) o public bool Event::addSignal ([double $timeout]) o public bool Event::addTimer ([double $timeout]) o public Event::__construct (EventBase $base, mixed $fd, int $what, callable $cb, [mixed $arg = NULL]) o public bool Event::del (void ) o public bool Event::delSignal (void ) o public bool Event::delTimer (void ) o public void Event::free (void ) o publicstatic array Event::getSupportedMethods (void ) o public bool Event::pending (int $flags) o public bool Event::set (EventBase $base, mixed $fd, [int $what], [callable $cb], [mixed $arg]) o public bool Event::setPriority (int $priority) o public bool Event::setTimer (EventBase $base, callable $cb, [mixed $arg]) o publicstatic Event Event::signal (EventBase $base, int $signum, callable $cb, [mixed $arg]) o publicstatic Event Event::timer (EventBase $base, callable $cb, [mixed $arg]) PROPERTIES
o $pending - Whether event is pending. See About event persistence . PREDEFINED CONSTANTS
o Event::ET - Indicates that the event should be edge-triggered, if the underlying event base backend supports edge-triggered events. This affects the semantics of Event::READ and Event::WRITE . o Event::PERSIST - Indicates that the event is persistent. See About event persistence . o Event::READ - This flag indicates an event that becomes active when the provided file descriptor(usually a stream resource, or socket) is ready for reading. o Event::WRITE - This flag indicates an event that becomes active when the provided file descriptor(usually a stream resource, or socket) is ready for reading. o Event::SIGNAL - Used to implement signal detection. See "Constructing signal events" below. o Event::TIMEOUT - This flag indicates an event that becomes active after a timeout elapses. The Event::TIMEOUT flag is ignored when constructing an event: one can either set a timeout when event is added , or not. It is set in the $what argument to the callback function when a timeout has occurred. PHP Documentation Group EVENT(3)
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