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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? A terrific historical video about UNIX circa 1982 with well known names. Post 303033205 by vgersh99 on Monday 1st of April 2019 12:55:47 PM
Old 04-01-2019
Great find - enjoyed watching!
Thanks!
This User Gave Thanks to vgersh99 For This Post:
 

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Mojo::Reactor(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					Mojo::Reactor(3pm)

NAME
Mojo::Reactor - Low level event reactor base class SYNOPSIS
package Mojo::Reactor::MyEventLoop; use Mojo::Base 'Mojo::Reactor'; $ENV{MOJO_REACTOR} ||= 'Mojo::Reactor::MyEventLoop'; sub io {...} sub is_running {...} sub one_tick {...} sub recurring {...} sub remove {...} sub start {...} sub stop {...} sub timer {...} sub watch {...} 1; DESCRIPTION
Mojo::Reactor is an abstract base class for low level event reactors. EVENTS
Mojo::Reactor can emit the following events. "error" $reactor->on(error => sub { my ($reactor, $err) = @_; ... }); Emitted safely for exceptions caught in callbacks. $reactor->on(error => sub { my ($reactor, $err) = @_; say "Something very bad happened: $err"; }); METHODS
Mojo::Reactor inherits all methods from Mojo::EventEmitter and implements the following new ones. "detect" my $class = Mojo::Reactor->detect; Detect and load the best reactor implementation available, will try the value of the "MOJO_REACTOR" environment variable, Mojo::Reactor::EV or Mojo::Reactor::Poll. # Instantiate best reactor implementation available my $reactor = Mojo::Reactor->detect->new; "io" $reactor = $reactor->io($handle => sub {...}); Watch handle for I/O events, invoking the callback whenever handle becomes readable or writable. Meant to be overloaded in a subclass. # Callback will be invoked twice if handle becomes readable and writable $reactor->io($handle => sub { my ($reactor, $writable) = @_; say $writable ? 'Handle is writable' : 'Handle is readable'; }); "is_readable" my $success = $reactor->is_readable($handle); Quick non-blocking check if a handle is readable, useful for identifying tainted sockets. "is_running" my $success = $reactor->is_running; Check if reactor is running. Meant to be overloaded in a subclass. "one_tick" $reactor->one_tick; Run reactor until an event occurs or no events are being watched anymore. Note that this method can recurse back into the reactor, so you need to be careful. Meant to be overloaded in a subclass. # Don't block longer than 0.5 seconds my $id = $reactor->timer(0.5 => sub {}); $reactor->one_tick; $reactor->remove($id); "recurring" my $id = $reactor->recurring(0.25 => sub {...}); Create a new recurring timer, invoking the callback repeatedly after a given amount of time in seconds. Meant to be overloaded in a subclass. # Invoke as soon as possible $reactor->recurring(0 => sub { say 'Reactor tick.' }); "remove" my $success = $reactor->remove($handle); my $success = $reactor->remove($id); Remove handle or timer. Meant to be overloaded in a subclass. "start" $reactor->start; Start watching for I/O and timer events, this will block until "stop" is called or no events are being watched anymore. Meant to be overloaded in a subclass. "stop" $reactor->stop; Stop watching for I/O and timer events. Meant to be overloaded in a subclass. "timer" my $id = $reactor->timer(0.5 => sub {...}); Create a new timer, invoking the callback after a given amount of time in seconds. Meant to be overloaded in a subclass. # Invoke as soon as possible $reactor->timer(0 => sub { say 'Next tick.' }); "watch" $reactor = $reactor->watch($handle, $readable, $writable); Change I/O events to watch handle for with "true" and "false" values, meant to be overloaded in a subclass. # Watch only for readable events $reactor->watch($handle, 1, 0); # Watch only for writable events $reactor->watch($handle, 0, 1); # Watch for readable and writable events $reactor->watch($handle, 1, 1); # Pause watching for events $reactor->watch($handle, 0, 0); SEE ALSO
Mojolicious, Mojolicious::Guides, <http://mojolicio.us>. perl v5.14.2 2012-09-05 Mojo::Reactor(3pm)
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