NAME
IO::Async::Loop::Ppoll - use IO::Async with ppoll(2)
SYNOPSIS
use IO::Async::Loop::Ppoll;
my $loop = IO::Async::Loop::Ppoll->new();
$loop->add( ... );
$loop->add( IO::Async::Signal->new(
name =< 'HUP',
on_receipt => sub { ... },
) );
$loop->run;
DESCRIPTION
This subclass of IO::Async::Loop::Poll uses an IO::Ppoll object instead
of a IO::Poll to perform read-ready and write-ready tests so that they
can be mixed with signal handling.
The ppoll() system call atomically switches the process's signal mask,
performs a wait exactly as poll() would, then switches it back. This
allows a process to block the signals it cares about, but switch in an
empty signal mask during the poll, allowing it to handle file IO and
signals concurrently.
CONSTRUCTOR
new
$loop = IO::Async::Loop::Ppoll->new( %args )
This function returns a new instance of a IO::Async::Loop::Ppoll
object. It takes the following named arguments:
poll
The IO::Ppoll object to use for notification. Optional; if a value is
not given, a new IO::Ppoll object will be constructed.
METHODS
As this is a subclass of IO::Async::Loop::Poll, all of its methods are
inherited. Expect where noted below, all of the class's methods behave
identically to IO::Async::Loop::Poll.
loop_once
$count = $loop->loop_once( $timeout )
This method calls the poll() method on the stored IO::Ppoll object,
passing in the value of $timeout, and processes the results of that
call. It returns the total number of IO::Async::Notifier callbacks
invoked, or undef if the underlying poll() method returned an error. If
the poll() was interrupted by a signal, then 0 is returned instead.
SEE ALSO
* IO::Ppoll - Object interface to Linux's ppoll() call
* IO::Async::Loop::Poll - a set using an IO::Poll object
AUTHOR
Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>