NAME
IO::Async::Process
- start and manage a child process
SYNOPSIS
use IO::Async::Process;
use IO::Async::Loop;
my $loop = IO::Async::Loop->new;
my $process = IO::Async::Process->new(
command => [ "tr", "a-z", "n-za-m" ],
stdin => {
from => "hello world\n",
},
stdout => {
on_read => sub {
my ( $stream, $buffref ) = @_;
while( $$buffref =~ s/^(.*)\n// ) {
print "Rot13 of 'hello world' is '$1'\n";
}
return 0;
},
},
on_finish => sub {
$loop->loop_stop;
},
);
$loop->add( $process );
$loop->loop_forever;
DESCRIPTION
This subclass of IO::Async::Notifier starts a child process, and invokes a callback when it exits. The child process can either execute a given block of code (via fork(2)
), or a command.
EVENTS
The following events are invoked, either using subclass methods or CODE references in parameters:
on_finish $exitcode
Invoked after the process has exited by normal means (i.e. an exit(2)
syscall from a process, or return
ing from the code block), and has closed all its file descriptors.
on_exception $exception, $errno, $exitcode
Invoked when the process exits by an exception from code
, or by failing to exec(2)
the given command. $errno
will be a dualvar, containing both number and string values.
Note that this has a different name and a different argument order from Loop->open_child
's on_error
.
If this is not provided and the process exits with an exception, then on_finish
is invoked instead, being passed just the exit code.
CONSTRUCTOR
$process = IO::Async::Process->new( %args )
Constructs a new IO::Async::Process
object and returns it.
Once constructed, the Process
will need to be added to the Loop
before the child process is started.
PARAMETERS
The following named parameters may be passed to new
or configure
:
Once the on_finish
continuation has been invoked, the IO::Async::Process
object is removed from the containing IO::Async::Loop
object.
The following parameters may be passed to new
, or to configure
before the process has been started (i.e. before it has been added to the Loop
). Once the process is running these cannot be changed.
- command => ARRAY or STRING
-
Either a reference to an array containing the command and its arguments, or a plain string containing the command. This value is passed into perl's
exec(2)
function. - code => CODE
-
A block of code to execute in the child process. It will be called in scalar context inside an
eval
block. - setup => ARRAY
-
Optional reference to an array to pass to the underlying
Loop
spawn_child
method. - fdn => HASH
-
A hash describing how to set up file descriptor n. The hash may contain the following keys:
- via => STRING
-
Configures how this file descriptor will be configured for the child process. Must be given one of the following mode names:
- pipe_read
-
The child will be given the writing end of a
pipe(2)
; the parent may read from the other. - pipe_write
-
The child will be given the reading end of a
pipe(2)
; the parent may write to the other. - pipe_rdwr
-
Only valid on the
stdio
filehandle. The child will be given the reading end of onepipe(2)
on STDIN and the writing end of another on STDOUT. A single Stream object will be created in the parent configured for both filehandles. - socketpair
-
The child will be given one end of a
socketpair(2)
; the parent will be given the other. The family of this socket may be given by the extra key calledfamily
; defaulting tounix
. The socktype of this socket may be given by the extra key calledsocktype
; defaulting tostream
. If the type is notSOCK_STREAM
then a IO::Async::Socket object will be constructed for the parent side of the handle, rather thanIO::Async::Stream
.
Once the filehandle is set up, the
fd
method (or its shortcuts ofstdin
,stdout
orstderr
) may be used to access theIO::Async::Handle
-subclassed object wrapped around it.The value of this argument is implied by any of the following alternatives.
- on_read => CODE
-
The child will be given the writing end of a pipe. The reading end will be wrapped by an
IO::Async::Stream
using thison_read
callback function. - into => SCALAR
-
The child will be given the reading end of a pipe. The referenced scalar will be filled by data read from the child process. This data may not be available until the pipe has been closed by the child.
- from => STRING
-
The child will be given the reading end of a pipe. The string given by the
from
parameter will be written to the child. When all of the data has been written the pipe will be closed.
- stdin => ...
- stdout => ...
- stderr => ...
-
Shortcuts for
fd0
,fd1
andfd2
respectively. - stdio => ...
-
Special filehandle to affect STDIN and STDOUT at the same time. This filehandle supports being configured for both reading and writing at the same time.
METHODS
$pid = $process->pid
Returns the process ID of the process, if it has been started, or undef
if not. Its value is preserved after the process exits, so it may be inspected during the on_finish
or on_exception
events.
$running = $process->is_running
Returns true if the Process has been started, and has not yet finished.
$exited = $process->is_exited
Returns true if the Process has finished running, and finished due to normal exit(2)
.
$status = $process->exitstatus
If the process exited due to normal exit(2)
, returns the value that was passed to exit(2)
. Otherwise, returns undef
.
$exception = $process->exception
If the process exited due to an exception, returns the exception that was thrown. Otherwise, returns undef
.
$errno = $process->errno
If the process exited due to an exception, returns the numerical value of $!
at the time the exception was thrown. Otherwise, returns undef
.
$errstr = $process->errstr
If the process exited due to an exception, returns the string value of $!
at the time the exception was thrown. Otherwise, returns undef
.
$stream = $process->fd( $fd )
Returns the IO::Async::Stream or IO::Async::Socket associated with the given FD number. This must have been set up by a configure
argument prior to adding the Process
object to the Loop
.
The returned object have its read or write handle set to the other end of a pipe or socket connected to that FD number in the child process. Typically, this will be used to call the write
method on, to write more data into the child, or to set an on_read
handler to read data out of the child.
The on_closed
event for these streams must not be changed, or it will break the close detection used by the Process
object and the on_finish
event will not be invoked.
$stream = $process->stdin
$stream = $process->stdout
$stream = $process->stderr
$stream = $process->stdio
Shortcuts for calling fd
with 0, 1, 2 or io
respectively, to obtain the IO::Async::Stream representing the standard input, output, error, or combined input/output streams of the child process.
AUTHOR
Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>