NAME
Linux::Perl::epoll
SYNOPSIS
my $epl = Linux::Perl::epoll->new();
$epl->add( $fh, events => ['IN', 'ET'] );
my @events = $epl->wait(
maxevents => 3,
timeout => 2, #seconds
sigmask => ['INT', 'TERM'], #optional
);
$epl->delete($fh);
DESCRIPTION
An interface to Linux’s “epoll” feature.
Note that older kernel versions may not support all of the functionality documented here. Check your system’s epoll documentation (i.e., man 7 epoll
and the various system calls’ pages) for full details.
METHODS
CLASS->new( %OPTS )
Creates a new epoll instance. %OPTS are:
flags
- Currently onlyCLOEXEC
is recognized.size
- Optional, and only useful on pre-2.6.8 kernels. Seemain 2 epoll_create
for more details.
CLASS->EVENT_NUMBER()
Returns a (constant) hash reference that cross-references event names and their numbers. This is useful, e.g., for parsing events from the return of wait()
.
The recognized event names are IN
, OUT
, RDHUP
, PRI
, ERR
, and HUP
.
OBJ->add( $FD_OR_FH, %OPTS )
Adds a listener to the epoll instance. $FD_OR_FH is either a Perl filehandle or a file descriptor number. %OPTS are:
events
- An array reference of events/switches. Each member is either a key fromEVENT_NUMBER()
or one of the following switches:ET
,ONESHOT
,WAKEUP
,EXCLUSIVE
. Your kernel may not support all of those; checkman 2 epoll_ctl
for details.data
- Optional, an arbitrary number to store with the file descriptor. This defaults to the file descriptor because this is the obvious way to correlate an event with its filehandle; however, you can set your own numeric value here if you’d rather.
OBJ->modify( $FD_OR_FH, %OPTS )
Same arguments as add()
; use this to update an existing epoll listener.
OBJ->delete( $FD_OR_FH )
Removes an epoll listener.
@events = OBJ->wait( %OPTS )
Waits for one or more events on the epoll. %OPTS are:
maxevents
- The number of events to listen for.timeout
- in secondssigmask
- Optional, an array of signals to block. The signals can be specified either as names (e.g.,INT
) or as numbers. Seeman 2 epoll_pwait
for why you might want to do this. (Note that Perl doesn’t really expect you to block signals directly, so this may screw things up for you in weird ways. If in doubt, avoid this option.)
The return is a list of hash references, one for each received event. Each hash reference is:
data
- The same number given inadd()
—or, if you didn’t set a customdata
value, the file descriptor associated with the event.events
- Corresponds to the same-named array given inadd()
, but to optimize performance this is returned as a single number. Check for specific events by iterating through theEVENT_NUMBER()
hash reference.