NAME
Future::AsyncAwait
- deferred subroutine syntax for futures
SYNOPSIS
use v5.14;
use Future::AsyncAwait;
async sub do_a_thing
{
my $first = await do_first_thing();
my $second = await do_second_thing();
return combine_things( $first, $second );
}
do_a_thing()->get;
DESCRIPTION
This module provides syntax for deferring and resuming subroutines while waiting for Futures to complete. This syntax aims to make code that performs asynchronous operations using futures look neater and more expressive than simply using then
chaining and other techniques on the futures themselves. It is also a similar syntax used by a number of other languages; notably C# 5, EcmaScript 6, Python 3, Dart, Rust, C++20.
This module is still under active development. While it now seems relatively stable enough for most use-cases and has received a lot of "battle-testing" in a wide variety of scenarios, there may still be the occasional case of memory leak left in it, especially if still-pending futures are abandoned.
The new syntax takes the form of two new keywords, async
and await
.
async
The async
keyword should appear just before the sub
keyword that declares a new function. When present, this marks that the function performs its work in a potentially asynchronous fashion. This has two effects: it permits the body of the function to use the await
expression, and it wraps the return value of the function in a Future instance.
async sub myfunc
{
return 123;
}
my $f = myfunc();
my $result = $f->get;
As well as named function declarations it is also supported on anonymous function expressions.
my $code = async sub { return 456 };
my $f = $code->();
my $result = $f->get;
This async
-declared function always returns a Future
instance when invoked. The returned future instance will eventually complete when the function returns, either by the return
keyword or by falling off the end; the result of the future will be the return value from the function's code. Alternatively, if the function body throws an exception, this will cause the returned future to fail.
If the final expression in the body of the function returns a Future
, don't forget to await
it rather than simply returning it as it is, or else this return value will become double-wrapped - almost certainly not what you wanted.
async sub otherfunc { ... }
async sub myfunc
{
...
return await otherfunc();
}
await
The await
keyword forms an expression which takes a Future
instance as an operand and yields the eventual result of it. Superficially it can be thought of similar to invoking the get
method on the future.
my $result = await $f;
my $result = $f->get;
However, the key difference (and indeed the entire reason for being a new syntax keyword) is the behaviour when the future is still pending and is not yet complete. Whereas the simple get
method would block until the future is complete, the await
keyword causes its entire containing function to become suspended, making it return a new (pending) future instance. It waits in this state until the future it was waiting on completes, at which point it wakes up and resumes execution from the point of the await
expression. When the now-resumed function eventually finishes (either by returning a value or throwing an exception), this value is set as the result of the future it had returned earlier.
await
provides scalar context to its controlling expression.
async sub func {
# this function is invoked in scalar context
}
await func();
Because the await
keyword may cause its containing function to suspend early, returning a pending future instance, it is only allowed inside async
-marked subs.
The converse is not true; just because a function is marked as async
does not require it to make use of the await
expression. It is still useful to turn the result of that function into a future, entirely without await
ing on any itself.
Any function that doesn't actually await anything, and just returns immediate futures can be neatened by this module too.
Instead of writing
sub imm
{
...
return Future->done( @result );
}
you can now simply write
async sub imm
{
...
return @result;
}
with the added side-benefit that any exceptions thrown by the elided code will be turned into an immediate-failed Future
rather than making the call itself propagate the exception, which is usually what you wanted when dealing with futures.
await (toplevel)
Since version 0.47.
An await
expression is also permitted directly in the main script at toplevel, outside of async sub
. This is implemented by simply invoking the get
method on the future value. Thus, the following two lines are directly equivalent:
await afunc();
afunc()->get;
This is provided as a syntax convenience for unit tests, toplevel scripts, and so on. It allows code to be written in a style that can be easily moved into an async sub
, and avoids encouraging "bad habits" of invoking the get
method directly.
CANCEL
Experimental. Since version 0.44.
The CANCEL
keyword declares a block of code which will be run in the event that the future returned by the async sub
is cancelled.
async sub f
{
CANCEL { warn "This task was cancelled"; }
await ...
}
f()->cancel;
A CANCEL
block is a self-contained syntax element, similar to perl constructions like BEGIN
, and does not need a terminating semicolon.
When a CANCEL
block is encountered during execution of the async sub
, the code in its block is stored for the case that the returned future is cancelled. Each will take effect as it is executed, possibly multiple times if it appears inside a loop, or not at all if it appears conditionally in a branch that was not executed.
async sub g
{
if(0) {
CANCEL { warn "This does not happen"; }
}
foreach my $x ( 1..3 ) {
CANCEL { warn "This happens for x=$x"; }
}
await ...
}
g()->cancel;
CANCEL
blocks are only invoked if a still-pending future is cancelled. They are discarded without being executed if the function finishes; either successfully or if it throws an exception.
Experimental Features
Some of the features of this module are currently marked as experimental. They will provoke warnings in the experimental
category, unless silenced.
You can silence this with no warnings 'experimental'
but then that will silence every experimental warning, which may hide others unintentionally. For a more fine-grained approach you can instead use the import line for this module to only silence this module's warnings selectively:
use Future::AsyncAwait qw( :experimental(cancel) );
use Future::AsyncAwait qw( :experimental ); # all of the above
SUPPORTED USES
Most cases involving awaiting on still-pending futures should work fine:
async sub foo
{
my ( $f ) = @_;
BEFORE();
await $f;
AFTER();
}
async sub bar
{
my ( $f ) = @_;
return 1 + await( $f ) + 3;
}
async sub splot
{
while( COND ) {
await func();
}
}
async sub wibble
{
if( COND ) {
await func();
}
}
async sub wobble
{
foreach my $var ( THINGs ) {
await func();
}
}
async sub quux
{
my $x = do {
await func();
};
}
async sub splat
{
eval {
await func();
};
}
Plain lexical variables are preserved across an await
deferral:
async sub quux
{
my $message = "Hello, world\n";
await func();
print $message;
}
On perl versions 5.26 and later async sub
syntax supports the signatures
feature if it is enabled:
use v5.26;
use feature 'signatures';
async sub quart($x, $y)
{
...
}
Cancellation
Cancelled futures cause a suspended async sub
to simply stop running.
async sub fizz
{
await func();
say "This is never reached";
}
my $f = fizz();
$f->cancel;
Cancellation requests can propagate backwards into the future the async sub
is currently waiting on.
async sub floof
{
...
await $f1;
}
my $f2 = floof();
$f2->cancel; # $f1 will be cancelled too
This behaviour is still more experimental than the rest of the logic. The following should be noted:
Cancellation propagation is only implemented on Perl version 5.24 and above. An
async sub
in an earlier perl version will still stop executing if cancelled, but will not propagate the request backwards into the future that theasync sub
is currently waiting on. See "TODO".
SUBCLASSING Future
By default when an async sub
returns a result or fails immediately before awaiting, it will return a new completed instance of the Future class. In order to allow code that wishes to use a different class to represent futures the module import method can be passed the name of a class to use instead.
use Future::AsyncAwait future_class => "Subclass::Of::Future";
async sub func { ... }
This has the usual lexically-scoped effect, applying only to async sub
s defined within the block; others are unaffected.
use Future::AsyncAwait;
{
use Future::AsyncAwait future_class => "Different::Future";
async sub x { ... }
}
async sub y { ... } # returns a regular Future
This will only affect immediate results. If the await
keyword has to suspend the function and create a new pending future, it will do this by using the prototype constructor on the future it itself is waiting on, and the usual subclass-respecting semantics of "new" in Future will remain in effect there. As such it is not usually necessary to use this feature just for wrapping event system modules or other similar situations.
Such an alternative subclass should implement the API documented by Future::AsyncAwait::Awaitable.
WITH OTHER MODULES
Syntax::Keyword::Try
As of Future::AsyncAwait version 0.10 and Syntax::Keyword::Try version 0.07, cross-module integration tests assert that basic try/catch
blocks inside an async sub
work correctly, including those that attempt to return
from inside try
.
use Future::AsyncAwait;
use Syntax::Keyword::Try;
async sub attempt
{
try {
await func();
return "success";
}
catch {
return "failed";
}
}
As of Future::AsyncAwait version 0.50, finally
blocks are invoked even during cancellation.
Syntax::Keyword::Dynamically
As of Future::AsyncAwait version 0.32, cross-module integration tests assert that the dynamically
correctly works across an await
boundary.
use Future::AsyncAwait;
use Syntax::Keyword::Dynamically;
our $var;
async sub trial
{
dynamically $var = "value";
await func();
say "Var is still $var";
}
Syntax::Keyword::Defer
As of Future::AsyncAwait version 0.50, defer
blocks are invoked even during cancellation.
use Future::AsyncAwait;
use Syntax::Keyword::Defer;
async sub perhaps
{
defer { say "Cleaning up now" }
await $f1;
}
my $fouter = perhaps();
$fouter->cancel;
Object::Pad
As of Future::AsyncAwait version 0.38 and Object::Pad version 0.15, both modules now use XS::Parse::Sublike to parse blocks of code. Because of this the two modules can operate together and allow class methods to be written as async subs which await expressions:
use Future::AsyncAwait;
use Object::Pad;
class Example
{
async method perform($block)
{
say "$self is performing code";
await $block->();
say "code finished";
}
}
SEE ALSO
"Awaiting The Future" - TPC in Amsterdam 2017
TODO
Suspend and resume with some consideration for the savestack; i.e. the area used to implement
local
and similar. While in generallocal
support has awkward questions about semantics, there are certain situations and cases where internally-implied localisation of variables would still be useful and can be supported without the semantic ambiguities of genericlocal
.our $DEBUG = 0; async sub quark { local $DEBUG = 1; await func(); }
Since
foreach
loops on non-lexical iterator variables (usually the$_
global variable) effectively imply alocal
-like behaviour, these are also disallowed.async sub splurt { foreach ( LIST ) { await ... } }
Some notes on what makes the problem hard can be found at
Currently this module requires perl version 5.16 or later. Additionally, threaded builds of perl earlier than 5.22 are not supported.
Implement cancel back-propagation for Perl versions earlier than 5.24. Currently this does not work due to some as-yet-unknown effects that installing the back-propagation has, causing future instances to be reclaimed too early.
KNOWN BUGS
This is not a complete list of all known issues, but rather a summary of the most notable ones that currently prevent the module from working correctly in a variety of situations. For a complete list of known bugs, see the RT queue at https://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Name=Future-AsyncAwait.
await
insidemap
orgrep
blocks does not work. This is due to the difficulty of detecting the map or grep context from internal perl state at suspend time, sufficient to be able to restore it again when resuming.https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=129748
As a workaround, consider converting a
map
expression to the equivalent form usingpush
onto an accumulator array with aforeach
loop:my @results = map { await func($_) } ITEMS;
becomes
my @results; foreach my $item ( ITEMS ) { push @results, await func($item); }
with a similar transformation for
grep
expressions.Alternatively, consider using the
fmap*
family of functions from Future::Utils to provide a concurrent version of the same code, which can keep multiple items running concurrently:use Future::Utils qw( fmap ); my @results = await fmap { func( shift ) } foreach => [ ITEMS ], concurrent => 5;
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
With thanks to Zefram
, ilmari
and others from irc.perl.org/#p5p
for assisting with trickier bits of XS logic.
Thanks to genio
for project management and actually reminding me to write some code.
Thanks to The Perl Foundation for sponsoring me to continue working on the implementation.
AUTHOR
Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>