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 again      {...}
sub io         {...}
sub is_running {...}
sub one_tick   {...}
sub recurring  {...}
sub remove     {...}
sub start      {...}
sub stop       {...}
sub timer      {...}
sub watch      {...}

DESCRIPTION

Mojo::Reactor is an abstract base class for low level event reactors.

EVENTS

Mojo::Reactor inherits all events from Mojo::EventEmitter and can emit the following new ones.

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.

again

$reactor->again($id);

Restart active timer. Meant to be overloaded in a subclass.

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. 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. Note that some reactors stop automatically if there are no events 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. Note that this method requires an active I/O watcher.

# 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.