source: for-distributions/trunk/bin/windows/perl/lib/threads/shared.pm@ 14489

Last change on this file since 14489 was 14489, checked in by oranfry, 17 years ago

upgrading to perl 5.8

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1package threads::shared;
2
3use 5.008;
4use strict;
5use warnings;
6BEGIN {
7 require Exporter;
8 our @ISA = qw(Exporter);
9 our @EXPORT = qw(share cond_wait cond_timedwait cond_broadcast cond_signal);
10 our $VERSION = '0.94';
11
12 if ($threads::threads) {
13 *cond_wait = \&cond_wait_enabled;
14 *cond_timedwait = \&cond_timedwait_enabled;
15 *cond_signal = \&cond_signal_enabled;
16 *cond_broadcast = \&cond_broadcast_enabled;
17 require XSLoader;
18 XSLoader::load('threads::shared',$VERSION);
19 push @EXPORT,'bless';
20 }
21 else {
22
23# String eval is generally evil, but we don't want these subs to exist at all
24# if threads are loaded successfully. Vivifying them conditionally this way
25# saves on average about 4K of memory per thread.
26
27 eval <<'EOD';
28sub cond_wait (\[$@%];\[$@%]) { undef }
29sub cond_timedwait (\[$@%]$;\[$@%]) { undef }
30sub cond_signal (\[$@%]) { undef }
31sub cond_broadcast (\[$@%]) { undef }
32sub share (\[$@%]) { return $_[0] }
33EOD
34 }
35}
36
37$threads::shared::threads_shared = 1;
38
39sub threads::shared::tie::SPLICE
40{
41 die "Splice not implemented for shared arrays";
42}
43
44__END__
45
46=head1 NAME
47
48threads::shared - Perl extension for sharing data structures between threads
49
50=head1 SYNOPSIS
51
52 use threads;
53 use threads::shared;
54
55 my $var : shared;
56 $var = $scalar_value;
57 $var = $shared_ref_value;
58 $var = &share($simple_unshared_ref_value);
59 $var = &share(new Foo);
60
61 my($scalar, @array, %hash);
62 share($scalar);
63 share(@array);
64 share(%hash);
65 my $bar = &share([]);
66 $hash{bar} = &share({});
67
68 { lock(%hash); ... }
69
70 cond_wait($scalar);
71 cond_timedwait($scalar, time() + 30);
72 cond_broadcast(@array);
73 cond_signal(%hash);
74
75 my $lockvar : shared;
76 # condition var != lock var
77 cond_wait($var, $lockvar);
78 cond_timedwait($var, time()+30, $lockvar);
79
80=head1 DESCRIPTION
81
82By default, variables are private to each thread, and each newly created
83thread gets a private copy of each existing variable. This module allows
84you to share variables across different threads (and pseudoforks on Win32).
85It is used together with the threads module.
86
87=head1 EXPORT
88
89C<share>, C<cond_wait>, C<cond_timedwait>, C<cond_signal>, C<cond_broadcast>
90
91Note that if this module is imported when C<threads> has not yet been
92loaded, then these functions all become no-ops. This makes it possible
93to write modules that will work in both threaded and non-threaded
94environments.
95
96=head1 FUNCTIONS
97
98=over 4
99
100=item share VARIABLE
101
102C<share> takes a value and marks it as shared. You can share a scalar,
103array, hash, scalar ref, array ref or hash ref. C<share> will return
104the shared rvalue but always as a reference.
105
106C<share> will traverse up references exactly I<one> level.
107C<share(\$a)> is equivalent to C<share($a)>, while C<share(\\$a)> is not.
108This means that you must create nested shared data structures by first
109creating individual shared leaf notes, then adding them to a shared hash
110or array.
111
112A variable can also be marked as shared at compile time by using the
113C<shared> attribute: C<my $var : shared>.
114
115If you want to share a newly created reference unfortunately you
116need to use C<&share([])> and C<&share({})> syntax due to problems
117with Perl's prototyping.
118
119The only values that can be assigned to a shared scalar are other scalar
120values, or shared refs, eg
121
122 my $var : shared;
123 $var = 1; # ok
124 $var = &share([]); # ok
125 $var = []; # error
126 $var = A->new; # error
127 $var = &share(A->new); # ok as long as the A object is not nested
128
129Note that it is often not wise to share an object unless the class itself
130has been written to support sharing; for example, an object's destructor
131may get called multiple times, one for each thread's scope exit.
132
133=item lock VARIABLE
134
135C<lock> places a lock on a variable until the lock goes out of scope.
136If the variable is locked by another thread, the C<lock> call will
137block until it's available. C<lock> is recursive, so multiple calls
138to C<lock> are safe -- the variable will remain locked until the
139outermost lock on the variable goes out of scope.
140
141If a container object, such as a hash or array, is locked, all the
142elements of that container are not locked. For example, if a thread
143does a C<lock @a>, any other thread doing a C<lock($a[12])> won't block.
144
145C<lock> will traverse up references exactly I<one> level.
146C<lock(\$a)> is equivalent to C<lock($a)>, while C<lock(\\$a)> is not.
147
148Note that you cannot explicitly unlock a variable; you can only wait
149for the lock to go out of scope. If you need more fine-grained
150control, see L<Thread::Semaphore>.
151
152=item cond_wait VARIABLE
153
154=item cond_wait CONDVAR, LOCKVAR
155
156The C<cond_wait> function takes a B<locked> variable as a parameter,
157unlocks the variable, and blocks until another thread does a
158C<cond_signal> or C<cond_broadcast> for that same locked variable.
159The variable that C<cond_wait> blocked on is relocked after the
160C<cond_wait> is satisfied. If there are multiple threads
161C<cond_wait>ing on the same variable, all but one will reblock waiting
162to reacquire the lock on the variable. (So if you're only using
163C<cond_wait> for synchronisation, give up the lock as soon as
164possible). The two actions of unlocking the variable and entering the
165blocked wait state are atomic, the two actions of exiting from the
166blocked wait state and relocking the variable are not.
167
168In its second form, C<cond_wait> takes a shared, B<unlocked> variable
169followed by a shared, B<locked> variable. The second variable is
170unlocked and thread execution suspended until another thread signals
171the first variable.
172
173It is important to note that the variable can be notified even if
174no thread C<cond_signal> or C<cond_broadcast> on the variable.
175It is therefore important to check the value of the variable and
176go back to waiting if the requirement is not fulfilled. For example,
177to pause until a shared counter drops to zero:
178
179 { lock($counter); cond_wait($count) until $counter == 0; }
180
181=item cond_timedwait VARIABLE, ABS_TIMEOUT
182
183=item cond_timedwait CONDVAR, ABS_TIMEOUT, LOCKVAR
184
185In its two-argument form, C<cond_timedwait> takes a B<locked> variable
186and an absolute timeout as parameters, unlocks the variable, and blocks
187until the timeout is reached or another thread signals the variable. A
188false value is returned if the timeout is reached, and a true value
189otherwise. In either case, the variable is re-locked upon return.
190
191Like C<cond_wait>, this function may take a shared, B<locked> variable
192as an additional parameter; in this case the first parameter is an
193B<unlocked> condition variable protected by a distinct lock variable.
194
195Again like C<cond_wait>, waking up and reacquiring the lock are not
196atomic, and you should always check your desired condition after this
197function returns. Since the timeout is an absolute value, however, it
198does not have to be recalculated with each pass:
199
200 lock($var);
201 my $abs = time() + 15;
202 until ($ok = desired_condition($var)) {
203 last if !cond_timedwait($var, $abs);
204 }
205 # we got it if $ok, otherwise we timed out!
206
207=item cond_signal VARIABLE
208
209The C<cond_signal> function takes a B<locked> variable as a parameter
210and unblocks one thread that's C<cond_wait>ing on that variable. If
211more than one thread is blocked in a C<cond_wait> on that variable,
212only one (and which one is indeterminate) will be unblocked.
213
214If there are no threads blocked in a C<cond_wait> on the variable,
215the signal is discarded. By always locking before signaling, you can
216(with care), avoid signaling before another thread has entered cond_wait().
217
218C<cond_signal> will normally generate a warning if you attempt to use it
219on an unlocked variable. On the rare occasions where doing this may be
220sensible, you can skip the warning with
221
222 { no warnings 'threads'; cond_signal($foo) }
223
224=item cond_broadcast VARIABLE
225
226The C<cond_broadcast> function works similarly to C<cond_signal>.
227C<cond_broadcast>, though, will unblock B<all> the threads that are
228blocked in a C<cond_wait> on the locked variable, rather than only one.
229
230=back
231
232=head1 NOTES
233
234threads::shared is designed to disable itself silently if threads are
235not available. If you want access to threads, you must C<use threads>
236before you C<use threads::shared>. threads will emit a warning if you
237use it after threads::shared.
238
239=head1 BUGS
240
241C<bless> is not supported on shared references. In the current version,
242C<bless> will only bless the thread local reference and the blessing
243will not propagate to the other threads. This is expected to be
244implemented in a future version of Perl.
245
246Does not support splice on arrays!
247
248Taking references to the elements of shared arrays and hashes does not
249autovivify the elements, and neither does slicing a shared array/hash
250over non-existent indices/keys autovivify the elements.
251
252share() allows you to C<< share $hashref->{key} >> without giving any error
253message. But the C<< $hashref->{key} >> is B<not> shared, causing the error
254"locking can only be used on shared values" to occur when you attempt to
255C<< lock $hasref->{key} >>.
256
257=head1 AUTHOR
258
259Arthur Bergman E<lt>arthur at contiller.seE<gt>
260
261threads::shared is released under the same license as Perl
262
263Documentation borrowed from the old Thread.pm
264
265=head1 SEE ALSO
266
267L<threads>, L<perlthrtut>, L<http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/06/11/threads.html>
268
269=cut
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