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=head1 NAME

Async::Interrupt - allow C/XS libraries to interrupt perl asynchronously

=head1 SYNOPSIS

 use Async::Interrupt;

=head1 DESCRIPTION

This module implements a single feature only of interest to advanced perl
modules, namely asynchronous interruptions (think "UNIX signals", which
are very similar).

Sometimes, modules wish to run code asynchronously (in another thread,
or from a signal handler), and then signal the perl interpreter on
certain events. One common way is to write some data to a pipe and use an
event handling toolkit to watch for I/O events. Another way is to send
a signal. Those methods are slow, and in the case of a pipe, also not
asynchronous - it won't interrupt a running perl interpreter.

This module implements asynchronous notifications that enable you to
signal running perl code from another thread, asynchronously, and
sometimes even without using a single syscall.

=head2 USAGE SCENARIOS

=over 4

=item Race-free signal handling

There seems to be no way to do race-free signal handling in perl: to
catch a signal, you have to execute Perl code, and between entering the
interpreter C<select> function (or other blocking functions) and executing
the select syscall is a small but relevant timespan during which signals
will be queued, but perl signal handlers will not be executed and the
blocking syscall will not be interrupted.

You can use this module to bind a signal to a callback while at the same
time activating an event pipe that you can C<select> on, fixing the race
completely.

This can be used to implement the signal hadling in event loops,
e.g. L<AnyEvent>, L<POE>, L<IO::Async::Loop> and so on.

=item Background threads want speedy reporting

Assume you want very exact timing, and you can spare an extra cpu core
for that. Then you can run an extra thread that signals your perl
interpreter. This means you can get a very exact timing source while your
perl code is number crunching, without even using a syscall to communicate
between your threads.

For example the deliantra game server uses a variant of this technique
to interrupt background processes regularly to send map updates to game
clients.

Or L<EV::Loop::Async> uses an interrupt object to wake up perl when new
events have arrived.

L<IO::AIO> and L<BDB> could also use this to speed up result reporting.

=item Speedy event loop invocation

One could use this module e.g. in L<Coro> to interrupt a running coro-thread
and cause it to enter the event loop.

Or one could bind to C<SIGIO> and tell some important sockets to send this
signal, causing the event loop to be entered to reduce network latency.

=back

=head2 HOW TO USE

You can use this module by creating an C<Async::Interrupt> object for each
such event source. This object stores a perl and/or a C-level callback
that is invoked when the C<Async::Interrupt> object gets signalled. It is
executed at the next time the perl interpreter is running (i.e. it will
interrupt a computation, but not an XS function or a syscall).

You can signal the C<Async::Interrupt> object either by calling it's C<<
->signal >> method, or, more commonly, by calling a C function. There is
also the built-in (POSIX) signal source.

The C<< ->signal_func >> returns the address of the C function that is to
be called (plus an argument to be used during the call). The signalling
function also takes an integer argument in the range SIG_ATOMIC_MIN to
SIG_ATOMIC_MAX (guaranteed to allow at least 0..127).

Since this kind of interruption is fast, but can only interrupt a
I<running> interpreter, there is optional support for signalling a pipe
- that means you can also wait for the pipe to become readable (e.g. via
L<EV> or L<AnyEvent>). This, of course, incurs the overhead of a C<read>
and C<write> syscall.

=head1 USAGE EXAMPLES

=head2 Implementing race-free signal handling

This example uses a single event pipe for all signals, and one
Async::Interrupt per signal. This code is actually what the L<AnyEvent>
module uses itself when Async::Interrupt is available.

First, create the event pipe and hook it into the event loop

   $SIGPIPE = new Async::Interrupt::EventPipe;
   $SIGPIPE_W = AnyEvent->io (
      fh   => $SIGPIPE->fileno,
      poll => "r",
      cb   => \&_signal_check, # defined later
   );

Then, for each signal to hook, create an Async::Interrupt object. The
callback just sets a global variable, as we are only interested in
synchronous signals (i.e. when the event loop polls), which is why the
pipe draining is not done automatically.

   my $interrupt = new Async::Interrupt
      cb             => sub { undef $SIGNAL_RECEIVED{$signum} }
      signal         => $signum,
      pipe           => [$SIGPIPE->filenos],
      pipe_autodrain => 0,
   ;

Finally, the I/O callback for the event pipe handles the signals:

   sub _signal_check {
      # drain the pipe first
      $SIGPIPE->drain;

      # two loops, just to be sure
      while (%SIGNAL_RECEIVED) {
         for (keys %SIGNAL_RECEIVED) {
            delete $SIGNAL_RECEIVED{$_};
            warn "signal $_ received\n";
         }
      }
   }

=head2 Interrupt perl from another thread

This example interrupts the Perl interpreter from another thread, via the
XS API. This is used by e.g. the L<EV::Loop::Async> module.

On the Perl level, a new loop object (which contains the thread)
is created, by first calling some XS constructor, querying the
C-level callback function and feeding that as the C<c_cb> into the
Async::Interrupt constructor:

   my $self = XS_thread_constructor;
   my ($c_func, $c_arg) = _c_func $self; # return the c callback
   my $asy = new Async::Interrupt c_cb => [$c_func, $c_arg];

Then the newly created Interrupt object is queried for the signaling
function that the newly created thread should call, and this is in turn
told to the thread object:

   _attach $self, $asy->signal_func;

So to repeat: first the XS object is created, then it is queried for the
callback that should be called when the Interrupt object gets signalled.

Then the interrupt object is queried for the callback fucntion that the
thread should call to signal the Interrupt object, and this callback is
then attached to the thread.

You have to be careful that your new thread is not signalling before the
signal function was configured, for example by starting the background
thread only within C<_attach>.

That concludes the Perl part.

The XS part consists of the actual constructor which creates a thread,
which is not relevant for this example, and two functions, C<_c_func>,
which returns the Perl-side callback, and C<_attach>, which configures
the signalling functioon that is safe toc all from another thread. For
simplicity, we will use global variables to store the functions, normally
you would somehow attach them to C<$self>.

The C<c_func> simply returns the address of a static function and arranges
for the object pointed to by C<$self> to be passed to it, as an integer:

   void
   _c_func (SV *loop)
           PPCODE:
           EXTEND (SP, 2);
           PUSHs (sv_2mortal (newSViv (PTR2IV (c_func))));
           PUSHs (sv_2mortal (newSViv (SvRV (loop))));

This would be the callback (since it runs in a normal Perl context, it is
permissible to manipulate Perl values):

   static void
   c_func (pTHX_ void *loop_, int value)
   {
     SV *loop_object = (SV *)loop_;
     ...
   }

And this attaches the signalling callback:

   static void (*my_sig_func) (void *signal_arg, int value);
   static void *my_sig_arg;

   void
   _attach (SV *loop_, IV sig_func, void *sig_arg)
           CODE:
   {
           my_sig_func = sig_func;
           my_sig_arg  = sig_arg;

           /* now run the thread */
           thread_create (&u->tid, l_run, 0);
   }

And C<l_run> (the background thread) would eventually call the signaling
function:

   my_sig_func (my_sig_arg, 0);

You can have a look at L<EV::Loop::Async> for an actual example using
intra-thread communication, locking and so on.


=head1 THE Async::Interrupt CLASS

=over 4

=cut

package Async::Interrupt;

use common::sense;

BEGIN {
   # the next line forces initialisation of internal
   # signal handling variables, otherwise, PL_sig_pending
   # etc. might be null pointers.
   $SIG{KILL} = sub { };

   our $VERSION = '1.1';

   require XSLoader;
   XSLoader::load ("Async::Interrupt", $VERSION);
}

our $DIED = sub { warn "$@" };

=item $async = new Async::Interrupt key => value...

Creates a new Async::Interrupt object. You may only use async
notifications on this object while it exists, so you need to keep a
reference to it at all times while it is used.

Optional constructor arguments include (normally you would specify at
least one of C<cb> or C<c_cb>).

=over 4

=item cb => $coderef->($value)

Registers a perl callback to be invoked whenever the async interrupt is
signalled.

Note that, since this callback can be invoked at basically any time, it
must not modify any well-known global variables such as C<$/> without
restoring them again before returning.

The exceptions are C<$!> and C<$@>, which are saved and restored by
Async::Interrupt.

If the callback should throw an exception, then it will be caught,
and C<$Async::Interrupt::DIED> will be called with C<$@> containing
the exception. The default will simply C<warn> about the message and
continue.

=item c_cb => [$c_func, $c_arg]

Registers a C callback the be invoked whenever the async interrupt is
signalled.

The C callback must have the following prototype:

   void c_func (pTHX_ void *c_arg, int value);

Both C<$c_func> and C<$c_arg> must be specified as integers/IVs, and
C<$value> is the C<value> passed to some earlier call to either C<$signal>
or the C<signal_func> function.

Note that, because the callback can be invoked at almost any time, you
have to be careful at saving and restoring global variables that Perl
might use (the exception is C<errno>, which is saved and restored by
Async::Interrupt). The callback itself runs as part of the perl context,
so you can call any perl functions and modify any perl data structures (in
which case the requirements set out for C<cb> apply as well).

=item var => $scalar_ref

When specified, then the given argument must be a reference to a
scalar. The scalar will be set to C<0> initially. Signalling the interrupt
object will set it to the passed value, handling the interrupt will reset
it to C<0> again.

Note that the only thing you are legally allowed to do is to is to check
the variable in a boolean or integer context (e.g. comparing it with a
string, or printing it, will I<destroy> it and might cause your program to
crash or worse).

=item signal => $signame_or_value

When this parameter is specified, then the Async::Interrupt will hook the
given signal, that is, it will effectively call C<< ->signal (0) >> each time
the given signal is caught by the process.

Only one async can hook a given signal, and the signal will be restored to
defaults when the Async::Interrupt object gets destroyed.

=item signal_hysteresis => $boolean

Sets the initial signal hysteresis state, see the C<signal_hysteresis>
method, below.

=item pipe => [$fileno_or_fh_for_reading, $fileno_or_fh_for_writing]

Specifies two file descriptors (or file handles) that should be signalled
whenever the async interrupt is signalled. This means a single octet will
be written to it, and before the callback is being invoked, it will be
read again. Due to races, it is unlikely but possible that multiple octets
are written. It is required that the file handles are both in nonblocking
mode.

The object will keep a reference to the file handles.

This can be used to ensure that async notifications will interrupt event
frameworks as well.

Note that C<Async::Interrupt> will create a suitable signal fd
automatically when your program requests one, so you don't have to specify
this argument when all you want is an extra file descriptor to watch.

If you want to share a single event pipe between multiple Async::Interrupt
objects, you can use the C<Async::Interrupt::EventPipe> class to manage
those.

=item pipe_autodrain => $boolean

Sets the initial autodrain state, see the C<pipe_autodrain> method, below.

=back

=cut

sub new {
   my ($class, %arg) = @_;

   my $self = bless \(_alloc $arg{cb}, @{$arg{c_cb}}[0,1], @{$arg{pipe}}[0,1], $arg{signal}, $arg{var}), $class;

   # urgs, reminds me of Event
   for my $attr (qw(pipe_autodrain signal_hysteresis)) {
      $self->$attr ($arg{$attr}) if exists $arg{$attr};
   }

   $self
}

=item ($signal_func, $signal_arg) = $async->signal_func

Returns the address of a function to call asynchronously. The function
has the following prototype and needs to be passed the specified
C<$signal_arg>, which is a C<void *> cast to C<IV>:

   void (*signal_func) (void *signal_arg, int value)

An example call would look like:

   signal_func (signal_arg, 0);

The function is safe to call from within signal and thread contexts, at
any time. The specified C<value> is passed to both C and Perl callback.

C<$value> must be in the valid range for a C<sig_atomic_t>, except C<0>
(1..127 is portable).

If the function is called while the Async::Interrupt object is already
signaled but before the callbacks are being executed, then the stored
C<value> is either the old or the new one. Due to the asynchronous
nature of the code, the C<value> can even be passed to two consecutive
invocations of the callback.

=item $address = $async->c_var

Returns the address (cast to IV) of an C<IV> variable. The variable is set
to C<0> initially and gets set to the passed value whenever the object
gets signalled, and reset to C<0> once the interrupt has been handled.

Note that it is often beneficial to just call C<PERL_ASYNC_CHECK ()> to
handle any interrupts.

Example: call some XS function to store the address, then show C code
waiting for it.

   my_xs_func $async->c_var;

   static IV *valuep;

   void
   my_xs_func (void *addr)
           CODE:
           valuep = (IV *)addr;

   // code in a loop, waiting
   while (!*valuep)
     ; // do something

=item $async->signal ($value=1)

This signals the given async object from Perl code. Semi-obviously, this
will instantly trigger the callback invocation (it does not, as the name
might imply, do anything with POSIX signals).

C<$value> must be in the valid range for a C<sig_atomic_t>, except C<0>
(1..127 is portable).

=item $async->handle

Calls the callback if the object is pending.

This method does not need to be called normally, as it will be invoked
automatically. However, it can be used to force handling of outstanding
interrupts while the object is blocked.

One reason why one might want to do that is when you want to switch
from asynchronous interruptions to synchronous one, using e.g. an event
loop. To do that, one would first C<< $async->block >> the interrupt
object, then register a read watcher on the C<pipe_fileno> that calls C<<
$async->handle >>.

This disables asynchronous interruptions, but ensures that interrupts are
handled by the event loop.

=item $async->signal_hysteresis ($enable)

Enables or disables signal hysteresis (default: disabled). If a POSIX
signal is used as a signal source for the interrupt object, then enabling
signal hysteresis causes Async::Interrupt to reset the signal action to
C<SIG_IGN> in the signal handler and restore it just before handling the
interruption.

When you expect a lot of signals (e.g. when using SIGIO), then enabling
signal hysteresis can reduce the number of handler invocations
considerably, at the cost of two extra syscalls.

Note that setting the signal to C<SIG_IGN> can have unintended side
effects when you fork and exec other programs, as often they do not expect
signals to be ignored by default.

=item $async->block

=item $async->unblock

Sometimes you need a "critical section" of code that will not be
interrupted by an Async::Interrupt. This can be implemented by calling C<<
$async->block >> before the critical section, and C<< $async->unblock >>
afterwards.

Note that there must be exactly one call of C<unblock> for every previous
call to C<block> (i.e. calls can nest).

Since ensuring this in the presence of exceptions and threads is
usually more difficult than you imagine, I recommend using C<<
$async->scoped_block >> instead.

=item $async->scope_block

This call C<< $async->block >> and installs a handler that is called when
the current scope is exited (via an exception, by canceling the Coro
thread, by calling last/goto etc.).

This is the recommended (and fastest) way to implement critical sections.

=item ($block_func, $block_arg) = $async->scope_block_func

Returns the address of a function that implements the C<scope_block>
functionality.

It has the following prototype and needs to be passed the specified
C<$block_arg>, which is a C<void *> cast to C<IV>:

   void (*block_func) (void *block_arg)

An example call would look like:

   block_func (block_arg);

The function is safe to call only from within the toplevel of a perl XS
function and will call C<LEAVE> and C<ENTER> (in this order!).

=item $async->pipe_enable

=item $async->pipe_disable

Enable/disable signalling the pipe when the interrupt occurs (default is
enabled). Writing to a pipe is relatively expensive, so it can be disabled
when you know you are not waiting for it (for example, with L<EV> you
could disable the pipe in a check watcher, and enable it in a prepare
watcher).

Note that currently, while C<pipe_disable> is in effect, no attempt to
read from the pipe will be done when handling events. This might change as
soon as I realize why this is a mistake.

=item $fileno = $async->pipe_fileno

Returns the reading side of the signalling pipe. If no signalling pipe is
currently attached to the object, it will dynamically create one.

Note that the only valid operation on this file descriptor is to wait
until it is readable. The fd might belong currently to a pipe, a tcp
socket, or an eventfd, depending on the platform, and is guaranteed to be
C<select>able.

=item $async->pipe_autodrain ($enable)

Enables (C<1>) or disables (C<0>) automatic draining of the pipe (default:
enabled). When automatic draining is enabled, then Async::Interrupt will
automatically clear the pipe. Otherwise the user is responsible for this
draining.

This is useful when you want to share one pipe among many Async::Interrupt
objects.

=item $async->pipe_drain

Drains the pipe manually, for example, when autodrain is disabled. Does
nothing when no pipe is enabled.

=item $async->post_fork

The object will not normally be usable after a fork (as the pipe fd is
shared between processes). Calling this method after a fork in the child
ensures that the object will work as expected again. It only needs to be
called when the async object is used in the child.

This only works when the pipe was created by Async::Interrupt.

Async::Interrupt ensures that the reading file descriptor does not change
it's value.

=item $signum = Async::Interrupt::sig2num $signame_or_number

=item $signame = Async::Interrupt::sig2name $signame_or_number

These two convenience functions simply convert a signal name or number to
the corresponding name or number. They are not used by this module and
exist just because perl doesn't have a nice way to do this on its own.

They will return C<undef> on illegal names or numbers.

=back

=head1 THE Async::Interrupt::EventPipe CLASS

Pipes are the predominant utility to make asynchronous signals
synchronous. However, pipes are hard to come by: they don't exist on the
broken windows platform, and on GNU/Linux systems, you might want to use
an C<eventfd> instead.

This class creates selectable event pipes in a portable fashion: on
windows, it will try to create a tcp socket pair, on GNU/Linux, it will
try to create an eventfd and everywhere else it will try to use a normal
pipe.

=over 4

=item $epipe = new Async::Interrupt::EventPipe

This creates and returns an eventpipe object. This object is simply a
blessed array reference:

=item ($r_fd, $w_fd) = $epipe->filenos

Returns the read-side file descriptor and the write-side file descriptor.

Example: pass an eventpipe object as pipe to the Async::Interrupt
constructor, and create an AnyEvent watcher for the read side.

   my $epipe = new Async::Interrupt::EventPipe;
   my $asy = new Async::Interrupt pipe => [$epipe->filenos];
   my $iow = AnyEvent->io (fh => $epipe->fileno, poll => 'r', cb => sub { });

=item $r_fd = $epipe->fileno

Return only the reading/listening side.

=item $epipe->signal

Write something to the pipe, in a portable fashion.

=item $epipe->drain

Drain (empty) the pipe.

=item ($c_func, $c_arg) = $epipe->signal_func

=item ($c_func, $c_arg) = $epipe->drain_func

These two methods returns a function pointer and C<void *> argument
that can be called to have the effect of C<< $epipe->signal >> or C<<
$epipe->drain >>, respectively, on the XS level.

They both have the following prototype and need to be passed their
C<$c_arg>, which is a C<void *> cast to an C<IV>:

   void (*c_func) (void *c_arg)

An example call would look like:

   c_func (c_arg);

=item $epipe->renew

Recreates the pipe (useful after a fork). The reading side will not change
it's file descriptor number, but the writing side might.

=item $epipe->wait

This method blocks the process until there are events on the pipe. This is
not a very event-based or ncie way of usign an event pipe, but it can be
occasionally useful.

=back

=cut

1;

=head1 IMPLEMENTATION DETAILS AND LIMITATIONS

This module works by "hijacking" SIGKILL, which is guaranteed to always
exist, but also cannot be caught, so is always available.

Basically, this module fakes the occurance of a SIGKILL signal and
then intercepts the interpreter handling it. This makes normal signal
handling slower (probably unmeasurably, though), but has the advantage
of not requiring a special runops function, nor slowing down normal perl
execution a bit.

It assumes that C<sig_atomic_t>, C<int> and C<IV> are all async-safe to
modify.

=head1 AUTHOR

 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
 http://home.schmorp.de/

=cut