Allows a thread to wait on many sockets at once. The standard usage pattern would be for a single I/O thread to:
Create its own SbSocketWaiter.
Wait on the SbSocketWaiter, indefinitely if no scheduled tasks, or timed if there are scheduled future tasks.
While waiting, the SbSocketWaiter will call back to service ready SbSockets.
Wake up, if signaled to do so.
If ready to exit, go to 7.
Add and remove SbSockets to and from the SbSocketWaiter, and go to 2.
Destroy its SbSocketWaiter and exit.
If another thread wants to queue immediate or schedule future work on the I/O thread, it needs to call SbSocketWaiterWakeUp() on the SbSocketWaiter after queuing the work item, or the SbSocketWaiter is not otherwise guaranteed to wake up.
Macros
kSbSocketWaiterInvalid
Well-defined value for an invalid socket watcher handle.
Enums
SbSocketWaiterInterest
All the interests that a socket may register for on a waiter.
Values
kSbSocketWaiterInterestNone
No interests whatsoever.
kSbSocketWaiterInterestRead
An interest in or readiness to read from a socket without blocking.
kSbSocketWaiterInterestWrite
An interest in or readiness to write to a socket without blocking.
SbSocketWaiterResult
Possible reasons why a call to SbSocketWaiterWaitTimed returned.
Values
kSbSocketWaiterResultInvalid
The wait didn't block because the waiter was invalid.
kSbSocketWaiterResultTimedOut
The wait stopped because the timeout expired.
kSbSocketWaiterResultWokenUp
The wait stopped because a call to SbSocketWaiterWakeUp was consumed.
Typedefs
SbPosixSocketWaiterCallback
Function pointer for socket waiter callbacks.
Definition
typedef void(* SbPosixSocketWaiterCallback) (SbSocketWaiter waiter, int socket, void *context, int ready_interests)
SbSocketWaiter
A handle to a socket waiter.
Definition
typedef SbSocketWaiterPrivate* SbSocketWaiter
SbSocketWaiterCallback
Function pointer for socket waiter callbacks.
Definition
typedef void(* SbSocketWaiterCallback) (SbSocketWaiter waiter, SbSocket socket, void *context, int ready_interests)
Functions
SbSocketWaiterAdd
DEPRECATED with SB_API_VERSION 16
Adds a new socket to be waited on by the waiter
with a bitfield of
interests
. This function should only be called on the thread that waits on
this waiter.
If socket
is already registered with this or another waiter, the function does
nothing and returns false
. The client must remove the socket and then add it
back with the new interests
.
If socket
is already ready for one or more of the operations set in the
interests
mask, then the callback will be called on the next call to either
SbSocketWaiterWait() or SbSocketWaiterWaitTimed().
waiter
: An SbSocketWaiter that waits on the socket for the specified set of
operations (interests
). socket
: The SbSocket on which the waiter waits.
context
: callback
: The function that is called when the event fires. The
waiter
, socket
, context
are all passed to the callback, along with a
bitfield of interests
that the socket is actually ready for. interests
: A
bitfield that identifies operations for which the socket is waiting.
persistent
: Identifies the procedure that will be followed for removing the
socket:
If
persistent
istrue
, thensocket
stays registered withwaiter
until SbSocketWaiterRemove() is called withwaiter
andsocket
.If
persistent
isfalse
, thensocket
is removed before the next call tocallback
, even if not all registeredinterests
became ready, which allows for adding it again in thecallback
.
Declaration
bool SbSocketWaiterAdd(SbSocketWaiter waiter, SbSocket socket, void *context, SbSocketWaiterCallback callback, int interests, bool persistent)
SbSocketWaiterCreate
The results of two threads waiting on the same waiter is undefined and will not work. Except for the SbSocketWaiterWakeUp() function, SbSocketWaiters are not thread-safe and don't expect to be modified concurrently.
Declaration
SbSocketWaiter SbSocketWaiterCreate()
SbSocketWaiterDestroy
Destroys waiter
and removes all sockets still registered by way of
SbSocketWaiterAdd. This function may be called on any thread as long as there is
no risk of concurrent access to the waiter.
waiter
: The SbSocketWaiter to be destroyed.
Declaration
bool SbSocketWaiterDestroy(SbSocketWaiter waiter)
SbSocketWaiterIsValid
Returns whether the given socket handle is valid.
Declaration
static bool SbSocketWaiterIsValid(SbSocketWaiter watcher)
SbSocketWaiterRemove
DEPRECATED with SB_API_VERSION 16
Removes a socket, previously added with SbSocketWaiterAdd(), from a waiter. This function should only be called on the thread that waits on this waiter.
The return value indicates whether the waiter still waits on the socket. If
socket
wasn't registered with waiter
, then the function is a no-op and
returns true
.
waiter
: The waiter from which the socket is removed. socket
: The socket to
remove from the waiter.
Declaration
bool SbSocketWaiterRemove(SbSocketWaiter waiter, SbSocket socket)
SbSocketWaiterWait
Waits on all registered sockets, calling the registered callbacks if and when the corresponding sockets become ready for an interested operation. This version exits only after SbSocketWaiterWakeUp() is called. This function should only be called on the thread that waits on this waiter.
Declaration
void SbSocketWaiterWait(SbSocketWaiter waiter)
SbSocketWaiterWaitTimed
Behaves similarly to SbSocketWaiterWait(), but this function also causes
waiter
to exit on its own after at least duration
has passed if
SbSocketWaiterWakeUp() it not called by that time.
The return value indicates the reason that the socket waiter exited. This function should only be called on the thread that waits on this waiter.
duration
: The minimum amount of time in microseconds after which the socket
waiter should exit if it is not woken up before then. As with SbThreadSleep()
(see thread.h), this function may wait longer than duration
, such as if the
timeout expires while a callback is being fired.
Declaration
SbSocketWaiterResult SbSocketWaiterWaitTimed(SbSocketWaiter waiter, int64_t duration)
SbSocketWaiterWakeUp
Wakes up waiter
once. This is the only thread-safe waiter function. It can can
be called from a SbSocketWaiterCallback to wake up its own waiter, and it can
also be called from another thread at any time. In either case, the waiter will
exit the next wait gracefully, first completing any in-progress callback.
Each time this function is called, it causes the waiter to wake up once, regardless of whether the waiter is currently waiting. If the waiter is not waiting, the function takes effect immediately the next time the waiter waits. The number of wake-ups accumulates, and the queue is only consumed as the waiter waits and then is subsequently woken up again. For example, if you call this function 7 times, then SbSocketWaiterWait() and WaitTimed() will not block the next 7 times they are called.
waiter
: The socket waiter to be woken up.
Declaration
void SbSocketWaiterWakeUp(SbSocketWaiter waiter)