POE::Wheel::ReadWrite(User Contributed Perl DocumentatPOE::Wheel::ReadWrite(3)NAMEPOE::Wheel::ReadWrite - non-blocking buffered I/O mix-in for
POE::Session
SYNOPSIS
#!perl
use warnings;
use strict;
use IO::Socket::INET;
use POE qw(Wheel::ReadWrite);
POE::Session->create(
inline_states => {
_start => sub {
# Note: IO::Socket::INET will block. We recommend
# POE::Wheel::SocketFactory or POE::Component::Client::TCP if
# blocking is contraindicated.
$_[HEAP]{client} = POE::Wheel::ReadWrite->new(
Handle => IO::Socket::INET->new(
PeerHost => 'www.yahoo.com',
PeerPort => 80,
),
InputEvent => 'on_remote_data',
ErrorEvent => 'on_remote_fail',
);
print "Connected. Sending request...\n";
$_[HEAP]{client}->put(
"GET / HTTP/0.9",
"Host: www.yahoo.com",
"",
);
},
on_remote_data => sub {
print "Received: $_[ARG0]\n";
},
on_remote_fail => sub {
print "Connection failed or ended. Shutting down...\n";
delete $_[HEAP]{client};
},
},
);
POE::Kernel->run();
exit;
DESCRIPTIONPOE::Wheel::ReadWrite encapsulates a common design pattern: dealing
with buffered I/O in a non-blocking, event driven fashion.
The pattern goes something like this:
Given a filehandle, watch it for incoming data. When notified of
incoming data, read it, buffer it, and parse it according to some low-
level protocol (such as line-by-line). Generate higher-level "here be
lines" events, one per parsed line.
In the other direction, accept whole chunks of data (such as lines) for
output. Reformat them according to some low-level protocol (such as by
adding newlines), and buffer them for output. Flush the buffered data
when the filehandle is ready to transmit it.
PUBLIC METHODS
Constructor
POE::Wheel subclasses tend to perform a lot of setup so that they run
lighter and faster. POE::Wheel::ReadWrite's constructor is no
exception.
new
new() creates and returns a new POE:Wheel::ReadWrite instance. Under
most circumstances, the wheel will continue to read/write to one or
more filehandles until it's destroyed.
Handle
Handle defines the filehandle that a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object will
read from and write to. The "SYNOPSIS" includes an example using
Handle.
A single POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object can read from and write to
different filehandles. See "InputHandle" for more information and an
example.
InputHandle
InputHandle and OutputHandle may be used to specify different handles
for input and output. For example, input may be from STDIN and output
may go to STDOUT:
$_[HEAP]{console} = POE::Wheel::ReadWrite->new(
InputHandle => \*STDIN,
OutputHandle => \*STDOUT,
InputEvent => "console_input",
);
InputHandle and OutputHandle may not be used with Handle.
OutputHandle
InputHandle and OutputHandle may be used to specify different handles
for input and output. Please see "InputHandle" for more information
and an example.
Driver
Driver specifies how POE::Wheel::ReadWrite will actually read from and
write to its filehandle or filehandles. Driver must be an object that
inherits from POE::Driver.
POE::Driver::SysRW, which implements sysread() and syswrite(), is the
default. It's used in nearly all cases, so there's no point in
specifying it.
Filter
Filter is the parser that POE::Wheel::ReadWrite will used to recognize
input data and the serializer it uses to prepare data for writing. It
defaults to a new POE::Filter::Line instance since many network
protocols are line based.
InputFilter
InputFilter and OutputFilter may be used to specify different filters
for input and output.
OutputFilter
InputFilter and OutputFilter may be used to specify different filters
for input and output. Please see "InputFilter" for more information and
an example.
InputEvent
InputEvent specifies the name of the event that will be sent for every
complete input unit (as parsed by InputFilter or Filter).
Every input event includes two parameters:
"ARG0" contains the parsed input unit, and "ARG1" contains the unique
ID for the POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object that generated the event.
InputEvent is optional. If omitted, the POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object
will not watch its Handle or InputHandle for input, and no input events
will be generated.
A sample InputEvent handler:
sub handle_input {
my ($heap, $input, $wheel_id) = @_[HEAP, ARG0, ARG1];
print "Echoing input from wheel $wheel_id: $input\n";
$heap->{wheel}->put($input); # Put... the input... beck!
}
FlushedEvent
FlushedEvent specifies the event that a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object
will emit whenever its output buffer transitions from containing data
to becoming empty.
FlushedEvent comes with a single parameter: "ARG0" contains the unique
ID for the POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object that generated the event. This
may be used to match the event to a particular wheel.
"Flushed" events are often used to shut down I/O after a "goodbye"
message has been sent. For example, the following input_handler()
responds to "quit" by instructing the wheel to say "Goodbye." and then
to send a "shutdown" event when that has been flushed to the socket.
sub handle_input {
my ($input, $wheel_id) = @_[ARG0, ARG1];
my $wheel = $_[HEAP]{wheel}{$wheel_id};
if ($input eq "quit") {
$wheel->event( FlushedEvent => "shutdown" );
$wheel->put("Goodbye.");
}
else {
$wheel->put("Echo: $input");
}
}
Here's the shutdown handler. It just destroys the wheel to end the
connection:
sub handle_flushed {
my $wheel_id = $_[ARG0];
delete $_[HEAP]{wheel}{$wheel_id};
}
ErrorEvent
ErrorEvent names the event that a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object will
emit whenever an error occurs. Every ErrorEvent includes four
parameters:
"ARG0" describes what failed, either "read" or "write". It doesn't
name a particular function since POE::Wheel::ReadWrite delegates actual
reading and writing to a POE::Driver object.
"ARG1" and "ARG2" hold numeric and string values for $! at the time of
failure. Applicatin code cannot test $! directly since its value may
have changed between the time of the error and the time the error event
is dispatched.
"ARG3" contains the wheel's unique ID. The wheel's ID is used to
differentiate between many wheels managed by a single session.
ErrorEvent may also indicate EOF on a FileHandle by returning operation
"read" error 0. For sockets, this means the remote end has closed the
connection.
A sample ErrorEvent handler:
sub error_state {
my ($operation, $errnum, $errstr, $id) = @_[ARG0..ARG3];
if ($operation eq "read" and $errnum == 0) {
print "EOF from wheel $id\n";
}
else {
warn "Wheel $id encountered $operation error $errnum: $errstr\n";
}
delete $_[HEAP]{wheels}{$id}; # shut down that wheel
}
HighEvent
HighEvent and LowEvent are used along with HighMark and LowMark to
control the flow of streamed output.
A HighEvent is sent when the output buffer of a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite
object exceeds a certain size (the "high water" mark, or HighMark).
This advises an application to stop streaming output. POE and Perl
really don't care if the application continues, but it's possible that
the process may run out of memory if a buffer grows without bounds.
A POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object will continue to flush its buffer even
after an application stops streaming data, until the buffer is empty.
Some streaming applications may require the buffer to always be primed
with data, however. For example, a media server would encounter
stutters if it waited for a FlushedEvent before sending more data.
LowEvent solves the stutter problem. A POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object
will send a LowEvent when its output buffer drains below a certain
level (the "low water" mark, or LowMark). This notifies an application
that the buffer is small enough that it may resume streaming.
The stutter problem is solved because the output buffer never quite
reaches empty.
HighEvent and LowEvent are edge-triggered, not level-triggered. This
means they are emitted once whenever a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object's
output buffer crosses the HighMark or LowMark. If an application
continues to put() data after the HighMark is reached, it will not
cause another HighEvent to be sent.
HighEvent is generally not needed. The put() method will return the
high watermark state: true if the buffer is at or above the high
watermark, or false if the buffer has room for more data. Here's a
quick way to prime a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object's output buffer:
1 while not $_[HEAP]{readwrite}->put(get_next_data());
POE::Wheel::ReadWrite objects always start in a low-water state.
HighEvent and LowEvent are optional. Omit them if flow control is not
needed.
LowEvent
HighEvent and LowEvent are used along with HighMark and LowMark to
control the flow of streamed output. Please see "HighEvent" for more
information and examples.
put RECORDS
put() accepts a list of RECORDS, which will be serialized by the
wheel's Filter and buffered and written by its Driver.
put() returns true if a HighMark has been set and the Driver's output
buffer has reached or exceeded the limit. False is returned if
HighMark has not been set, or if the Driver's buffer is smaller than
that limit.
put()'s return value is purely advisory; an application may continue
buffering data beyond the HighMark---at the risk of exceeding the
process' memory limits. Do not use "<1 while not $wheel-"put()>>
syntax if HighMark isn't set: the application will fail spectacularly!
event EVENT_TYPE => EVENT_NAME, ...
event() allows an application to modify the events emitted by a
POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object. All constructor parameters ending in
"Event" may be changed at run time: "InputEvent", "FlushedEvent",
"ErrorEvent", "HighEvent", and "LowEvent".
Setting an event to undef will disable the code within the wheel that
generates the event. So for example, stopping InputEvent will also
stop reading from the filehandle. "pause_input" and "resume_input" may
be a better way to manage input events, however.
set_filter POE_FILTER
set_filter() changes the way a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object parses
input and serializes output. Any pending data that has not been
dispatched to the application will be parsed with the new POE_FILTER.
Information that has been put() but not flushed will not be
reserialized.
set_filter() performs the same act as calling set_input_filter() and
set_output_filter() with the same POE::Filter object.
Switching filters can be tricky. Please see the discussion of
get_pending() in POE::Filter. Some filters may not support being
dynamically loaded or unloaded.
set_input_filter POE_FILTER
set_input_filter() changes a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object's input
filter while leaving the output filter unchanged. This alters the way
data is parsed without affecting how it's serialized for output.
set_output_filter POE_FILTER
set_output_filter() changes how a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object
serializes its output but does not affect the way data is parsed.
get_input_filter
get_input_filter() returns the POE::Filter object currently used by a
POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object to parse incoming data. The returned
object may be introspected or altered via its own methods.
There is no get_filter() method because there is no sane return value
when input and output filters differ.
get_output_filter
get_output_filter() returns the POE::Filter object currently used by a
POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object to serialize outgoing data. The returned
object may be introspected or altered via its own methods.
There is no get_filter() method because there is no sane return value
when input and output filters differ.
set_high_mark HIGH_MARK_OCTETS
Sets the high water mark---the number of octets that designates a "full
enough" output buffer. A POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object will emit a
HighEvent when its output buffer expands to reach this point. All
put() calls will return true when the output buffer is equal or greater
than HIGH_MARK_OCTETS.
Both HighEvent and put() indicate that it's unsafe to continue writing
when the output buffer expands to at least HIGH_MARK_OCTETS.
set_low_mark LOW_MARK_OCTETS
Sets the low water mark---the number of octets that designates an
"empty enough" output buffer. This event lets an application know that
it's safe to resume writing again.
POE::Wheel::ReadWrite objects will emit a LowEvent when their output
buffers shrink to LOW_MARK_OCTETS after having reached
HIGH_MARK_OCTETS.
ID
ID() returns a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object's unique ID. ID() is
usually called after the object is created so that the object may be
stashed by its ID. Events generated by the POE::Wheel::ReadWrite
object will include the ID of the object, so that they may be matched
back to their sources.
pause_input
pause_input() instructs a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object to stop watching
for input, and thus stop emitting InputEvent events. It's much more
efficient than destroying the object outright, especially if an
application intends to resume_input() later.
resume_input
resume_input() turns a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object's input watcher
back on. It's used to resume watching for input, and thus resume
sending InputEvent events. pause_input() and resume_input() implement
a form of input flow control, driven by the application itself.
get_input_handle
get_input_handle() returns the filehandle being watched for input.
Manipulating filehandles that are managed by POE may cause nasty side
effects, which may change from one POE release to the next. Please use
caution.
get_output_handle
get_output_handle() returns the filehandle being watched for output.
Manipulating filehandles that are managed by POE may cause nasty side
effects, which may change from one POE release to the next. Please use
caution.
shutdown_input
Call shutdown($fh,0) on a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object's input
filehandle. This only works for sockets; nothing will happen for other
types of filehandle.
Occasionally, the POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object will stop monitoring its
input filehandle for new data. This occurs regardless of the
filehandle type.
shutdown_output
Call shutdown($fh,1) on a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object's output
filehandle. This only works for sockets; nothing will happen for other
types of filehandle.
Occasionally, the POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object will stop monitoring its
output filehandle for new data. This occurs regardless of the
filehandle type.
get_driver_out_octets
POE::Driver objects contain output buffers that are flushed
asynchronously. get_driver_out_octets() returns the number of octets
remaining in the wheel's driver's output buffer.
get_driver_out_messages
POE::Driver objects' output buffers may be message based. Every put()
call may be buffered individually. get_driver_out_messages() will
return the number of pending put() messages that remain to be sent.
Stream-based drivers will simply return 1 if any data remains to be
flushed. This is because they operate with one potentially large
message.
flush
flush() manually attempts to flush a wheel's output in a synchronous
fashion. This can be used to flush small messages. Note, however,
that complete flushing is not guaranteed---to do so would mean
potentially blocking indefinitely, which is undesirable in most POE
applications.
If an application must guarantee a full buffer flush, it may loop
flush() calls:
$wheel->flush() while $wheel->get_driver_out_octets();
However it would be prudent to check for errors as well. A flush()
failure may be permanent, and an infinite loop is probably not what
most developers have in mind here.
It should be obvious by now that this method is experimental. Its
behavior may change or it may disappear outright. Please let us know
whether it's useful.
SEE ALSO
POE::Wheel describes wheels in general.
The SEE ALSO section in POE contains a table of contents covering the
entire POE distribution.
BUGS
None known.
AUTHORS & COPYRIGHTS
Please see POE for more information about authors and contributors.
POD ERRORS
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perl v5.14.2 2011-12-15 POE::Wheel::ReadWrite(3)