- If you built the library as a loadable package
[local] ev = require 'ev'
- If you compiled the package statically into your application, call
the function
luaopen_ev(L)
. It will create a table with the ev functions and leave it on the stack.
Set the LIBEV_FLAGS=
environment variable to choose a backend:
- select()
- poll()
- epoll()
- kqueue
- /dev/poll (not implemented)
- Solaris port
Please see the documentation for libev for more details.
WARNING:
If your program fork()
s, then you will need to re-initialize
your event loop(s) in the child process. You can do this
re-initialization using the loop:fork()
function.
NOTE:
If you are new to event loop programming, take a look at example.lua.
returns numeric ev version for the major and minor levels of the version dynamically linked in.
Create a new non-default event loop. See ev.Loop object methods below.
The "default" event loop. See ev.Loop object methods below. Note that the default loop is "lazy loaded".
Create a new timer that will call the on_timeout function when the timer expires. The timer initially expires in after_seconds (floating point), then it will expire in repeat_seconds (floating point) over and over again (unless repeat_seconds is zero or is omitted in which case, this timer will only fire once).
The returned timer is an ev.Timer object. See below for the methods on this object.
NOTE: You must explicitly register the timer with an event loop in order for it to take effect.
The on_timeout function will be called with these arguments (return values are ignored):
The loop is the event loop for which the timer is registered, the timer is the ev.Timer object, and revents is ev.TIMEOUT.
See also ev_timer_init()
C function.
Create a new signal watcher that will call the on_signal function when the specified signal_number is delivered.
The returned sig is an ev.Signal object. See below for the methods on this object.
NOTE: You must explicitly register the sig with an event loop in order for it to take effect.
The on_signal function will be called with these arguments (return values are ignored):
The loop is the event loop for which the io object is registered, the sig parameter is the ev.Signal object, and revents is ev.SIGNAL.
See also ev_signal_init()
C function.
Create a new io watcher that will call the on_io function when the specified file_descriptor is available for read and/or write depending on the revents. The revents parameter must be either ev.READ, ev.WRITE, or the bitwise or of ev.READ and ev.WRITE (use bitlib to do bitwise or).
The returned io is an ev.IO object. See below for the methods on this object.
NOTE: You must explicitly register the io with an event loop in order for it to take effect.
The on_io function will be called with these arguments (return values are ignored):
The loop is the event loop for which the io object is registered, the io parameter is the ev.IO object, and revents is a bit set consisting of ev.READ and/or ev.WRITE and/or ev.TIMEOUT depending on which event triggered this callback. Of course ev.TIMEOUT won't be in that set since this is the io watcher.
See also ev_io_init()
C function.
Create a new io watcher that will call the on_idle function whenever there is nothing else to do. This means that the loop will never block while an idle watcher is started.
The returned io is an ev.Idle object. See below for the methods on this object.
NOTE: You must explicitly register the idle with an event loop in order for it to take effect.
The on_idle function will be called with these arguments (return values are ignored):
The loop is the event loop for which the idle object is registered, the idle parameter is the ev.Idle object, and revents is ev.IDLE.
See also ev_idle_init()
C function.
Create a new async watcher that will call the on_async function whenever an application calls ev_async_send() from another context (this can be another thread or some other context which does not control the loop this watcher lives on)
The returned async is an ev.Async object. See below for the methods on this object.
NOTE: You must explicitly register the async with an event loop in order for it to take effect.
The on_async function will be called with these arguments (return values are ignored):
The loop is the event loop for which the idle object is registered, the idle parameter is the ev.Idle object, and revents is ev.IDLE.
See also ev_idle_init()
C function.
Create a new child watcher that will call the on_child function whenever SIGCHLD for registered pid is delivered.
When pid is set to 0 the watcher will fire for any pid.
When trace is false the watcher will be activated when the process terminates. If it's true - it will additionally be activated when the process is stopped or continued.
The returned child is an ev.Child object. See below for the methods on this object.
NOTE: You must explicitly register the idle with an event loop in order for it to take effect.
The on_child function will be called with these arguments (return values are ignored):
The loop is the event loop for which the idle object is registered, the child parameter is the ev.Child object, and revents is ev.CHILD.
See also ev_child_init()
C function.
Configures the watcher to wait for status changes of the given "path". The "interval" is a hint on how quickly a change is expected to be detected and may normally be left out to let libev choose a suitable value.
The returned stat is an ev.Stat object. See below for the methods on this object.
NOTE: You must explicitly register the stat with an event loop in order for it to take effect.
The on_stat function will be called with these arguments (return values are ignored):
The loop is the event loop for which the idle object is registered, the stat parameter is the ev.Stat object, and revents is ev.STAT.
See also ev_stat_init()
C function.
If this bit is set, the io watcher is ready to read. See also
EV_READ
C definition.
If this bit is set, the io watcher is ready to write. See also
EV_WRITE
C definition.
If this bit is set, the watcher was triggered by a timeout. See
also EV_TIMEOUT
C definition.
If this bit is set, the watcher was triggered by a signal. See
also EV_SIGNAL
C definition.
If this bit is set, the watcher was triggered by a child signal.
See also EV_CHILD
C definition.
If this bit is set, the watcher was triggered by a change in
attributes of the file system path. See also EV_STAT
C definition.
You must call this function in the child process after fork(2)
system call and before the next iteration of the event loop.
Run the event loop! Returns when there are no more watchers registered with the event loop. See special note below about calling ev_loop() C API.
See also ev_loop()
C function.
Returns true if the referenced loop object is the default event loop.
See also ev_is_default_loop()
C function.
Returns the number of loop iterations. Note that this function used to be called loop:count().
See also ev_iterations()
C function.
Returns the number of times loop:loop() was entered minus the number of times loop:loop() was exited, in other words, the recursion depth.
This method is available only if lua-ev was linked with libev 3.7 and higher.
See also ev_depth()
C function.
Returns the non-integer epoch seconds time at which the current iteration of the event loop woke up.
See also ev_now()
C function.
Updates the current time returned by loop.now(), and returns that timestamp.
See also ev_now_update()
C function.
Process all outstanding events in the event loop, but do not make another iteration of the event loop.
See also ev_unloop()
C function.
Returns the identifier of the current backend which is being used by this event loop. See the libev documentation for what each number means:
http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/libev/ev.pod#FUNCTIONS_CONTROLLING_THE_EVENT_LOOP
Returns true if the watcher is active (has been start()ed, but not stop()ed).
See also ev_is_active()
C function.
Returns true if the watcher is pending (it has outstanding events but its callback has not yet been invoked).
See also ev_is_pending()
C function.
If the watcher is pending, return the revents of the pending event, otherwise returns zero. If the event was pending, the pending flag is cleared (and therefore this watcher event will not trigger the events callback).
See also ev_clear_pending()
C function.
Get access to the priority of this watcher, optionally setting a new priority. The priority should be a small integer between ev.MINPRI and ev.MAXPRI. The default is 0.
See also the ev_priority()
and ev_set_priority()
C functions.
Get access to the callback function associated with this watcher, optionally setting a new callback function.
Start the timer in the specified event loop. Optionally make this watcher a "daemon" watcher which means that the event loop will terminate even if this watcher has not triggered.
See also ev_timer_start()
C function (document as ev_TYPE_start()
).
Unregister this timer from the specified event loop. Ensures that the watcher is neither active nor pending.
See also ev_timer_stop()
C function (document as ev_TYPE_stop()
).
Reset the timer so that it doesn't trigger again in the specified loop until the specified number of seconds from now have elapsed. If seconds is not specified, uses the repeat_seconds specified when the timer was created.
See also ev_timer_again()
C function.
Start the io in the specified event loop. Optionally make this watcher a "daemon" watcher which means that the event loop will terminate even if this watcher has not triggered.
See also ev_io_start()
C function (document as ev_TYPE_start()
).
Unregister this io from the specified event loop. Ensures that the watcher is neither active nor pending.
See also ev_io_stop()
C function (document as ev_TYPE_stop()
).
Returns the file descriptor associated with the IO object.
idle:start(loop [, is_daemon])
Start the idle watcher in the specified event loop. Optionally make this watcher a "daemon" watcher which means that the event loop will terminate even if this watcher has not triggered.
See also ev_idle_start()
C function (document as ev_TYPE_start()
).
Unregister this idle watcher from the specified event loop. Ensures that the watcher is neither active nor pending.
See also ev_io_stop()
C function (document as ev_TYPE_stop()
).
Start the async watcher in the specified event loop. Optionally make this watcher a "daemon" watcher which means that the event loop will terminate even if this watcher has not triggered.
See also ev_async_start()
C function (document as ev_TYPE_start()
).
Unregister this async watcher from the specified event loop. Ensures that the watcher is neither active nor pending.
See also ev_async_stop()
C function (document as ev_TYPE_stop()
).
Start the child watcher in the specified event loop. Optionally make this watcher a "daemon" watcher which means that the event loop will terminate even if this watcher has not triggered.
See also ev_child_start()
C function (document as ev_TYPE_start()
).
Unregister this child watcher from the specified event loop. Ensures that the watcher is neither active nor pending.
See also ev_child_stop()
C function (document as ev_TYPE_stop()
).
Return the process id this watcher watches out for, or 0, meaning any process id.
Return the process id that detected a status change.
Returns the process exit/trace status caused by "rpid" (see your systems "waitpid" and "sys/wait.h" for details).
It returns the table with the following fields:
exited
: true if status was returned for a child process that terminated normally;stopped
: true if status was returned for a child process that is currently stopped;signaled
: true if status was returned for a child process that terminated due to receipt of a signal that was not caught;exit_status
: (only if exited == true) the low-order 8 bits of the status argument that the child process passed to _exit() or exit(), or the value the child process returned from main();- stop_signal`: (only if stopped == true) the number of the signal that caused the child process to stop;
term_signal
: (only if signaled == true) the number of the signal that caused the termination of the child process.
Start the stat watcher in the specified event loop. Optionally make this watcher a "daemon" watcher which means that the event loop will terminate even if this watcher has not triggered.
See also ev_stat_start()
C function (document as ev_TYPE_start()
).
Unregister this stat watcher from the specified event loop. Ensures that the watcher is neither active nor pending.
See also ev_stat_stop()
C function (document as ev_TYPE_stop()
).
Returns a table with the following fields:
-
- path: the file system path that is being watched;
-
- interval: the specified interval;
-
- attr: the most-recently detected attributes of the file in a form
- of table with the following fields: dev, ino, mode, nlink, uid, gid,
- rdev, size, atime, mtime, ctime corresponding to struct stat members
- (st_dev, st_ino, etc.);
-
- prev: the previous attributes of the file with the same fields as
- attr fields.
If there is an exception when calling a watcher callback, the error will be printed to stderr. In the future, it would be cool if there was a linked list of error handlers, and that if a callback registers another callback, this linked list of error handlers would be inherited so that exception handling can be done more easily. To do this, we just need to add a method for adding an error handler for the current callback context, and keep calling the error handlers in the linked list until an error handler actually handles the exception. If the error handling stack unwinds, we will probably just resort to printing to stderr.
If you want to call the ev_loop()
C API directly, then you MUST
set the loop userdata field to the lua_State
in which you want all
callbacks to be ran in. In the past, the lua_State
was stored as
a thread local which was set when loop:loop()
lua function is
called, but this made lua-ev dependent upon pthreads and forced
ev_loop()
to only be called from lua. Next, I removed the pthreads
dependency and stored the lua_State
in which the callback was
registered. This doesn't bode well when working with coroutines as
it means that loop:loop()
may call back into a coroutine that is
long gone.
The current implementation relies on libev 3.7's ability to set a
userdata field associated with an event loop, and the loop:loop()
implementation simply sets the userdata field for the duration of
loop:loop()
. This does mean that if you want to call ev_loop()
from C then you either need to be sure that no lua watchers are
registered with that loop, or you need to set the userdata field to
the lua_State*
in which the callbacks should be ran.
- Add support for other watcher types (periodic, embed, etc).