SYNOPSIS
use Mojo::Reactor::EV;
# Watch if handle becomes readable or writable
my $reactor = Mojo::Reactor::EV->new;
$reactor->io($first => sub {
my ($reactor, $writable) = @_;
say $writable ? 'First handle is writable' : 'First handle is readable';
});
# Change to watching only if handle becomes writable
$reactor->watch($first, 0, 1);
# Turn file descriptor into handle and watch if it becomes readable
my $second = IO::Handle->new_from_fd($fd, 'r');
$reactor->io($second => sub {
my ($reactor, $writable) = @_;
say $writable ? 'Second handle is writable' : 'Second handle is readable';
})->watch($second, 1, 0);
# Add a timer
$reactor->timer(15 => sub {
my $reactor = shift;
$reactor->remove($first);
$reactor->remove($second);
say 'Timeout!';
});
# Start reactor if necessary
$reactor->start unless $reactor->is_running;
DESCRIPTION
Mojo::Reactor::EV is a low-level event reactor based on EV (4.0+).EVENTS
Mojo::Reactor::EV inherits all events from Mojo::Reactor::Poll.METHODS
Mojo::Reactor::EV inherits all methods from Mojo::Reactor::Poll and implements the following new ones.again
$reactor->again($id);
Restart timer. Note that this method requires an active timer.
is_running
my $bool = $reactor->is_running;
Check if reactor is running.
new
my $reactor = Mojo::Reactor::EV->new;
Construct a new Mojo::Reactor::EV object.
one_tick
$reactor->one_tick;
Run reactor until an event occurs or no events are being watched anymore. Note that this method can recurse back into the reactor, so you need to be careful.
# Don't block longer than 0.5 seconds my $id = $reactor->timer(0.5 => sub {}); $reactor->one_tick; $reactor->remove($id);
recurring
my $id = $reactor->recurring(0.25 => sub {...});
Create a new recurring timer, invoking the callback repeatedly after a given amount of time in seconds.
start
$reactor->start;
Start watching for I/O and timer events, this will block until ``stop'' is called or no events are being watched anymore.
# Start reactor only if it is not running already $reactor->start unless $reactor->is_running;
stop
$reactor->stop;
Stop watching for I/O and timer events.
timer
my $id = $reactor->timer(0.5 => sub {...});
Create a new timer, invoking the callback after a given amount of time in seconds.
watch
$reactor = $reactor->watch($handle, $readable, $writable);
Change I/O events to watch handle for with true and false values. Note that this method requires an active I/O watcher.
# Watch only for readable events $reactor->watch($handle, 1, 0); # Watch only for writable events $reactor->watch($handle, 0, 1); # Watch for readable and writable events $reactor->watch($handle, 1, 1); # Pause watching for events $reactor->watch($handle, 0, 0);