1 /* 2 * Copyright (c) 2000-2007 Niels Provos <provos@citi.umich.edu> 3 * Copyright (c) 2007-2012 Niels Provos and Nick Mathewson 4 * 5 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 6 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 7 * are met: 8 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 9 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 10 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 11 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 12 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 13 * 3. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products 14 * derived from this software without specific prior written permission. 15 * 16 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR 17 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES 18 * OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. 19 * IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, 20 * INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT 21 * NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, 22 * DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY 23 * THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT 24 * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF 25 * THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 26 */ 27 #ifndef _EVENT2_EVENT_H_ 28 #define _EVENT2_EVENT_H_ 29 30 /** 31 @mainpage 32 33 @section intro Introduction 34 35 Libevent is an event notification library for developing scalable network 36 servers. The Libevent API provides a mechanism to execute a callback 37 function when a specific event occurs on a file descriptor or after a 38 timeout has been reached. Furthermore, Libevent also support callbacks due 39 to signals or regular timeouts. 40 41 Libevent is meant to replace the event loop found in event driven network 42 servers. An application just needs to call event_dispatch() and then add or 43 remove events dynamically without having to change the event loop. 44 45 46 Currently, Libevent supports /dev/poll, kqueue(2), select(2), poll(2), 47 epoll(4), and evports. The internal event mechanism is completely 48 independent of the exposed event API, and a simple update of Libevent can 49 provide new functionality without having to redesign the applications. As a 50 result, Libevent allows for portable application development and provides 51 the most scalable event notification mechanism available on an operating 52 system. Libevent can also be used for multithreaded programs. Libevent 53 should compile on Linux, *BSD, Mac OS X, Solaris and, Windows. 54 55 @section usage Standard usage 56 57 Every program that uses Libevent must inclurde the <event2/event.h> 58 header, and pass the -levent flag to the linker. (You can instead link 59 -levent_core if you only want the main event and buffered IO-based code, 60 and don't want to link any protocol code.) 61 62 @section setup Library setup 63 64 Before you call any other Libevent functions, you need to set up the 65 library. If you're going to use Libevent from multiple threads in a 66 multithreaded application, you need to initialize thread support -- 67 typically by using evthread_use_pthreads() or 68 evthread_use_windows_threads(). See <event2/thread.h> for more 69 information. 70 71 This is also the point where you can replace Libevent's memory 72 management functions with event_set_mem_functions, and enable debug mode 73 with event_enable_debug_mode(). 74 75 @section base Creating an event base 76 77 Next, you need to create an event_base structure, using event_base_new() 78 or event_base_new_with_config(). The event_base is responsible for 79 keeping track of which events are "pending" (that is to say, being 80 watched to see if they become active) and which events are "active". 81 Every event is associated with a single event_base. 82 83 @section event Event notification 84 85 For each file descriptor that you wish to monitor, you must create an 86 event structure with event_new(). (You may also declare an event 87 structure and call event_assign() to initialize the members of the 88 structure.) To enable notification, you add the structure to the list 89 of monitored events by calling event_add(). The event structure must 90 remain allocated as long as it is active, so it should generally be 91 allocated on the heap. 92 93 @section loop Dispaching evets. 94 95 Finally, you call event_base_dispatch() to loop and dispatch events. 96 You can also use event_base_loop() for more fine-grained control. 97 98 Currently, only one thread can be dispatching a given event_base at a 99 time. If you want to run events in multiple threads at once, you can 100 either have a single event_base whose events add work to a work queue, 101 or you can create multiple event_base objects. 102 103 @section bufferevent I/O Buffers 104 105 Libevent provides a buffered I/O abstraction on top of the regular event 106 callbacks. This abstraction is called a bufferevent. A bufferevent 107 provides input and output buffers that get filled and drained 108 automatically. The user of a buffered event no longer deals directly 109 with the I/O, but instead is reading from input and writing to output 110 buffers. 111 112 Once initialized via bufferevent_socket_new(), the bufferevent structure 113 can be used repeatedly with bufferevent_enable() and 114 bufferevent_disable(). Instead of reading and writing directly to a 115 socket, you would call bufferevent_read() and bufferevent_write(). 116 117 When read enabled the bufferevent will try to read from the file descriptor 118 and call the read callback. The write callback is executed whenever the 119 output buffer is drained below the write low watermark, which is 0 by 120 default. 121 122 See <event2/bufferevent*.h> for more information. 123 124 @section timers Timers 125 126 Libevent can also be used to create timers that invoke a callback after a 127 certain amount of time has expired. The evtimer_new() function returns 128 an event struct to use as a timer. To activate the timer, call 129 evtimer_add(). Timers can be deactivated by calling evtimer_del(). 130 131 @section evdns Asynchronous DNS resolution 132 133 Libevent provides an asynchronous DNS resolver that should be used instead 134 of the standard DNS resolver functions. See the <event2/dns.h> 135 functions for more detail. 136 137 @section evhttp Event-driven HTTP servers 138 139 Libevent provides a very simple event-driven HTTP server that can be 140 embedded in your program and used to service HTTP requests. 141 142 To use this capability, you need to include the <event2/http.h> header in your 143 program. See that header for more information. 144 145 @section evrpc A framework for RPC servers and clients 146 147 Libevent provides a framework for creating RPC servers and clients. It 148 takes care of marshaling and unmarshaling all data structures. 149 150 @section api API Reference 151 152 To browse the complete documentation of the libevent API, click on any of 153 the following links. 154 155 event2/event.h 156 The primary libevent header 157 158 event2/thread.h 159 Functions for use by multithreaded programs 160 161 event2/buffer.h and event2/bufferevent.h 162 Buffer management for network reading and writing 163 164 event2/util.h 165 Utility functions for portable nonblocking network code 166 167 event2/dns.h 168 Asynchronous DNS resolution 169 170 event2/http.h 171 An embedded libevent-based HTTP server 172 173 event2/rpc.h 174 A framework for creating RPC servers and clients 175 176 */ 177 178 /** @file event2/event.h 179 180 Core functions for waiting for and receiving events, and using event bases. 181 */ 182 183 #ifdef __cplusplus 184 extern "C" { 185 #endif 186 187 #include <event2/event-config.h> 188 #ifdef _EVENT_HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H 189 #include <sys/types.h> 190 #endif 191 #ifdef _EVENT_HAVE_SYS_TIME_H 192 #include <sys/time.h> 193 #endif 194 195 #include <stdio.h> 196 197 /* For int types. */ 198 #include <event2/util.h> 199 200 /** 201 * Structure to hold information and state for a Libevent dispatch loop. 202 * 203 * The event_base lies at the center of Libevent; every application will 204 * have one. It keeps track of all pending and active events, and 205 * notifies your application of the active ones. 206 * 207 * This is an opaque structure; you can allocate one using 208 * event_base_new() or event_base_new_with_config(). 209 * 210 * @see event_base_new(), event_base_free(), event_base_loop(), 211 * event_base_new_with_config() 212 */ 213 struct event_base 214 #ifdef _EVENT_IN_DOXYGEN 215 {/*Empty body so that doxygen will generate documentation here.*/} 216 #endif 217 ; 218 219 /** 220 * @struct event 221 * 222 * Structure to represent a single event. 223 * 224 * An event can have some underlying condition it represents: a socket 225 * becoming readable or writeable (or both), or a signal becoming raised. 226 * (An event that represents no underlying condition is still useful: you 227 * can use one to implement a timer, or to communicate between threads.) 228 * 229 * Generally, you can create events with event_new(), then make them 230 * pending with event_add(). As your event_base runs, it will run the 231 * callbacks of an events whose conditions are triggered. When you 232 * longer want the event, free it with event_free(). 233 * 234 * In more depth: 235 * 236 * An event may be "pending" (one whose condition we are watching), 237 * "active" (one whose condition has triggered and whose callback is about 238 * to run), neither, or both. Events come into existence via 239 * event_assign() or event_new(), and are then neither active nor pending. 240 * 241 * To make an event pending, pass it to event_add(). When doing so, you 242 * can also set a timeout for the event. 243 * 244 * Events become active during an event_base_loop() call when either their 245 * condition has triggered, or when their timeout has elapsed. You can 246 * also activate an event manually using event_active(). The even_base 247 * loop will run the callbacks of active events; after it has done so, it 248 * marks them as no longer active. 249 * 250 * You can make an event non-pending by passing it to event_del(). This 251 * also makes the event non-active. 252 * 253 * Events can be "persistent" or "non-persistent". A non-persistent event 254 * becomes non-pending as soon as it is triggered: thus, it only runs at 255 * most once per call to event_add(). A persistent event remains pending 256 * even when it becomes active: you'll need to event_del() it manually in 257 * order to make it non-pending. When a persistent event with a timeout 258 * becomes active, its timeout is reset: this means you can use persistent 259 * events to implement periodic timeouts. 260 * 261 * This should be treated as an opaque structure; you should never read or 262 * write any of its fields directly. For backward compatibility with old 263 * code, it is defined in the event2/event_struct.h header; including this 264 * header may make your code incompatible with other versions of Libevent. 265 * 266 * @see event_new(), event_free(), event_assign(), event_get_assignment(), 267 * event_add(), event_del(), event_active(), event_pending(), 268 * event_get_fd(), event_get_base(), event_get_events(), 269 * event_get_callback(), event_get_callback_arg(), 270 * event_priority_set() 271 */ 272 struct event 273 #ifdef _EVENT_IN_DOXYGEN 274 {/*Empty body so that doxygen will generate documentation here.*/} 275 #endif 276 ; 277 278 /** 279 * Configuration for an event_base. 280 * 281 * There are many options that can be used to alter the behavior and 282 * implementation of an event_base. To avoid having to pass them all in a 283 * complex many-argument constructor, we provide an abstract data type 284 * wrhere you set up configation information before passing it to 285 * event_base_new_with_config(). 286 * 287 * @see event_config_new(), event_config_free(), event_base_new_with_config(), 288 * event_config_avoid_method(), event_config_require_features(), 289 * event_config_set_flag(), event_config_set_num_cpus_hint() 290 */ 291 struct event_config 292 #ifdef _EVENT_IN_DOXYGEN 293 {/*Empty body so that doxygen will generate documentation here.*/} 294 #endif 295 ; 296 297 /** 298 * Enable some relatively expensive debugging checks in Libevent that 299 * would normally be turned off. Generally, these checks cause code that 300 * would otherwise crash mysteriously to fail earlier with an assertion 301 * failure. Note that this method MUST be called before any events or 302 * event_bases have been created. 303 * 304 * Debug mode can currently catch the following errors: 305 * An event is re-assigned while it is added 306 * Any function is called on a non-assigned event 307 * 308 * Note that debugging mode uses memory to track every event that has been 309 * initialized (via event_assign, event_set, or event_new) but not yet 310 * released (via event_free or event_debug_unassign). If you want to use 311 * debug mode, and you find yourself running out of memory, you will need 312 * to use event_debug_unassign to explicitly stop tracking events that 313 * are no longer considered set-up. 314 * 315 * @see event_debug_unassign() 316 */ 317 void event_enable_debug_mode(void); 318 319 /** 320 * When debugging mode is enabled, informs Libevent that an event should no 321 * longer be considered as assigned. When debugging mode is not enabled, does 322 * nothing. 323 * 324 * This function must only be called on a non-added event. 325 * 326 * @see event_enable_debug_mode() 327 */ 328 void event_debug_unassign(struct event *); 329 330 /** 331 * Create and return a new event_base to use with the rest of Libevent. 332 * 333 * @return a new event_base on success, or NULL on failure. 334 * 335 * @see event_base_free(), event_base_new_with_config() 336 */ 337 struct event_base *event_base_new(void); 338 339 /** 340 Reinitialize the event base after a fork 341 342 Some event mechanisms do not survive across fork. The event base needs 343 to be reinitialized with the event_reinit() function. 344 345 @param base the event base that needs to be re-initialized 346 @return 0 if successful, or -1 if some events could not be re-added. 347 @see event_base_new() 348 */ 349 int event_reinit(struct event_base *base); 350 351 /** 352 Event dispatching loop 353 354 This loop will run the event base until either there are no more pending or 355 active, or until something calls event_base_loopbreak() or 356 event_base_loopexit(). 357 358 @param base the event_base structure returned by event_base_new() or 359 event_base_new_with_config() 360 @return 0 if successful, -1 if an error occurred, or 1 if we exited because 361 no events were pending or active. 362 @see event_base_loop() 363 */ 364 int event_base_dispatch(struct event_base *); 365 366 /** 367 Get the kernel event notification mechanism used by Libevent. 368 369 @param eb the event_base structure returned by event_base_new() 370 @return a string identifying the kernel event mechanism (kqueue, epoll, etc.) 371 */ 372 const char *event_base_get_method(const struct event_base *); 373 374 /** 375 Gets all event notification mechanisms supported by Libevent. 376 377 This functions returns the event mechanism in order preferred by 378 Libevent. Note that this list will include all backends that 379 Libevent has compiled-in support for, and will not necessarily check 380 your OS to see whether it has the required resources. 381 382 @return an array with pointers to the names of support methods. 383 The end of the array is indicated by a NULL pointer. If an 384 error is encountered NULL is returned. 385 */ 386 const char **event_get_supported_methods(void); 387 388 /** 389 Allocates a new event configuration object. 390 391 The event configuration object can be used to change the behavior of 392 an event base. 393 394 @return an event_config object that can be used to store configuration, or 395 NULL if an error is encountered. 396 @see event_base_new_with_config(), event_config_free(), event_config 397 */ 398 struct event_config *event_config_new(void); 399 400 /** 401 Deallocates all memory associated with an event configuration object 402 403 @param cfg the event configuration object to be freed. 404 */ 405 void event_config_free(struct event_config *cfg); 406 407 /** 408 Enters an event method that should be avoided into the configuration. 409 410 This can be used to avoid event mechanisms that do not support certain 411 file descriptor types, or for debugging to avoid certain event 412 mechanisms. An application can make use of multiple event bases to 413 accommodate incompatible file descriptor types. 414 415 @param cfg the event configuration object 416 @param method the name of the event method to avoid 417 @return 0 on success, -1 on failure. 418 */ 419 int event_config_avoid_method(struct event_config *cfg, const char *method); 420 421 /** 422 A flag used to describe which features an event_base (must) provide. 423 424 Because of OS limitations, not every Libevent backend supports every 425 possible feature. You can use this type with 426 event_config_require_features() to tell Libevent to only proceed if your 427 event_base implements a given feature, and you can receive this type from 428 event_base_get_features() to see which features are available. 429 */ 430 enum event_method_feature { 431 /** Require an event method that allows edge-triggered events with EV_ET. */ 432 EV_FEATURE_ET = 0x01, 433 /** Require an event method where having one event triggered among 434 * many is [approximately] an O(1) operation. This excludes (for 435 * example) select and poll, which are approximately O(N) for N 436 * equal to the total number of possible events. */ 437 EV_FEATURE_O1 = 0x02, 438 /** Require an event method that allows file descriptors as well as 439 * sockets. */ 440 EV_FEATURE_FDS = 0x04 441 }; 442 443 /** 444 A flag passed to event_config_set_flag(). 445 446 These flags change the behavior of an allocated event_base. 447 448 @see event_config_set_flag(), event_base_new_with_config(), 449 event_method_feature 450 */ 451 enum event_base_config_flag { 452 /** Do not allocate a lock for the event base, even if we have 453 locking set up. */ 454 EVENT_BASE_FLAG_NOLOCK = 0x01, 455 /** Do not check the EVENT_* environment variables when configuring 456 an event_base */ 457 EVENT_BASE_FLAG_IGNORE_ENV = 0x02, 458 /** Windows only: enable the IOCP dispatcher at startup 459 460 If this flag is set then bufferevent_socket_new() and 461 evconn_listener_new() will use IOCP-backed implementations 462 instead of the usual select-based one on Windows. 463 */ 464 EVENT_BASE_FLAG_STARTUP_IOCP = 0x04, 465 /** Instead of checking the current time every time the event loop is 466 ready to run timeout callbacks, check after each timeout callback. 467 */ 468 EVENT_BASE_FLAG_NO_CACHE_TIME = 0x08, 469 470 /** If we are using the epoll backend, this flag says that it is 471 safe to use Libevent's internal change-list code to batch up 472 adds and deletes in order to try to do as few syscalls as 473 possible. Setting this flag can make your code run faster, but 474 it may trigger a Linux bug: it is not safe to use this flag 475 if you have any fds cloned by dup() or its variants. Doing so 476 will produce strange and hard-to-diagnose bugs. 477 478 This flag can also be activated by settnig the 479 EVENT_EPOLL_USE_CHANGELIST environment variable. 480 481 This flag has no effect if you wind up using a backend other than 482 epoll. 483 */ 484 EVENT_BASE_FLAG_EPOLL_USE_CHANGELIST = 0x10 485 }; 486 487 /** 488 Return a bitmask of the features implemented by an event base. This 489 will be a bitwise OR of one or more of the values of 490 event_method_feature 491 492 @see event_method_feature 493 */ 494 int event_base_get_features(const struct event_base *base); 495 496 /** 497 Enters a required event method feature that the application demands. 498 499 Note that not every feature or combination of features is supported 500 on every platform. Code that requests features should be prepared 501 to handle the case where event_base_new_with_config() returns NULL, as in: 502 <pre> 503 event_config_require_features(cfg, EV_FEATURE_ET); 504 base = event_base_new_with_config(cfg); 505 if (base == NULL) { 506 // We can't get edge-triggered behavior here. 507 event_config_require_features(cfg, 0); 508 base = event_base_new_with_config(cfg); 509 } 510 </pre> 511 512 @param cfg the event configuration object 513 @param feature a bitfield of one or more event_method_feature values. 514 Replaces values from previous calls to this function. 515 @return 0 on success, -1 on failure. 516 @see event_method_feature, event_base_new_with_config() 517 */ 518 int event_config_require_features(struct event_config *cfg, int feature); 519 520 /** 521 * Sets one or more flags to configure what parts of the eventual event_base 522 * will be initialized, and how they'll work. 523 * 524 * @see event_base_config_flags, event_base_new_with_config() 525 **/ 526 int event_config_set_flag(struct event_config *cfg, int flag); 527 528 /** 529 * Records a hint for the number of CPUs in the system. This is used for 530 * tuning thread pools, etc, for optimal performance. In Libevent 2.0, 531 * it is only on Windows, and only when IOCP is in use. 532 * 533 * @param cfg the event configuration object 534 * @param cpus the number of cpus 535 * @return 0 on success, -1 on failure. 536 */ 537 int event_config_set_num_cpus_hint(struct event_config *cfg, int cpus); 538 539 /** 540 Initialize the event API. 541 542 Use event_base_new_with_config() to initialize a new event base, taking 543 the specified configuration under consideration. The configuration object 544 can currently be used to avoid certain event notification mechanisms. 545 546 @param cfg the event configuration object 547 @return an initialized event_base that can be used to registering events, 548 or NULL if no event base can be created with the requested event_config. 549 @see event_base_new(), event_base_free(), event_init(), event_assign() 550 */ 551 struct event_base *event_base_new_with_config(const struct event_config *); 552 553 /** 554 Deallocate all memory associated with an event_base, and free the base. 555 556 Note that this function will not close any fds or free any memory passed 557 to event_new as the argument to callback. 558 559 @param eb an event_base to be freed 560 */ 561 void event_base_free(struct event_base *); 562 563 /** @name Log severities 564 */ 565 /**@{*/ 566 #define EVENT_LOG_DEBUG 0 567 #define EVENT_LOG_MSG 1 568 #define EVENT_LOG_WARN 2 569 #define EVENT_LOG_ERR 3 570 /**@}*/ 571 572 /* Obsolete names: these are deprecated, but older programs might use them. 573 * They violate the reserved-identifier namespace. */ 574 #define _EVENT_LOG_DEBUG EVENT_LOG_DEBUG 575 #define _EVENT_LOG_MSG EVENT_LOG_MSG 576 #define _EVENT_LOG_WARN EVENT_LOG_WARN 577 #define _EVENT_LOG_ERR EVENT_LOG_ERR 578 579 /** 580 A callback function used to intercept Libevent's log messages. 581 582 @see event_set_log_callback 583 */ 584 typedef void (*event_log_cb)(int severity, const char *msg); 585 /** 586 Redirect Libevent's log messages. 587 588 @param cb a function taking two arguments: an integer severity between 589 _EVENT_LOG_DEBUG and _EVENT_LOG_ERR, and a string. If cb is NULL, 590 then the default log is used. 591 592 NOTE: The function you provide *must not* call any other libevent 593 functionality. Doing so can produce undefined behavior. 594 */ 595 void event_set_log_callback(event_log_cb cb); 596 597 /** 598 A function to be called if Libevent encounters a fatal internal error. 599 600 @see event_set_fatal_callback 601 */ 602 typedef void (*event_fatal_cb)(int err); 603 604 /** 605 Override Libevent's behavior in the event of a fatal internal error. 606 607 By default, Libevent will call exit(1) if a programming error makes it 608 impossible to continue correct operation. This function allows you to supply 609 another callback instead. Note that if the function is ever invoked, 610 something is wrong with your program, or with Libevent: any subsequent calls 611 to Libevent may result in undefined behavior. 612 613 Libevent will (almost) always log an _EVENT_LOG_ERR message before calling 614 this function; look at the last log message to see why Libevent has died. 615 */ 616 void event_set_fatal_callback(event_fatal_cb cb); 617 618 /** 619 Associate a different event base with an event. 620 621 The event to be associated must not be currently active or pending. 622 623 @param eb the event base 624 @param ev the event 625 @return 0 on success, -1 on failure. 626 */ 627 int event_base_set(struct event_base *, struct event *); 628 629 /** @name Loop flags 630 631 These flags control the behavior of event_base_loop(). 632 */ 633 /**@{*/ 634 /** Block until we have an active event, then exit once all active events 635 * have had their callbacks run. */ 636 #define EVLOOP_ONCE 0x01 637 /** Do not block: see which events are ready now, run the callbacks 638 * of the highest-priority ones, then exit. */ 639 #define EVLOOP_NONBLOCK 0x02 640 /**@}*/ 641 642 /** 643 Wait for events to become active, and run their callbacks. 644 645 This is a more flexible version of event_base_dispatch(). 646 647 By default, this loop will run the event base until either there are no more 648 pending or active events, or until something calls event_base_loopbreak() or 649 event_base_loopexit(). You can override this behavior with the 'flags' 650 argument. 651 652 @param eb the event_base structure returned by event_base_new() or 653 event_base_new_with_config() 654 @param flags any combination of EVLOOP_ONCE | EVLOOP_NONBLOCK 655 @return 0 if successful, -1 if an error occurred, or 1 if we exited because 656 no events were pending or active. 657 @see event_base_loopexit(), event_base_dispatch(), EVLOOP_ONCE, 658 EVLOOP_NONBLOCK 659 */ 660 int event_base_loop(struct event_base *, int); 661 662 /** 663 Exit the event loop after the specified time 664 665 The next event_base_loop() iteration after the given timer expires will 666 complete normally (handling all queued events) then exit without 667 blocking for events again. 668 669 Subsequent invocations of event_base_loop() will proceed normally. 670 671 @param eb the event_base structure returned by event_init() 672 @param tv the amount of time after which the loop should terminate, 673 or NULL to exit after running all currently active events. 674 @return 0 if successful, or -1 if an error occurred 675 @see event_base_loopbreak() 676 */ 677 int event_base_loopexit(struct event_base *, const struct timeval *); 678 679 /** 680 Abort the active event_base_loop() immediately. 681 682 event_base_loop() will abort the loop after the next event is completed; 683 event_base_loopbreak() is typically invoked from this event's callback. 684 This behavior is analogous to the "break;" statement. 685 686 Subsequent invocations of event_loop() will proceed normally. 687 688 @param eb the event_base structure returned by event_init() 689 @return 0 if successful, or -1 if an error occurred 690 @see event_base_loopexit() 691 */ 692 int event_base_loopbreak(struct event_base *); 693 694 /** 695 Checks if the event loop was told to exit by event_loopexit(). 696 697 This function will return true for an event_base at every point after 698 event_loopexit() is called, until the event loop is next entered. 699 700 @param eb the event_base structure returned by event_init() 701 @return true if event_base_loopexit() was called on this event base, 702 or 0 otherwise 703 @see event_base_loopexit() 704 @see event_base_got_break() 705 */ 706 int event_base_got_exit(struct event_base *); 707 708 /** 709 Checks if the event loop was told to abort immediately by event_loopbreak(). 710 711 This function will return true for an event_base at every point after 712 event_loopbreak() is called, until the event loop is next entered. 713 714 @param eb the event_base structure returned by event_init() 715 @return true if event_base_loopbreak() was called on this event base, 716 or 0 otherwise 717 @see event_base_loopbreak() 718 @see event_base_got_exit() 719 */ 720 int event_base_got_break(struct event_base *); 721 722 /** 723 * @name event flags 724 * 725 * Flags to pass to event_new(), event_assign(), event_pending(), and 726 * anything else with an argument of the form "short events" 727 */ 728 /**@{*/ 729 /** Indicates that a timeout has occurred. It's not necessary to pass 730 * this flag to event_for new()/event_assign() to get a timeout. */ 731 #define EV_TIMEOUT 0x01 732 /** Wait for a socket or FD to become readable */ 733 #define EV_READ 0x02 734 /** Wait for a socket or FD to become writeable */ 735 #define EV_WRITE 0x04 736 /** Wait for a POSIX signal to be raised*/ 737 #define EV_SIGNAL 0x08 738 /** 739 * Persistent event: won't get removed automatically when activated. 740 * 741 * When a persistent event with a timeout becomes activated, its timeout 742 * is reset to 0. 743 */ 744 #define EV_PERSIST 0x10 745 /** Select edge-triggered behavior, if supported by the backend. */ 746 #define EV_ET 0x20 747 /**@}*/ 748 749 /** 750 @name evtimer_* macros 751 752 Aliases for working with one-shot timer events */ 753 /**@{*/ 754 #define evtimer_assign(ev, b, cb, arg) \ 755 event_assign((ev), (b), -1, 0, (cb), (arg)) 756 #define evtimer_new(b, cb, arg) event_new((b), -1, 0, (cb), (arg)) 757 #define evtimer_add(ev, tv) event_add((ev), (tv)) 758 #define evtimer_del(ev) event_del(ev) 759 #define evtimer_pending(ev, tv) event_pending((ev), EV_TIMEOUT, (tv)) 760 #define evtimer_initialized(ev) event_initialized(ev) 761 /**@}*/ 762 763 /** 764 @name evsignal_* macros 765 766 Aliases for working with signal events 767 */ 768 /**@{*/ 769 #define evsignal_add(ev, tv) event_add((ev), (tv)) 770 #define evsignal_assign(ev, b, x, cb, arg) \ 771 event_assign((ev), (b), (x), EV_SIGNAL|EV_PERSIST, cb, (arg)) 772 #define evsignal_new(b, x, cb, arg) \ 773 event_new((b), (x), EV_SIGNAL|EV_PERSIST, (cb), (arg)) 774 #define evsignal_del(ev) event_del(ev) 775 #define evsignal_pending(ev, tv) event_pending((ev), EV_SIGNAL, (tv)) 776 #define evsignal_initialized(ev) event_initialized(ev) 777 /**@}*/ 778 779 /** 780 A callback function for an event. 781 782 It receives three arguments: 783 784 @param fd An fd or signal 785 @param events One or more EV_* flags 786 @param arg A user-supplied argument. 787 788 @see event_new() 789 */ 790 typedef void (*event_callback_fn)(evutil_socket_t, short, void *); 791 792 /** 793 Allocate and asssign a new event structure, ready to be added. 794 795 The function event_new() returns a new event that can be used in 796 future calls to event_add() and event_del(). The fd and events 797 arguments determine which conditions will trigger the event; the 798 callback and callback_arg arguments tell Libevent what to do when the 799 event becomes active. 800 801 If events contains one of EV_READ, EV_WRITE, or EV_READ|EV_WRITE, then 802 fd is a file descriptor or socket that should get monitored for 803 readiness to read, readiness to write, or readiness for either operation 804 (respectively). If events contains EV_SIGNAL, then fd is a signal 805 number to wait for. If events contains none of those flags, then the 806 event can be triggered only by a timeout or by manual activation with 807 event_active(): In this case, fd must be -1. 808 809 The EV_PERSIST flag can also be passed in the events argument: it makes 810 event_add() persistent until event_del() is called. 811 812 The EV_ET flag is compatible with EV_READ and EV_WRITE, and supported 813 only by certain backends. It tells Libevent to use edge-triggered 814 events. 815 816 The EV_TIMEOUT flag has no effect here. 817 818 It is okay to have multiple events all listening on the same fds; but 819 they must either all be edge-triggered, or all not be edge triggerd. 820 821 When the event becomes active, the event loop will run the provided 822 callbuck function, with three arguments. The first will be the provided 823 fd value. The second will be a bitfield of the events that triggered: 824 EV_READ, EV_WRITE, or EV_SIGNAL. Here the EV_TIMEOUT flag indicates 825 that a timeout occurred, and EV_ET indicates that an edge-triggered 826 event occurred. The third event will be the callback_arg pointer that 827 you provide. 828 829 @param base the event base to which the event should be attached. 830 @param fd the file descriptor or signal to be monitored, or -1. 831 @param events desired events to monitor: bitfield of EV_READ, EV_WRITE, 832 EV_SIGNAL, EV_PERSIST, EV_ET. 833 @param callback callback function to be invoked when the event occurs 834 @param callback_arg an argument to be passed to the callback function 835 836 @return a newly allocated struct event that must later be freed with 837 event_free(). 838 @see event_free(), event_add(), event_del(), event_assign() 839 */ 840 struct event *event_new(struct event_base *, evutil_socket_t, short, event_callback_fn, void *); 841 842 843 /** 844 Prepare a new, already-allocated event structure to be added. 845 846 The function event_assign() prepares the event structure ev to be used 847 in future calls to event_add() and event_del(). Unlike event_new(), it 848 doesn't allocate memory itself: it requires that you have already 849 allocated a struct event, probably on the heap. Doing this will 850 typically make your code depend on the size of the event structure, and 851 thereby create incompatibility with future versions of Libevent. 852 853 The easiest way to avoid this problem is just to use event_new() and 854 event_free() instead. 855 856 A slightly harder way to future-proof your code is to use 857 event_get_struct_event_size() to determine the required size of an event 858 at runtime. 859 860 Note that it is NOT safe to call this function on an event that is 861 active or pending. Doing so WILL corrupt internal data structures in 862 Libevent, and lead to strange, hard-to-diagnose bugs. You _can_ use 863 event_assign to change an existing event, but only if it is not active 864 or pending! 865 866 The arguments for this function, and the behavior of the events that it 867 makes, are as for event_new(). 868 869 @param ev an event struct to be modified 870 @param base the event base to which ev should be attached. 871 @param fd the file descriptor to be monitored 872 @param events desired events to monitor; can be EV_READ and/or EV_WRITE 873 @param callback callback function to be invoked when the event occurs 874 @param callback_arg an argument to be passed to the callback function 875 876 @return 0 if success, or -1 on invalid arguments. 877 878 @see event_new(), event_add(), event_del(), event_base_once(), 879 event_get_struct_event_size() 880 */ 881 int event_assign(struct event *, struct event_base *, evutil_socket_t, short, event_callback_fn, void *); 882 883 /** 884 Deallocate a struct event * returned by event_new(). 885 886 If the event is pending or active, first make it non-pending and 887 non-active. 888 */ 889 void event_free(struct event *); 890 891 /** 892 Schedule a one-time event 893 894 The function event_base_once() is similar to event_set(). However, it 895 schedules a callback to be called exactly once, and does not require the 896 caller to prepare an event structure. 897 898 Note that in Libevent 2.0 and earlier, if the event is never triggered, 899 the internal memory used to hold it will never be freed. This may be 900 fixed in a later version of Libevent. 901 902 @param base an event_base 903 @param fd a file descriptor to monitor, or -1 for no fd. 904 @param events event(s) to monitor; can be any of EV_READ | 905 EV_WRITE, or EV_TIMEOUT 906 @param callback callback function to be invoked when the event occurs 907 @param arg an argument to be passed to the callback function 908 @param timeout the maximum amount of time to wait for the event. NULL 909 makes an EV_READ/EV_WRITE event make forever; NULL makes an 910 EV_TIMEOUT event succees immediately. 911 @return 0 if successful, or -1 if an error occurred 912 */ 913 int event_base_once(struct event_base *, evutil_socket_t, short, event_callback_fn, void *, const struct timeval *); 914 915 /** 916 Add an event to the set of pending events. 917 918 The function event_add() schedules the execution of the ev event when the 919 event specified in event_assign()/event_new() occurs, or when the time 920 specified in timeout has elapesed. If atimeout is NULL, no timeout 921 occurs and the function will only be 922 called if a matching event occurs. The event in the 923 ev argument must be already initialized by event_assign() or event_new() 924 and may not be used 925 in calls to event_assign() until it is no longer pending. 926 927 If the event in the ev argument already has a scheduled timeout, calling 928 event_add() replaces the old timeout with the new one, or clears the old 929 timeout if the timeout argument is NULL. 930 931 @param ev an event struct initialized via event_set() 932 @param timeout the maximum amount of time to wait for the event, or NULL 933 to wait forever 934 @return 0 if successful, or -1 if an error occurred 935 @see event_del(), event_assign(), event_new() 936 */ 937 int event_add(struct event *ev, const struct timeval *timeout); 938 939 /** 940 Remove an event from the set of monitored events. 941 942 The function event_del() will cancel the event in the argument ev. If the 943 event has already executed or has never been added the call will have no 944 effect. 945 946 @param ev an event struct to be removed from the working set 947 @return 0 if successful, or -1 if an error occurred 948 @see event_add() 949 */ 950 int event_del(struct event *); 951 952 953 /** 954 Make an event active. 955 956 You can use this function on a pending or a non-pending event to make it 957 active, so that its callback will be run by event_base_dispatch() or 958 event_base_loop(). 959 960 One common use in multithreaded programs is to wake the thread running 961 event_base_loop() from another thread. 962 963 @param ev an event to make active. 964 @param res a set of flags to pass to the event's callback. 965 @param ncalls an obsolete argument: this is ignored. 966 **/ 967 void event_active(struct event *ev, int res, short ncalls); 968 969 /** 970 Checks if a specific event is pending or scheduled. 971 972 @param ev an event struct previously passed to event_add() 973 @param events the requested event type; any of EV_TIMEOUT|EV_READ| 974 EV_WRITE|EV_SIGNAL 975 @param tv if this field is not NULL, and the event has a timeout, 976 this field is set to hold the time at which the timeout will 977 expire. 978 979 @return true if the event is pending on any of the events in 'what', (that 980 is to say, it has been added), or 0 if the event is not added. 981 */ 982 int event_pending(const struct event *ev, short events, struct timeval *tv); 983 984 985 /** 986 Test if an event structure might be initialized. 987 988 The event_initialized() function can be used to check if an event has been 989 initialized. 990 991 Warning: This function is only useful for distinguishing a a zeroed-out 992 piece of memory from an initialized event, it can easily be confused by 993 uninitialized memory. Thus, it should ONLY be used to distinguish an 994 initialized event from zero. 995 996 @param ev an event structure to be tested 997 @return 1 if the structure might be initialized, or 0 if it has not been 998 initialized 999 */ 1000 int event_initialized(const struct event *ev); 1001 1002 /** 1003 Get the signal number assigned to a signal event 1004 */ 1005 #define event_get_signal(ev) ((int)event_get_fd(ev)) 1006 1007 /** 1008 Get the socket or signal assigned to an event, or -1 if the event has 1009 no socket. 1010 */ 1011 evutil_socket_t event_get_fd(const struct event *ev); 1012 1013 /** 1014 Get the event_base associated with an event. 1015 */ 1016 struct event_base *event_get_base(const struct event *ev); 1017 1018 /** 1019 Return the events (EV_READ, EV_WRITE, etc) assigned to an event. 1020 */ 1021 short event_get_events(const struct event *ev); 1022 1023 /** 1024 Return the callback assigned to an event. 1025 */ 1026 event_callback_fn event_get_callback(const struct event *ev); 1027 1028 /** 1029 Return the callback argument assigned to an event. 1030 */ 1031 void *event_get_callback_arg(const struct event *ev); 1032 1033 /** 1034 Extract _all_ of arguments given to construct a given event. The 1035 event_base is copied into *base_out, the fd is copied into *fd_out, and so 1036 on. 1037 1038 If any of the "_out" arguments is NULL, it will be ignored. 1039 */ 1040 void event_get_assignment(const struct event *event, 1041 struct event_base **base_out, evutil_socket_t *fd_out, short *events_out, 1042 event_callback_fn *callback_out, void **arg_out); 1043 1044 /** 1045 Return the size of struct event that the Libevent library was compiled 1046 with. 1047 1048 This will be NO GREATER than sizeof(struct event) if you're running with 1049 the same version of Libevent that your application was built with, but 1050 otherwise might not. 1051 1052 Note that it might be SMALLER than sizeof(struct event) if some future 1053 version of Libevent adds extra padding to the end of struct event. 1054 We might do this to help ensure ABI-compatibility between different 1055 versions of Libevent. 1056 */ 1057 size_t event_get_struct_event_size(void); 1058 1059 /** 1060 Get the Libevent version. 1061 1062 Note that this will give you the version of the library that you're 1063 currently linked against, not the version of the headers that you've 1064 compiled against. 1065 1066 @return a string containing the version number of Libevent 1067 */ 1068 const char *event_get_version(void); 1069 1070 /** 1071 Return a numeric representation of Libevent's version. 1072 1073 Note that this will give you the version of the library that you're 1074 currently linked against, not the version of the headers you've used to 1075 compile. 1076 1077 The format uses one byte each for the major, minor, and patchlevel parts of 1078 the version number. The low-order byte is unused. For example, version 1079 2.0.1-alpha has a numeric representation of 0x02000100 1080 */ 1081 ev_uint32_t event_get_version_number(void); 1082 1083 /** As event_get_version, but gives the version of Libevent's headers. */ 1084 #define LIBEVENT_VERSION _EVENT_VERSION 1085 /** As event_get_version_number, but gives the version number of Libevent's 1086 * headers. */ 1087 #define LIBEVENT_VERSION_NUMBER _EVENT_NUMERIC_VERSION 1088 1089 /** Largest number of priorities that Libevent can support. */ 1090 #define EVENT_MAX_PRIORITIES 256 1091 /** 1092 Set the number of different event priorities 1093 1094 By default Libevent schedules all active events with the same priority. 1095 However, some time it is desirable to process some events with a higher 1096 priority than others. For that reason, Libevent supports strict priority 1097 queues. Active events with a lower priority are always processed before 1098 events with a higher priority. 1099 1100 The number of different priorities can be set initially with the 1101 event_base_priority_init() function. This function should be called 1102 before the first call to event_base_dispatch(). The 1103 event_priority_set() function can be used to assign a priority to an 1104 event. By default, Libevent assigns the middle priority to all events 1105 unless their priority is explicitly set. 1106 1107 Note that urgent-priority events can starve less-urgent events: after 1108 running all urgent-priority callbacks, Libevent checks for more urgent 1109 events again, before running less-urgent events. Less-urgent events 1110 will not have their callbacks run until there are no events more urgent 1111 than them that want to be active. 1112 1113 @param eb the event_base structure returned by event_base_new() 1114 @param npriorities the maximum number of priorities 1115 @return 0 if successful, or -1 if an error occurred 1116 @see event_priority_set() 1117 */ 1118 int event_base_priority_init(struct event_base *, int); 1119 1120 /** 1121 Assign a priority to an event. 1122 1123 @param ev an event struct 1124 @param priority the new priority to be assigned 1125 @return 0 if successful, or -1 if an error occurred 1126 @see event_priority_init() 1127 */ 1128 int event_priority_set(struct event *, int); 1129 1130 /** 1131 Prepare an event_base to use a large number of timeouts with the same 1132 duration. 1133 1134 Libevent's default scheduling algorithm is optimized for having a large 1135 number of timeouts with their durations more or less randomly 1136 distributed. But if you have a large number of timeouts that all have 1137 the same duration (for example, if you have a large number of 1138 connections that all have a 10-second timeout), then you can improve 1139 Libevent's performance by telling Libevent about it. 1140 1141 To do this, call this function with the common duration. It will return a 1142 pointer to a different, opaque timeout value. (Don't depend on its actual 1143 contents!) When you use this timeout value in event_add(), Libevent will 1144 schedule the event more efficiently. 1145 1146 (This optimization probably will not be worthwhile until you have thousands 1147 or tens of thousands of events with the same timeout.) 1148 */ 1149 const struct timeval *event_base_init_common_timeout(struct event_base *base, 1150 const struct timeval *duration); 1151 1152 #if !defined(_EVENT_DISABLE_MM_REPLACEMENT) || defined(_EVENT_IN_DOXYGEN) 1153 /** 1154 Override the functions that Libevent uses for memory management. 1155 1156 Usually, Libevent uses the standard libc functions malloc, realloc, and 1157 free to allocate memory. Passing replacements for those functions to 1158 event_set_mem_functions() overrides this behavior. 1159 1160 Note that all memory returned from Libevent will be allocated by the 1161 replacement functions rather than by malloc() and realloc(). Thus, if you 1162 have replaced those functions, it will not be appropriate to free() memory 1163 that you get from Libevent. Instead, you must use the free_fn replacement 1164 that you provided. 1165 1166 Note also that if you are going to call this function, you should do so 1167 before any call to any Libevent function that does allocation. 1168 Otherwise, those funtions will allocate their memory using malloc(), but 1169 then later free it using your provided free_fn. 1170 1171 @param malloc_fn A replacement for malloc. 1172 @param realloc_fn A replacement for realloc 1173 @param free_fn A replacement for free. 1174 **/ 1175 void event_set_mem_functions( 1176 void *(*malloc_fn)(size_t sz), 1177 void *(*realloc_fn)(void *ptr, size_t sz), 1178 void (*free_fn)(void *ptr)); 1179 /** This definition is present if Libevent was built with support for 1180 event_set_mem_functions() */ 1181 #define EVENT_SET_MEM_FUNCTIONS_IMPLEMENTED 1182 #endif 1183 1184 void event_base_dump_events(struct event_base *, FILE *); 1185 1186 /** Sets 'tv' to the current time (as returned by gettimeofday()), 1187 looking at the cached value in 'base' if possible, and calling 1188 gettimeofday() or clock_gettime() as appropriate if there is no 1189 cached time. 1190 1191 Generally, this value will only be cached while actually 1192 processing event callbacks, and may be very inaccuate if your 1193 callbacks take a long time to execute. 1194 1195 Returns 0 on success, negative on failure. 1196 */ 1197 int event_base_gettimeofday_cached(struct event_base *base, 1198 struct timeval *tv); 1199 1200 #ifdef __cplusplus 1201 } 1202 #endif 1203 1204 #endif /* _EVENT2_EVENT_H_ */ 1205