Initial commit of OpenSPARC T2 architecture model.
[OpenSPARC-T2-SAM] / sam-t2 / devtools / v8plus / man / man3 / Tcl_AsyncInvoke.3
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246.TH Tcl_AsyncCreate 3 7.0 Tcl "Tcl Library Procedures"
247.BS
248.SH NAME
249Tcl_AsyncCreate, Tcl_AsyncMark, Tcl_AsyncInvoke, Tcl_AsyncDelete, Tcl_AsyncReady \- handle asynchronous events
250.SH SYNOPSIS
251.nf
252\fB#include <tcl.h>\fR
253.sp
254Tcl_AsyncHandler
255\fBTcl_AsyncCreate\fR(\fIproc, clientData\fR)
256.sp
257\fBTcl_AsyncMark\fR(\fIasync\fR)
258.sp
259int
260\fBTcl_AsyncInvoke\fR(\fIinterp, code\fR)
261.sp
262\fBTcl_AsyncDelete\fR(\fIasync\fR)
263.sp
264int
265\fBTcl_AsyncReady\fR()
266.SH ARGUMENTS
267.AS Tcl_AsyncHandler clientData
268.AP Tcl_AsyncProc *proc in
269Procedure to invoke to handle an asynchronous event.
270.AP ClientData clientData in
271One-word value to pass to \fIproc\fR.
272.AP Tcl_AsyncHandler async in
273Token for asynchronous event handler.
274.AP Tcl_Interp *interp in
275Tcl interpreter in which command was being evaluated when handler was
276invoked, or NULL if handler was invoked when there was no interpreter
277active.
278.AP int code in
279Completion code from command that just completed in \fIinterp\fR,
280or 0 if \fIinterp\fR is NULL.
281.BE
282
283.SH DESCRIPTION
284.PP
285These procedures provide a safe mechanism for dealing with
286asynchronous events such as signals.
287If an event such as a signal occurs while a Tcl script is being
288evaluated then it isn't safe to take any substantive action to
289process the event.
290For example, it isn't safe to evaluate a Tcl script since the
291interpreter may already be in the middle of evaluating a script;
292it may not even be safe to allocate memory, since a memory
293allocation could have been in progress when the event occurred.
294The only safe approach is to set a flag indicating that the event
295occurred, then handle the event later when the world has returned
296to a clean state, such as after the current Tcl command completes.
297.PP
298\fBTcl_AsyncCreate\fR, \fBTcl_AsyncDelete\fR, and \fBTcl_AsyncReady\fR
299are thread sensitive. They access and/or set a thread-specific data
300structure in the event of a core built with \fI\-\-enable\-threads\fR. The token
301created by \fBTcl_AsyncCreate\fR contains the needed thread information it
302was called from so that calling \fBTcl_AsyncMark\fR(\fItoken\fR) will only yield
303the origin thread into the asynchronous handler.
304.PP
305\fBTcl_AsyncCreate\fR creates an asynchronous handler and returns
306a token for it.
307The asynchronous handler must be created before
308any occurrences of the asynchronous event that it is intended
309to handle (it is not safe to create a handler at the time of
310an event).
311When an asynchronous event occurs the code that detects the event
312(such as a signal handler) should call \fBTcl_AsyncMark\fR with the
313token for the handler.
314\fBTcl_AsyncMark\fR will mark the handler as ready to execute, but it
315will not invoke the handler immediately.
316Tcl will call the \fIproc\fR associated with the handler later, when
317the world is in a safe state, and \fIproc\fR can then carry out
318the actions associated with the asynchronous event.
319\fIProc\fR should have arguments and result that match the
320type \fBTcl_AsyncProc\fR:
321.CS
322typedef int Tcl_AsyncProc(
323 ClientData \fIclientData\fR,
324 Tcl_Interp *\fIinterp\fR,
325 int \fIcode\fR);
326.CE
327The \fIclientData\fR will be the same as the \fIclientData\fR
328argument passed to \fBTcl_AsyncCreate\fR when the handler was
329created.
330If \fIproc\fR is invoked just after a command has completed
331execution in an interpreter, then \fIinterp\fR will identify
332the interpreter in which the command was evaluated and
333\fIcode\fR will be the completion code returned by that
334command.
335The command's result will be present in the interpreter's result.
336When \fIproc\fR returns, whatever it leaves in the interpreter's result
337will be returned as the result of the command and the integer
338value returned by \fIproc\fR will be used as the new completion
339code for the command.
340.PP
341It is also possible for \fIproc\fR to be invoked when no interpreter
342is active.
343This can happen, for example, if an asynchronous event occurs while
344the application is waiting for interactive input or an X event.
345In this case \fIinterp\fR will be NULL and \fIcode\fR will be
3460, and the return value from \fIproc\fR will be ignored.
347.PP
348The procedure \fBTcl_AsyncInvoke\fR is called to invoke all of the
349handlers that are ready.
350The procedure \fBTcl_AsyncReady\fR will return non-zero whenever any
351asynchronous handlers are ready; it can be checked to avoid calls
352to \fBTcl_AsyncInvoke\fR when there are no ready handlers.
353Tcl calls \fBTcl_AsyncReady\fR after each command is evaluated
354and calls \fBTcl_AsyncInvoke\fR if needed.
355Applications may also call \fBTcl_AsyncInvoke\fR at interesting
356times for that application.
357For example, Tcl's event handler calls \fBTcl_AsyncReady\fR
358after each event and calls \fBTcl_AsyncInvoke\fR if needed.
359The \fIinterp\fR and \fIcode\fR arguments to \fBTcl_AsyncInvoke\fR
360have the same meaning as for \fIproc\fR: they identify the active
361interpreter, if any, and the completion code from the command
362that just completed.
363.PP
364\fBTcl_AsyncDelete\fR removes an asynchronous handler so that
365its \fIproc\fR will never be invoked again.
366A handler can be deleted even when ready, and it will still
367not be invoked.
368.PP
369If multiple handlers become active at the same time, the
370handlers are invoked in the order they were created (oldest
371handler first).
372The \fIcode\fR and the interpreter's result for later handlers
373reflect the values returned by earlier handlers, so that
374the most recently created handler has last say about
375the interpreter's result and completion code.
376If new handlers become ready while handlers are executing,
377\fBTcl_AsyncInvoke\fR will invoke them all; at each point it
378invokes the highest-priority (oldest) ready handler, repeating
379this over and over until there are no longer any ready handlers.
380
381.SH WARNING
382.PP
383It is almost always a bad idea for an asynchronous event
384handler to modify the interpreter's result or return a code different
385from its \fIcode\fR argument.
386This sort of behavior can disrupt the execution of scripts in
387subtle ways and result in bugs that are extremely difficult
388to track down.
389If an asynchronous event handler needs to evaluate Tcl scripts
390then it should first save the interpreter's result plus the values
391of the variables \fBerrorInfo\fR and \fBerrorCode\fR (this can
392be done, for example, by storing them in dynamic strings).
393When the asynchronous handler is finished it should restore
394the interpreter's result, \fBerrorInfo\fR, and \fBerrorCode\fR,
395and return the \fIcode\fR argument.
396
397.SH KEYWORDS
398asynchronous event, handler, signal