class Channel {}
A Channel
is a thread-safe queue that helps you to send a series of objects from one or more producers to one or more consumers. Each object will arrive at only one such consumer, selected by the scheduler. If there is only one consumer and one producer, the order of objects is guaranteed to be preserved. Sending on a Channel
is non-blocking.
my $c = Channel.new; await (^10).map: { start { my $r = rand; sleep $r; $c.send($r); } } $c.close; say $c.list;
Further examples can be found in the concurrency page
Methods§
method send§
method send(Channel:D: \item)
Enqueues an item into the Channel
. Throws an exception of type X::Channel::SendOnClosed
if the Channel
has been closed already. This call will not block waiting for a consumer to take the object. There is no set limit on the number of items that may be queued, so care should be taken to prevent runaway queueing.
my $c = Channel.new; $c.send(1); $c.send([2, 3, 4, 5]); $c.close; say $c.list; # OUTPUT: «(1 [2 3 4 5])»
method receive§
method receive(Channel:D:)
Receives and removes an item from the Channel
. It blocks if no item is present, waiting for a send
from another thread.
Throws an exception of type X::Channel::ReceiveOnClosed
if the Channel
has been closed, and the last item has been removed already, or if close
is called while receive
is waiting for an item to arrive.
If the Channel
has been marked as erratic with method fail
, and the last item has been removed, throws the argument that was given to fail
as an exception.
See method poll
for a non-blocking version that won't throw exceptions.
my $c = Channel.new; $c.send(1); say $c.receive; # OUTPUT: «1»
method poll§
method poll(Channel:D:)
Receives and removes an item from the Channel
. If no item is present, returns Nil
instead of waiting.
my $c = Channel.new; Promise.in(2).then: { $c.close; } ^10 .map({ $c.send($_); }); loop { if $c.poll -> $item { $item.say }; if $c.closed { last }; sleep 0.1; }
See method receive
for a blocking version that properly responds to Channel
closing and failure.
method close§
method close(Channel:D:)
Close the Channel
, normally. This makes subsequent send
calls die with X::Channel::SendOnClosed
. Subsequent calls of .receive
may still drain any remaining items that were previously sent, but if the queue is empty, will throw an X::Channel::ReceiveOnClosed
exception. Since you can produce a Seq
from a Channel
by contextualizing to array with @()
or by calling the .list
method, these methods will not terminate until the Channel
has been closed. A whenever-block will also terminate properly on a closed Channel
.
my $c = Channel.new; $c.close; $c.send(1); CATCH { default { put .^name, ': ', .Str } }; # OUTPUT: «X::Channel::SendOnClosed: Cannot send a message on a closed channel»
Please note that any exception thrown may prevent .close
from being called, this may hang the receiving thread. Use a LEAVE phaser to enforce the .close
call in this case.
method list§
method list(Channel:D:)
Returns a list based on the Seq
which will iterate items in the queue and remove each item from it as it iterates. This can only terminate once the close
method has been called.
my $c = Channel.new; $c.send(1); $c.send(2); $c.close; say $c.list; # OUTPUT: «(1 2)»
method closed§
method closed(Channel:D: --> Promise:D)
Returns a promise that will be kept once the Channel
is closed by a call to method close
.
my $c = Channel.new; $c.closed.then({ say "It's closed!" }); $c.close; sleep 1;
method fail§
method fail(Channel:D: $error)
Closes the Channel
(that is, makes subsequent send
calls die), and enqueues the error to be thrown as the final element in the Channel
. Method receive
will throw that error as an exception. Does nothing if the Channel
has already been closed or .fail
has already been called on it.
my $c = Channel.new; $c.fail("Bad error happens!"); $c.receive; CATCH { default { put .^name, ': ', .Str } }; # OUTPUT: «X::AdHoc: Bad error happens!»
method Capture§
method Capture(Channel:D: --> Capture:D)
Equivalent to calling .List.Capture
on the invocant.
method Supply§
method Supply(Channel:D:)
This returns an on-demand
Supply
that emits a value for every value received on the Channel
. done
will be called on the Supply
when the Channel
is closed.
my $c = Channel.new; my Supply $s1 = $c.Supply; my Supply $s2 = $c.Supply; $s1.tap(-> $v { say "First $v" }); $s2.tap(-> $v { say "Second $v" }); ^10 .map({ $c.send($_) }); sleep 1;
Multiple calls to this method produce multiple instances of Supply, which compete over the values from the Channel
.
sub await§
multi await(Channel:D) multi await(*@)
Waits until all of one or more Channel
s has a value available, and returns those values (it calls .receive
on the Channel
). Also works with Promise
s.
my $c = Channel.new; Promise.in(1).then({$c.send(1)}); say await $c;
Since 6.d, it no longer blocks a thread while waiting.