pub struct Registry { /* private fields */ }
Expand description
Registers I/O resources.
Implementations§
Source§impl Registry
impl Registry
Sourcepub fn register<S>(
&self,
source: &mut S,
token: Token,
interests: Interest,
) -> Result<()>
pub fn register<S>( &self, source: &mut S, token: Token, interests: Interest, ) -> Result<()>
Register an event::Source
with the Poll
instance.
Once registered, the Poll
instance will monitor the event source for
readiness state changes. When it notices a state change, it will return
a readiness event for the handle the next time poll
is called.
See Poll
docs for a high level overview.
§Arguments
source: &mut S: event::Source
: This is the source of events that the
Poll
instance should monitor for readiness state changes.
token: Token
: The caller picks a token to associate with the socket.
When poll
returns an event for the handle, this token is included.
This allows the caller to map the event to its source. The token
associated with the event::Source
can be changed at any time by
calling reregister
.
See documentation on Token
for an example showing how to pick
Token
values.
interest: Interest
: Specifies which operations Poll
should monitor
for readiness. Poll
will only return readiness events for operations
specified by this argument.
If a socket is registered with readable interest and the socket becomes
writable, no event will be returned from poll
.
The readiness interest for an event::Source
can be changed at any time
by calling reregister
.
§Notes
Callers must ensure that if a source being registered with a Poll
instance was previously registered with that Poll
instance, then a
call to deregister
has already occurred. Consecutive calls to
register
is unspecified behavior.
Unless otherwise specified, the caller should assume that once an event
source is registered with a Poll
instance, it is bound to that Poll
instance for the lifetime of the event source. This remains true even
if the event source is deregistered from the poll instance using
deregister
.
§Examples
use mio::{Events, Poll, Interest, Token};
use mio::net::TcpStream;
use std::net::SocketAddr;
use std::time::{Duration, Instant};
let mut poll = Poll::new()?;
let address: SocketAddr = "127.0.0.1:0".parse()?;
let listener = net::TcpListener::bind(address)?;
let mut socket = TcpStream::connect(listener.local_addr()?)?;
// Register the socket with `poll`
poll.registry().register(
&mut socket,
Token(0),
Interest::READABLE | Interest::WRITABLE)?;
let mut events = Events::with_capacity(1024);
let start = Instant::now();
let timeout = Duration::from_millis(500);
loop {
let elapsed = start.elapsed();
if elapsed >= timeout {
// Connection timed out
return Ok(());
}
let remaining = timeout - elapsed;
poll.poll(&mut events, Some(remaining))?;
for event in &events {
if event.token() == Token(0) {
// Something (probably) happened on the socket.
return Ok(());
}
}
}
Sourcepub fn reregister<S>(
&self,
source: &mut S,
token: Token,
interests: Interest,
) -> Result<()>
pub fn reregister<S>( &self, source: &mut S, token: Token, interests: Interest, ) -> Result<()>
Re-register an event::Source
with the Poll
instance.
Re-registering an event source allows changing the details of the
registration. Specifically, it allows updating the associated token
and interests
specified in previous register
and reregister
calls.
The reregister
arguments fully override the previous values. In other
words, if a socket is registered with readable
interest and the call
to reregister
specifies writable
, then read interest is no longer
requested for the handle.
The event source must have previously been registered with this instance
of Poll
, otherwise the behavior is unspecified.
See the register
documentation for details about the function
arguments and see the struct
docs for a high level overview of
polling.
§Examples
use mio::{Poll, Interest, Token};
use mio::net::TcpStream;
use std::net::SocketAddr;
let poll = Poll::new()?;
let address: SocketAddr = "127.0.0.1:0".parse()?;
let listener = net::TcpListener::bind(address)?;
let mut socket = TcpStream::connect(listener.local_addr()?)?;
// Register the socket with `poll`, requesting readable
poll.registry().register(
&mut socket,
Token(0),
Interest::READABLE)?;
// Reregister the socket specifying write interest instead. Even though
// the token is the same it must be specified.
poll.registry().reregister(
&mut socket,
Token(0),
Interest::WRITABLE)?;
Sourcepub fn deregister<S>(&self, source: &mut S) -> Result<()>
pub fn deregister<S>(&self, source: &mut S) -> Result<()>
Deregister an event::Source
with the Poll
instance.
When an event source is deregistered, the Poll
instance will no longer
monitor it for readiness state changes. Deregistering clears up any
internal resources needed to track the handle. After an explicit call
to this method completes, it is guaranteed that the token previously
registered to this handle will not be returned by a future poll, so long
as a happens-before relationship is established between this call and
the poll.
The event source must have previously been registered with this instance
of Poll
, otherwise the behavior is unspecified.
A handle can be passed back to register
after it has been
deregistered; however, it must be passed back to the same Poll
instance, otherwise the behavior is unspecified.
§Examples
use mio::{Events, Poll, Interest, Token};
use mio::net::TcpStream;
use std::net::SocketAddr;
use std::time::Duration;
let mut poll = Poll::new()?;
let address: SocketAddr = "127.0.0.1:0".parse()?;
let listener = net::TcpListener::bind(address)?;
let mut socket = TcpStream::connect(listener.local_addr()?)?;
// Register the socket with `poll`
poll.registry().register(
&mut socket,
Token(0),
Interest::READABLE)?;
poll.registry().deregister(&mut socket)?;
let mut events = Events::with_capacity(1024);
// Set a timeout because this poll should never receive any events.
poll.poll(&mut events, Some(Duration::from_secs(1)))?;
assert!(events.is_empty());