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files >> //opt/alt/ruby32/include/ruby/internal/intern/cont.h
#ifndef RBIMPL_INTERN_CONT_H /*-*-C++-*-vi:se ft=cpp:*/ #define RBIMPL_INTERN_CONT_H /** * @file * @author Ruby developers <ruby-core@ruby-lang.org> * @copyright This file is a part of the programming language Ruby. * Permission is hereby granted, to either redistribute and/or * modify this file, provided that the conditions mentioned in the * file COPYING are met. Consult the file for details. * @warning Symbols prefixed with either `RBIMPL` or `rbimpl` are * implementation details. Don't take them as canon. They could * rapidly appear then vanish. The name (path) of this header file * is also an implementation detail. Do not expect it to persist * at the place it is now. Developers are free to move it anywhere * anytime at will. * @note To ruby-core: remember that this header can be possibly * recursively included from extension libraries written in C++. * Do not expect for instance `__VA_ARGS__` is always available. * We assume C99 for ruby itself but we don't assume languages of * extension libraries. They could be written in C++98. * @brief Public APIs related to rb_cFiber. */ #include "ruby/internal/dllexport.h" #include "ruby/internal/value.h" #include "ruby/internal/iterator.h" RBIMPL_SYMBOL_EXPORT_BEGIN() /* cont.c */ /** * Creates a Fiber instance from a C-backended block. * * @param[in] func A function, to become the fiber's body. * @param[in] callback_obj Passed as-is to `func`. * @return An allocated new instance of rb_cFiber, which is ready to be * "resume"d. */ VALUE rb_fiber_new(rb_block_call_func_t func, VALUE callback_obj); /** * Creates a Fiber instance from a C-backended block with the specified * storage. * * If the given storage is Qundef or Qtrue, this function is equivalent to * rb_fiber_new() which inherits storage from the current fiber. * * Specifying Qtrue is experimental and may be changed in the future. * * If the given storage is Qnil, this function will lazy initialize the * internal storage which starts of empty (without any inheritance). * * Otherwise, the given storage is used as the internal storage. * * @param[in] func A function, to become the fiber's body. * @param[in] callback_obj Passed as-is to `func`. * @param[in] storage The way to set up the storage for the fiber. * @return An allocated new instance of rb_cFiber, which is ready to be * "resume"d. */ VALUE rb_fiber_new_storage(rb_block_call_func_t func, VALUE callback_obj, VALUE storage); /** * Queries the fiber which is calling this function. Any ruby execution * context has its fiber, either explicitly or implicitly. * * @return The current fiber. */ VALUE rb_fiber_current(void); /** * Queries the liveness of the passed fiber. "Alive" in this context means * that the fiber can still be resumed. Once it reaches is its end of * execution, this function returns ::RUBY_Qfalse. * * @param[in] fiber A target fiber. * @retval RUBY_Qtrue It is. * @retval RUBY_Qfalse It isn't. */ VALUE rb_fiber_alive_p(VALUE fiber); /** * Queries if an object is a fiber. * * @param[in] obj Arbitrary ruby object. * @retval RUBY_Qtrue It is. * @retval RUBY_Qfalse It isn't. */ VALUE rb_obj_is_fiber(VALUE obj); /** * Resumes the execution of the passed fiber, either from the point at which * the last rb_fiber_yield() was called if any, or at the beginning of the * fiber body if it is the first call to this function. * * Other arguments are passed into the fiber's body, either as return values of * rb_fiber_yield() in case it switches to there, or as the block parameter of * the fiber body if it switches to the beginning of the fiber. * * The return value of this function is either the value passed to previous * rb_fiber_yield() call, or the ultimate evaluated value of the entire fiber * body if the execution reaches the end of it. * * When an exception happens inside of a fiber it propagates to this function. * * ```ruby * f = Fiber.new do |i| * puts "<x> =>> #{i}" * puts "<y> <-- #{i + 1}" * j = Fiber.yield(i + 1) * puts "<z> =>> #{j}" * puts "<w> <-- #{j + 1}" * next j + 1 * end * * puts "[a] <-- 1" * p = f.resume(1) * puts "[b] =>> #{p}" * puts "[c] <-- #{p + 1}" * q = f.resume(p + 1) * puts "[d] =>> #{q}" * ``` * * Above program executes in `[a] <x> <y> [b] [c] <z> <w> [d]`. * * @param[out] fiber The fiber to resume. * @param[in] argc Number of objects of `argv`. * @param[in] argv Passed (somehow) to `fiber`. * @exception rb_eFiberError `fib` is terminated etc. * @exception rb_eException Any exceptions happen in `fiber`. * @return (See above) * @note This function _does_ return. * * @internal * * @shyouhei expected this function to raise ::rb_eFrozenError for frozen * fibers but it doesn't in practice. Intentional or ...? */ VALUE rb_fiber_resume(VALUE fiber, int argc, const VALUE *argv); /** * Identical to rb_fiber_resume(), except you can specify how to handle the * last element of the given array. * * @param[out] fiber The fiber to resume. * @param[in] argc Number of objects of `argv`. * @param[in] argv Passed (somehow) to `fiber`. * @param[in] kw_splat Handling of keyword parameters: * - RB_NO_KEYWORDS `argv`'s last is not a keyword argument. * - RB_PASS_KEYWORDS `argv`'s last is a keyword argument. * - RB_PASS_CALLED_KEYWORDS it depends if there is a passed block. * @exception rb_eFiberError `fiber` is terminated etc. * @exception rb_eException Any exceptions happen in `fiber`. * @return Either what was yielded or the last value of the fiber body. */ VALUE rb_fiber_resume_kw(VALUE fiber, int argc, const VALUE *argv, int kw_splat); /** * Yields the control back to the point where the current fiber was resumed. * The passed objects would be the return value of rb_fiber_resume(). This * fiber then suspends its execution until next time it is resumed. * * This function can also raise arbitrary exceptions injected from outside of * the fiber using rb_fiber_raise(). * * ```ruby * exc = Class.new Exception * * f = Fiber.new do * Fiber.yield * rescue exc => e * puts e.message * end * * f.resume * f.raise exc, "Hi!" * ``` * * @param[in] argc Number of objects of `argv`. * @param[in] argv Passed to rb_fiber_resume(). * @exception rb_eException (See above) * @return (See rb_fiber_resume() for details) */ VALUE rb_fiber_yield(int argc, const VALUE *argv); /** * Identical to rb_fiber_yield(), except you can specify how to handle the last * element of the given array. * * @param[in] argc Number of objects of `argv`. * @param[in] argv Passed to rb_fiber_resume(). * @param[in] kw_splat Handling of keyword parameters: * - RB_NO_KEYWORDS `argv`'s last is not a keyword argument. * - RB_PASS_KEYWORDS `argv`'s last is a keyword argument. * - RB_PASS_CALLED_KEYWORDS it depends if there is a passed block. * @exception rb_eException What was raised using `Fiber#raise`. * @return (See rb_fiber_resume() for details) */ VALUE rb_fiber_yield_kw(int argc, const VALUE *argv, int kw_splat); /** * Transfers control to another fiber, resuming it from where it last stopped * or starting it if it was not resumed before. The calling fiber will be * suspended much like in a call to rb_fiber_yield(). * * The fiber which receives the transfer call treats it much like a resume * call. Arguments passed to transfer are treated like those passed to resume. * * The two style of control passing to and from fiber (one is rb_fiber_resume() * and rb_fiber_yield(), another is rb_fiber_transfer() to and from fiber) * can't be freely mixed. * * - If the Fiber's lifecycle had started with transfer, it will never be * able to yield or be resumed control passing, only finish or transfer * back. (It still can resume other fibers that are allowed to be * resumed.) * * - If the Fiber's lifecycle had started with resume, it can yield or * transfer to another Fiber, but can receive control back only the way * compatible with the way it was given away: if it had transferred, it * only can be transferred back, and if it had yielded, it only can be * resumed back. After that, it again can transfer or yield. * * If those rules are broken, rb_eFiberError is raised. * * For an individual Fiber design, yield/resume is easier to use (the Fiber * just gives away control, it doesn't need to think about who the control is * given to), while transfer is more flexible for complex cases, allowing to * build arbitrary graphs of Fibers dependent on each other. * * @param[out] fiber Explicit control destination. * @param[in] argc Number of objects of `argv`. * @param[in] argv Passed to rb_fiber_resume(). * @exception rb_eFiberError (See above) * @exception rb_eException What was raised using `Fiber#raise`. * @return (See rb_fiber_resume() for details) */ VALUE rb_fiber_transfer(VALUE fiber, int argc, const VALUE *argv); /** * Identical to rb_fiber_transfer(), except you can specify how to handle the * last element of the given array. * * @param[out] fiber Explicit control destination. * @param[in] argc Number of objects of `argv`. * @param[in] argv Passed to rb_fiber_resume(). * @param[in] kw_splat Handling of keyword parameters: * - RB_NO_KEYWORDS `argv`'s last is not a keyword argument. * - RB_PASS_KEYWORDS `argv`'s last is a keyword argument. * - RB_PASS_CALLED_KEYWORDS it depends if there is a passed block. * @exception rb_eFiberError (See above) * @exception rb_eException What was raised using `Fiber#raise`. * @return (See rb_fiber_resume() for details) */ VALUE rb_fiber_transfer_kw(VALUE fiber, int argc, const VALUE *argv, int kw_splat); /** * Identical to rb_fiber_resume() but instead of resuming normal execution of * the passed fiber, it raises the given exception in it. From inside of the * fiber this would be seen as if rb_fiber_yield() raised. * * This function does return in case the passed fiber gracefully handled the * passed exception. But if it does not, the raised exception propagates out * of the passed fiber; this function then does not return. * * Parameters are passed to rb_make_exception() to create an exception object. * See its document for what are allowed here. * * It is a failure to call this function against a fiber which is resuming, * have never run yet, or has already finished running. * * @param[out] fiber Where exception is raised. * @param[in] argc Passed as-is to rb_make_exception(). * @param[in] argv Passed as-is to rb_make_exception(). * @exception rb_eFiberError `fiber` is terminated etc. * @return (See rb_fiber_resume() for details) */ VALUE rb_fiber_raise(VALUE fiber, int argc, const VALUE *argv); RBIMPL_SYMBOL_EXPORT_END() #endif /* RBIMPL_INTERN_CONT_H */
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