| '\" |
| '\" Copyright (c) 1998-1999 Scriptics Corporation |
| '\" Copyright (c) 1995-1997 Sun Microsystems, Inc. |
| '\" |
| '\" See the file "license.terms" for information on usage and redistribution |
| '\" of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES. |
| '\" |
| '\" RCS: @(#) $Id: Notifier.3,v 1.9 2002/07/01 18:24:39 jenglish Exp $ |
| '\" |
| '\" The definitions below are for supplemental macros used in Tcl/Tk |
| '\" manual entries. |
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| See the \\fBoptions\\fR manual entry for details on the standard options. |
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| Command-Line Name: \\fB\\$1\\fR |
| Database Name: \\fB\\$2\\fR |
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| .. |
| .TH Notifier 3 8.1 Tcl "Tcl Library Procedures" |
| .BS |
| .SH NAME |
| Tcl_CreateEventSource, Tcl_DeleteEventSource, Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime, Tcl_QueueEvent, Tcl_ThreadQueueEvent, Tcl_ThreadAlert, Tcl_GetCurrentThread, Tcl_DeleteEvents, Tcl_InitNotifier, Tcl_FinalizeNotifier, Tcl_WaitForEvent, Tcl_AlertNotifier, Tcl_SetTimer, Tcl_ServiceAll, Tcl_ServiceEvent, Tcl_GetServiceMode, Tcl_SetServiceMode \- the event queue and notifier interfaces |
| .SH SYNOPSIS |
| .nf |
| \fB#include <tcl.h>\fR |
| .sp |
| void |
| \fBTcl_CreateEventSource\fR(\fIsetupProc, checkProc, clientData\fR) |
| .sp |
| void |
| \fBTcl_DeleteEventSource\fR(\fIsetupProc, checkProc, clientData\fR) |
| .sp |
| void |
| \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR(\fItimePtr\fR) |
| .sp |
| void |
| \fBTcl_QueueEvent\fR(\fIevPtr, position\fR) |
| .VS 8.1 |
| .sp |
| void |
| \fBTcl_ThreadQueueEvent\fR(\fIthreadId, evPtr, position\fR) |
| .sp |
| void |
| \fBTcl_ThreadAlert\fR(\fIthreadId, clientData\fR) |
| .sp |
| Tcl_ThreadId |
| \fBTcl_GetCurrentThread\fR() |
| .sp |
| void |
| \fBTcl_DeleteEvents\fR(\fIdeleteProc, clientData\fR) |
| .sp |
| ClientData |
| \fBTcl_InitNotifier\fR() |
| .sp |
| void |
| \fBTcl_FinalizeNotifier\fR(\fIclientData\fR) |
| .sp |
| int |
| \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR(\fItimePtr\fR) |
| .sp |
| void |
| \fBTcl_AlertNotifier\fR(\fIclientData\fR) |
| .sp |
| void |
| \fBTcl_SetTimer\fR(\fItimePtr\fR) |
| .sp |
| int |
| \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR() |
| .sp |
| int |
| \fBTcl_ServiceEvent\fR(\fIflags\fR) |
| .sp |
| int |
| \fBTcl_GetServiceMode\fR() |
| .sp |
| int |
| \fBTcl_SetServiceMode\fR(\fImode\fR) |
| .VE |
| |
| .SH ARGUMENTS |
| .AS Tcl_EventDeleteProc milliseconds |
| .AP Tcl_EventSetupProc *setupProc in |
| Procedure to invoke to prepare for event wait in \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR. |
| .AP Tcl_EventCheckProc *checkProc in |
| Procedure for \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR to invoke after waiting for |
| events. Checks to see if any events have occurred and, if so, |
| queues them. |
| .AP ClientData clientData in |
| Arbitrary one-word value to pass to \fIsetupProc\fR, \fIcheckProc\fR, or |
| \fIdeleteProc\fR. |
| .AP Tcl_Time *timePtr in |
| Indicates the maximum amount of time to wait for an event. This |
| is specified as an interval (how long to wait), not an absolute |
| time (when to wakeup). If the pointer passed to \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR |
| is NULL, it means there is no maximum wait time: wait forever if |
| necessary. |
| .AP Tcl_Event *evPtr in |
| An event to add to the event queue. The storage for the event must |
| have been allocated by the caller using \fBTcl_Alloc\fR or \fBckalloc\fR. |
| .AP Tcl_QueuePosition position in |
| Where to add the new event in the queue: \fBTCL_QUEUE_TAIL\fR, |
| \fBTCL_QUEUE_HEAD\fR, or \fBTCL_QUEUE_MARK\fR. |
| .AP Tcl_ThreadId threadId in |
| A unique identifier for a thread. |
| .AP Tcl_EventDeleteProc *deleteProc in |
| Procedure to invoke for each queued event in \fBTcl_DeleteEvents\fR. |
| .AP int flags in |
| What types of events to service. These flags are the same as those |
| passed to \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR. |
| .VS 8.1 |
| .AP int mode in |
| Indicates whether events should be serviced by \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR. |
| Must be one of \fBTCL_SERVICE_NONE\fR or \fBTCL_SERVICE_ALL\fR. |
| .VE |
| .BE |
| |
| .SH INTRODUCTION |
| .PP |
| The interfaces described here are used to customize the Tcl event |
| loop. The two most common customizations are to add new sources of |
| events and to merge Tcl's event loop with some other event loop, such |
| as one provided by an application in which Tcl is embedded. Each of |
| these tasks is described in a separate section below. |
| .PP |
| The procedures in this manual entry are the building blocks out of which |
| the Tcl event notifier is constructed. The event notifier is the lowest |
| layer in the Tcl event mechanism. It consists of three things: |
| .IP [1] |
| Event sources: these represent the ways in which events can be |
| generated. For example, there is a timer event source that implements |
| the \fBTcl_CreateTimerHandler\fR procedure and the \fBafter\fR |
| command, and there is a file event source that implements the |
| \fBTcl_CreateFileHandler\fR procedure on Unix systems. An event |
| source must work with the notifier to detect events at the right |
| times, record them on the event queue, and eventually notify |
| higher-level software that they have occurred. The procedures |
| \fBTcl_CreateEventSource\fR, \fBTcl_DeleteEventSource\fR, |
| and \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR, \fBTcl_QueueEvent\fR, and |
| \fBTcl_DeleteEvents\fR are used primarily by event sources. |
| .IP [2] |
| The event queue: for non-threaded applications, |
| there is a single queue for the whole application, |
| containing events that have been detected but not yet serviced. Event |
| sources place events onto the queue so that they may be processed in |
| order at appropriate times during the event loop. The event queue |
| guarantees a fair discipline of event handling, so that no event |
| source can starve the others. It also allows events to be saved for |
| servicing at a future time. |
| .VS 8.1 |
| Threaded applications work in a |
| similar manner, except that there is a separate event queue for |
| each thread containing a Tcl interpreter. |
| \fBTcl_QueueEvent\fR is used (primarily |
| by event sources) to add events to the event queue and |
| \fBTcl_DeleteEvents\fR is used to remove events from the queue without |
| processing them. In a threaded application, \fBTcl_QueueEvent\fR adds |
| an event to the current thread's queue, and \fBTcl_ThreadQueueEvent\fR |
| adds an event to a queue in a specific thread. |
| .IP [3] |
| The event loop: in order to detect and process events, the application |
| enters a loop that waits for events to occur, places them on the event |
| queue, and then processes them. Most applications will do this by |
| calling the procedure \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR, which is described in a |
| separate manual entry. |
| .PP |
| Most Tcl applications need not worry about any of the internals of |
| the Tcl notifier. However, the notifier now has enough flexibility |
| to be retargeted either for a new platform or to use an external event |
| loop (such as the Motif event loop, when Tcl is embedded in a Motif |
| application). The procedures \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR and |
| \fBTcl_SetTimer\fR are normally implemented by Tcl, but may be |
| replaced with new versions to retarget the notifier (the |
| \fBTcl_InitNotifier\fR, \fBTcl_AlertNotifier\fR, |
| \fBTcl_FinalizeNotifier\fR, \fBTcl_Sleep\fR, |
| \fBTcl_CreateFileHandler\fR, and \fBTcl_DeleteFileHandler\fR must |
| also be replaced; see CREATING A NEW NOTIFIER below for details). |
| The procedures \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR, \fBTcl_ServiceEvent\fR, |
| \fBTcl_GetServiceMode\fR, and \fBTcl_SetServiceMode\fR are provided |
| to help connect Tcl's event loop to an external event loop such as |
| Motif's. |
| .SH "NOTIFIER BASICS" |
| .VE |
| .PP |
| The easiest way to understand how the notifier works is to consider |
| what happens when \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR is called. |
| \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR is passed a \fIflags\fR argument that indicates |
| what sort of events it is OK to process and also whether or not to |
| block if no events are ready. \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR does the following |
| things: |
| .IP [1] |
| Check the event queue to see if it contains any events that can |
| be serviced. If so, service the first possible event, remove it |
| .VS 8.1 |
| from the queue, and return. It does this by calling |
| \fBTcl_ServiceEvent\fR and passing in the \fIflags\fR argument. |
| .VE |
| .IP [2] |
| Prepare to block for an event. To do this, \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR |
| invokes a \fIsetup procedure\fR in each event source. |
| The event source will perform event-source specific initialization and |
| .VS 8.1 |
| possibly call \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR to limit how long |
| .VE |
| \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR will block if no new events occur. |
| .IP [3] |
| Call \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR. This procedure is implemented differently |
| on different platforms; it waits for an event to occur, based on the |
| information provided by the event sources. |
| It may cause the application to block if \fItimePtr\fR specifies |
| an interval other than 0. |
| \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR returns when something has happened, |
| such as a file becoming readable or the interval given by \fItimePtr\fR |
| expiring. If there are no events for \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR to |
| wait for, so that it would block forever, then it returns immediately |
| and \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR returns 0. |
| .IP [4] |
| Call a \fIcheck procedure\fR in each event source. The check |
| procedure determines whether any events of interest to this source |
| occurred. If so, the events are added to the event queue. |
| .IP [5] |
| Check the event queue to see if it contains any events that can |
| be serviced. If so, service the first possible event, remove it |
| from the queue, and return. |
| .IP [6] |
| See if there are idle callbacks pending. If so, invoke all of them and |
| return. |
| .IP [7] |
| Either return 0 to indicate that no events were ready, or go back to |
| step [2] if blocking was requested by the caller. |
| |
| .SH "CREATING A NEW EVENT SOURCE" |
| .PP |
| An event source consists of three procedures invoked by the notifier, |
| plus additional C procedures that are invoked by higher-level code |
| to arrange for event-driven callbacks. The three procedures called |
| by the notifier consist of the setup and check procedures described |
| above, plus an additional procedure that is invoked when an event |
| is removed from the event queue for servicing. |
| .PP |
| The procedure \fBTcl_CreateEventSource\fR creates a new event source. |
| Its arguments specify the setup procedure and check procedure for |
| the event source. |
| \fISetupProc\fR should match the following prototype: |
| .CS |
| typedef void Tcl_EventSetupProc( |
| ClientData \fIclientData\fR, |
| int \fIflags\fR); |
| .CE |
| The \fIclientData\fR argument will be the same as the \fIclientData\fR |
| argument to \fBTcl_CreateEventSource\fR; it is typically used to |
| point to private information managed by the event source. |
| The \fIflags\fR argument will be the same as the \fIflags\fR |
| argument passed to \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR except that it will never |
| be 0 (\fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR replaces 0 with \fBTCL_ALL_EVENTS\fR). |
| \fIFlags\fR indicates what kinds of events should be considered; |
| if the bit corresponding to this event source isn't set, the event |
| source should return immediately without doing anything. For |
| example, the file event source checks for the \fBTCL_FILE_EVENTS\fR |
| bit. |
| .PP |
| \fISetupProc\fR's job is to make sure that the application wakes up |
| when events of the desired type occur. This is typically done in a |
| platform-dependent fashion. For example, under Unix an event source |
| might call \fBTcl_CreateFileHandler\fR; under Windows it might |
| request notification with a Windows event. For timer-driven event |
| sources such as timer events or any polled event, the event source |
| can call \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR to force the application to wake |
| up after a specified time even if no events have occurred. |
| .VS 8.1 |
| If no event source calls \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR |
| then \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR will wait as long as necessary for an |
| event to occur; otherwise, it will only wait as long as the shortest |
| interval passed to \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR by one of the event |
| sources. If an event source knows that it already has events ready to |
| report, it can request a zero maximum block time. For example, the |
| setup procedure for the X event source looks to see if there are |
| events already queued. If there are, it calls |
| \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR with a 0 block time so that |
| \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR does not block if there is no new data on the X |
| connection. |
| .VE |
| The \fItimePtr\fR argument to \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR points to |
| a structure that describes a time interval in seconds and |
| microseconds: |
| .CS |
| typedef struct Tcl_Time { |
| long \fIsec\fR; |
| long \fIusec\fR; |
| } Tcl_Time; |
| .CE |
| The \fIusec\fR field should be less than 1000000. |
| .PP |
| .VS 8.1 |
| Information provided to \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR |
| is only used for the next call to \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR; it is |
| discarded after \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR returns. |
| .VE |
| The next time an event wait is done each of the event sources' |
| setup procedures will be called again, and they can specify new |
| information for that event wait. |
| .PP |
| .VS 8.1 |
| If the application uses an external event loop rather than |
| \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR, the event sources may need to call |
| \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR at other times. For example, if a new event |
| handler is registered that needs to poll for events, the event source |
| may call \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR to set the block time to zero to |
| force the external event loop to call Tcl. In this case, |
| \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR invokes \fBTcl_SetTimer\fR with the shortest |
| interval seen since the last call to \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR or |
| \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR. |
| .PP |
| In addition to the generic procedure \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR, other |
| platform-specific procedures may also be available for |
| \fIsetupProc\fR, if there is additional information needed by |
| \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR on that platform. For example, on Unix systems |
| the \fBTcl_CreateFileHandler\fR interface can be used to wait for file events. |
| .VE |
| .PP |
| The second procedure provided by each event source is its check |
| procedure, indicated by the \fIcheckProc\fR argument to |
| \fBTcl_CreateEventSource\fR. \fICheckProc\fR must match the |
| following prototype: |
| .CS |
| typedef void Tcl_EventCheckProc( |
| ClientData \fIclientData\fR, |
| int \fIflags\fR); |
| .CE |
| The arguments to this procedure are the same as those for \fIsetupProc\fR. |
| \fBCheckProc\fR is invoked by \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR after it has waited |
| for events. Presumably at least one event source is now prepared to |
| queue an event. \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR calls each of the event sources |
| in turn, so they all have a chance to queue any events that are ready. |
| The check procedure does two things. First, it must see if any events |
| have triggered. Different event sources do this in different ways. |
| .PP |
| If an event source's check procedure detects an interesting event, it |
| must add the event to Tcl's event queue. To do this, the event source |
| calls \fBTcl_QueueEvent\fR. The \fIevPtr\fR argument is a pointer to |
| a dynamically allocated structure containing the event (see below for |
| more information on memory management issues). Each event source can |
| define its own event structure with whatever information is relevant |
| to that event source. However, the first element of the structure |
| must be a structure of type \fBTcl_Event\fR, and the address of this |
| structure is used when communicating between the event source and the |
| rest of the notifier. A \fBTcl_Event\fR has the following definition: |
| .CS |
| typedef struct { |
| Tcl_EventProc *\fIproc\fR; |
| struct Tcl_Event *\fInextPtr\fR; |
| } Tcl_Event; |
| .CE |
| The event source must fill in the \fIproc\fR field of |
| the event before calling \fBTcl_QueueEvent\fR. |
| The \fInextPtr\fR is used to link together the events in the queue |
| and should not be modified by the event source. |
| .PP |
| An event may be added to the queue at any of three positions, depending |
| on the \fIposition\fR argument to \fBTcl_QueueEvent\fR: |
| .IP \fBTCL_QUEUE_TAIL\fR 24 |
| Add the event at the back of the queue, so that all other pending |
| events will be serviced first. This is almost always the right |
| place for new events. |
| .IP \fBTCL_QUEUE_HEAD\fR 24 |
| Add the event at the front of the queue, so that it will be serviced |
| before all other queued events. |
| .IP \fBTCL_QUEUE_MARK\fR 24 |
| Add the event at the front of the queue, unless there are other |
| events at the front whose position is \fBTCL_QUEUE_MARK\fR; if so, |
| add the new event just after all other \fBTCL_QUEUE_MARK\fR events. |
| This value of \fIposition\fR is used to insert an ordered sequence of |
| events at the front of the queue, such as a series of |
| Enter and Leave events synthesized during a grab or ungrab operation |
| in Tk. |
| .PP |
| .VS 8.1 |
| When it is time to handle an event from the queue (steps 1 and 4 |
| above) \fBTcl_ServiceEvent\fR will invoke the \fIproc\fR specified |
| .VE |
| in the first queued \fBTcl_Event\fR structure. |
| \fIProc\fR must match the following prototype: |
| .CS |
| typedef int Tcl_EventProc( |
| Tcl_Event *\fIevPtr\fR, |
| int \fIflags\fR); |
| .CE |
| The first argument to \fIproc\fR is a pointer to the event, which will |
| be the same as the first argument to the \fBTcl_QueueEvent\fR call that |
| added the event to the queue. |
| The second argument to \fIproc\fR is the \fIflags\fR argument for the |
| .VS 8.1 |
| current call to \fBTcl_ServiceEvent\fR; this is used by the event source |
| .VE |
| to return immediately if its events are not relevant. |
| .PP |
| It is up to \fIproc\fR to handle the event, typically by invoking |
| one or more Tcl commands or C-level callbacks. |
| Once the event source has finished handling the event it returns 1 |
| to indicate that the event can be removed from the queue. |
| If for some reason the event source decides that the event cannot |
| be handled at this time, it may return 0 to indicate that the event |
| .VS 8.1 |
| should be deferred for processing later; in this case \fBTcl_ServiceEvent\fR |
| .VE |
| will go on to the next event in the queue and attempt to service it. |
| There are several reasons why an event source might defer an event. |
| One possibility is that events of this type are excluded by the |
| \fIflags\fR argument. |
| For example, the file event source will always return 0 if the |
| \fBTCL_FILE_EVENTS\fR bit isn't set in \fIflags\fR. |
| Another example of deferring events happens in Tk if |
| \fBTk_RestrictEvents\fR has been invoked to defer certain kinds |
| of window events. |
| .PP |
| .VS 8.1 |
| When \fIproc\fR returns 1, \fBTcl_ServiceEvent\fR will remove the |
| event from the event queue and free its storage. |
| Note that the storage for an event must be allocated by |
| the event source (using \fBTcl_Alloc\fR or the Tcl macro \fBckalloc\fR) |
| before calling \fBTcl_QueueEvent\fR, but it |
| will be freed by \fBTcl_ServiceEvent\fR, not by the event source. |
| .PP |
| Threaded applications work in a |
| similar manner, except that there is a separate event queue for |
| each thread containing a Tcl interpreter. |
| Calling \fBTcl_QueueEvent\fR in a multithreaded application adds |
| an event to the current thread's queue. |
| To add an event to another thread's queue, use \fBTcl_ThreadQueueEvent\fR. |
| \fBTcl_ThreadQueueEvent\fR accepts as an argument a Tcl_ThreadId argument, |
| which uniquely identifies a thread in a Tcl application. To obtain the |
| Tcl_ThreadID for the current thread, use the \fBTcl_GetCurrentThread\fR |
| procedure. (A thread would then need to pass this identifier to other |
| threads for those threads to be able to add events to its queue.) |
| After adding an event to another thread's queue, you then typically |
| need to call \fBTcl_ThreadAlert\fR to "wake up" that thread's notifier to |
| alert it to the new event. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_DeleteEvents\fR can be used to explicitly remove one or more |
| events from the event queue. \fBTcl_DeleteEvents\fR calls \fIproc\fR |
| for each event in the queue, deleting those for with the procedure |
| returns 1. Events for which the procedure returns 0 are left in the |
| queue. \fIProc\fR should match the following prototype: |
| .CS |
| typedef int Tcl_EventDeleteProc( |
| Tcl_Event *\fIevPtr\fR, |
| ClientData \fIclientData\fR); |
| .CE |
| The \fIclientData\fR argument will be the same as the \fIclientData\fR |
| argument to \fBTcl_DeleteEvents\fR; it is typically used to point to |
| private information managed by the event source. The \fIevPtr\fR will |
| point to the next event in the queue. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_DeleteEventSource\fR deletes an event source. The \fIsetupProc\fR, |
| \fIcheckProc\fR, and \fIclientData\fR arguments must exactly match those |
| provided to the \fBTcl_CreateEventSource\fR for the event source to be deleted. |
| If no such source exists, \fBTcl_DeleteEventSource\fR has no effect. |
| .VE |
| |
| .SH "CREATING A NEW NOTIFIER" |
| .PP |
| The notifier consists of all the procedures described in this manual |
| entry, plus \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR and \fBTcl_Sleep\fR, which are |
| .VS 8.1 |
| available on all platforms, and \fBTcl_CreateFileHandler\fR and |
| \fBTcl_DeleteFileHandler\fR, which are Unix-specific. Most of these |
| procedures are generic, in that they are the same for all notifiers. |
| However, eight of the procedures are notifier-dependent: |
| \fBTcl_InitNotifier\fR, \fBTcl_AlertNotifier\fR, \fBTcl_FinalizeNotifier\fR, |
| \fBTcl_SetTimer\fR, \fBTcl_Sleep\fR, \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR, |
| \fBTcl_CreateFileHandler\fR and \fBTcl_DeleteFileHandler\fR. To |
| support a new platform or to integrate Tcl with an |
| application-specific event loop, you must write new versions of these |
| procedures. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_InitNotifier\fR initializes the notifier state and returns |
| a handle to the notifier state. Tcl calls this |
| procedure when initializing a Tcl interpreter. Similarly, |
| \fBTcl_FinalizeNotifier\fR shuts down the notifier, and is |
| called by \fBTcl_Finalize\fR when shutting down a Tcl interpreter. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR is the lowest-level procedure in the notifier; |
| it is responsible for waiting for an ``interesting'' event to occur or |
| for a given time to elapse. Before \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR is invoked, |
| each of the event sources' setup procedure will have been invoked. |
| The \fItimePtr\fR argument to |
| \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR gives the maximum time to block for an event, |
| based on calls to \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR made by setup procedures |
| and on other information (such as the \fBTCL_DONT_WAIT\fR bit in |
| \fIflags\fR). |
| .PP |
| Ideally, \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR should only wait for an event |
| to occur; it should not actually process the event in any way. |
| Later on, the |
| event sources will process the raw events and create Tcl_Events on |
| the event queue in their \fIcheckProc\fR procedures. |
| However, on some platforms (such as Windows) this isn't possible; |
| events may be processed in \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR, including queuing |
| Tcl_Events and more (for example, callbacks for native widgets may be |
| invoked). The return value from \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR must be either |
| 0, 1, or \-1. On platforms such as Windows where events get processed in |
| \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR, a return value of 1 means that there may be more |
| events still pending that haven't been processed. This is a sign to the |
| caller that it must call \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR again if it wants all |
| pending events to be processed. A 0 return value means that calling |
| \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR again will not have any effect: either this is a |
| platform where \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR only waits without doing any event |
| processing, or \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR knows for sure that there are no |
| additional events to process (e.g. it returned because the time |
| elapsed). Finally, a return value of \-1 means that the event loop is |
| no longer operational and the application should probably unwind and |
| terminate. Under Windows this happens when a WM_QUIT message is received; |
| under Unix it happens when \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR would have waited |
| forever because there were no active event sources and the timeout was |
| infinite. |
| .PP |
| \fBTcl_AlertNotifier\fR is used in multithreaded applications to allow |
| any thread to "wake up" the notifier to alert it to new events on its |
| queue. \fBTcl_AlertNotifier\fR requires as an argument the notifier |
| handle returned by \fBTcl_InitNotifier\fR. |
| .PP |
| If the notifier will be used with an external event loop, then it must |
| also support the \fBTcl_SetTimer\fR interface. \fBTcl_SetTimer\fR is |
| invoked by \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR whenever the maximum blocking |
| time has been reduced. \fBTcl_SetTimer\fR should arrange for the |
| external event loop to invoke \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR after the specified |
| interval even if no events have occurred. This interface is needed |
| because \fBTcl_WaitForEvent\fR isn't invoked when there is an external |
| event loop. If the |
| notifier will only be used from \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR, then |
| \fBTcl_SetTimer\fR need not do anything. |
| .PP |
| On Unix systems, the file event source also needs support from the |
| notifier. The file event source consists of the |
| \fBTcl_CreateFileHandler\fR and \fBTcl_DeleteFileHandler\fR |
| procedures, which are described in the \fBTcl_CreateFileHandler\fR |
| manual page. |
| .PP |
| The \fBTcl_Sleep\fR and \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR interfaces are described |
| in their respective manual pages. |
| .PP |
| The easiest way to create a new notifier is to look at the code |
| for an existing notifier, such as the files \fBunix/tclUnixNotfy.c\fR |
| or \fBwin/tclWinNotify.c\fR in the Tcl source distribution. |
| |
| .SH "EXTERNAL EVENT LOOPS" |
| .PP |
| The notifier interfaces are designed so that Tcl can be embedded into |
| applications that have their own private event loops. In this case, |
| the application does not call \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR except in the case |
| of recursive event loops such as calls to the Tcl commands \fBupdate\fR |
| or \fBvwait\fR. Most of the time is spent in the external event loop |
| of the application. In this case the notifier must arrange for the |
| external event loop to call back into Tcl when something |
| happens on the various Tcl event sources. These callbacks should |
| arrange for appropriate Tcl events to be placed on the Tcl event queue. |
| .PP |
| Because the external event loop is not calling \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR on |
| a regular basis, it is up to the notifier to arrange for |
| \fBTcl_ServiceEvent\fR to be called whenever events are pending on the |
| Tcl event queue. The easiest way to do this is to invoke |
| \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR at the end of each callback from the external |
| event loop. This will ensure that all of the event sources are |
| polled, any queued events are serviced, and any pending idle handlers |
| are processed before returning control to the application. In |
| addition, event sources that need to poll for events can call |
| \fBTcl_SetMaxBlockTime\fR to force the external event loop to call |
| Tcl even if no events are available on the system event queue. |
| .PP |
| As a side effect of processing events detected in the main external |
| event loop, Tcl may invoke \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR to start a recursive event |
| loop in commands like \fBvwait\fR. \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR will invoke |
| the external event loop, which will result in callbacks as described |
| in the preceding paragraph, which will result in calls to |
| \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR. However, in these cases it is undesirable to |
| service events in \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR. Servicing events there is |
| unnecessary because control will immediately return to the |
| external event loop and hence to \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR, which can |
| service the events itself. Furthermore, \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR is |
| supposed to service only a single event, whereas \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR |
| normally services all pending events. To handle this situation, |
| \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR sets a flag for \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR |
| that causes it to return without servicing any events. |
| This flag is called the \fIservice mode\fR; |
| \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR restores it to its previous value before it returns. |
| .PP |
| In some cases, however, it may be necessary for \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR |
| to service events |
| even when it has been invoked from \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR. This happens |
| when there is yet another recursive event loop invoked via an |
| event handler called by \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR (such as one that is |
| part of a native widget). In this case, \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR may not |
| have a chance to service events so \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR must service |
| them all. Any recursive event loop that calls an external event |
| loop rather than \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR must reset the service mode so |
| that all events get processed in \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR. This is done |
| by invoking the \fBTcl_SetServiceMode\fR procedure. If |
| \fBTcl_SetServiceMode\fR is passed \fBTCL_SERVICE_NONE\fR, then calls |
| to \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR will return immediately without processing any |
| events. If \fBTcl_SetServiceMode\fR is passed \fBTCL_SERVICE_ALL\fR, |
| then calls to \fBTcl_ServiceAll\fR will behave normally. |
| \fBTcl_SetServiceMode\fR returns the previous value of the service |
| mode, which should be restored when the recursive loop exits. |
| \fBTcl_GetServiceMode\fR returns the current value of the service |
| mode. |
| .VE |
| .SH "SEE ALSO" |
| \fBTcl_CreateFileHandler\fR, \fBTcl_DeleteFileHandler\fR, \fBTcl_Sleep\fR, |
| \fBTcl_DoOneEvent\fR, \fBThread(3)\fR |
| .SH KEYWORDS |
| event, notifier, event queue, event sources, file events, timer, idle, service mode, threads |