Provided by: libfuture-xs-perl_0.10-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       "Future::XS" - experimental XS implementation of "Future"

SYNOPSIS

          my $future = Future::XS->new;

          perform_some_operation(
             on_complete => sub {
                $future->done( @_ );
             }
          );

          $future->on_ready( sub {
             say "The operation is complete";
          } );

DESCRIPTION

       This module provides an XS-based implementation of the Future class. It is currently
       experimental and shipped in its own distribution for testing purposes, though once it
       seems stable the plan is to move it into the main "Future" distribution and load it
       automatically in favour of the pureperl implementation on supported systems.

   Future::XS and threads
       In a program not involving multiple threads, this module behaves entirely as expected,
       following the behaviour of the regular pure-perl "Future" implementation (regardless of
       whether or not the perl interpreter is actually built to support threads).

       When multiple threads are created, previous versions of this module would most likely
       crash. The current version (0.10) fixes enough of the logic, that future instances that
       are only ever accessed from one thread (either the initial main thread, or any additional
       sidecar threads) will work fine.  However, future instances cannot currently cross the
       boundary between threads.  Any instances that were created before a new thread is made
       will no longer be accessible within that thread, and instances may not be returned as the
       result of the thread exit value. Some of these restrictions may be relaxed in later
       versions.

       Attempts to access a future instance created in one thread from another thread will raise
       an exception:

          Future::XS instance IO::Async::Future=SCALAR(0x...) is not available in this thread at ...

       As a special case for process cleanup activities, the "->cancel" method does not throw
       this exception, but simply returns silently. This is because cleanup code such as
       "DESTROY" methods or "defer" blocks often attempt to call this on existing instances.

AUTHOR

       Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>