Provided by: libpoe-perl_1.3670-1_all bug

NAME

       POE::Queue - a flexible, generic priority queue API

SYNOPSIS

       POE::Queue specifies additional methods not illustrated here.

         #!perl

         use warnings;
         use strict;
         use POE::Queue::Array;

         my $pqa = POE::Queue::Array->new();

         # Enqueue a few items.

         foreach my $priority (505, 404, 303, 202, 101) {
           $pqa->enqueue($priority, "payload $priority");
         }

         # Dequeue until the queue is drained.

         while (1) {
           my ($priority, $queue_id, $payload) = $pqa->dequeue_next();
           last unless defined $priority;

           print(
             "dequeued id($queue_id) ",
             "priority($priority) ",
             "payload($payload)\n",
           );
         }

       Sample output:

         dequeued id(5) priority(101) payload(payload 101)
         dequeued id(4) priority(202) payload(payload 202)
         dequeued id(3) priority(303) payload(payload 303)
         dequeued id(2) priority(404) payload(payload 404)
         dequeued id(1) priority(505) payload(payload 505)

DESCRIPTION

       Priority queues may be implemented a number of ways, but they tend to behave similar to
       lists that are kept in order by some kind of "priority".  Enqueued items are stored such
       that the "next" item to be retrieved is the one with the highest priority.  Subsequent
       fetches return the next lowest priority, and so on, until the queue is emptied.

       Priority queues (also known as priority heaps) attempt to do this while consuming the
       fewest resources.  Go read about it!  It's fascinating stuff!

   POE::Queue Items
       POE::Queue items consist of three fields: A priority, a unique ID assigned at enqueue
       time, and a payload.  The priority and payload are specified by the caller, and the unique
       ID is generated by POE::Queue when an item is enqueued.

       POE::Queue imposes two limitations on priorities: Priorities must be numeric, and lower
       numbers indicate higher priorities.  Aside from that, POE::Queue doesn't care what the
       numbers mean.

       Unique IDs are handles into the queue.  POE::Queue generates and returns them as new items
       are enqueued.  Some methods manipulate items, and they take IDs to identify the items to
       alter.

       Item payloads are arbitrary application data.  POE::Queue does not examine or alter
       payloads itself.  Any methods that need to examine payloads will accept a filter function.
       Filter functions examine payloads so POE::Queue need not.

Public Methods

       POE::Queue is an API specification.  Subclasses like POE::Queue::Array provide actual
       implementations.

   new
       Creates a new priority queue.  Returns a reference to the queue.

         my $queue = POE::Queue::Array->new();

   enqueue PRIORITY, PAYLOAD
       Enqueues a PAYLOAD, which can be just about anything that will fit into a Perl scalar, at
       a particular PRIORITY level.  enqueue() returns a unique ID which can be used to
       manipulate the payload or its priority directly.

       Following the UNIX tradition, lower priority numbers indicate higher priorities.  The
       payload with the lowest priority number will be dequeued first.  If two payloads have the
       same PRIORITY, then they will be dequeued in the order in which they were enqueued.

       In this example, a queue is used to manage a number of alarms.  The "next" alarm will be
       the one due soonest.

         my $payload_id = $queue->enqueue($alarm_time, [ "stuff" ]);

   dequeue_next
       Removes the next item from the queue, returning it as three fields: priority, ID and
       payload.

       The "next" item is the one with the lowest priority number.  If multiple items exist with
       the same priority, dequeue_next() will return the one that was given the priority first.

         ITEM: while (1) {
           my ($priority, $id, $payload) = $queue->dequeue_next();
           last ITEM unless defined $priority;
           ...;
         }

   get_next_priority
       Returns the priority of the item at the head of the queue.  This is the lowest numeric
       priority in the queue.

       get_next_priority() can be useful for checking the queue to see if it's time to dequeue
       some items.  In this case, the queue manages multiple alarms, and there's nothing to do if
       the next alarm isn't due yet.

         ALARM: while (1) {
           my $next_alarm_time = $queue->get_next_priority();
           last ALARM unless defined $next_alarm_time;

           if ($next_alarm_time - time() > 0) {
             sleep($next_alarm_time - time());
           }

           my ($priority, $id, $payload) = $queue->dequeue_next();
           ...;
         }

   get_item_count
       Returns the number of items in the queue.  It's another way to tell whether the queue has
       been fully drained.  Here's an alternative version of the example for get_next_priority().

         ALARM: while ($queue->get_item_count()) {
           my $next_alarm_time = $queue->get_next_priority();
           if ($next_alarm_time - time() > 0) {
             sleep($next_alarm_time - time());
           }

           my ($priority, $id, $payload) = $queue->dequeue_next();
           ...;
         }

   remove_item ITEM_ID, FILTER_FUNCTION
       Removes a single item by its ID, but only if a FILTER_FUNCTION approves of the item's
       payload.

       If a payload is found with the given ITEM_ID, it is passed to FILTER_FUNCTION for
       examination.  If FILTER_FUNCTION returns true, the item is removed from the queue and is
       returned as three fields.

         my ($priority, $id, $payload) = $queue->remove_item(
           $target_id, \&monkeys
         );

         sub monkeys {
           my $payload = shift;
           $payload->{type} eq "monkey";
         }

       The returned $priority will be undef on failure, and $! will be set to the reason why the
       item couldn't be removed.  That will be ESRCH if the ITEM_ID was not found in the queue,
       or EPERM if the filter function returned false.

   remove_items FILTER_FUNCTION [, MAX_ITEM_COUNT ]
       Removes and returns items from the queue that match a FILTER_FUNCTION.  remove_items()
       will return immediately if MAX_ITEM_COUNT items is specified and that many items have been
       removed from the queue.  MAX_ITEM_COUNT is a bit of optimization if the application knows
       in advance how many items will match the FILTER_FUNCTION.

       Returns a list of items that were removed.  Each item is an array reference containing a
       priority, item ID, and payload.  Returns nothing if FILTER_FUNCTION matched nothing.

         # Remove up to 12 monkeys.
         my @monkeys = $queue->remove_items(\&monkeys, 12);
         foreach my $monkey (@monkeys) {
           my ($priority, $id, $payload) = @$monkey;
           print(
             "Removed monkey:\n",
             "  priority = $priority\n",
             "  queue id = $id\n",
             "  payload  = $payload\n",
           );
         }

       There is no guarantee which items will be removed if MAX_ITEM_COUNT is specified too low.

   peek_items FILTER_FUNCTION [, MAX_ITEM_COUNT ]
       peek_items() returns up to MAX_ITEM_COUNT items that match a given FILTER_FUNCTION without
       removing them from the queue.

         my @entire_queue = $queue->peek_items(sub { 1 });
         foreach my $item (@entire_queue) {
           my ($priority, $id, $payload) = @$item;
           print(
             "Item:\n",
             "  priority = $priority\n",
             "  queue id = $id\n",
             "  payload  = $payload\n",
           );
         }

   adjust_priority ITEM_ID, FILTER_FUNCTION, DELTA
       Changes the priority of an item by DELTA.  The item is identified by its ITEM_ID, and the
       change will only happen if the item's payload satisfies a FILTER_FUNCTION.  Returns the
       new priority, which is the previous priority + DELTA.  DELTA may be negative.

         my $new_priority = $queue->adjust_priority(
           $item_id, \&one_of_mine, 100
         );

         sub one_of_mine {
           my $payload = shift;
           return $payload->{owner} == $me;
         }

       Returns undef if the item's priority could not be adjusted, and sets $! to explain why:
       ESRCH means that the ITEM_ID could not be found, and EPERM means that the FILTER_FUNCTION
       was not satisfied.

   set_priority ITEM_ID, FILTER_FUNCTION, ABSOLUTE_PRIORITY
       Sets an item's priority to a new ABSOLUTE_PRIORITY.  The item is identified by its
       ITEM_ID, and the change will only be allowed to happen if the item's payload satisfies a
       FILTER_FUNCTION.  Returns the new priority, which should match ABSOLUTE_PRIORITY.

       Returns undef if the item's priority could not be set, and sets $! to explain why: ESRCH
       means that the ITEM_ID could not be found, and EPERM means that the FILTER_FUNCTION was
       not satisfied.

         my $new_priority = $queue->set_priority(
           $item_id, \&one_of_mine, time() + 60
         );

         unless (defined $new_priority) {
           die "one of our submarines is missing: $item_id" if $! == ESRCH;
           die "set_priority disallowed for item $item_id" if $! == EPERM;
           die $!;
         }

         sub one_of_mine {
           $_[0]{owner} == $me;
         }

SEE ALSO

       POE, POE::Queue::Array

BUGS

       None known.

AUTHORS & COPYRIGHTS

       Please see POE for more information about authors, contributors, and POE's licensing.