bionic (3) IO::Async::ChildManager.3pm.gz

Provided by: libio-async-perl_0.71-1_all bug

NAME

       "IO::Async::ChildManager" - facilitates the execution of child processes

SYNOPSIS

       This object is used indirectly via an IO::Async::Loop:

        use IO::Async::Loop;

        my $loop = IO::Async::Loop->new;

        ...

        $loop->run_child(
           command => "/bin/ps",

           on_finish => sub {
              my ( $pid, $exitcode, $stdout, $stderr ) = @_;
              my $status = ( $exitcode >> 8 );
              print "ps [PID $pid] exited with status $status\n";
           },
        );

        $loop->open_child(
           command => [ "/bin/ping", "-c4", "some.host" ],

           stdout => {
              on_read => sub {
                 my ( $stream, $buffref, $eof ) = @_;
                 while( $$buffref =~ s/^(.*)\n// ) {
                    print "PING wrote: $1\n";
                 }
                 return 0;
              },
           },

           on_finish => sub {
              my ( $pid, $exitcode ) = @_;
              my $status = ( $exitcode >> 8 );
              ...
           },
        );

        my ( $pipeRd, $pipeWr ) = IO::Async::OS->pipepair;
        $loop->spawn_child(
           command => "/usr/bin/my-command",

           setup => [
              stdin  => [ "open", "<", "/dev/null" ],
              stdout => $pipeWr,
              stderr => [ "open", ">>", "/var/log/mycmd.log" ],
              chdir  => "/",
           ]

           on_exit => sub {
              my ( $pid, $exitcode ) = @_;
              my $status = ( $exitcode >> 8 );
              print "Command exited with status $status\n";
           },
        );

        $loop->spawn_child(
           code => sub {
              do_something; # executes in a child process
              return 1;
           },

           on_exit => sub {
              my ( $pid, $exitcode, $dollarbang, $dollarat ) = @_;
              my $status = ( $exitcode >> 8 );
              print "Child process exited with status $status\n";
              print " OS error was $dollarbang, exception was $dollarat\n";
           },
        );

DESCRIPTION

       This module extends the functionality of the containing IO::Async::Loop to manage the execution of child
       processes. It acts as a central point to store PID values of currently-running children, and to call the
       appropriate continuation handler code when the process terminates. It provides useful wrapper methods
       that set up filehandles and other child process details, and to capture the child process's STDOUT and
       STDERR streams.

METHODS

       When active, the following methods are available on the containing "Loop" object.

   spawn_child
          $pid = $loop->spawn_child( %params )

       This method creates a new child process to run a given code block or command.  The %params hash takes the
       following keys:

       command => ARRAY or STRING
               Either a reference to an array containing the command and its arguments, or a plain string
               containing the command. This value is passed into perl's "exec" function.

       code => CODE
               A block of code to execute in the child process. It will be called in scalar context inside an
               "eval" block.

       setup => ARRAY
               A reference to an array which gives file descriptors to set up in the child process before
               running the code or command. See below.

       on_exit => CODE
               A continuation to be called when the child processes exits. It will be invoked in the following
               way:

                $on_exit->( $pid, $exitcode, $dollarbang, $dollarat )

               The second argument is passed the plain perl $? value.

       Exactly one of the "command" or "code" keys must be specified.

       If the "command" key is used, the given array or string is executed using the "exec" function.

       If the "code" key is used, the return value will be used as the exit(2) code from the child if it returns
       (or 255 if it returned "undef" or thows an exception).

        Case          | ($exitcode >> 8)       | $dollarbang | $dollarat
        --------------+------------------------+-------------+----------
        exec succeeds | exit code from program |     0       |    ""
        exec fails    |         255            |     $!      |    ""
        $code returns |     return value       |     $!      |    ""
        $code dies    |         255            |     $!      |    $@

       It is usually more convenient to use the "open_child" method in simple cases where an external program is
       being started in order to interact with it via file IO, or even "run_child" when only the final result is
       required, rather than interaction while it is running.

   "setup" array
       This array gives a list of file descriptor operations to perform in the child process after it has been
       fork(2)ed from the parent, before running the code or command. It consists of name/value pairs which are
       ordered; the operations are performed in the order given.

       fdn => ARRAY
               Gives an operation on file descriptor n. The first element of the array defines the operation to
               be performed:

               [ 'close' ]
                   The file descriptor will be closed.

               [ 'dup', $io ]
                   The file descriptor will be dup2(2)ed from the given IO handle.

               [ 'open', $mode, $file ]
                   The file descriptor will be opened from the named file in the given mode. The $mode string
                   should be in the form usually given to the "open" function; such as '<' or '>>'.

               [ 'keep' ]
                   The file descriptor will not be closed; it will be left as-is.

               A non-reference value may be passed as a shortcut, where it would contain the name of the
               operation with no arguments (i.e. for the "close" and "keep" operations).

       IO => ARRAY
               Shortcut for passing "fdn", where n is the fileno of the IO reference. In this case, the key must
               be a reference that implements the "fileno" method. This is mostly useful for

                $handle => 'keep'

       fdn => IO
               A shortcut for the "dup" case given above.

       stdin => ...
       stdout => ...
       stderr => ...
               Shortcuts for "fd0", "fd1" and "fd2" respectively.

       env => HASH
               A reference to a hash to set as the child process's environment.

               Note that this will entirely set a new environment, completely replacing the existing one. If you
               want to simply add new keys or change the values of some keys without removing the other existing
               ones, you can simply copy %ENV into the hash before setting new keys:

                env => {
                   %ENV,
                   ANOTHER => "key here",
                }

       nice => INT
               Change the child process's scheduling priority using "POSIX::nice".

       chdir => STRING
               Change the child process's working directory using "chdir".

       setuid => INT
       setgid => INT
               Change the child process's effective UID or GID.

       setgroups => ARRAY
               Change the child process's groups list, to those groups whose numbers are given in the ARRAY
               reference.

               On most systems, only the privileged superuser change user or group IDs.  IO::Async will NOT
               check before detaching the child process whether this is the case.

               If setting both the primary GID and the supplementary groups list, it is suggested to set the
               primary GID first. Moreover, some operating systems may require that the supplementary groups
               list contains the primary GID.

       If no directions for what to do with "stdin", "stdout" and "stderr" are given, a default of "keep" is
       implied. All other file descriptors will be closed, unless a "keep" operation is given for them.

       If "setuid" is used, be sure to place it after any other operations that might require superuser
       privileges, such as "setgid" or opening special files.

AUTHOR

       Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>