Provided by: libanyevent-perl_7.070-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       AnyEvent::Util - various utility functions.

SYNOPSIS

          use AnyEvent::Util;

DESCRIPTION

       This module implements various utility functions, mostly replacing well-known functions by event-ised
       counterparts.

       All functions documented without "AnyEvent::Util::" prefix are exported by default.

       ($r, $w) = portable_pipe
           Calling  "pipe"  in  Perl  is portable - except it doesn't really work on sucky windows platforms (at
           least not with most perls - cygwin's perl notably works fine): On windows, you actually get two  file
           handles you cannot use select on.

           This function gives you a pipe that actually works even on the broken windows platform (by creating a
           pair  of  TCP  sockets  on windows, so do not expect any speed from that) and using "pipe" everywhere
           else.

           See "portable_socketpair", below, for a bidirectional "pipe".

           Returns the empty list on any errors.

       ($fh1, $fh2) = portable_socketpair
           Just like "portable_pipe", above, but returns a bidirectional pipe (usually by  calling  "socketpair"
           to  create a local loopback socket pair, except on windows, where it again returns two interconnected
           TCP sockets).

           Returns the empty list on any errors.

       fork_call { CODE } @args, $cb->(@res)
           Executes the given code block asynchronously, by  forking.  Everything  the  block  returns  will  be
           transferred to the calling process (by serialising and deserialising via Storable).

           If  there  are any errors, then the $cb will be called without any arguments. In that case, either $@
           contains the exception (and $! is irrelevant), or $! contains an error number. In all other cases, $@
           will be "undef"ined.

           The code block must not ever call an event-polling function or use event-based programming that might
           cause any callbacks registered in the parent to run.

           Win32 spoilers: Due to the endlessly sucky and broken native  windows  perls  (there  is  no  way  to
           cleanly  exit  a  child process on that platform that doesn't also kill the parent), you have to make
           sure that your main program doesn't exit as long as any "fork_calls" are still in progress, otherwise
           the program won't exit. Also, on most windows platforms some memory will leak for  every  invocation.
           We are open for improvements that don't require XS hackery.

           Note  that forking can be expensive in large programs (RSS 200MB+). On windows, it is abysmally slow,
           do not expect more than 5..20 forks/s on that sucky platform (note this uses  perl's  pseudo-threads,
           so avoid those like the plague).

           Example: poor man's async disk I/O (better use AnyEvent::IO together with IO::AIO).

              fork_call {
                 open my $fh, "</etc/passwd"
                    or die "passwd: $!";
                 local $/;
                 <$fh>
              } sub {
                 my ($passwd) = @_;
                 ...
              };

       $AnyEvent::Util::MAX_FORKS [default: 10]
           The maximum number of child processes that "fork_call" will fork in parallel. Any additional requests
           will be queued until a slot becomes free again.

           The environment variable "PERL_ANYEVENT_MAX_FORKS" is used to initialise this value.

       fh_nonblocking $fh, $nonblocking
           Sets  the blocking state of the given filehandle (true == nonblocking, false == blocking). Uses fcntl
           on anything sensible and ioctl FIONBIO on broken (i.e. windows) platforms.

       $guard = guard { CODE }
           This function creates a special object that, when called, will execute the code block.

           This is often handy in continuation-passing style code to clean up some resource regardless of  where
           you break out of a process.

           The  Guard  module will be used to implement this function, if it is available. Otherwise a pure-perl
           implementation is used.

           While the code is allowed to throw exceptions in unusual conditions, it is not defined  whether  this
           exception  will  be reported (at the moment, the Guard module and AnyEvent's pure-perl implementation
           both try to report the error and continue).

           You can call one method on the returned object:

       $guard->cancel
           This simply causes the code block not to be invoked: it "cancels" the guard.

       AnyEvent::Util::close_all_fds_except @fds
           This rarely-used function simply closes all file descriptors (or tries to)  of  the  current  process
           except the ones given as arguments.

           When  you  want to start a long-running background server, then it is often beneficial to do this, as
           too many C-libraries are too stupid to mark their internal fd's as close-on-exec.

           The function expects to be called shortly before an "exec" call.

           Example: close all fds except 0, 1, 2.

              close_all_fds_except 0, 2, 1;

       $cv = run_cmd $cmd, key => value...
           Run a given external command,  potentially  redirecting  file  descriptors  and  return  a  condition
           variable  that  gets  sent  the exit status (like $?)  when the program exits and all redirected file
           descriptors have been exhausted.

           The $cmd is either a single string, which is then passed to a shell, or an arrayref, which is  passed
           to the "execvp" function.

           The key-value pairs can be:

           ">" => $filename
               Redirects  program  standard  output  into  the specified filename, similar to ">filename" in the
               shell.

           ">" => \$data
               Appends program standard output to the referenced scalar.  The  condvar  will  not  be  signalled
               before EOF or an error is signalled.

           ">" => $filehandle
               Redirects  program  standard  output  to  the  given  filehandle (or actually its underlying file
               descriptor).

           ">" => $callback->($data)
               Calls the given callback each time standard output  receives  some  data,  passing  it  the  data
               received. On EOF or error, the callback will be invoked once without any arguments.

               The condvar will not be signalled before EOF or an error is signalled.

           "fd>" => $see_above
               Like ">", but redirects the specified fd number instead.

           "<" => $see_above
               The  same,  but  redirects  the  program's  standard input instead. The same forms as for ">" are
               allowed.

               In the callback form, the callback is supposed to return data to be written, or the empty list or
               "undef" or a zero-length scalar to signal EOF.

               Similarly, either the write data must be exhausted or an error is  to  be  signalled  before  the
               condvar is signalled, for both string-reference and callback forms.

           "fd<" => $see_above
               Like "<", but redirects the specified file descriptor instead.

           on_prepare => $cb
               Specify  a  callback that is executed just before the command is "exec"'ed, in the child process.
               Be careful not to use any event handling or other services not available in the child.

               This can be useful to set up the environment in special ways, such as changing  the  priority  of
               the command or manipulating signal handlers (e.g.  setting "SIGINT" to "IGNORE").

           close_all => $boolean
               When  "close_all"  is  enabled  (default  is  disabled),  then all extra file descriptors will be
               closed, except the ones that were redirected and 0, 1 and 2.

               See "close_all_fds_except" for more details.

           '$$' => \$pid
               A reference to a scalar which  will  receive  the  PID  of  the  newly-created  subprocess  after
               "run_cmd" returns.

               Note  the  the  PID might already have been recycled and used by an unrelated process at the time
               "run_cmd" returns, so it's not useful to send signals, use a unique key in data structures and so
               on.

           Example: run "rm -rf /", redirecting standard input, output and error to /dev/null.

              my $cv = run_cmd [qw(rm -rf /)],
                 "<", "/dev/null",
                 ">", "/dev/null",
                 "2>", "/dev/null";
              $cv->recv and die "d'oh! something survived!"

           Example: run openssl and create a self-signed certificate and key, storing them in  $cert  and  $key.
           When finished, check the exit status in the callback and print key and certificate.

              my $cv = run_cmd [qw(openssl req
                                -new -nodes -x509 -days 3650
                                -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout /dev/fd/3
                                -batch -subj /CN=AnyEvent
                               )],
                 "<", "/dev/null",
                 ">" , \my $cert,
                 "3>", \my $key,
                 "2>", "/dev/null";

              $cv->cb (sub {
                 shift->recv and die "openssl failed";

                 print "$key\n$cert\n";
              });

       AnyEvent::Util::punycode_encode $string
           Punycode-encodes the given $string and returns its punycode form. Note that uppercase letters are not
           casefolded - you have to do that yourself.

           Croaks when it cannot encode the string.

       AnyEvent::Util::punycode_decode $string
           Tries  to punycode-decode the given $string and return its unicode form. Again, uppercase letters are
           not casefoled, you have to do that yourself.

           Croaks when it cannot decode the string.

       AnyEvent::Util::idn_nameprep $idn[, $display]
           Implements the IDNA nameprep normalisation algorithm. Or actually  the  UTS#46  algorithm.  Or  maybe
           something similar - reality is complicated between IDNA2003, UTS#46 and IDNA2008. If $display is true
           then the name is prepared for display, otherwise it is prepared for lookup (default).

           If you have no clue what this means, look at "idn_to_ascii" instead.

           This  function is designed to avoid using a lot of resources - it uses about 1MB of RAM (most of this
           due to Unicode::Normalize). Also, names that are already "simple" will  only  be  checked  for  basic
           validity, without the overhead of full nameprep processing.

       $domainname = AnyEvent::Util::idn_to_ascii $idn
           Converts  the  given  unicode  string  ($idn, international domain name, e.g. XXXXXX) to a pure-ASCII
           domain name (this is usually called the "IDN ToAscii" transform). This transformation is  idempotent,
           which means you can call it just in case and it will do the right thing.

           Unlike  some  other  "ToAscii"  implementations, this one works on full domain names and should never
           fail - if it cannot convert the name, then it will return it unchanged.

           This function is an amalgam of IDNA2003, UTS#46 and IDNA2008 - it tries to be  reasonably  compatible
           to  other implementations, reasonably secure, as much as IDNs can be secure, and reasonably efficient
           when confronted with IDNs that are already valid DNS names.

       $idn = AnyEvent::Util::idn_to_unicode $idn
           Converts the given unicode string ($idn, international domain name, e.g.  XXXXXX,  www.deliantra.net,
           www.xn--l-0ga.de)  to  unicode  form  (this  is  usually  called the "IDN ToUnicode" transform). This
           transformation is idempotent, which means you can call it just in case  and  it  will  do  the  right
           thing.

           Unlike  some  other "ToUnicode" implementations, this one works on full domain names and should never
           fail - if it cannot convert the name, then it will return it unchanged.

           This function is an amalgam of IDNA2003, UTS#46 and IDNA2008 - it tries to be  reasonably  compatible
           to  other implementations, reasonably secure, as much as IDNs can be secure, and reasonably efficient
           when confronted with IDNs that are already valid DNS names.

           At the moment, this function simply calls "idn_nameprep $idn, 1", returning its  argument  when  that
           function fails.

AUTHOR

        Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
        http://anyevent.schmorp.de

perl v5.18.1                                       2013-12-10                                AnyEvent::Util(3pm)