Provided by: libcommoncpp2-doc_1.8.1-6ubuntu1_all bug

NAME

       ost::TimerPort -

       Timer ports are used to provide synchronized timing events when managed under a 'service
       thread' such as SocketService.

SYNOPSIS

       #include <thread.h>

       Inherited by ost::SerialPort, and ost::SocketPort.

   Public Member Functions
       TimerPort ()
           Create a timer, mark it as inactive, and set the initial 'start' time to the creation
           time of the timer object.
       void setTimer (timeout_t timeout=0)
           Set a new start time for the object based on when this call is made and optionally
           activate the timer for a specified number of milliseconds.
       void incTimer (timeout_t timeout)
           Set a timeout based on the current time reference value either from object creation or
           the last setTimer().
       void decTimer (timeout_t timeout)
           Adjust a timeout based on the current time reference value either from object creation
           or the last setTimer().
       void sleepTimer (void)
           Sleep until the current timer expires.
       void endTimer (void)
           This is used to 'disable' the service thread from expiring the timer object.
       timeout_t getTimer (void) const
           This is used by service threads to determine how much time remains before the timer
           expires based on a timeout specified in setTimer() or incTimer().
       timeout_t getElapsed (void) const
           This is used to determine how much time has elapsed since a timer port setTimer
           benchmark time was initially set.

Detailed Description

       Timer ports are used to provide synchronized timing events when managed under a 'service
       thread' such as SocketService.

       This is made into a stand-alone base class since other derived libraries (such as the
       serial handlers) may also use the pooled 'service thread' model and hence also require
       this code for managing timing.

       Author:
           David Sugar dyfet@ostel.com synchronized millisecond timing for service threads.

Constructor & Destructor Documentation

   ost::TimerPort::TimerPort ()
       Create a timer, mark it as inactive, and set the initial 'start' time to the creation time
       of the timer object. This allows 'incTimer' to initially refer to time delays relative to
       the original start time of the object.

Member Function Documentation

   void ost::TimerPort::decTimer (timeout_ttimeout)
       Adjust a timeout based on the current time reference value either from object creation or
       the last setTimer(). This reference can be used to time synchronize realtime data over
       specified intervals and force expiration when a new frame should be released in a
       synchronized manner.

       Parameters:
           timeout delay in milliseconds from reference.

   void ost::TimerPort::endTimer (void)
       This is used to 'disable' the service thread from expiring the timer object. It does not
       effect the reference time from either creation or a setTimer().

   timeout_t ost::TimerPort::getElapsed (void) const
       This is used to determine how much time has elapsed since a timer port setTimer benchmark
       time was initially set. This allows one to use setTimer() to set the timer to the current
       time and then measure elapsed time from that point forward.

       return time elapsed in milliseconds, or TIMEOUT_INF if inactive.

   timeout_t ost::TimerPort::getTimer (void) const
       This is used by service threads to determine how much time remains before the timer
       expires based on a timeout specified in setTimer() or incTimer(). It can also be called
       after setting a timeout with incTimer() to see if the current timeout has already expired
       and hence that the application is already delayed and should skip frame(s).

       return time remaining in milliseconds, or TIMEOUT_INF if inactive.

   void ost::TimerPort::incTimer (timeout_ttimeout)
       Set a timeout based on the current time reference value either from object creation or the
       last setTimer(). This reference can be used to time synchronize realtime data over
       specified intervals and force expiration when a new frame should be released in a
       synchronized manner.

       Parameters:
           timeout delay in milliseconds from reference.

   void ost::TimerPort::setTimer (timeout_ttimeout = 0)
       Set a new start time for the object based on when this call is made and optionally
       activate the timer for a specified number of milliseconds. This can be used to set the
       starting time of a realtime session.

       Parameters:
           timeout delay in milliseconds from 'now'

   void ost::TimerPort::sleepTimer (void)
       Sleep until the current timer expires. This is useful in time syncing realtime periodic
       tasks.

Author

       Generated automatically by Doxygen for GNU CommonC++ from the source code.