IO::Async::Listener(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | IO::Async::Listener(3pm) |
"IO::Async::Listener" - listen on network sockets for incoming connections
use IO::Async::Listener; use IO::Async::Loop; my $loop = IO::Async::Loop->new; my $listener = IO::Async::Listener->new( on_stream => sub { my ( undef, $stream ) = @_; $stream->configure( on_read => sub { my ( $self, $buffref, $eof ) = @_; $self->write( $$buffref ); $$buffref = ""; return 0; }, ); $loop->add( $stream ); }, ); $loop->add( $listener ); $listener->listen( service => "echo", socktype => 'stream', )->get; $loop->run;
This object can also be used indirectly via an IO::Async::Loop:
use IO::Async::Stream; use IO::Async::Loop; my $loop = IO::Async::Loop->new; $loop->listen( service => "echo", socktype => 'stream', on_stream => sub { ... }, )->get; $loop->run;
This subclass of IO::Async::Handle adds behaviour which watches a socket in listening mode, to accept incoming connections on them.
A Listener can be constructed and given a existing socket in listening mode. Alternatively, the Listener can construct a socket by calling the "listen" method. Either a list of addresses can be provided, or a service name can be looked up using the underlying loop's "resolve" method.
The following events are invoked, either using subclass methods or CODE references in parameters:
Invoked whenever a new client connects to the socket.
If neither "handle_constructor" nor "handle_class" parameters are set, this will be invoked with the new client socket directly. If a handle constructor or class are set, this will be invoked with the newly-constructed handle, having the new socket already configured onto it.
An alternative to "on_accept", this is passed an instance of IO::Async::Stream when a new client connects. This is provided as a convenience for the common case that a Stream object is required as the transport for a Protocol object.
This is now vaguely deprecated in favour of using "on_accept" with a handle constructor or class.
Similar to "on_stream", but constructs an instance of IO::Async::Socket. This is most useful for "SOCK_DGRAM" or "SOCK_RAW" sockets.
This is now vaguely deprecated in favour of using "on_accept" with a handle constructor or class.
Optional. Invoked if the "accept" syscall indicates an error (other than "EAGAIN" or "EWOULDBLOCK"). If not provided, failures of "accept" will be passed to the main "on_error" handler.
The following named parameters may be passed to "new" or "configure":
CODE reference for the event handlers. Because of the mutually-exclusive nature of their behaviour, only one of these may be set at a time. Setting one will remove the other two.
The IO handle containing an existing listen-mode socket.
Optional. If defined, gives a CODE reference to be invoked every time a new client socket is accepted from the listening socket. It is passed the listener object itself, and is expected to return a new instance of IO::Async::Handle or a subclass, used to wrap the new client socket.
$handle = $handle_constructor->( $listener )
This can also be given as a subclass method
$handle = $listener->handle_constructor()
Optional. If defined and "handle_constructor" isn't, then new wrapper handles are constructed by invoking the "new" method on the given class name, passing in no additional parameters.
$handle = $handle_class->new()
This can also be given as a subclass method
$handle = $listener->handle_class->new
Optional. If defined, gives the name of a method or a CODE reference to use to implement the actual accept behaviour. This will be invoked as:
( $accepted ) = $listener->acceptor( $socket )->get ( $handle ) = $listener->acceptor( $socket, handle => $handle )->get
It is invoked with the listening socket as its its argument, and optionally an IO::Async::Handle instance as a named parameter, and is expected to return a "Future" that will eventually yield the newly-accepted socket or handle instance, if such was provided.
The following methods documented with a trailing call to "->get" return Future instances.
$acceptor = $listener->acceptor
Returns the currently-set "acceptor" method name or code reference. This may be of interest to Loop "listen" extension methods that wish to extend or wrap it.
$name = $listener->sockname
Returns the "sockname" of the underlying listening socket
$family = $listener->family
Returns the socket address family of the underlying listening socket
$socktype = $listener->socktype
Returns the socket type of the underlying listening socket
$listener->listen( %params )
This method sets up a listening socket and arranges for the acceptor callback to be invoked each time a new connection is accepted on the socket.
Most parameters given to this method are passed into the "listen" method of the IO::Async::Loop object. In addition, the following arguments are also recognised directly:
$on_listen->( $listener )
The "handle" argument can be passed an existing socket already in listening mode, making it possible to listen on other types of socket such as UNIX sockets.
use IO::Async::Listener; use IO::Socket::UNIX; use IO::Async::Loop; my $loop = IO::Async::Loop->new; my $listener = IO::Async::Listener->new( on_stream => sub { my ( undef, $stream ) = @_; $stream->configure( on_read => sub { my ( $self, $buffref, $eof ) = @_; $self->write( $$buffref ); $$buffref = ""; return 0; }, ); $loop->add( $stream ); }, ); $loop->add( $listener ); my $socket = IO::Socket::UNIX->new( Local => "echo.sock", Listen => 1, ) or die "Cannot make UNIX socket - $!\n"; $listener->listen( handle => $socket, ); $loop->run;
The "addr" or "addrs" parameters should contain a definition of a plain socket address in a form that the IO::Async::OS "extract_addrinfo" method can use.
This example shows how to listen on TCP port 8001 on address 10.0.0.1:
$listener->listen( addr => { family => "inet", socktype => "stream", port => 8001, ip => "10.0.0.1", }, ... );
This example shows another way to listen on a UNIX socket, similar to the earlier example:
$listener->listen( addr => { family => "unix", socktype => "stream", path => "echo.sock", }, ... );
Rather than picking a specific port number, is it possible to ask the kernel to assign one arbitrarily that is currently free. This can be done by requesting port number 0 (which is actually the default if no port number is otherwise specified). To determine which port number the kernel actually picked, inspect the "sockport" accessor on the actual socket filehandle.
Either use the Future returned by the "listen" method:
$listener->listen( addr => { family => "inet" }, )->on_done( sub { my ( $listener ) = @_; my $socket = $listener->read_handle; say "Now listening on port ", $socket->sockport; });
Or pass an "on_listen" continuation:
$listener->listen( addr => { family => "inet" }, on_listen => sub { my ( $listener ) = @_; my $socket = $listener->read_handle; say "Now listening on port ", $socket->sockport; }, );
Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>
2018-04-19 | perl v5.26.2 |