AnyEvent::Impl::IOAsync - AnyEvent adaptor for IO::Async
use AnyEvent; use IO::Async::Loop; # optionally set another event loop use AnyEvent::Impl::IOAsync; my $loop = new IO::Async::Loop; AnyEvent::Impl::IOAsync::set_loop $loop;
This module provides support for IO::Async as AnyEvent backend. It supports I/O, timers, signals and child process watchers. Idle watchers are emulated. I/O watchers need to dup their fh because IO::Async only supports IO handles, not plain file descriptors.
This section had a long list of problems and shortcomings that made it almost impossible to support IO::Async. With version 0.33 of IO::Async, however, most of these have been fixed, so IO::Async can now be used as easily as many other loops.
There are a few remaining problems that require emulation or workarounds:
In most (all? documentation?) cases you cannot have multiple watchers for the same event (what's the point of having all these fancy notifier classes when you cannot have multiple notifiers for the same event? That's like only allowing one timer per second or so...).
For I/O watchers, AnyEvent has to dup() every file handle, as IO::Async fails to support the same or different file handles pointing to the same fd (the good thing is that it is documented, but why not fix it instead?).
Apart from these fatal flaws, there are a number of unpleasent properties that just need some mentioning:
Another rather negative point about this module family is its name, which is deeply confusing: Despite the "async" in the name, IO::Async only does synchronous I/O, there is nothing "asynchronous" about it whatsoever (when I first heard about it, I thought, "wow, a second async I/O module, what does it do compared to IO::AIO", and was somehow set back when I learned that the only "async" aspect of it is the name).
Implementing AnyEvent's rather simple timers on top of IO::Async's timers was a nightmare (try implementing a timer with configurable interval and delay value...).
The method naming is chaotic: watch_child creates a child watcher, but watch_io is an internal method; detach_signal removes a signal watcher, but detach_child forks a subprocess and so on).
watch_child
watch_io
detach_signal
detach_child
When you develop your program on FreeBSD and run it on GNU/Linux, you might have unpleasant surprises, as IO::Async::Loop will by default use IO::Async::Loop::Epoll, which is incompatible with fork, so your network server will run into spurious and very hard to debug problems under heavy load, as IO::Async forks a lot of processes, e.g. for DNS resolution. It would be better if IO::Async would only load "safe" backends by default (or fix the epoll backend to work in the presence of fork, which admittedly is hard - EV does it for you, and also does not use unsafe backends by default).
fork
On the positive side, performance with IO::Async is quite good even in my very demanding eyes.
AnyEvent, IO::Async.
Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de> http://anyevent.schmorp.de Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk> Rewrote the backend for IO::Async version 0.33.
To install AnyEvent, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm AnyEvent
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install AnyEvent
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.