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POE::Component::Generic(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation POE::Component::Generic(3)

POE::Component::Generic - A POE component that provides non-blocking access to a blocking object.

    use POE::Component::Generic;

    my $telnet = POE::Component::Generic->spawn(

        # required; main object is of this class
        package => 'Net::Telnet',

        # optional; Options passed to Net::Telnet->new()
        object_options => [ ],

        # optional; You can use $poco->session_id() instead
        alias => 'telnet',
        # optional; 1 to turn on debugging
        debug => 1,
        # optional; 1 to see the child's STDERR
        verbose => 1,

        # optional; Options passed to the internal session
        options => { trace => 1 },

        # optional; describe package signatures 
        packages => {
            'Net::Telnet' => {
                # Methods that require coderefs, and keep them after they 
                # return.  
            
                # The first arg is converted to a coderef
                postbacks => { option_callback=>0 } 
            },
            'Other::Package' => {
                # only these methods are exposed
                methods => [ qw( one two ) ],

                # Methods that require coderefs, but don't keep them
                # after they return 
                callbacks => [ qw( two ) ]
            }
        }
    );

    # Start your POE session, then...

    $telnet->open( { event => 'result' }, "rainmaker.wunderground.com");
    # result state
    sub result {
        my ($kernel, $ref, $result) = @_[KERNEL, ARG0, ARG1];

        if( $ref->{error} ) {
            die join(' ', @{ $ref->{error} ) . "\n";
        }
        print "connected: $result\n";
    }


    # Setup a postback
    $telnet->option_callback( {}, "option_back" );

    # option_back state
    sub option_back {
        my( $obj, $option, $is_remote,
                $is_enabled, $was_enabled, $buf_position) = @_[ARG0..$#_];
        # See L<Net::Telnet> for a discussion of the above.

        # NOTE: Callbacks and postbacks can't currently receive objects.
    }

    # Use a callback
    # Pretend that $other was created as a proxy to an Other::Package object
    $other->two( {}, sub { warn "I was called..." } );

    my $code = $session->postback( "my_state" );
    $other->two( {}, $code );

POE::Component::Generic is a POE component that provides a non-blocking wrapper around any object. This allows you to build a POE component from existing code with minimal effort.

The following documentation is a tad opaque and complicated. This is unavoidable; the problem POE::Component::Generic solves is complicated.

POE::Component::Generic works by forking a child process with POE::Wheel::Run and creating the blocking object in the child process. Method calls on the object are then serialised and sent to the child process to be handled by the object there. The returned value is serialised and sent to the parent process, where it is posted back to the caller as a POE event.

Communication is done via the child's "STDIN" and "STDOUT". This means that all method arguments and return values must survive serialisation. If you need to pass coderefs or other data that can't be serialised, use "callbacks" or "postbacks".

If you want to have multiple objects within a single child process, you will have to create "factories" that create the objects.

Method calls are wrapped in "eval" in the child process so that errors may be propagated back to your session. See "OUTPUT".

Output to "STDERR" in the child, that is from your object, is shown only if "debug" or "verbose" is set. "STDOUT" in the child, that is from your object, is redirected to STDERR and will be shown in the same circomstances.

    my $obj = POE::Component::Generic->spawn( $package );
    my $obj = POE::Component::Generic->spawn( %arguments );

Create the POE::Component::Generic component.

Takes either a single scalar, which is assumed to be a package name, or a hash of arguments, of which all but "package" are optional.

alias
Session alias to register with the kernel. Also used as the child processes' name. See "STATUS" below. Default is none.
alt_fork
Set to "true" if you want to run another perl instance. That is, the child process will "exec" a new instance of "perl" using $^X to do the work. @INC is preserved. If present, $ENV{HARNESS_PERL_SWITCHES} is preserved.

Using "alt_fork" might help save memory; while the child process will only contain "POE::Component::Generic" and your object, it will not be able to share as many memory pages with other processes.

Care must be taken that the all necessary modules are loaded in the new perl instance. Make sure that your main "package" loads all modules that it might interact with.

Default is false.

Please note that "alt_fork" does not currently work on MSWin32. The problem is that "exec()" is failing in POE::Wheel::Run. If you can fix that I will reactivate "alt_fork" for MSWin32.

Note also that if you are running in an embedded perl and $^X does not actually point to the perl binary, you may set alt_fork to the path to the perl executable. POE::Component::Generic will make sure that this path is executable or will silently fall back to $^X.

callbacks
Callbacks are coderefs that are passed as method parameters. Because coderefs can't be serialised, a little bit of magic needs to happen. When a method that has callbacks is called, it's parameters are marshaled in the parent process. The callback coderef is saved in the parent, and replaced by markers which the child process converts into thunk coderefs when demarshalling. These thunks, when called by the object, will sent a request to the parent process, which is translated into a call of the callback coderef which the parent saved during marshalling.

Callbacks are only valid during the method's execution. After the method returns, the callback will be invalidated. If you need to pass a coderef which is valid for longer then one method call, use postbacks.

The "callbacks" parameter is a list of methods that have callbacks in their parameter list.

When one of the methods in "callbacks" is called, any coderefs in the parameters are converted into a message to the child process to propagate the call back to the parent.

IMPORTANT: The callback is called from inside POE::Component::Generic. This means that the current session is NOT your session. If you need to be inside your session, use "POE::Session/postback".

Defaults to empty.

child_package
Set the package that the child process worker object. Sometimes advanced interaction with objects will require more smarts in the child process. You may control child process behaviour by setting this to an subclass of POE::Component::Generic::Child. For more details, consult the source!
debug
Set to "true" to see component debug information, such as anything output to STDERR by your code. Default to "false".
error
Event that all POE::Wheel::Run errors and text from stderr will be posted to. May be either a hash, in which case it must have "event" and "session" members, like "data".

    POE::Component::Generic->spawn(
            ....
            error => { event => 'generic_event',
                       session => 'error_watcher'
                     },
            ....
        );
    

If "error" is a string, it is used as an event in the current session.

    POE::Component::Generic->spawn(
            ....
            error => 'generic_error',   # in the current session
            ....
        );
    

When called, "ARG0" will be a hash reference containing either 1 or 3 keys, depending on the situation:

    sub generic_error 
    {
        my( $session, $err ) = @_[ SESSION, ARG0 ];
        if( $err->{stderr} ) {
            # $err->{stderr} is a line that was printed to the 
            # sub-processes' STDERR.  99% of the time that means from 
            # your code.
        }
        else {
            # Wheel error.  See L<POE::Wheel::Run/ErrorEvent>
            # $err->{operation}
            # $err->{errnum}
            # $err->{errstr}
        }
    }
    

Experimental feature.

factories
List of methods that are object factories. An object factory is one that returns a different object. For example, "DBI"'s $dbh->prepare returns a statement handle object, so it is an object factory.

The first value of the return argument is assumed to be the object. It is kept in the child process. Your return event will receive a proxy object that will allow you to use the "yield", "call" and "psuedo-method" calls, as documented below.

See POE::Component::Generic::Object for details.

You should configure package signatures for the proxy objects that factories return with "packages".

methods
An array ref containing methods that you want the component to expose. If not specified, all the methods of "package" and its super-classes are exposed.

Note that methods that begin with "_" or don't end with a lower case letter ("a-z") are excluded, as well as methods that end in "carp", "croak" and "confess".

options
A hashref of POE::Session options that are passed to the component's session creator.
on_exit
An event that will be called when the child process exits. This may be a POEx::URI object, a scalar event name in the current session or an array.

The event is invoked with any parameters you specified, followed by a hashref that contains "objects", which is a list of all object names it knows of.

Examples:

    { on_exit => URI->new( 'poe://session/event' ) }
    { on_exit => 'event' }
    { on_exit => [ $SESSIONID, $EVENT, $PARAMS ] }
    
object_options
An optional array ref of options that will be passed to the main object constructor.
package
Package used to create the main object.

Object creation happens in the child process. The package is loaded, if it isn't already, then a constructor is called with "object_options" as the parameters. The constructor is a package method named "new", "spawn" or "create", searching in that order.

packages
Set the package signature for packages that are be created with factory methods. This allows you to configure the "callbacks", "postbacks" and "methods" for objects that are returned by methods listed with the "factories" parameter.

Must be a hashref, keys are package names, values are either a scalar, which will case the package will be scanned for methods, a arrayref, which is taken as a list of "methods", or a hashref, which gives you full control. The hashref may contain the keys "methods", "callbacks" and "postbacks", which work as described above and below.

It is also possible to specify the package signature for the main object with "packages".

Example:

    POE::Component::Generic->spawn( 
                        package   => 'Honk',
                        methods   => [ qw(off on fast slow) ],
                        postbacks => { slow=>1, fast=>[1,2] }
                   );
    # Could also be written as
    POE::Component::Generic->spawn( 
                    package  =>'Honk',
                    packages => {
                        Honk => {
                            methods=>[ qw(off on fast slow) ],
                            postbacks=>{ slow=>1, fast=>[1,2] }
                        }
                    }
                );
    
postbacks
Postbacks are like callbacks, but for POE event calls. They will also be valid even after the object method returns. If the object doesn't hold on to the coderef longer then one method call, you should use callbacks, because postbacks use memory in the parent process.

The "postbacks" value must be a hashref, keys are method names, values are lists of the offsets of argument that will be converted into postbacks. These offsets maybe be a number, or an array of numeric offsets. Remember that argument offsets are numbered from 0.

"postbacks" may also be an array of method names. In this case, the argument offset for each listed method is assumed to be 0.

Examples:

    [ qw( new_cert new_connect ) ]
    { new_cert=>0, new_connect=>0 }     # equivalent to previous
    { double_set=>[0,3] }               # first and fourth param are coderefs
    

When calling a method that has a postback, the parameter should be an event name in the current session, or a hashref containing "event" and "session" keys. If "session" is missing, the current session is used. Yes, this means you may create postbacks that go to other sessions.

Examples:

    $obj->new_cert( "some_back" );
    $obj->new_cert( { event=>"some_back" } );
    $obj->new_cert( { event=>"some_back", session=>"my-session" } );
    $obj->double_set( "postback1", $P1, $P2, 
                      { event=>"postback1", session=>"other-session" } );
    

Use "state" in POE::Kernel to convert coderefs into POE states.

Your postback will have the arguments that the object calls it with. Contrary to response events, ARG0 isn't the OUTPUT data hashref. At least, not for now.

    my $coderef = sub { 
                      my( $arg1, $arg2 ) = @_[ARG0, ARG1];
                      ....
                  };
    $poe_kernel->state( "temp-postback" => $coderef );
    $obj->new_cert( "temp-postback" );

    # Note that you will probably want to remove the 'temp-postback' state
    # at some point.
    
verbose
Component tells you more about what is happening in the child process. The child's PID is reported to STDERR. All text sent to STDERR in the child process is reported. Any abnormal error conditions or exits are also reported. All this reported via warn.

If you wish to have STDERR delivered to your session, use "error".

Shut the component down, doing all the magic so that POE may exit. The child process will exit, causing "DESTROY" to be called on your object. The child process will of course wait if the object is in a blocking method.

It is assumed that your object won't prevent the child from exiting. If you want your object to live longer (say for some long-running activity) please fork off a grand-child.

Shutdown that this is also a POE event, which means you can not call a method named 'shutdown' on your object.

Shuting down if there are responses pending (see "OUTPUT" below) is undefined.

Calling "shutdown" will not cause the kernel to exit if you have other components or sessions keeping POE from doing so.

    $generic->kill(SIGNAL)

Sends sub-process a "SIGNAL".

You may send things like SIGTERM or SIGKILL. This is a violent way to shutdown the component, but is necessary if you want to implement a timeout on your blocking code.

Takes no arguments, returns the POE::Session ID of the component. Useful if you don't want to use aliases.

There are 4 ways of calling methods on the object.

All methods need a data hashref that will be handed back to the return event. This data hash is discussed in the "INPUT" section.

Post events to the object. First argument is the event to post, second is the data hashref, following arguments are sent as arguments in the resultant post.

  $poe_kernel->post( $alias => 'open',
                        { event => 'result' }, "localhost" );

This will call the "open" method on your object with one parameter: "localhost". The method's return value is posted to "result" in the current session.

This method provides an alternative object based means of asynchronisly calling methods on the object. First argument is the method to call, second is the data hashref (described in "INPUT"), following arguments are sent as arguments to the resultant post.

  $generic->yield( open => { event => 'result' }, "localhost" );

This method provides an alternative object based means of synchronisly calling methods on the object. First argument is the event to call, second is the data hashref (described in "INPUT"), following arguments are following arguments are sent as arguments to the resultant call.

  $generic->call( open => { event => 'result' }, "localhost" );

Call returns a request ID which may be matched with the response. NOT IMPLEMENTED.

The difference between call and yield is that call by-passes POE's event queue and the request is potentially sent faster to the child process.

All methods of the object can also be called directly, but the first argument must be the data hashref as noted in the "INPUT" section.

    $generic->open( { event => 'opened' }, "localhost" );

Each method call requires a data hashref as it's first argument.

The data hashref may have the following keys.

data
Opaque data element that will be present in the "OUTPUT" hash. While it is possible that other hash members will also work for now, only this one is reserved for your use.
event
Event in your session that you want the results of the method to go to. "event" is needed for all requests that you want a response to. You may send responses to other sessions with "session".

No response is sent if "event" is missing.

obj
Don't call the method on the main object, but rather on this object. Value is the ID of an object returned by a factory method. Doesn't work for "psuedo-method" calls.
session
Session that you want the response event to be sent to. Defaults to current session. Abuse with caution.
wantarray
Should the method be called in array context (1), scalar context (0) or void context (undef)? Defaults to void context, unless you specify a response "event", in which case it defaults to scalar context.

Note that at some point in the future this data hashref is going to be a full object for better encapsulation.

You may specify a response event for each method call. "ARG0" of this event handler contains the data hashref. "ARG1..$#_" are the returned values, if any.
data
Opaque value that was set in "INPUT".
error
In the event of an error occurring this will be defined. It is a scalar which contains the text of the error, which is normally $@.
method
Name of the method this is the output of. That is, if you call the method "foo", "method" is set to "foo" in the response event.
result
This is an arrayref containing the data returned from the function you called.

Method calls in scalar context have the return value at result->[0]. That is, they look like:

    $response->{result}[0] = $object->method(...);
    

Method calls in array context populate as much of the array as needed. That is, they look like:

    $response->{result} = [ $object->method(...) ];
    

It might be desirable to overload the following methods in a sub-class of POE::Component::Generic.

    sub __is_method_name {
        my( $package, $pk, $sub ) = @_;
        # ...
    }

Must return true if $sub is a valid object method of $pk. Must return false otherwise.

Method names are verified when a package specified with "spawn"'s "packages" argument is scanned for methods. The default implementation tries to reject constants ($sub ending in non-uppercase), private methods ($sub begining with "_") and common subroutines (ie, Carp).

These methods will help you writing components based on POE::Component::Generic.

Callbacks and postbacks expect the arguments are in order. This is a pain for your users and isn't really the POE-way. Instead, your method may accept a hash, and then convert it into the argument list.

For a given event FOO, there are 2 possible arguments:

FOOEvent
The argument is a POE event, either a simple string (event in the current session) or a hashref ({event=>$event, session=>$session}).
FOOSub
The argument is a subref.

You may use the following 2 methods to help convert the arguments into the appropriate type for a given situaion. They return undef() if the argument isn't present. This so you may use the following idiom and it will Just Work:

    sub method {
        my( $self, %args ) = @_;
        my @args;
        foreach my $ev ( qw(Stdin Stdout Close) ) {
            push @args, $self->__postback_argument( $ev, \%args );
        }
        $self->true_method( @args );
    }

    my $coderef = $self->__callback_argument( $event, \%args );

Converts argument into a coderef appropriate for "callbacks".

Returns $args{ "${event}Sub" } if present.

If present, converts $args{ "${event}Event" } to a coderef and returns that.

Returns "undef()" otherwise.

Converts argument into a POE event call appropriate for "postbacks".

Returns $args{ "${event}Event" } if present.

If present, converts $args{ "${event}Sub" } to a state of the current session and returns a call to that. NOT YET IMPLEMENTED.

Returns "undef()" otherwise.

For your comfort and conveinence, the child process updates $O to tell you what it is doing. On many systems, $O is available via "/proc/$PID/cmdline".

Philip Gwyn <gwyn-at-cpan.org>

Based on work by David Davis <xantus@cpan.org>

POE

Please rate this module. <http://cpanratings.perl.org/rate/?distribution=POE-Component-Generic>

Probably. Report them here: <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=POE%3A%3AComponent%3A%3AGeneric>

BinGOs for POE::Component::Win32::Service that helped xantus get started.

David Davis for POE::Component::Net::Telnet on which this is originally based.

Copyright 2006-2009,2011 by Philip Gwyn;

Copyright 2005 by David Davis and Teknikill Software.

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

2012-11-30 perl v5.32.1

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