qemu-e2k/include/io/task.h
Peter Maydell 90ce6e2644 include: Clean up includes
Clean up includes so that osdep.h is included first and headers
which it implies are not included manually.

This commit was created with scripts/clean-includes.

NB: If this commit breaks compilation for your out-of-tree
patchseries or fork, then you need to make sure you add
#include "qemu/osdep.h" to any new .c files that you have.

Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
2016-02-23 12:43:05 +00:00

256 lines
8.2 KiB
C

/*
* QEMU I/O task
*
* Copyright (c) 2015 Red Hat, Inc.
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
* version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*
*/
#ifndef QIO_TASK_H__
#define QIO_TASK_H__
#include "qemu-common.h"
#include "qom/object.h"
typedef struct QIOTask QIOTask;
typedef void (*QIOTaskFunc)(Object *source,
Error *err,
gpointer opaque);
typedef int (*QIOTaskWorker)(QIOTask *task,
Error **errp,
gpointer opaque);
/**
* QIOTask:
*
* The QIOTask object provides a simple mechanism for reporting
* success / failure of long running background operations.
*
* A object on which the operation is to be performed could have
* a public API which accepts a task callback:
*
* <example>
* <title>Task callback function signature</title>
* <programlisting>
* void myobject_operation(QMyObject *obj,
* QIOTaskFunc *func,
* gpointer opaque,
* GDestroyNotify *notify);
* </programlisting>
* </example>
*
* The 'func' parameter is the callback to be invoked, and 'opaque'
* is data to pass to it. The optional 'notify' function is used
* to free 'opaque' when no longer needed.
*
* Now, lets say the implementation of this method wants to set
* a timer to run once a second checking for completion of some
* activity. It would do something like
*
* <example>
* <title>Task callback function implementation</title>
* <programlisting>
* void myobject_operation(QMyObject *obj,
* QIOTaskFunc *func,
* gpointer opaque,
* GDestroyNotify *notify)
* {
* QIOTask *task;
*
* task = qio_task_new(OBJECT(obj), func, opaque, notify);
*
* g_timeout_add_full(G_PRIORITY_DEFAULT,
* 1000,
* myobject_operation_timer,
* task,
* NULL);
* }
* </programlisting>
* </example>
*
* It could equally have setup a watch on a file descriptor or
* created a background thread, or something else entirely.
* Notice that the source object is passed to the task, and
* QIOTask will hold a reference on that. This ensure that
* the QMyObject instance cannot be garbage collected while
* the async task is still in progress.
*
* In this case, myobject_operation_timer will fire after
* 3 secs and do
*
* <example>
* <title>Task timer function</title>
* <programlisting>
* gboolean myobject_operation_timer(gpointer opaque)
* {
* QIOTask *task = QIO_TASK(opaque);
* Error *err;*
*
* ...check something important...
* if (err) {
* qio_task_abort(task, err);
* error_free(task);
* return FALSE;
* } else if (...work is completed ...) {
* qio_task_complete(task);
* return FALSE;
* }
* ...carry on polling ...
* return TRUE;
* }
* </programlisting>
* </example>
*
* Once this function returns false, object_unref will be called
* automatically on the task causing it to be released and the
* ref on QMyObject dropped too.
*
* The QIOTask module can also be used to perform operations
* in a background thread context, while still reporting the
* results in the main event thread. This allows code which
* cannot easily be rewritten to be asychronous (such as DNS
* lookups) to be easily run non-blocking. Reporting the
* results in the main thread context means that the caller
* typically does not need to be concerned about thread
* safety wrt the QEMU global mutex.
*
* For example, the socket_listen() method will block the caller
* while DNS lookups take place if given a name, instead of IP
* address. The C library often do not provide a practical async
* DNS API, so the to get non-blocking DNS lookups in a portable
* manner requires use of a thread. So achieve a non-blocking
* socket listen using QIOTask would require:
*
* <example>
* static int myobject_listen_worker(QIOTask *task,
* Error **errp,
* gpointer opaque)
* {
* QMyObject obj = QMY_OBJECT(qio_task_get_source(task));
* SocketAddress *addr = opaque;
*
* obj->fd = socket_listen(addr, errp);
* if (obj->fd < 0) {
* return -1;
* }
* return 0;
* }
*
* void myobject_listen_async(QMyObject *obj,
* SocketAddress *addr,
* QIOTaskFunc *func,
* gpointer opaque,
* GDestroyNotify *notify)
* {
* QIOTask *task;
* SocketAddress *addrCopy;
*
* qapi_copy_SocketAddress(&addrCopy, addr);
* task = qio_task_new(OBJECT(obj), func, opaque, notify);
*
* qio_task_run_in_thread(task, myobject_listen_worker,
* addrCopy,
* qapi_free_SocketAddress);
* }
* </example>
*
* NB, The 'func' callback passed into myobject_listen_async
* will be invoked from the main event thread, despite the
* actual operation being performed in a different thread.
*/
/**
* qio_task_new:
* @source: the object on which the operation is invoked
* @func: the callback to invoke when the task completes
* @opaque: opaque data to pass to @func when invoked
* @destroy: optional callback to free @opaque
*
* Creates a new task struct to track completion of a
* background operation running on the object @source.
* When the operation completes or fails, the callback
* @func will be invoked. The callback can access the
* 'err' attribute in the task object to determine if
* the operation was successful or not.
*
* The returned task will be released when one of
* qio_task_abort() or qio_task_complete() are invoked.
*
* Returns: the task struct
*/
QIOTask *qio_task_new(Object *source,
QIOTaskFunc func,
gpointer opaque,
GDestroyNotify destroy);
/**
* qio_task_run_in_thread:
* @task: the task struct
* @worker: the function to invoke in a thread
* @opaque: opaque data to pass to @worker
* @destroy: function to free @opaque
*
* Run a task in a background thread. If @worker
* returns 0 it will call qio_task_complete() in
* the main event thread context. If @worker
* returns -1 it will call qio_task_abort() in
* the main event thread context.
*/
void qio_task_run_in_thread(QIOTask *task,
QIOTaskWorker worker,
gpointer opaque,
GDestroyNotify destroy);
/**
* qio_task_complete:
* @task: the task struct
*
* Mark the operation as succesfully completed
* and free the memory for @task.
*/
void qio_task_complete(QIOTask *task);
/**
* qio_task_abort:
* @task: the task struct
* @err: the error to record for the operation
*
* Mark the operation as failed, with @err providing
* details about the failure. The @err may be freed
* afer the function returns, as the notification
* callback is invoked synchronously. The @task will
* be freed when this call completes.
*/
void qio_task_abort(QIOTask *task,
Error *err);
/**
* qio_task_get_source:
* @task: the task struct
*
* Get the source object associated with the background
* task. This returns a new reference to the object,
* which the caller must released with object_unref()
* when no longer required.
*
* Returns: the source object
*/
Object *qio_task_get_source(QIOTask *task);
#endif /* QIO_TASK_H__ */