eventmachine-with-ipv6 1.0.0.beta.4.ipv6.0

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  1. data/.gitignore +21 -0
  2. data/.yardopts +7 -0
  3. data/FORK.md +47 -0
  4. data/GNU +281 -0
  5. data/Gemfile +3 -0
  6. data/LICENSE +60 -0
  7. data/README.md +109 -0
  8. data/Rakefile +20 -0
  9. data/docs/DocumentationGuidesIndex.md +27 -0
  10. data/docs/GettingStarted.md +521 -0
  11. data/docs/old/ChangeLog +211 -0
  12. data/docs/old/DEFERRABLES +246 -0
  13. data/docs/old/EPOLL +141 -0
  14. data/docs/old/INSTALL +13 -0
  15. data/docs/old/KEYBOARD +42 -0
  16. data/docs/old/LEGAL +25 -0
  17. data/docs/old/LIGHTWEIGHT_CONCURRENCY +130 -0
  18. data/docs/old/PURE_RUBY +75 -0
  19. data/docs/old/RELEASE_NOTES +94 -0
  20. data/docs/old/SMTP +4 -0
  21. data/docs/old/SPAWNED_PROCESSES +148 -0
  22. data/docs/old/TODO +8 -0
  23. data/eventmachine.gemspec +50 -0
  24. data/examples/guides/getting_started/01_eventmachine_echo_server.rb +18 -0
  25. data/examples/guides/getting_started/02_eventmachine_echo_server_that_recognizes_exit_command.rb +22 -0
  26. data/examples/guides/getting_started/03_simple_chat_server.rb +149 -0
  27. data/examples/guides/getting_started/04_simple_chat_server_step_one.rb +27 -0
  28. data/examples/guides/getting_started/05_simple_chat_server_step_two.rb +43 -0
  29. data/examples/guides/getting_started/06_simple_chat_server_step_three.rb +98 -0
  30. data/examples/guides/getting_started/07_simple_chat_server_step_four.rb +121 -0
  31. data/examples/guides/getting_started/08_simple_chat_server_step_five.rb +141 -0
  32. data/examples/old/ex_channel.rb +43 -0
  33. data/examples/old/ex_queue.rb +2 -0
  34. data/examples/old/ex_tick_loop_array.rb +15 -0
  35. data/examples/old/ex_tick_loop_counter.rb +32 -0
  36. data/examples/old/helper.rb +2 -0
  37. data/ext/binder.cpp +124 -0
  38. data/ext/binder.h +46 -0
  39. data/ext/cmain.cpp +858 -0
  40. data/ext/ed.cpp +1992 -0
  41. data/ext/ed.h +423 -0
  42. data/ext/em.cpp +2358 -0
  43. data/ext/em.h +245 -0
  44. data/ext/eventmachine.h +127 -0
  45. data/ext/extconf.rb +166 -0
  46. data/ext/fastfilereader/extconf.rb +94 -0
  47. data/ext/fastfilereader/mapper.cpp +214 -0
  48. data/ext/fastfilereader/mapper.h +59 -0
  49. data/ext/fastfilereader/rubymain.cpp +127 -0
  50. data/ext/kb.cpp +79 -0
  51. data/ext/page.cpp +107 -0
  52. data/ext/page.h +51 -0
  53. data/ext/pipe.cpp +347 -0
  54. data/ext/project.h +155 -0
  55. data/ext/rubymain.cpp +1280 -0
  56. data/ext/ssl.cpp +468 -0
  57. data/ext/ssl.h +94 -0
  58. data/java/.classpath +8 -0
  59. data/java/.project +17 -0
  60. data/java/src/com/rubyeventmachine/EmReactor.java +571 -0
  61. data/java/src/com/rubyeventmachine/EmReactorException.java +40 -0
  62. data/java/src/com/rubyeventmachine/EventableChannel.java +69 -0
  63. data/java/src/com/rubyeventmachine/EventableDatagramChannel.java +189 -0
  64. data/java/src/com/rubyeventmachine/EventableSocketChannel.java +364 -0
  65. data/lib/em/buftok.rb +110 -0
  66. data/lib/em/callback.rb +58 -0
  67. data/lib/em/channel.rb +64 -0
  68. data/lib/em/completion.rb +304 -0
  69. data/lib/em/connection.rb +728 -0
  70. data/lib/em/deferrable.rb +210 -0
  71. data/lib/em/deferrable/pool.rb +2 -0
  72. data/lib/em/file_watch.rb +73 -0
  73. data/lib/em/future.rb +61 -0
  74. data/lib/em/iterator.rb +270 -0
  75. data/lib/em/messages.rb +66 -0
  76. data/lib/em/pool.rb +151 -0
  77. data/lib/em/process_watch.rb +45 -0
  78. data/lib/em/processes.rb +123 -0
  79. data/lib/em/protocols.rb +36 -0
  80. data/lib/em/protocols/header_and_content.rb +138 -0
  81. data/lib/em/protocols/httpclient.rb +279 -0
  82. data/lib/em/protocols/httpclient2.rb +600 -0
  83. data/lib/em/protocols/line_and_text.rb +125 -0
  84. data/lib/em/protocols/line_protocol.rb +29 -0
  85. data/lib/em/protocols/linetext2.rb +161 -0
  86. data/lib/em/protocols/memcache.rb +331 -0
  87. data/lib/em/protocols/object_protocol.rb +46 -0
  88. data/lib/em/protocols/postgres3.rb +246 -0
  89. data/lib/em/protocols/saslauth.rb +175 -0
  90. data/lib/em/protocols/smtpclient.rb +365 -0
  91. data/lib/em/protocols/smtpserver.rb +640 -0
  92. data/lib/em/protocols/socks4.rb +66 -0
  93. data/lib/em/protocols/stomp.rb +202 -0
  94. data/lib/em/protocols/tcptest.rb +54 -0
  95. data/lib/em/pure_ruby.rb +1017 -0
  96. data/lib/em/queue.rb +71 -0
  97. data/lib/em/resolver.rb +195 -0
  98. data/lib/em/spawnable.rb +84 -0
  99. data/lib/em/streamer.rb +118 -0
  100. data/lib/em/threaded_resource.rb +90 -0
  101. data/lib/em/tick_loop.rb +85 -0
  102. data/lib/em/timers.rb +61 -0
  103. data/lib/em/version.rb +3 -0
  104. data/lib/eventmachine.rb +1517 -0
  105. data/lib/jeventmachine.rb +279 -0
  106. data/rakelib/cpp.rake_example +77 -0
  107. data/rakelib/package.rake +98 -0
  108. data/rakelib/test.rake +8 -0
  109. data/tests/client.crt +31 -0
  110. data/tests/client.key +51 -0
  111. data/tests/em_test_helper.rb +64 -0
  112. data/tests/test_attach.rb +126 -0
  113. data/tests/test_basic.rb +294 -0
  114. data/tests/test_channel.rb +62 -0
  115. data/tests/test_completion.rb +177 -0
  116. data/tests/test_connection_count.rb +33 -0
  117. data/tests/test_defer.rb +18 -0
  118. data/tests/test_deferrable.rb +35 -0
  119. data/tests/test_epoll.rb +134 -0
  120. data/tests/test_error_handler.rb +38 -0
  121. data/tests/test_exc.rb +28 -0
  122. data/tests/test_file_watch.rb +65 -0
  123. data/tests/test_futures.rb +170 -0
  124. data/tests/test_get_sock_opt.rb +37 -0
  125. data/tests/test_handler_check.rb +35 -0
  126. data/tests/test_hc.rb +155 -0
  127. data/tests/test_httpclient.rb +190 -0
  128. data/tests/test_httpclient2.rb +128 -0
  129. data/tests/test_inactivity_timeout.rb +54 -0
  130. data/tests/test_ipv4.rb +128 -0
  131. data/tests/test_ipv6.rb +135 -0
  132. data/tests/test_kb.rb +34 -0
  133. data/tests/test_ltp.rb +138 -0
  134. data/tests/test_ltp2.rb +288 -0
  135. data/tests/test_next_tick.rb +104 -0
  136. data/tests/test_object_protocol.rb +36 -0
  137. data/tests/test_pause.rb +78 -0
  138. data/tests/test_pending_connect_timeout.rb +52 -0
  139. data/tests/test_pool.rb +194 -0
  140. data/tests/test_process_watch.rb +48 -0
  141. data/tests/test_processes.rb +133 -0
  142. data/tests/test_proxy_connection.rb +168 -0
  143. data/tests/test_pure.rb +88 -0
  144. data/tests/test_queue.rb +50 -0
  145. data/tests/test_resolver.rb +55 -0
  146. data/tests/test_running.rb +14 -0
  147. data/tests/test_sasl.rb +47 -0
  148. data/tests/test_send_file.rb +217 -0
  149. data/tests/test_servers.rb +33 -0
  150. data/tests/test_set_sock_opt.rb +41 -0
  151. data/tests/test_shutdown_hooks.rb +23 -0
  152. data/tests/test_smtpclient.rb +55 -0
  153. data/tests/test_smtpserver.rb +57 -0
  154. data/tests/test_spawn.rb +293 -0
  155. data/tests/test_ssl_args.rb +78 -0
  156. data/tests/test_ssl_methods.rb +48 -0
  157. data/tests/test_ssl_verify.rb +82 -0
  158. data/tests/test_threaded_resource.rb +53 -0
  159. data/tests/test_tick_loop.rb +59 -0
  160. data/tests/test_timers.rb +123 -0
  161. data/tests/test_ud.rb +8 -0
  162. data/tests/test_udp46.rb +54 -0
  163. data/tests/test_unbind_reason.rb +48 -0
  164. metadata +319 -0
@@ -0,0 +1,66 @@
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+ #--
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+ #
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+ # Author:: Francis Cianfrocca (gmail: blackhedd)
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+ # Homepage:: http://rubyeventmachine.com
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+ # Date:: 16 Jul 2006
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+ #
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+ # See EventMachine and EventMachine::Connection for documentation and
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+ # usage examples.
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+ #
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+ #----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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+ #
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+ # Copyright (C) 2006-07 by Francis Cianfrocca. All Rights Reserved.
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+ # Gmail: blackhedd
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+ #
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+ # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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+ # it under the terms of either: 1) the GNU General Public License
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+ # as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
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+ # License, or (at your option) any later version; or 2) Ruby's License.
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+ #
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+ # See the file COPYING for complete licensing information.
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+ #
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+ #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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+ #
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+ #
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+
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+ =begin
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+
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+ Message Routing in EventMachine.
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+
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+ The goal here is to enable "routing points," objects that can send and receive
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+ "messages," which are delimited streams of bytes. The boundaries of a message
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+ are preserved as it passes through the reactor system.
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+
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+ There will be several module methods defined in EventMachine to create route-point
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+ objects (which will probably have a base class of EventMachine::MessageRouter
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+ until someone suggests a better name).
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+
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+ As with I/O objects, routing objects will receive events by having the router
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+ core call methods on them. And of course user code can and will define handlers
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+ to deal with events of interest.
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+
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+ The message router base class only really needs a receive_message method. There will
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+ be an EM module-method to send messages, in addition to the module methods to create
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+ the various kinds of message receivers.
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+
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+ The simplest kind of message receiver object can receive messages by being named
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+ explicitly in a parameter to EM#send_message. More sophisticated receivers can define
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+ pub-sub selectors and message-queue names. And they can also define channels for
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+ route-points in other processes or even on other machines.
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+
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+ A message is NOT a marshallable entity. Rather, it's a chunk of flat content more like
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+ an Erlang message. Initially, all content submitted for transmission as a message will
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+ have the to_s method called on it. Eventually, we'll be able to transmit certain structured
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+ data types (XML and YAML documents, Structs within limits) and have them reconstructed
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+ on the other end.
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+
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+ A fundamental goal of the message-routing capability is to interoperate seamlessly with
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+ external systems, including non-Ruby systems like ActiveMQ. We will define various protocol
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+ handlers for things like Stomp and possibly AMQP, but these will be wrapped up and hidden
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+ from the users of the basic routing capability.
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+
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+ As with Erlang, a critical goal is for programs that are built to use message-passing to work
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+ WITHOUT CHANGE when the code is re-based on a multi-process system.
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+
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+ =end
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+
@@ -0,0 +1,151 @@
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+ module EventMachine
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+ # = EventMachine::Pool
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+ #
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+ # A simple async resource pool based on a resource and work queue. Resources
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+ # are enqueued and work waits for resources to become available.
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+ #
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+ # Example:
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+ #
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+ # EM.run do
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+ # pool = EM::Pool.new
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+ # spawn = lambda { pool.add EM::HttpRequest.new('http://example.org') }
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+ # 10.times { spawn[] }
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+ # done, scheduled = 0, 0
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+ #
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+ # check = lambda do
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+ # done += 1
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+ # if done >= scheduled
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+ # EM.stop
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+ # end
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+ # end
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+ #
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+ # pool.on_error { |conn| spawn[] }
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+ #
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+ # 100.times do
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+ # pool.perform do |conn|
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+ # req = conn.get :path => '/', :keepalive => true
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+ #
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+ # req.callback do
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+ # p [:success, conn.object_id, i, req.response.size]
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+ # check[]
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+ # end
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+ #
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+ # req.errback { check[] }
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+ #
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+ # req
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+ # end
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+ # end
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+ # end
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+ #
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+ # Resources are expected to be controlled by an object responding to a
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+ # deferrable/completion style API with callback and errback blocks.
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+ #
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+ class Pool
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+
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+ def initialize
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+ @resources = EM::Queue.new
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+ @removed = []
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+ @contents = []
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+ @on_error = nil
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+ end
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+
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+ def add resource
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+ @contents << resource
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+ requeue resource
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+ end
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+
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+ def remove resource
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+ @contents.delete resource
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+ @removed << resource
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+ end
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+
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+ # Returns a list for introspection purposes only. You should *NEVER* call
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+ # modification or work oriented methods on objects in this list. A good
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+ # example use case is periodic statistics collection against a set of
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+ # connection resources.
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+ #
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+ # For example:
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+ # pool.contents.inject(0) { |sum, connection| connection.num_bytes }
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+ def contents
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+ @contents.dup
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+ end
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+
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+ # Define a default catch-all for when the deferrables returned by work
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+ # blocks enter a failed state. By default all that happens is that the
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+ # resource is returned to the pool. If on_error is defined, this block is
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+ # responsible for re-adding the resource to the pool if it is still usable.
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+ # In other words, it is generally assumed that on_error blocks explicitly
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+ # handle the rest of the lifetime of the resource.
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+ def on_error *a, &b
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+ @on_error = EM::Callback(*a, &b)
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+ end
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+
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+ # Perform a given #call-able object or block. The callable object will be
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+ # called with a resource from the pool as soon as one is available, and is
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+ # expected to return a deferrable.
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+ #
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+ # The deferrable will have callback and errback added such that when the
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+ # deferrable enters a finished state, the object is returned to the pool.
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+ #
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+ # If on_error is defined, then objects are not automatically returned to the
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+ # pool.
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+ def perform(*a, &b)
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+ work = EM::Callback(*a, &b)
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+
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+ @resources.pop do |resource|
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+ if removed? resource
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+ @removed.delete resource
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+ reschedule work
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+ else
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+ process work, resource
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+ end
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+ end
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+ end
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+ alias reschedule perform
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+
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+ # A peek at the number of enqueued jobs waiting for resources
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+ def num_waiting
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+ @resources.num_waiting
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+ end
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+
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+ # Removed will show resources in a partial pruned state. Resources in the
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+ # removed list may not appear in the contents list if they are currently in
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+ # use.
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+ def removed? resource
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+ @removed.include? resource
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+ end
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+
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+ protected
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+ def requeue resource
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+ @resources.push resource
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+ end
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+
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+ def failure resource
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+ if @on_error
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+ @contents.delete resource
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+ @on_error.call resource
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+ # Prevent users from calling a leak.
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+ @removed.delete resource
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+ else
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+ requeue resource
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+ end
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+ end
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+
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+ def completion deferrable, resource
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+ deferrable.callback { requeue resource }
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+ deferrable.errback { failure resource }
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+ end
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+
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+ def process work, resource
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+ deferrable = work.call resource
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+ if deferrable.kind_of?(EM::Deferrable)
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+ completion deferrable, resource
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+ else
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+ raise ArgumentError, "deferrable expected from work"
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+ end
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+ rescue Exception
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+ failure resource
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+ raise
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+ end
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+ end
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+ end
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+ module EventMachine
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+
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+ # This is subclassed from EventMachine::Connection for use with the process monitoring API. Read the
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+ # documentation on the instance methods of this class, and for a full explanation see EventMachine.watch_process.
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+ class ProcessWatch < Connection
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+ # @private
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+ Cfork = 'fork'.freeze
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+ # @private
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+ Cexit = 'exit'.freeze
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+
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+ # @private
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+ def receive_data(data)
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+ case data
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+ when Cfork
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+ process_forked
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+ when Cexit
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+ process_exited
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+ end
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+ end
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+
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+ # Returns the pid that EventMachine::watch_process was originally called with.
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+ def pid
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+ @pid
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+ end
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+
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+ # Should be redefined with the user's custom callback that will be fired when the prcess is forked.
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+ #
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+ # There is currently not an easy way to get the pid of the forked child.
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+ def process_forked
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+ end
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+
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+ # Should be redefined with the user's custom callback that will be fired when the process exits.
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+ #
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+ # stop_watching is called automatically after this callback
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+ def process_exited
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+ end
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+
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+ # Discontinue monitoring of the process.
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+ # This will be called automatically when a process dies. User code may call it as well.
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+ def stop_watching
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+ EventMachine::unwatch_pid(@signature)
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+ end
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+ end
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+
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+ end
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+ #--
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+ #
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+ # Author:: Francis Cianfrocca (gmail: blackhedd)
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+ # Homepage:: http://rubyeventmachine.com
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+ # Date:: 13 Dec 07
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+ #
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+ # See EventMachine and EventMachine::Connection for documentation and
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+ # usage examples.
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+ #
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+ #----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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+ #
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+ # Copyright (C) 2006-08 by Francis Cianfrocca. All Rights Reserved.
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+ # Gmail: blackhedd
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+ #
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+ # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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+ # it under the terms of either: 1) the GNU General Public License
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+ # as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
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+ # License, or (at your option) any later version; or 2) Ruby's License.
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+ #
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+ # See the file COPYING for complete licensing information.
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+ #
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+ #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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+ #
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+ #
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+
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+
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+ module EventMachine
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+
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+ # EM::DeferrableChildProcess is a sugaring of a common use-case
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+ # involving EM::popen.
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+ # Call the #open method on EM::DeferrableChildProcess, passing
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+ # a command-string. #open immediately returns an EM::Deferrable
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+ # object. It also schedules the forking of a child process, which
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+ # will execute the command passed to #open.
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+ # When the forked child terminates, the Deferrable will be signalled
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+ # and execute its callbacks, passing the data that the child process
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+ # wrote to stdout.
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+ #
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+ class DeferrableChildProcess < EventMachine::Connection
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+ include EventMachine::Deferrable
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+
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+ # @private
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+ def initialize
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+ super
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+ @data = []
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+ end
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+
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+ # Sugars a common use-case involving forked child processes.
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+ # #open takes a String argument containing an shell command
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+ # string (including arguments if desired). #open immediately
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+ # returns an EventMachine::Deferrable object, without blocking.
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+ #
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+ # It also invokes EventMachine#popen to run the passed-in
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+ # command in a forked child process.
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+ #
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+ # When the forked child terminates, the Deferrable that
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+ # #open calls its callbacks, passing the data returned
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+ # from the child process.
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+ #
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+ def self.open cmd
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+ EventMachine.popen( cmd, DeferrableChildProcess )
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+ end
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+
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+ # @private
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+ def receive_data data
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+ @data << data
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+ end
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+
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+ # @private
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+ def unbind
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+ succeed( @data.join )
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+ end
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+ end
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+
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+ # @private
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+ class SystemCmd < EventMachine::Connection
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+ def initialize cb
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+ @cb = cb
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+ @output = []
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+ end
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+ def receive_data data
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+ @output << data
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+ end
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+ def unbind
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+ @cb.call @output.join(''), get_status if @cb
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+ end
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+ end
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+
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+ # EM::system is a simple wrapper for EM::popen. It is similar to Kernel::system, but requires a
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+ # single string argument for the command and performs no shell expansion.
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+ #
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+ # The block or proc passed to EM::system is called with two arguments: the output generated by the command,
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+ # and a Process::Status that contains information about the command's execution.
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+ #
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+ # EM.run{
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+ # EM.system('ls'){ |output,status| puts output if status.exitstatus == 0 }
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+ # }
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+ #
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+ # You can also supply an additional proc to send some data to the process:
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+ #
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+ # EM.run{
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+ # EM.system('sh', proc{ |process|
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+ # process.send_data("echo hello\n")
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+ # process.send_data("exit\n")
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+ # }, proc{ |out,status|
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+ # puts(out)
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+ # })
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+ # }
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+ #
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+ # Like EventMachine.popen, EventMachine.system currently does not work on windows.
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+ # It returns the pid of the spawned process.
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+ def EventMachine::system cmd, *args, &cb
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+ cb ||= args.pop if args.last.is_a? Proc
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+ init = args.pop if args.last.is_a? Proc
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+
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+ # merge remaining arguments into the command
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+ cmd = ([cmd] + args.map{|a|a.to_s.dump}).join(' ')
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+
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+ EM.get_subprocess_pid(EM.popen(cmd, SystemCmd, cb) do |c|
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+ init[c] if init
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+ end.signature)
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+ end
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+ end
@@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
1
+ module EventMachine
2
+ # This module contains various protocol implementations, including:
3
+ # - HttpClient and HttpClient2
4
+ # - Stomp
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+ # - Memcache
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+ # - SmtpClient and SmtpServer
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+ # - SASLauth and SASLauthclient
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+ # - LineProtocol, LineAndTextProtocol and LineText2
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+ # - HeaderAndContentProtocol
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+ # - Postgres3
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+ # - ObjectProtocol
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+ #
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+ # The protocol implementations live in separate files in the protocols/ subdirectory,
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+ # but are auto-loaded when they are first referenced in your application.
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+ #
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+ # EventMachine::Protocols is also aliased to EM::P for easier usage.
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+ #
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+ module Protocols
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+ # TODO : various autotools are completely useless with the lack of naming
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+ # convention, we need to correct that!
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+ autoload :TcpConnectTester, 'em/protocols/tcptest'
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+ autoload :HttpClient, 'em/protocols/httpclient'
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+ autoload :HttpClient2, 'em/protocols/httpclient2'
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+ autoload :LineAndTextProtocol, 'em/protocols/line_and_text'
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+ autoload :HeaderAndContentProtocol, 'em/protocols/header_and_content'
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+ autoload :LineText2, 'em/protocols/linetext2'
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+ autoload :Stomp, 'em/protocols/stomp'
28
+ autoload :SmtpClient, 'em/protocols/smtpclient'
29
+ autoload :SmtpServer, 'em/protocols/smtpserver'
30
+ autoload :SASLauth, 'em/protocols/saslauth'
31
+ autoload :Memcache, 'em/protocols/memcache'
32
+ autoload :Postgres3, 'em/protocols/postgres3'
33
+ autoload :ObjectProtocol, 'em/protocols/object_protocol'
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+ autoload :Socks4, 'em/protocols/socks4'
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+ end
36
+ end
@@ -0,0 +1,138 @@
1
+ #--
2
+ #
3
+ # Author:: Francis Cianfrocca (gmail: blackhedd)
4
+ # Homepage:: http://rubyeventmachine.com
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+ # Date:: 15 Nov 2006
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+ #
7
+ # See EventMachine and EventMachine::Connection for documentation and
8
+ # usage examples.
9
+ #
10
+ #----------------------------------------------------------------------------
11
+ #
12
+ # Copyright (C) 2006-07 by Francis Cianfrocca. All Rights Reserved.
13
+ # Gmail: blackhedd
14
+ #
15
+ # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
16
+ # it under the terms of either: 1) the GNU General Public License
17
+ # as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
18
+ # License, or (at your option) any later version; or 2) Ruby's License.
19
+ #
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+ # See the file COPYING for complete licensing information.
21
+ #
22
+ #---------------------------------------------------------------------------
23
+ #
24
+ #
25
+
26
+ module EventMachine
27
+ module Protocols
28
+
29
+ # === Usage
30
+ #
31
+ # class RequestHandler < EM::P::HeaderAndContentProtocol
32
+ # def receive_request headers, content
33
+ # p [:request, headers, content]
34
+ # end
35
+ # end
36
+ #
37
+ # EM.run{
38
+ # EM.start_server 'localhost', 80, RequestHandler
39
+ # }
40
+ #
41
+ #--
42
+ # Originally, this subclassed LineAndTextProtocol, which in
43
+ # turn relies on BufferedTokenizer, which doesn't gracefully
44
+ # handle the transitions between lines and binary text.
45
+ # Changed 13Sep08 by FCianfrocca.
46
+ class HeaderAndContentProtocol < Connection
47
+ include LineText2
48
+
49
+ ContentLengthPattern = /Content-length:\s*(\d+)/i
50
+
51
+ def initialize *args
52
+ super
53
+ init_for_request
54
+ end
55
+
56
+ def receive_line line
57
+ case @hc_mode
58
+ when :discard_blanks
59
+ unless line == ""
60
+ @hc_mode = :headers
61
+ receive_line line
62
+ end
63
+ when :headers
64
+ if line == ""
65
+ raise "unrecognized state" unless @hc_headers.length > 0
66
+ if respond_to?(:receive_headers)
67
+ receive_headers @hc_headers
68
+ end
69
+ # @hc_content_length will be nil, not 0, if there was no content-length header.
70
+ if @hc_content_length.to_i > 0
71
+ set_binary_mode @hc_content_length
72
+ else
73
+ dispatch_request
74
+ end
75
+ else
76
+ @hc_headers << line
77
+ if ContentLengthPattern =~ line
78
+ # There are some attacks that rely on sending multiple content-length
79
+ # headers. This is a crude protection, but needs to become tunable.
80
+ raise "extraneous content-length header" if @hc_content_length
81
+ @hc_content_length = $1.to_i
82
+ end
83
+ if @hc_headers.length == 1 and respond_to?(:receive_first_header_line)
84
+ receive_first_header_line line
85
+ end
86
+ end
87
+ else
88
+ raise "internal error, unsupported mode"
89
+ end
90
+ end
91
+
92
+ def receive_binary_data text
93
+ @hc_content = text
94
+ dispatch_request
95
+ end
96
+
97
+ def dispatch_request
98
+ if respond_to?(:receive_request)
99
+ receive_request @hc_headers, @hc_content
100
+ end
101
+ init_for_request
102
+ end
103
+ private :dispatch_request
104
+
105
+ def init_for_request
106
+ @hc_mode = :discard_blanks
107
+ @hc_headers = []
108
+ # originally was @hc_headers ||= []; @hc_headers.clear to get a performance
109
+ # boost, but it's counterproductive because a subclassed handler will have to
110
+ # call dup to use the header array we pass in receive_headers.
111
+
112
+ @hc_content_length = nil
113
+ @hc_content = ""
114
+ end
115
+ private :init_for_request
116
+
117
+ # Basically a convenience method. We might create a subclass that does this
118
+ # automatically. But it's such a performance killer.
119
+ def headers_2_hash hdrs
120
+ self.class.headers_2_hash hdrs
121
+ end
122
+
123
+ class << self
124
+ def headers_2_hash hdrs
125
+ hash = {}
126
+ hdrs.each {|h|
127
+ if /\A([^\s:]+)\s*:\s*/ =~ h
128
+ tail = $'.dup
129
+ hash[ $1.downcase.gsub(/-/,"_").intern ] = tail
130
+ end
131
+ }
132
+ hash
133
+ end
134
+ end
135
+
136
+ end
137
+ end
138
+ end