{-# LANGUAGE Trustworthy #-} {-# LANGUAGE CPP #-} ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- | -- Module : Control.Concurrent.Chan -- Copyright : (c) The University of Glasgow 2001 -- License : BSD-style (see the file libraries/base/LICENSE) -- -- Maintainer : libraries@haskell.org -- Stability : experimental -- Portability : non-portable (concurrency) -- -- Unbounded channels. -- -- The channels are implemented with @MVar@s and therefore inherit all the -- caveats that apply to @MVar@s (possibility of races, deadlocks etc). The -- stm (software transactional memory) library has a more robust implementation -- of channels called @TChan@s. -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- module Control.Concurrent.Chan ( -- * The 'Chan' type Chan, -- abstract -- * Operations newChan, writeChan, readChan, dupChan, -- * Stream interface getChanContents, writeList2Chan, ) where import System.IO.Unsafe ( unsafeInterleaveIO ) import Control.Concurrent.MVar import Control.Exception (mask_) #define _UPK_(x) {-# UNPACK #-} !(x) -- A channel is represented by two @MVar@s keeping track of the two ends -- of the channel contents,i.e., the read- and write ends. Empty @MVar@s -- are used to handle consumers trying to read from an empty channel. -- |'Chan' is an abstract type representing an unbounded FIFO channel. data Chan a = Chan _UPK_(MVar (Stream a)) _UPK_(MVar (Stream a)) -- Invariant: the Stream a is always an empty MVar deriving (Eq) type Stream a = MVar (ChItem a) data ChItem a = ChItem a _UPK_(Stream a) -- benchmarks show that unboxing the MVar here is worthwhile, because -- although it leads to higher allocation, the channel data takes up -- less space and is therefore quicker to GC. -- See the Concurrent Haskell paper for a diagram explaining the -- how the different channel operations proceed. -- @newChan@ sets up the read and write end of a channel by initialising -- these two @MVar@s with an empty @MVar@. -- |Build and returns a new instance of 'Chan'. newChan :: IO (Chan a) newChan = do hole <- newEmptyMVar readVar <- newMVar hole writeVar <- newMVar hole return (Chan readVar writeVar) -- To put an element on a channel, a new hole at the write end is created. -- What was previously the empty @MVar@ at the back of the channel is then -- filled in with a new stream element holding the entered value and the -- new hole. -- |Write a value to a 'Chan'. writeChan :: Chan a -> a -> IO () writeChan (Chan _ writeVar) val = do new_hole <- newEmptyMVar mask_ $ do old_hole <- takeMVar writeVar putMVar old_hole (ChItem val new_hole) putMVar writeVar new_hole -- The reason we don't simply do this: -- -- modifyMVar_ writeVar $ \old_hole -> do -- putMVar old_hole (ChItem val new_hole) -- return new_hole -- -- is because if an asynchronous exception is received after the 'putMVar' -- completes and before modifyMVar_ installs the new value, it will set the -- Chan's write end to a filled hole. -- |Read the next value from the 'Chan'. Blocks when the channel is empty. Since -- the read end of a channel is an 'MVar', this operation inherits fairness -- guarantees of 'MVar's (e.g. threads blocked in this operation are woken up in -- FIFO order). -- -- Throws 'BlockedIndefinitelyOnMVar' when the channel is empty and no other -- thread holds a reference to the channel. readChan :: Chan a -> IO a readChan (Chan readVar _) = do modifyMVarMasked readVar $ \read_end -> do -- Note [modifyMVarMasked] (ChItem val new_read_end) <- readMVar read_end -- Use readMVar here, not takeMVar, -- else dupChan doesn't work return (new_read_end, val) -- Note [modifyMVarMasked] -- This prevents a theoretical deadlock if an asynchronous exception -- happens during the readMVar while the MVar is empty. In that case -- the read_end MVar will be left empty, and subsequent readers will -- deadlock. Using modifyMVarMasked prevents this. The deadlock can -- be reproduced, but only by expanding readMVar and inserting an -- artificial yield between its takeMVar and putMVar operations. -- |Duplicate a 'Chan': the duplicate channel begins empty, but data written to -- either channel from then on will be available from both. Hence this creates -- a kind of broadcast channel, where data written by anyone is seen by -- everyone else. -- -- (Note that a duplicated channel is not equal to its original. -- So: @fmap (c /=) $ dupChan c@ returns @True@ for all @c@.) dupChan :: Chan a -> IO (Chan a) dupChan (Chan _ writeVar) = do hole <- readMVar writeVar newReadVar <- newMVar hole return (Chan newReadVar writeVar) -- Operators for interfacing with functional streams. -- |Return a lazy list representing the contents of the supplied -- 'Chan', much like 'System.IO.hGetContents'. getChanContents :: Chan a -> IO [a] getChanContents ch = unsafeInterleaveIO (do x <- readChan ch xs <- getChanContents ch return (x:xs) ) -- |Write an entire list of items to a 'Chan'. writeList2Chan :: Chan a -> [a] -> IO () writeList2Chan ch ls = sequence_ (map (writeChan ch) ls)