| Portability | non-portable | 
|---|---|
| Stability | experimental | 
| Maintainer | libraries@haskell.org | 
| Safe Haskell | Trustworthy | 
System.Timeout
Description
Attach a timeout event to arbitrary IO computations.
Documentation
timeout :: Int -> IO a -> IO (Maybe a)Source
Wrap an IO computation to time out and return Nothing in case no result
 is available within n microseconds (1/10^6 seconds). In case a result
 is available before the timeout expires, Just a is returned. A negative
 timeout interval means "wait indefinitely". When specifying long timeouts,
 be careful not to exceed maxBound :: Int.
The design of this combinator was guided by the objective that timeout n f
 should behave exactly the same as f as long as f doesn't time out. This
 means that f has the same myThreadId it would have without the timeout
 wrapper. Any exceptions f might throw cancel the timeout and propagate
 further up. It also possible for f to receive exceptions thrown to it by
 another thread.
A tricky implementation detail is the question of how to abort an IO
 computation. This combinator relies on asynchronous exceptions internally.
 The technique works very well for computations executing inside of the
 Haskell runtime system, but it doesn't work at all for non-Haskell code.
 Foreign function calls, for example, cannot be timed out with this
 combinator simply because an arbitrary C function cannot receive
 asynchronous exceptions. When timeout is used to wrap an FFI call that
 blocks, no timeout event can be delivered until the FFI call returns, which
 pretty much negates the purpose of the combinator. In practice, however,
 this limitation is less severe than it may sound. Standard I/O functions
 like hGetBuf, hPutBuf, Network.Socket.accept, or
 hWaitForInput appear to be blocking, but they really don't
 because the runtime system uses scheduling mechanisms like select(2) to
 perform asynchronous I/O, so it is possible to interrupt standard socket
 I/O or file I/O using this combinator.