{-# LANGUAGE DeriveDataTypeable #-} module Transient.EVars where import Transient.Base import Transient.Internals(runTransState,onNothing, EventF(..), killChildren) import qualified Data.Map as M import Data.Typeable import Control.Concurrent import Control.Applicative import Control.Concurrent.STM import Control.Monad.IO.Class import Control.Exception(SomeException) import Data.List(nub) import Control.Monad.State import Data.IORef data EVar a= EVar (TChan (StreamData a)) deriving Typeable -- | creates an EVar. -- -- Evars are event vars. `writeEVar` trigger the execution of all the continuations associated to the `readEVar` of this variable -- (the code that is after them). -- -- It is like the publish-subscribe pattern but without inversion of control, since a readEVar can be inserted at any place in the -- Transient flow. -- -- EVars are created upstream and can be used to communicate two sub-threads of the monad. Following the Transient philosophy they -- do not block his own thread if used with alternative operators, unlike the IORefs and TVars. And unlike STM vars, that are composable, -- they wait for their respective events, while TVars execute the whole expression when any variable is modified. -- -- The execution continues after the writeEVar when all subscribers have been executed. -- -- Now the continuations are executed in parallel. -- -- see https://www.fpcomplete.com/user/agocorona/publish-subscribe-variables-transient-effects-v -- newEVar :: TransIO (EVar a) newEVar = Transient $ do ref <-liftIO newBroadcastTChanIO return . Just $ EVar ref -- | delete al the subscriptions for an evar. cleanEVar :: EVar a -> TransIO () cleanEVar (EVar ref1)= liftIO $ atomically $ writeTChan ref1 SDone -- | read the EVar. It only succeed when the EVar is being updated -- The continuation gets registered to be executed whenever the variable is updated. -- -- if readEVar is re-executed in any kind of loop, since each continuation is different, this will register -- again. The effect is that the continuation will be executed multiple times -- To avoid multiple registrations, use `cleanEVar` readEVar :: EVar a -> TransIO a readEVar (EVar ref1)= do tchan <- liftIO . atomically $ dupTChan ref1 r <- parallel $ atomically $ readTChan tchan case r of SDone -> empty SMore x -> return x SLast x -> return x SError e -> empty -- error $ "readEVar: "++ show e -- | update the EVar and execute all readEVar blocks with "last in-first out" priority -- writeEVar (EVar ref1) x= liftIO $ atomically $ do writeTChan ref1 $ SMore x -- | write the EVar and drop all the `readEVar` handlers. -- -- It is like a combination of `writeEVar` and `cleanEVar` lastWriteEVar (EVar ref1) x= liftIO $ atomically $ do writeTChan ref1 $ SLast x