Foreign.Concurrent
Copyright | (c) The University of Glasgow 2003 |
---|---|
License | BSD-style (see the file libraries/base/LICENSE) |
Maintainer | [email protected] |
Stability | provisional |
Portability | non-portable (requires concurrency) |
Safe Haskell | Trustworthy |
Language | Haskell2010 |
Description
FFI datatypes and operations that use or require concurrency (GHC only).
Concurrency-based ForeignPtr operations
These functions generalize their namesakes in the portable Foreign.ForeignPtr module by allowing arbitrary IO
actions as finalizers. These finalizers necessarily run in a separate thread, cf. Destructors, Finalizers and Synchronization, by Hans Boehm, POPL, 2003.
newForeignPtr :: Ptr a -> IO () -> IO (ForeignPtr a) Source
Turns a plain memory reference into a foreign object by associating a finalizer - given by the monadic operation - with the reference. The storage manager will start the finalizer, in a separate thread, some time after the last reference to the ForeignPtr
is dropped. There is no guarantee of promptness, and in fact there is no guarantee that the finalizer will eventually run at all.
Note that references from a finalizer do not necessarily prevent another object from being finalized. If A's finalizer refers to B (perhaps using touchForeignPtr
, then the only guarantee is that B's finalizer will never be started before A's. If both A and B are unreachable, then both finalizers will start together. See touchForeignPtr
for more on finalizer ordering.
addForeignPtrFinalizer :: ForeignPtr a -> IO () -> IO () Source
This function adds a finalizer to the given ForeignPtr
. The finalizer will run before all other finalizers for the same object which have already been registered.
This is a variant of addForeignPtrFinalizer
, where the finalizer is an arbitrary IO
action. When it is invoked, the finalizer will run in a new thread.
NB. Be very careful with these finalizers. One common trap is that if a finalizer references another finalized value, it does not prevent that value from being finalized. In particular, Handle
s are finalized objects, so a finalizer should not refer to a Handle
(including stdout
, stdin
, or stderr
).
© The University of Glasgow and others
Licensed under a BSD-style license (see top of the page).
https://downloads.haskell.org/~ghc/8.10.2/docs/html/libraries/base-4.14.1.0/Foreign-Concurrent.html