.. _loop: :c:type:`uv_loop_t` --- Event loop ================================== The event loop is the central part of libuv's functionality. It takes care of polling for i/o and scheduling callbacks to be run based on different sources of events. Data types ---------- .. c:type:: uv_loop_t Loop data type. .. c:type:: uv_run_mode Mode used to run the loop with :c:func:`uv_run`. :: typedef enum { UV_RUN_DEFAULT = 0, UV_RUN_ONCE, UV_RUN_NOWAIT } uv_run_mode; .. c:type:: void (*uv_walk_cb)(uv_handle_t* handle, void* arg) Type definition for callback passed to :c:func:`uv_walk`. Public members ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. c:member:: void* uv_loop_t.data Space for user-defined arbitrary data. libuv does not use this field. libuv does, however, initialize it to NULL in :c:func:`uv_loop_init`, and it poisons the value (on debug builds) on :c:func:`uv_loop_close`. API --- .. c:function:: int uv_loop_init(uv_loop_t* loop) Initializes the given `uv_loop_t` structure. .. c:function:: int uv_loop_configure(uv_loop_t* loop, uv_loop_option option, ...) .. versionadded:: 1.0.2 Set additional loop options. You should normally call this before the first call to :c:func:`uv_run` unless mentioned otherwise. Returns 0 on success or a UV_E* error code on failure. Be prepared to handle UV_ENOSYS; it means the loop option is not supported by the platform. Supported options: - UV_LOOP_BLOCK_SIGNAL: Block a signal when polling for new events. The second argument to :c:func:`uv_loop_configure` is the signal number. This operation is currently only implemented for SIGPROF signals, to suppress unnecessary wakeups when using a sampling profiler. Requesting other signals will fail with UV_EINVAL. .. c:function:: int uv_loop_close(uv_loop_t* loop) Releases all internal loop resources. Call this function only when the loop has finished executing and all open handles and requests have been closed, or it will return UV_EBUSY. After this function returns, the user can free the memory allocated for the loop. .. c:function:: uv_loop_t* uv_default_loop(void) Returns the initialized default loop. It may return NULL in case of allocation failure. This function is just a convenient way for having a global loop throughout an application, the default loop is in no way different than the ones initialized with :c:func:`uv_loop_init`. As such, the default loop can (and should) be closed with :c:func:`uv_loop_close` so the resources associated with it are freed. .. c:function:: int uv_run(uv_loop_t* loop, uv_run_mode mode) This function runs the event loop. It will act differently depending on the specified mode: - UV_RUN_DEFAULT: Runs the event loop until there are no more active and referenced handles or requests. Returns non-zero if :c:func:`uv_stop` was called and there are still active handles or requests. Returns zero in all other cases. - UV_RUN_ONCE: Poll for i/o once. Note that this function blocks if there are no pending callbacks. Returns zero when done (no active handles or requests left), or non-zero if more callbacks are expected (meaning you should run the event loop again sometime in the future). - UV_RUN_NOWAIT: Poll for i/o once but don't block if there are no pending callbacks. Returns zero if done (no active handles or requests left), or non-zero if more callbacks are expected (meaning you should run the event loop again sometime in the future). .. c:function:: int uv_loop_alive(const uv_loop_t* loop) Returns non-zero if there are active handles or request in the loop. .. c:function:: void uv_stop(uv_loop_t* loop) Stop the event loop, causing :c:func:`uv_run` to end as soon as possible. This will happen not sooner than the next loop iteration. If this function was called before blocking for i/o, the loop won't block for i/o on this iteration. .. c:function:: size_t uv_loop_size(void) Returns the size of the `uv_loop_t` structure. Useful for FFI binding writers who don't want to know the structure layout. .. c:function:: int uv_backend_fd(const uv_loop_t* loop) Get backend file descriptor. Only kqueue, epoll and event ports are supported. This can be used in conjunction with `uv_run(loop, UV_RUN_NOWAIT)` to poll in one thread and run the event loop's callbacks in another see test/test-embed.c for an example. .. note:: Embedding a kqueue fd in another kqueue pollset doesn't work on all platforms. It's not an error to add the fd but it never generates events. .. c:function:: int uv_backend_timeout(const uv_loop_t* loop) Get the poll timeout. The return value is in milliseconds, or -1 for no timeout. .. c:function:: uint64_t uv_now(const uv_loop_t* loop) Return the current timestamp in milliseconds. The timestamp is cached at the start of the event loop tick, see :c:func:`uv_update_time` for details and rationale. The timestamp increases monotonically from some arbitrary point in time. Don't make assumptions about the starting point, you will only get disappointed. .. note:: Use :c:func:`uv_hrtime` if you need sub-millisecond granularity. .. c:function:: void uv_update_time(uv_loop_t* loop) Update the event loop's concept of "now". Libuv caches the current time at the start of the event loop tick in order to reduce the number of time-related system calls. You won't normally need to call this function unless you have callbacks that block the event loop for longer periods of time, where "longer" is somewhat subjective but probably on the order of a millisecond or more. .. c:function:: void uv_walk(uv_loop_t* loop, uv_walk_cb walk_cb, void* arg) Walk the list of handles: `walk_cb` will be executed with the given `arg`.