1Future(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Future(3)
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3
4
6 "Future" - represent an operation awaiting completion
7
9 my $future = Future->new;
10
11 perform_some_operation(
12 on_complete => sub {
13 $future->done( @_ );
14 }
15 );
16
17 $future->on_ready( sub {
18 say "The operation is complete";
19 } );
20
22 A "Future" object represents an operation that is currently in
23 progress, or has recently completed. It can be used in a variety of
24 ways to manage the flow of control, and data, through an asynchronous
25 program.
26
27 Some futures represent a single operation and are explicitly marked as
28 ready by calling the "done" or "fail" methods. These are called "leaf"
29 futures here, and are returned by the "new" constructor.
30
31 Other futures represent a collection of sub-tasks, and are implicitly
32 marked as ready depending on the readiness of their component futures
33 as required. These are called "convergent" futures here as they
34 converge control and data-flow back into one place. These are the ones
35 returned by the various "wait_*" and "need_*" constructors.
36
37 It is intended that library functions that perform asynchronous
38 operations would use future objects to represent outstanding
39 operations, and allow their calling programs to control or wait for
40 these operations to complete. The implementation and the user of such
41 an interface would typically make use of different methods on the
42 class. The methods below are documented in two sections; those of
43 interest to each side of the interface.
44
45 It should be noted however, that this module does not in any way
46 provide an actual mechanism for performing this asynchronous activity;
47 it merely provides a way to create objects that can be used for control
48 and data flow around those operations. It allows such code to be
49 written in a neater, forward-reading manner, and simplifies many common
50 patterns that are often involved in such situations.
51
52 See also Future::Utils which contains useful loop-constructing
53 functions, to run a future-returning function repeatedly in a loop.
54
55 Unless otherwise noted, the following methods require at least version
56 0.08.
57
58 FAILURE CATEGORIES
59 While not directly required by "Future" or its related modules, a
60 growing convention of "Future"-using code is to encode extra semantics
61 in the arguments given to the "fail" method, to represent different
62 kinds of failure.
63
64 The convention is that after the initial message string as the first
65 required argument (intended for display to humans), the second argument
66 is a short lowercase string that relates in some way to the kind of
67 failure that occurred. Following this is a list of details about that
68 kind of failure, whose exact arrangement or structure are determined by
69 the failure category. For example, IO::Async and Net::Async::HTTP use
70 this convention to indicate at what stage a given HTTP request has
71 failed:
72
73 ->fail( $message, http => ... ) # an HTTP-level error during protocol
74 ->fail( $message, connect => ... ) # a TCP-level failure to connect a
75 # socket
76 ->fail( $message, resolve => ... ) # a resolver (likely DNS) failure
77 # to resolve a hostname
78
79 By following this convention, a module remains consistent with other
80 "Future"-based modules, and makes it easy for program logic to
81 gracefully handle and manage failures by use of the "catch" method.
82
83 SUBCLASSING
84 This class easily supports being subclassed to provide extra behavior,
85 such as giving the "get" method the ability to block and wait for
86 completion. This may be useful to provide "Future" subclasses with
87 event systems, or similar.
88
89 Each method that returns a new future object will use the invocant to
90 construct its return value. If the constructor needs to perform per-
91 instance setup it can override the "new" method, and take context from
92 the given instance.
93
94 sub new
95 {
96 my $proto = shift;
97 my $self = $proto->SUPER::new;
98
99 if( ref $proto ) {
100 # Prototype was an instance
101 }
102 else {
103 # Prototype was a class
104 }
105
106 return $self;
107 }
108
109 If an instance overrides the "block_until_ready" method, this will be
110 called by "get" and "failure" if the instance is still pending.
111
112 In most cases this should allow future-returning modules to be used as
113 if they were blocking call/return-style modules, by simply appending a
114 "get" call to the function or method calls.
115
116 my ( $results, $here ) = future_returning_function( @args )->get;
117
118 DEBUGGING
119 By the time a "Future" object is destroyed, it ought to have been
120 completed or cancelled. By enabling debug tracing of objects, this fact
121 can be checked. If a future object is destroyed without having been
122 completed or cancelled, a warning message is printed.
123
124 $ PERL_FUTURE_DEBUG=1 perl -MFuture -E 'my $f = Future->new'
125 Future=HASH(0xaa61f8) was constructed at -e line 1 and was lost near -e line 0 before it was ready.
126
127 Note that due to a limitation of perl's "caller" function within a
128 "DESTROY" destructor method, the exact location of the leak cannot be
129 accurately determined. Often the leak will occur due to falling out of
130 scope by returning from a function; in this case the leak location may
131 be reported as being the line following the line calling that function.
132
133 $ PERL_FUTURE_DEBUG=1 perl -MFuture
134 sub foo {
135 my $f = Future->new;
136 }
137
138 foo();
139 print "Finished\n";
140
141 Future=HASH(0x14a2220) was constructed at - line 2 and was lost near - line 6 before it was ready.
142 Finished
143
144 A warning is also printed in debug mode if a "Future" object is
145 destroyed that completed with a failure, but the object believes that
146 failure has not been reported anywhere.
147
148 $ PERL_FUTURE_DEBUG=1 perl -Mblib -MFuture -E 'my $f = Future->fail("Oops")'
149 Future=HASH(0xac98f8) was constructed at -e line 1 and was lost near -e line 0 with an unreported failure of: Oops
150
151 Such a failure is considered reported if the "get" or "failure" methods
152 are called on it, or it had at least one "on_ready" or "on_fail"
153 callback, or its failure is propagated to another "Future" instance (by
154 a sequencing or converging method).
155
156 Future::AsyncAwait::Awaitable ROLE
157 Since version 0.43 this module provides the
158 Future::AsyncAwait::Awaitable API. Subclass authors should note that
159 several of the API methods are provided by special optimised internal
160 methods, which may require overriding in your subclass if your
161 internals are different from that of this module.
162
164 new
165 $future = Future->new
166
167 $future = $orig->new
168
169 Returns a new "Future" instance to represent a leaf future. It will be
170 marked as ready by any of the "done", "fail", or "cancel" methods. It
171 can be called either as a class method, or as an instance method.
172 Called on an instance it will construct another in the same class, and
173 is useful for subclassing.
174
175 This constructor would primarily be used by implementations of
176 asynchronous interfaces.
177
178 done (class method)
179 fail (class method)
180 $future = Future->done( @values )
181
182 $future = Future->fail( $exception, $category, @details )
183
184 Since version 0.26.
185
186 Shortcut wrappers around creating a new "Future" then immediately
187 marking it as done or failed.
188
189 wrap
190 $future = Future->wrap( @values )
191
192 Since version 0.14.
193
194 If given a single argument which is already a "Future" reference, this
195 will be returned unmodified. Otherwise, returns a new "Future" instance
196 that is already complete, and will yield the given values.
197
198 This will ensure that an incoming argument is definitely a "Future",
199 and may be useful in such cases as adapting synchronous code to fit
200 asynchronous libraries driven by "Future".
201
202 call
203 $future = Future->call( \&code, @args )
204
205 Since version 0.15.
206
207 A convenient wrapper for calling a "CODE" reference that is expected to
208 return a future. In normal circumstances is equivalent to
209
210 $future = $code->( @args )
211
212 except that if the code throws an exception, it is wrapped in a new
213 immediate fail future. If the return value from the code is not a
214 blessed "Future" reference, an immediate fail future is returned
215 instead to complain about this fact.
216
218 As there are a lare number of methods on this class, they are
219 documented here in several sections.
220
222 The following methods query the internal state of a Future instance
223 without modifying it or otherwise causing side-effects.
224
225 is_ready
226 $ready = $future->is_ready
227
228 Returns true on a leaf future if a result has been provided to the
229 "done" method, failed using the "fail" method, or cancelled using the
230 "cancel" method.
231
232 Returns true on a convergent future if it is ready to yield a result,
233 depending on its component futures.
234
235 is_done
236 $done = $future->is_done
237
238 Returns true on a future if it is ready and completed successfully.
239 Returns false if it is still pending, failed, or was cancelled.
240
241 is_failed
242 $failed = $future->is_failed
243
244 Since version 0.26.
245
246 Returns true on a future if it is ready and it failed. Returns false if
247 it is still pending, completed successfully, or was cancelled.
248
249 is_cancelled
250 $cancelled = $future->is_cancelled
251
252 Returns true if the future has been cancelled by "cancel".
253
254 state
255 $str = $future->state
256
257 Since version 0.36.
258
259 Returns a string describing the state of the future, as one of the
260 three states named above; namely "done", "failed" or "cancelled", or
261 "pending" if it is none of these.
262
264 These methods would primarily be used by implementations of
265 asynchronous interfaces.
266
267 done
268 $future->done( @result )
269
270 Marks that the leaf future is now ready, and provides a list of values
271 as a result. (The empty list is allowed, and still indicates the future
272 as ready). Cannot be called on a convergent future.
273
274 If the future is already cancelled, this request is ignored. If the
275 future is already complete with a result or a failure, an exception is
276 thrown.
277
278 fail
279 $future->fail( $exception, $category, @details )
280
281 Marks that the leaf future has failed, and provides an exception value.
282 This exception will be thrown by the "get" method if called.
283
284 The exception must evaluate as a true value; false exceptions are not
285 allowed. A failure category name and other further details may be
286 provided that will be returned by the "failure" method in list context.
287
288 If the future is already cancelled, this request is ignored. If the
289 future is already complete with a result or a failure, an exception is
290 thrown.
291
292 If passed a Future::Exception instance (i.e. an object previously
293 thrown by the "get"), the additional details will be preserved. This
294 allows the additional details to be transparently preserved by such
295 code as
296
297 ...
298 catch {
299 return Future->fail($@);
300 }
301
302 die
303 $future->die( $message, $category, @details )
304
305 Since version 0.09.
306
307 A convenient wrapper around "fail". If the exception is a non-reference
308 that does not end in a linefeed, its value will be extended by the file
309 and line number of the caller, similar to the logic that "die" uses.
310
311 Returns the $future.
312
313 on_cancel
314 $future->on_cancel( $code )
315
316 If the future is not yet ready, adds a callback to be invoked if the
317 future is cancelled by the "cancel" method. If the future is already
318 ready the method is ignored.
319
320 If the future is later cancelled, the callbacks will be invoked in the
321 reverse order to that in which they were registered.
322
323 $on_cancel->( $future )
324
325 If passed another "Future" instance, the passed instance will be
326 cancelled when the original future is cancelled. In this case, the
327 reference is only strongly held while the target future remains
328 pending. If it becomes ready, then there is no point trying to cancel
329 it, and so it is removed from the originating future's cancellation
330 list.
331
333 These methods would primarily be used by users of asynchronous
334 interfaces, on objects returned by such an interface.
335
336 on_ready
337 $future->on_ready( $code )
338
339 If the future is not yet ready, adds a callback to be invoked when the
340 future is ready. If the future is already ready, invokes it
341 immediately.
342
343 In either case, the callback will be passed the future object itself.
344 The invoked code can then obtain the list of results by calling the
345 "get" method.
346
347 $on_ready->( $future )
348
349 If passed another "Future" instance, the passed instance will have its
350 "done", "fail" or "cancel" methods invoked when the original future
351 completes successfully, fails, or is cancelled respectively.
352
353 Returns the $future.
354
355 get
356 @result = $future->get
357
358 $result = $future->get
359
360 If the future is ready and completed successfully, returns the list of
361 results that had earlier been given to the "done" method on a leaf
362 future, or the list of component futures it was waiting for on a
363 convergent future. In scalar context it returns just the first result
364 value.
365
366 If the future is ready but failed, this method raises as an exception
367 the failure that was given to the "fail" method. If additional details
368 were given to the "fail" method, an exception object is constructed to
369 wrap them of type Future::Exception.
370
371 If the future was cancelled an exception is thrown.
372
373 If it is not yet ready then "block_until_ready" is invoked to wait for
374 a ready state.
375
376 block_until_ready
377 $f = $f->block_until_ready
378
379 Since version 0.40.
380
381 Blocks until the future instance is no longer pending.
382
383 Returns the invocant future itself, so it is useful for chaining.
384
385 Usually, calling code would either force the future using "get", or use
386 either "then" chaining or "async/await" syntax to wait for results.
387 This method is useful in cases where the exception-throwing part of
388 "get" is not required, perhaps because other code will be testing the
389 result using "is_done" or similar.
390
391 if( $f->block_until_ready->is_done ) {
392 ...
393 }
394
395 This method is intended for subclasses to override, but a default
396 implementation for back-compatibility purposes is provided which calls
397 the "await" method. If the future is not yet ready, attempts to wait
398 for an eventual result by using the underlying "await" method, which
399 subclasses should provide. The default implementation will throw an
400 exception if called on a still-pending instance that does not provide
401 an "await" method.
402
403 unwrap
404 @values = Future->unwrap( @values )
405
406 Since version 0.26.
407
408 If given a single argument which is a "Future" reference, this method
409 will call "get" on it and return the result. Otherwise, it returns the
410 list of values directly in list context, or the first value in scalar.
411 Since it involves an implicit blocking wait, this method can only be
412 used on immediate futures or subclasses that implement
413 "block_until_ready".
414
415 This will ensure that an outgoing argument is definitely not a
416 "Future", and may be useful in such cases as adapting synchronous code
417 to fit asynchronous libraries that return "Future" instances.
418
419 on_done
420 $future->on_done( $code )
421
422 If the future is not yet ready, adds a callback to be invoked when the
423 future is ready, if it completes successfully. If the future completed
424 successfully, invokes it immediately. If it failed or was cancelled, it
425 is not invoked at all.
426
427 The callback will be passed the result passed to the "done" method.
428
429 $on_done->( @result )
430
431 If passed another "Future" instance, the passed instance will have its
432 "done" method invoked when the original future completes successfully.
433
434 Returns the $future.
435
436 failure
437 $exception = $future->failure
438
439 $exception, $category, @details = $future->failure
440
441 If the future is ready, returns the exception passed to the "fail"
442 method or "undef" if the future completed successfully via the "done"
443 method.
444
445 If it is not yet ready then "block_until_ready" is invoked to wait for
446 a ready state.
447
448 If called in list context, will additionally yield the category name
449 and list of the details provided to the "fail" method.
450
451 Because the exception value must be true, this can be used in a simple
452 "if" statement:
453
454 if( my $exception = $future->failure ) {
455 ...
456 }
457 else {
458 my @result = $future->get;
459 ...
460 }
461
462 on_fail
463 $future->on_fail( $code )
464
465 If the future is not yet ready, adds a callback to be invoked when the
466 future is ready, if it fails. If the future has already failed, invokes
467 it immediately. If it completed successfully or was cancelled, it is
468 not invoked at all.
469
470 The callback will be passed the exception and other details passed to
471 the "fail" method.
472
473 $on_fail->( $exception, $category, @details )
474
475 If passed another "Future" instance, the passed instance will have its
476 "fail" method invoked when the original future fails.
477
478 To invoke a "done" method on a future when another one fails, use a
479 CODE reference:
480
481 $future->on_fail( sub { $f->done( @_ ) } );
482
483 Returns the $future.
484
485 cancel
486 $future->cancel
487
488 Requests that the future be cancelled, immediately marking it as ready.
489 This will invoke all of the code blocks registered by "on_cancel", in
490 the reverse order. When called on a convergent future, all its
491 component futures are also cancelled. It is not an error to attempt to
492 cancel a future that is already complete or cancelled; it simply has no
493 effect.
494
495 Returns the $future.
496
498 The following methods all return a new future to represent the
499 combination of its invocant followed by another action given by a code
500 reference. The combined activity waits for the first future to be
501 ready, then may invoke the code depending on the success or failure of
502 the first, or may run it regardless. The returned sequence future
503 represents the entire combination of activity.
504
505 In some cases the code should return a future; in some it should return
506 an immediate result. If a future is returned, the combined future will
507 then wait for the result of this second one. If the combinined future
508 is cancelled, it will cancel either the first future or the second,
509 depending whether the first had completed. If the code block throws an
510 exception instead of returning a value, the sequence future will fail
511 with that exception as its message and no further values.
512
513 As it is always a mistake to call these sequencing methods in void
514 context and lose the reference to the returned future (because
515 exception/error handling would be silently dropped), this method warns
516 in void context.
517
518 then
519 $future = $f1->then( \&done_code )
520
521 Since version 0.13.
522
523 Returns a new sequencing "Future" that runs the code if the first
524 succeeds. Once $f1 succeeds the code reference will be invoked and is
525 passed the list of results. It should return a future, $f2. Once $f2
526 completes the sequence future will then be marked as complete with
527 whatever result $f2 gave. If $f1 fails then the sequence future will
528 immediately fail with the same failure and the code will not be
529 invoked.
530
531 $f2 = $done_code->( @result )
532
533 else
534 $future = $f1->else( \&fail_code )
535
536 Since version 0.13.
537
538 Returns a new sequencing "Future" that runs the code if the first
539 fails. Once $f1 fails the code reference will be invoked and is passed
540 the failure and other details. It should return a future, $f2. Once $f2
541 completes the sequence future will then be marked as complete with
542 whatever result $f2 gave. If $f1 succeeds then the sequence future will
543 immediately succeed with the same result and the code will not be
544 invoked.
545
546 $f2 = $fail_code->( $exception, $category, @details )
547
548 then (2 arguments)
549 $future = $f1->then( \&done_code, \&fail_code )
550
551 The "then" method can also be passed the $fail_code block as well,
552 giving a combination of "then" and "else" behaviour.
553
554 This operation is designed to be compatible with the semantics of other
555 future systems, such as Javascript's Q or Promises/A libraries.
556
557 catch
558 $future = $f1->catch(
559 name => \&code,
560 name => \&code, ...
561 )
562
563 Since version 0.33.
564
565 Returns a new sequencing "Future" that behaves like an "else" call
566 which dispatches to a choice of several alternative handling functions
567 depending on the kind of failure that occurred. If $f1 fails with a
568 category name (i.e. the second argument to the "fail" call) which
569 exactly matches one of the string names given, then the corresponding
570 code is invoked, being passed the same arguments as a plain "else" call
571 would take, and is expected to return a "Future" in the same way.
572
573 $f2 = $code->( $exception, $category, @details )
574
575 If $f1 does not fail, fails without a category name at all, or fails
576 with a category name that does not match any given to the "catch"
577 method, then the returned sequence future immediately completes with
578 the same result, and no block of code is invoked.
579
580 If passed an odd-sized list, the final argument gives a function to
581 invoke on failure if no other handler matches.
582
583 $future = $f1->catch(
584 name => \&code, ...
585 \&fail_code,
586 )
587
588 This feature is currently still a work-in-progress. It currently can
589 only cope with category names that are literal strings, which are all
590 distinct. A later version may define other kinds of match (e.g.
591 regexp), may specify some sort of ordering on the arguments, or any of
592 several other semantic extensions. For more detail on the ongoing
593 design, see <https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=103545>.
594
595 then (multiple arguments)
596 $future = $f1->then( \&done_code, @catch_list, \&fail_code )
597
598 Since version 0.33.
599
600 The "then" method can be passed an even-sized list inbetween the
601 $done_code and the $fail_code, with the same meaning as the "catch"
602 method.
603
604 transform
605 $future = $f1->transform( %args )
606
607 Returns a new sequencing "Future" that wraps the one given as $f1. With
608 no arguments this will be a trivial wrapper; $future will complete or
609 fail when $f1 does, and $f1 will be cancelled when $future is.
610
611 By passing the following named arguments, the returned $future can be
612 made to behave differently to $f1:
613
614 done => CODE
615 Provides a function to use to modify the result of a successful
616 completion. When $f1 completes successfully, the result of its
617 "get" method is passed into this function, and whatever it
618 returns is passed to the "done" method of $future
619
620 fail => CODE
621 Provides a function to use to modify the result of a failure.
622 When $f1 fails, the result of its "failure" method is passed
623 into this function, and whatever it returns is passed to the
624 "fail" method of $future.
625
626 then_with_f
627 $future = $f1->then_with_f( ... )
628
629 Since version 0.21.
630
631 Returns a new sequencing "Future" that behaves like "then", but also
632 passes the original future, $f1, to any functions it invokes.
633
634 $f2 = $done_code->( $f1, @result )
635 $f2 = $catch_code->( $f1, $category, @details )
636 $f2 = $fail_code->( $f1, $category, @details )
637
638 This is useful for conditional execution cases where the code block may
639 just return the same result of the original future. In this case it is
640 more efficient to return the original future itself.
641
642 then_done
643 then_fail
644 $future = $f->then_done( @result )
645
646 $future = $f->then_fail( $exception, $category, @details )
647
648 Since version 0.22.
649
650 Convenient shortcuts to returning an immediate future from a "then"
651 block, when the result is already known.
652
653 else_with_f
654 $future = $f1->else_with_f( \&code )
655
656 Since version 0.21.
657
658 Returns a new sequencing "Future" that runs the code if the first
659 fails. Identical to "else", except that the code reference will be
660 passed both the original future, $f1, and its exception and other
661 details.
662
663 $f2 = $code->( $f1, $exception, $category, @details )
664
665 This is useful for conditional execution cases where the code block may
666 just return the same result of the original future. In this case it is
667 more efficient to return the original future itself.
668
669 else_done
670 else_fail
671 $future = $f->else_done( @result )
672
673 $future = $f->else_fail( $exception, $category, @details )
674
675 Since version 0.22.
676
677 Convenient shortcuts to returning an immediate future from a "else"
678 block, when the result is already known.
679
680 catch_with_f
681 $future = $f1->catch_with_f( ... )
682
683 Since version 0.33.
684
685 Returns a new sequencing "Future" that behaves like "catch", but also
686 passes the original future, $f1, to any functions it invokes.
687
688 followed_by
689 $future = $f1->followed_by( \&code )
690
691 Returns a new sequencing "Future" that runs the code regardless of
692 success or failure. Once $f1 is ready the code reference will be
693 invoked and is passed one argument, $f1. It should return a future,
694 $f2. Once $f2 completes the sequence future will then be marked as
695 complete with whatever result $f2 gave.
696
697 $f2 = $code->( $f1 )
698
699 without_cancel
700 $future = $f1->without_cancel
701
702 Since version 0.30.
703
704 Returns a new sequencing "Future" that will complete with the success
705 or failure of the original future, but if cancelled, will not cancel
706 the original. This may be useful if the original future represents an
707 operation that is being shared among multiple sequences; cancelling one
708 should not prevent the others from running too.
709
710 retain
711 $f = $f->retain
712
713 Since version 0.36.
714
715 Creates a reference cycle which causes the future to remain in memory
716 until it completes. Returns the invocant future.
717
718 In normal situations, a "Future" instance does not strongly hold a
719 reference to other futures that it is feeding a result into, instead
720 relying on that to be handled by application logic. This is normally
721 fine because some part of the application will retain the top-level
722 Future, which then strongly refers to each of its components down in a
723 tree. However, certain design patterns, such as mixed Future-based and
724 legacy callback-based API styles might end up creating Futures simply
725 to attach callback functions to them. In that situation, without
726 further attention, the Future may get lost due to having no strong
727 references to it. Calling "->retain" on it creates such a reference
728 which ensures it persists until it completes. For example:
729
730 Future->needs_all( $fA, $fB )
731 ->on_done( $on_done )
732 ->on_fail( $on_fail )
733 ->retain;
734
736 The following constructors all take a list of component futures, and
737 return a new future whose readiness somehow depends on the readiness of
738 those components. The first derived class component future will be used
739 as the prototype for constructing the return value, so it respects
740 subclassing correctly, or failing that a plain "Future".
741
742 wait_all
743 $future = Future->wait_all( @subfutures )
744
745 Returns a new "Future" instance that will indicate it is ready once all
746 of the sub future objects given to it indicate that they are ready,
747 either by success, failure or cancellation. Its result will be a list
748 of its component futures.
749
750 When given an empty list this constructor returns a new immediately-
751 done future.
752
753 This constructor would primarily be used by users of asynchronous
754 interfaces.
755
756 wait_any
757 $future = Future->wait_any( @subfutures )
758
759 Returns a new "Future" instance that will indicate it is ready once any
760 of the sub future objects given to it indicate that they are ready,
761 either by success or failure. Any remaining component futures that are
762 not yet ready will be cancelled. Its result will be the result of the
763 first component future that was ready; either success or failure. Any
764 component futures that are cancelled are ignored, apart from the final
765 component left; at which point the result will be a failure.
766
767 When given an empty list this constructor returns an immediately-failed
768 future.
769
770 This constructor would primarily be used by users of asynchronous
771 interfaces.
772
773 needs_all
774 $future = Future->needs_all( @subfutures )
775
776 Returns a new "Future" instance that will indicate it is ready once all
777 of the sub future objects given to it indicate that they have completed
778 successfully, or when any of them indicates that they have failed. If
779 any sub future fails, then this will fail immediately, and the
780 remaining subs not yet ready will be cancelled. Any component futures
781 that are cancelled will cause an immediate failure of the result.
782
783 If successful, its result will be a concatenated list of the results of
784 all its component futures, in corresponding order. If it fails, its
785 failure will be that of the first component future that failed. To
786 access each component future's results individually, use
787 "done_futures".
788
789 When given an empty list this constructor returns a new immediately-
790 done future.
791
792 This constructor would primarily be used by users of asynchronous
793 interfaces.
794
795 needs_any
796 $future = Future->needs_any( @subfutures )
797
798 Returns a new "Future" instance that will indicate it is ready once any
799 of the sub future objects given to it indicate that they have completed
800 successfully, or when all of them indicate that they have failed. If
801 any sub future succeeds, then this will succeed immediately, and the
802 remaining subs not yet ready will be cancelled. Any component futures
803 that are cancelled are ignored, apart from the final component left; at
804 which point the result will be a failure.
805
806 If successful, its result will be that of the first component future
807 that succeeded. If it fails, its failure will be that of the last
808 component future to fail. To access the other failures, use
809 "failed_futures".
810
811 Normally when this future completes successfully, only one of its
812 component futures will be done. If it is constructed with multiple that
813 are already done however, then all of these will be returned from
814 "done_futures". Users should be careful to still check all the results
815 from "done_futures" in that case.
816
817 When given an empty list this constructor returns an immediately-failed
818 future.
819
820 This constructor would primarily be used by users of asynchronous
821 interfaces.
822
824 The following methods apply to convergent (i.e. non-leaf) futures, to
825 access the component futures stored by it.
826
827 pending_futures
828 @f = $future->pending_futures
829
830 ready_futures
831 @f = $future->ready_futures
832
833 done_futures
834 @f = $future->done_futures
835
836 failed_futures
837 @f = $future->failed_futures
838
839 cancelled_futures
840 @f = $future->cancelled_futures
841
842 Return a list of all the pending, ready, done, failed, or cancelled
843 component futures. In scalar context, each will yield the number of
844 such component futures.
845
847 set_label
848 label
849 $future = $future->set_label( $label )
850
851 $label = $future->label
852
853 Since version 0.28.
854
855 Chaining mutator and accessor for the label of the "Future". This
856 should be a plain string value, whose value will be stored by the
857 future instance for use in debugging messages or other tooling, or
858 similar purposes.
859
860 btime
861 rtime
862 [ $sec, $usec ] = $future->btime
863
864 [ $sec, $usec ] = $future->rtime
865
866 Since version 0.28.
867
868 Accessors that return the tracing timestamps from the instance. These
869 give the time the instance was constructed ("birth" time, "btime") and
870 the time the result was determined (the "ready" time, "rtime"). Each
871 result is returned as a two-element ARRAY ref, containing the epoch
872 time in seconds and microseconds, as given by
873 "Time::HiRes::gettimeofday".
874
875 In order for these times to be captured, they have to be enabled by
876 setting $Future::TIMES to a true value. This is initialised true at the
877 time the module is loaded if either "PERL_FUTURE_DEBUG" or
878 "PERL_FUTURE_TIMES" are set in the environment.
879
880 elapsed
881 $sec = $future->elapsed
882
883 Since version 0.28.
884
885 If both tracing timestamps are defined, returns the number of seconds
886 of elapsed time between them as a floating-point number. If not,
887 returns "undef".
888
889 wrap_cb
890 $cb = $future->wrap_cb( $operation_name, $cb )
891
892 Since version 0.31.
893
894 Note: This method is experimental and may be changed or removed in a
895 later version.
896
897 This method is invoked internally by various methods that are about to
898 save a callback CODE reference supplied by the user, to be invoked
899 later. The default implementation simply returns the callback argument
900 as-is; the method is provided to allow users to provide extra
901 behaviour. This can be done by applying a method modifier of the
902 "around" kind, so in effect add a chain of wrappers. Each wrapper can
903 then perform its own wrapping logic of the callback. $operation_name is
904 a string giving the reason for which the callback is being saved;
905 currently one of "on_ready", "on_done", "on_fail" or "sequence"; the
906 latter being used for all the sequence-returning methods.
907
908 This method is intentionally invoked only for CODE references that are
909 being saved on a pending "Future" instance to be invoked at some later
910 point. It does not run for callbacks to be invoked on an already-
911 complete instance. This is for performance reasons, where the intended
912 behaviour is that the wrapper can provide some amount of context save
913 and restore, to return the operating environment for the callback back
914 to what it was at the time it was saved.
915
916 For example, the following wrapper saves the value of a package
917 variable at the time the callback was saved, and restores that value at
918 invocation time later on. This could be useful for preserving context
919 during logging in a Future-based program.
920
921 our $LOGGING_CTX;
922
923 no warnings 'redefine';
924
925 my $orig = Future->can( "wrap_cb" );
926 *Future::wrap_cb = sub {
927 my $cb = $orig->( @_ );
928
929 my $saved_logging_ctx = $LOGGING_CTX;
930
931 return sub {
932 local $LOGGING_CTX = $saved_logging_ctx;
933 $cb->( @_ );
934 };
935 };
936
937 At this point, any code deferred into a "Future" by any of its
938 callbacks will observe the $LOGGING_CTX variable as having the value it
939 held at the time the callback was saved, even if it is invoked later on
940 when that value is different.
941
942 Remember when writing such a wrapper, that it still needs to invoke the
943 previous version of the method, so that it plays nicely in combination
944 with others (see the "$orig->( @_ )" part).
945
947 The following examples all demonstrate possible uses of a "Future"
948 object to provide a fictional asynchronous API.
949
950 For more examples, comparing the use of "Future" with regular
951 call/return style Perl code, see also Future::Phrasebook.
952
953 Providing Results
954 By returning a new "Future" object each time the asynchronous function
955 is called, it provides a placeholder for its eventual result, and a way
956 to indicate when it is complete.
957
958 sub foperation
959 {
960 my %args = @_;
961
962 my $future = Future->new;
963
964 do_something_async(
965 foo => $args{foo},
966 on_done => sub { $future->done( @_ ); },
967 );
968
969 return $future;
970 }
971
972 In most cases, the "done" method will simply be invoked with the entire
973 result list as its arguments. In that case, it is convenient to use the
974 curry module to form a "CODE" reference that would invoke the "done"
975 method.
976
977 my $future = Future->new;
978
979 do_something_async(
980 foo => $args{foo},
981 on_done => $future->curry::done,
982 );
983
984 The caller may then use this future to wait for a result using the
985 "on_ready" method, and obtain the result using "get".
986
987 my $f = foperation( foo => "something" );
988
989 $f->on_ready( sub {
990 my $f = shift;
991 say "The operation returned: ", $f->get;
992 } );
993
994 Indicating Success or Failure
995 Because the stored exception value of a failed future may not be false,
996 the "failure" method can be used in a conditional statement to detect
997 success or failure.
998
999 my $f = foperation( foo => "something" );
1000
1001 $f->on_ready( sub {
1002 my $f = shift;
1003 if( not my $e = $f->failure ) {
1004 say "The operation succeeded with: ", $f->get;
1005 }
1006 else {
1007 say "The operation failed with: ", $e;
1008 }
1009 } );
1010
1011 By using "not" in the condition, the order of the "if" blocks can be
1012 arranged to put the successful case first, similar to a "try"/"catch"
1013 block.
1014
1015 Because the "get" method re-raises the passed exception if the future
1016 failed, it can be used to control a "try"/"catch" block directly. (This
1017 is sometimes called Exception Hoisting).
1018
1019 use Syntax::Keyword::Try;
1020
1021 $f->on_ready( sub {
1022 my $f = shift;
1023 try {
1024 say "The operation succeeded with: ", $f->get;
1025 }
1026 catch {
1027 say "The operation failed with: ", $_;
1028 }
1029 } );
1030
1031 Even neater still may be the separate use of the "on_done" and
1032 "on_fail" methods.
1033
1034 $f->on_done( sub {
1035 my @result = @_;
1036 say "The operation succeeded with: ", @result;
1037 } );
1038 $f->on_fail( sub {
1039 my ( $failure ) = @_;
1040 say "The operation failed with: $failure";
1041 } );
1042
1043 Immediate Futures
1044 Because the "done" method returns the future object itself, it can be
1045 used to generate a "Future" that is immediately ready with a result.
1046 This can also be used as a class method.
1047
1048 my $f = Future->done( $value );
1049
1050 Similarly, the "fail" and "die" methods can be used to generate a
1051 "Future" that is immediately failed.
1052
1053 my $f = Future->die( "This is never going to work" );
1054
1055 This could be considered similarly to a "die" call.
1056
1057 An "eval{}" block can be used to turn a "Future"-returning function
1058 that might throw an exception, into a "Future" that would indicate this
1059 failure.
1060
1061 my $f = eval { function() } || Future->fail( $@ );
1062
1063 This is neater handled by the "call" class method, which wraps the call
1064 in an "eval{}" block and tests the result:
1065
1066 my $f = Future->call( \&function );
1067
1068 Sequencing
1069 The "then" method can be used to create simple chains of dependent
1070 tasks, each one executing and returning a "Future" when the previous
1071 operation succeeds.
1072
1073 my $f = do_first()
1074 ->then( sub {
1075 return do_second();
1076 })
1077 ->then( sub {
1078 return do_third();
1079 });
1080
1081 The result of the $f future itself will be the result of the future
1082 returned by the final function, if none of them failed. If any of them
1083 fails it will fail with the same failure. This can be considered
1084 similar to normal exception handling in synchronous code; the first
1085 time a function call throws an exception, the subsequent calls are not
1086 made.
1087
1088 Merging Control Flow
1089 A "wait_all" future may be used to resynchronise control flow, while
1090 waiting for multiple concurrent operations to finish.
1091
1092 my $f1 = foperation( foo => "something" );
1093 my $f2 = foperation( bar => "something else" );
1094
1095 my $f = Future->wait_all( $f1, $f2 );
1096
1097 $f->on_ready( sub {
1098 say "Operations are ready:";
1099 say " foo: ", $f1->get;
1100 say " bar: ", $f2->get;
1101 } );
1102
1103 This provides an ability somewhat similar to "CPS::kpar()" or
1104 Async::MergePoint.
1105
1107 Cancellation of Non-Final Sequence Futures
1108 The behaviour of future cancellation still has some unanswered
1109 questions regarding how to handle the situation where a future is
1110 cancelled that has a sequence future constructed from it.
1111
1112 In particular, it is unclear in each of the following examples what the
1113 behaviour of $f2 should be, were $f1 to be cancelled:
1114
1115 $f2 = $f1->then( sub { ... } ); # plus related ->then_with_f, ...
1116
1117 $f2 = $f1->else( sub { ... } ); # plus related ->else_with_f, ...
1118
1119 $f2 = $f1->followed_by( sub { ... } );
1120
1121 In the "then"-style case it is likely that this situation should be
1122 treated as if $f1 had failed, perhaps with some special message. The
1123 "else"-style case is more complex, because it may be that the entire
1124 operation should still fail, or it may be that the cancellation of $f1
1125 should again be treated simply as a special kind of failure, and the
1126 "else" logic run as normal.
1127
1128 To be specific; in each case it is unclear what happens if the first
1129 future is cancelled, while the second one is still waiting on it. The
1130 semantics for "normal" top-down cancellation of $f2 and how it affects
1131 $f1 are already clear and defined.
1132
1133 Cancellation of Divergent Flow
1134 A further complication of cancellation comes from the case where a
1135 given future is reused multiple times for multiple sequences or
1136 convergent trees.
1137
1138 In particular, it is in clear in each of the following examples what
1139 the behaviour of $f2 should be, were $f1 to be cancelled:
1140
1141 my $f_initial = Future->new; ...
1142 my $f1 = $f_initial->then( ... );
1143 my $f2 = $f_initial->then( ... );
1144
1145 my $f1 = Future->needs_all( $f_initial );
1146 my $f2 = Future->needs_all( $f_initial );
1147
1148 The point of cancellation propagation is to trace backwards through
1149 stages of some larger sequence of operations that now no longer need to
1150 happen, because the final result is no longer required. But in each of
1151 these cases, just because $f1 has been cancelled, the initial future
1152 $f_initial is still required because there is another future ($f2) that
1153 will still require its result.
1154
1155 Initially it would appear that some kind of reference-counting
1156 mechanism could solve this question, though that itself is further
1157 complicated by the "on_ready" handler and its variants.
1158
1159 It may simply be that a comprehensive useful set of cancellation
1160 semantics can't be universally provided to cover all cases; and that
1161 some use-cases at least would require the application logic to give
1162 extra information to its "Future" objects on how they should wire up
1163 the cancel propagation logic.
1164
1165 Both of these cancellation issues are still under active design
1166 consideration; see the discussion on RT96685 for more information
1167 (<https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=96685>).
1168
1170 · Future::AsyncAwait - deferred subroutine syntax for futures
1171
1172 Provides a neat syntax extension for writing future-based code.
1173
1174 · Future::IO - Future-returning IO methods
1175
1176 Provides methods similar to core IO functions, which yield results
1177 by Futures.
1178
1179 · Promises - an implementation of the "Promise/A+" pattern for
1180 asynchronous programming
1181
1182 A different alternative implementation of a similar idea.
1183
1184 · curry - Create automatic curried method call closures for any class
1185 or object
1186
1187 · "The Past, The Present and The Future" - slides from a talk given
1188 at the London Perl Workshop, 2012.
1189
1190 <https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1UkV5oLcTOOXBXPh8foyxko4PR28_zU_aVx6gBms7uoo/edit>
1191
1192 · "Futures advent calendar 2013"
1193
1194 <http://leonerds-code.blogspot.co.uk/2013/12/futures-advent-day-1.html>
1195
1196 · "Asynchronous Programming with Futures" - YAPC::EU 2014
1197
1198 <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9dZgFM6FtE>
1199
1201 · Consider the ability to pass the constructor a "block" CODEref,
1202 instead of needing to use a subclass. This might simplify
1203 async/etc.. implementations, and allows the reuse of the idea of
1204 subclassing to extend the abilities of "Future" itself - for
1205 example to allow a kind of Future that can report incremental
1206 progress.
1207
1209 Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>
1210
1211
1212
1213perl v5.30.1 2020-01-30 Future(3)