3.7 KiB
pipe Module
Since | Origin / Contributor | Maintainer | Source |
---|---|---|---|
2019-07-18 | Terry Ellison | Terry Ellison | pipe.c |
The pipe module provides RAM-efficient a means of passing character stream of records from one Lua task to another.
pipe.create()
Create a pipe.
Syntax
pobj = pipe.create([CB_function],[task_priority])
Parameters
CB_function
optional reader callback which is called through theǹode.task.post()
when the pipe is written to. If the CB returns a boolean, then the reposting action is forced: it is reposted if true and not if false. If the return is nil or omitted then the deault is to repost if a pipe write has occured since the last call.task_priority
Seeǹode.task.post()
Returns
A pipe resource.
pobj:read()
Read a record from a pipe object.
Note that the recommended method of reading from a pipe is to user a reader function as described below.
Syntax
pobj:read([size/end_char])
Parameters
size/end_char
- If numeric then a string of
size
length will be returned from the pipe. - If a string then this is a single character delimiter, followed by an optional "+" flag. The delimiter is used as an end-of-record to split the character stream into separate records. If the flag "+" is specified then the delimiter is also returned at the end of the record, otherwise it is discarded.
- If omitted, then this defaults to
"\n+"
- If numeric then a string of
Note that if the last record in the pipe is missing a delimiter or is too short, then it is still returned, emptying the pipe.
Returns
A string or nil
if the pipe is empty
Example
line = pobj:read('\n')
line = pobj:read(50)
pobj:reader()
Returns a Lua iterator function for a pipe object. This is as described in the
Lua Language: For Statement. (Note that the
state
and object
variables mentioned in 2.5.4 are optional and default to nil
, so this
conforms to to thefor
iterator syntax and works in a for because it maintains the state and pobj
internally as upvalues.
An emptied pipe takes up minimal RAM resources (an empty Lua array), and just like any other array this is reclaimed if all variables referencing it go out of scope or are over-written). Note that any reader iterators that you have created also refer to the pipe as an upval, so you will need to descard these to desope the pipe array.
Syntax
myFunc = pobj:reader([size/end_char])
Parameters
size/end_char
as forpobj:read()
Returns
myFunc
iterator function
Examples
- used in
for
loop:
for rec in p:reader() do print(rec) end
-- or
fp = p:reader()
-- ...
for rec in fp do print(rec) end
- used in callback task:
do
local pipe_reader = p:reader(1400)
local function flush(sk) -- Upvals flush, pipe_reader
local next = pipe_reader()
if next then
sk:send(next, flush)
else
sk:on('sent') -- dereference to allow GC
flush = nil
end
end
flush()
end
pobj:unread()
Write a string to a head of pipe object. This can be used to back-out a previous read.
Syntax
pobj:write(s)
Parameters
s
Any input string. Note that with all Lua strings, these may contain all character values including "\0".
Returns
Nothing
Example
a=p:read()
p:unread() -- restores pipe to state before the read
pobj:write()
Write a string to a pipe object.
Syntax
pobj:write(s)
Parameters
s
Any input string. Note that with all Lua strings, these may contain all character values including "\0".
Returns
Nothing