NAME
Mutex - Various locking implementations supporting processes and threads
VERSION
This document describes Mutex version 1.011
SYNOPSIS
use Mutex;
my $mutex = Mutex->new;
{
use MCE::Flow max_workers => 4;
mce_flow sub {
$mutex->lock;
# access shared resource
my $wid = MCE->wid; MCE->say($wid); sleep 1;
$mutex->unlock;
};
}
{
use MCE::Hobo;
MCE::Hobo->create('work', $_) for 1..4;
MCE::Hobo->waitall;
}
{
use threads;
threads->create('work', $_) for 5..8;
$_->join for ( threads->list );
}
sub work {
my ($id) = @_;
$mutex->lock;
# access shared resource
print $id, "\n";
sleep 1;
$mutex->unlock;
}
DESCRIPTION
This module, a standalone version of MCE::Mutex, implements locking methods that can be used to coordinate access to shared data from multiple workers spawned as processes or threads.
The inspiration for this module came from reading Mutex for Ruby.
API DOCUMENTATION
Mutex->new ( )
Mutex->new ( impl => "Channel" )
Mutex->new ( impl => "Flock", [ path => "/tmp/file.lock" ] )
Mutex->new ( path => "/tmp/file.lock" )
Creates a new mutex.
Channel locking (the default), unless path
is given, is through a pipe or socket depending on the platform. The advantage of channel locking is not having to re-establish handles inside new processes and threads.
For Fcntl-based locking, it is the responsibility of the caller to remove the tempfile
, associated with the mutex, when path is given. Otherwise, it establishes a tempfile
internally including removal on scope exit.
$mutex->impl ( void )
Returns the implementation used for the mutex.
$m1 = Mutex->new( );
$m1->impl(); # Channel
$m2 = Mutex->new( path => /tmp/my.lock );
$m2->impl(); # Flock
$m3 = Mutex->new( impl => "Channel" );
$m3->impl(); # Channel
$m4 = Mutex->new( impl => "Flock" );
$m4->impl(); # Flock
$mutex->lock ( void )
$mutex->lock_exclusive ( void )
Attempts to grab an exclusive lock and waits if not available. Multiple calls to mutex->lock by the same process or thread is safe. The mutex will remain locked until mutex->unlock is called.
The method lock_exclusive
is an alias for lock
.
( my $mutex = Mutex->new( path => $0 ) )->lock_exclusive;
$mutex->lock_shared ( void )
Like lock_exclusive
, but attempts to grab a shared lock instead. For non-Fcntl implementations, lock_shared
is an alias for lock
.
$guard = $mutex->guard_lock ( void )
This method calls lock
and returns a guard object. When the guard object is destroyed, it automatically calls unlock
.
Current API available since 1.010.
$mutex->unlock ( void )
Releases the lock. A held lock by an exiting process or thread is released automatically.
$mutex->synchronize ( sub { ... }, @_ )
$mutex->enter ( sub { ... }, @_ )
Obtains a lock, runs the code block, and releases the lock after the block completes. Optionally, the method is wantarray
aware.
my $val = $mutex->synchronize( sub {
# access shared resource
return 'scalar';
});
my @ret = $mutex->enter( sub {
# access shared resource
return @list;
});
The method enter
is an alias for synchronize
.
$mutex->timedwait ( floating_seconds )
Blocks until obtaining an exclusive lock. A false value is returned if the timeout is reached, and a true value otherwise. The default is 1 second.
my $mutex = Mutex->new( path => $0 );
# terminate script if a previous instance is still running
exit unless $mutex->timedwait( 2 );
...
REQUIREMENTS
Perl 5.8.1 or later.
AUTHOR
Mario E. Roy, <marioeroy AT gmail DOT com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2017-2023 by Mario E. Roy
Mutex is released under the same license as Perl.
See https://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.