| /* |
| * Event loop |
| * Copyright (c) 2002-2006, Jouni Malinen <j@w1.fi> |
| * |
| * This software may be distributed under the terms of the BSD license. |
| * See README for more details. |
| * |
| * This file defines an event loop interface that supports processing events |
| * from registered timeouts (i.e., do something after N seconds), sockets |
| * (e.g., a new packet available for reading), and signals. eloop.c is an |
| * implementation of this interface using select() and sockets. This is |
| * suitable for most UNIX/POSIX systems. When porting to other operating |
| * systems, it may be necessary to replace that implementation with OS specific |
| * mechanisms. |
| */ |
| |
| #ifndef ELOOP_H |
| #define ELOOP_H |
| |
| /** |
| * ELOOP_ALL_CTX - eloop_cancel_timeout() magic number to match all timeouts |
| */ |
| #define ELOOP_ALL_CTX (void *) -1 |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_event_type - eloop socket event type for eloop_register_sock() |
| * @EVENT_TYPE_READ: Socket has data available for reading |
| * @EVENT_TYPE_WRITE: Socket has room for new data to be written |
| * @EVENT_TYPE_EXCEPTION: An exception has been reported |
| */ |
| typedef enum { |
| EVENT_TYPE_READ = 0, |
| EVENT_TYPE_WRITE, |
| EVENT_TYPE_EXCEPTION |
| } eloop_event_type; |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_sock_handler - eloop socket event callback type |
| * @sock: File descriptor number for the socket |
| * @eloop_ctx: Registered callback context data (eloop_data) |
| * @sock_ctx: Registered callback context data (user_data) |
| */ |
| typedef void (*eloop_sock_handler)(int sock, void *eloop_ctx, void *sock_ctx); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_event_handler - eloop generic event callback type |
| * @eloop_ctx: Registered callback context data (eloop_data) |
| * @sock_ctx: Registered callback context data (user_data) |
| */ |
| typedef void (*eloop_event_handler)(void *eloop_data, void *user_ctx); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_timeout_handler - eloop timeout event callback type |
| * @eloop_ctx: Registered callback context data (eloop_data) |
| * @sock_ctx: Registered callback context data (user_data) |
| */ |
| typedef void (*eloop_timeout_handler)(void *eloop_data, void *user_ctx); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_signal_handler - eloop signal event callback type |
| * @sig: Signal number |
| * @signal_ctx: Registered callback context data (user_data from |
| * eloop_register_signal(), eloop_register_signal_terminate(), or |
| * eloop_register_signal_reconfig() call) |
| */ |
| typedef void (*eloop_signal_handler)(int sig, void *signal_ctx); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_init() - Initialize global event loop data |
| * Returns: 0 on success, -1 on failure |
| * |
| * This function must be called before any other eloop_* function. |
| */ |
| int eloop_init(void); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_register_read_sock - Register handler for read events |
| * @sock: File descriptor number for the socket |
| * @handler: Callback function to be called when data is available for reading |
| * @eloop_data: Callback context data (eloop_ctx) |
| * @user_data: Callback context data (sock_ctx) |
| * Returns: 0 on success, -1 on failure |
| * |
| * Register a read socket notifier for the given file descriptor. The handler |
| * function will be called whenever data is available for reading from the |
| * socket. The handler function is responsible for clearing the event after |
| * having processed it in order to avoid eloop from calling the handler again |
| * for the same event. |
| */ |
| int eloop_register_read_sock(int sock, eloop_sock_handler handler, |
| void *eloop_data, void *user_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_unregister_read_sock - Unregister handler for read events |
| * @sock: File descriptor number for the socket |
| * |
| * Unregister a read socket notifier that was previously registered with |
| * eloop_register_read_sock(). |
| */ |
| void eloop_unregister_read_sock(int sock); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_register_sock - Register handler for socket events |
| * @sock: File descriptor number for the socket |
| * @type: Type of event to wait for |
| * @handler: Callback function to be called when the event is triggered |
| * @eloop_data: Callback context data (eloop_ctx) |
| * @user_data: Callback context data (sock_ctx) |
| * Returns: 0 on success, -1 on failure |
| * |
| * Register an event notifier for the given socket's file descriptor. The |
| * handler function will be called whenever the that event is triggered for the |
| * socket. The handler function is responsible for clearing the event after |
| * having processed it in order to avoid eloop from calling the handler again |
| * for the same event. |
| */ |
| int eloop_register_sock(int sock, eloop_event_type type, |
| eloop_sock_handler handler, |
| void *eloop_data, void *user_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_unregister_sock - Unregister handler for socket events |
| * @sock: File descriptor number for the socket |
| * @type: Type of event for which sock was registered |
| * |
| * Unregister a socket event notifier that was previously registered with |
| * eloop_register_sock(). |
| */ |
| void eloop_unregister_sock(int sock, eloop_event_type type); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_register_event - Register handler for generic events |
| * @event: Event to wait (eloop implementation specific) |
| * @event_size: Size of event data |
| * @handler: Callback function to be called when event is triggered |
| * @eloop_data: Callback context data (eloop_data) |
| * @user_data: Callback context data (user_data) |
| * Returns: 0 on success, -1 on failure |
| * |
| * Register an event handler for the given event. This function is used to |
| * register eloop implementation specific events which are mainly targeted for |
| * operating system specific code (driver interface and l2_packet) since the |
| * portable code will not be able to use such an OS-specific call. The handler |
| * function will be called whenever the event is triggered. The handler |
| * function is responsible for clearing the event after having processed it in |
| * order to avoid eloop from calling the handler again for the same event. |
| * |
| * In case of Windows implementation (eloop_win.c), event pointer is of HANDLE |
| * type, i.e., void*. The callers are likely to have 'HANDLE h' type variable, |
| * and they would call this function with eloop_register_event(h, sizeof(h), |
| * ...). |
| */ |
| int eloop_register_event(void *event, size_t event_size, |
| eloop_event_handler handler, |
| void *eloop_data, void *user_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_unregister_event - Unregister handler for a generic event |
| * @event: Event to cancel (eloop implementation specific) |
| * @event_size: Size of event data |
| * |
| * Unregister a generic event notifier that was previously registered with |
| * eloop_register_event(). |
| */ |
| void eloop_unregister_event(void *event, size_t event_size); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_register_timeout - Register timeout |
| * @secs: Number of seconds to the timeout |
| * @usecs: Number of microseconds to the timeout |
| * @handler: Callback function to be called when timeout occurs |
| * @eloop_data: Callback context data (eloop_ctx) |
| * @user_data: Callback context data (sock_ctx) |
| * Returns: 0 on success, -1 on failure |
| * |
| * Register a timeout that will cause the handler function to be called after |
| * given time. |
| */ |
| int eloop_register_timeout(unsigned int secs, unsigned int usecs, |
| eloop_timeout_handler handler, |
| void *eloop_data, void *user_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_cancel_timeout - Cancel timeouts |
| * @handler: Matching callback function |
| * @eloop_data: Matching eloop_data or %ELOOP_ALL_CTX to match all |
| * @user_data: Matching user_data or %ELOOP_ALL_CTX to match all |
| * Returns: Number of cancelled timeouts |
| * |
| * Cancel matching <handler,eloop_data,user_data> timeouts registered with |
| * eloop_register_timeout(). ELOOP_ALL_CTX can be used as a wildcard for |
| * cancelling all timeouts regardless of eloop_data/user_data. |
| */ |
| int eloop_cancel_timeout(eloop_timeout_handler handler, |
| void *eloop_data, void *user_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_is_timeout_registered - Check if a timeout is already registered |
| * @handler: Matching callback function |
| * @eloop_data: Matching eloop_data |
| * @user_data: Matching user_data |
| * Returns: 1 if the timeout is registered, 0 if the timeout is not registered |
| * |
| * Determine if a matching <handler,eloop_data,user_data> timeout is registered |
| * with eloop_register_timeout(). |
| */ |
| int eloop_is_timeout_registered(eloop_timeout_handler handler, |
| void *eloop_data, void *user_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_register_signal - Register handler for signals |
| * @sig: Signal number (e.g., SIGHUP) |
| * @handler: Callback function to be called when the signal is received |
| * @user_data: Callback context data (signal_ctx) |
| * Returns: 0 on success, -1 on failure |
| * |
| * Register a callback function that will be called when a signal is received. |
| * The callback function is actually called only after the system signal |
| * handler has returned. This means that the normal limits for sighandlers |
| * (i.e., only "safe functions" allowed) do not apply for the registered |
| * callback. |
| */ |
| int eloop_register_signal(int sig, eloop_signal_handler handler, |
| void *user_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_register_signal_terminate - Register handler for terminate signals |
| * @handler: Callback function to be called when the signal is received |
| * @user_data: Callback context data (signal_ctx) |
| * Returns: 0 on success, -1 on failure |
| * |
| * Register a callback function that will be called when a process termination |
| * signal is received. The callback function is actually called only after the |
| * system signal handler has returned. This means that the normal limits for |
| * sighandlers (i.e., only "safe functions" allowed) do not apply for the |
| * registered callback. |
| * |
| * This function is a more portable version of eloop_register_signal() since |
| * the knowledge of exact details of the signals is hidden in eloop |
| * implementation. In case of operating systems using signal(), this function |
| * registers handlers for SIGINT and SIGTERM. |
| */ |
| int eloop_register_signal_terminate(eloop_signal_handler handler, |
| void *user_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_register_signal_reconfig - Register handler for reconfig signals |
| * @handler: Callback function to be called when the signal is received |
| * @user_data: Callback context data (signal_ctx) |
| * Returns: 0 on success, -1 on failure |
| * |
| * Register a callback function that will be called when a reconfiguration / |
| * hangup signal is received. The callback function is actually called only |
| * after the system signal handler has returned. This means that the normal |
| * limits for sighandlers (i.e., only "safe functions" allowed) do not apply |
| * for the registered callback. |
| * |
| * This function is a more portable version of eloop_register_signal() since |
| * the knowledge of exact details of the signals is hidden in eloop |
| * implementation. In case of operating systems using signal(), this function |
| * registers a handler for SIGHUP. |
| */ |
| int eloop_register_signal_reconfig(eloop_signal_handler handler, |
| void *user_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_run - Start the event loop |
| * |
| * Start the event loop and continue running as long as there are any |
| * registered event handlers. This function is run after event loop has been |
| * initialized with event_init() and one or more events have been registered. |
| */ |
| void eloop_run(void); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_terminate - Terminate event loop |
| * |
| * Terminate event loop even if there are registered events. This can be used |
| * to request the program to be terminated cleanly. |
| */ |
| void eloop_terminate(void); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_destroy - Free any resources allocated for the event loop |
| * |
| * After calling eloop_destroy(), other eloop_* functions must not be called |
| * before re-running eloop_init(). |
| */ |
| void eloop_destroy(void); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_terminated - Check whether event loop has been terminated |
| * Returns: 1 = event loop terminate, 0 = event loop still running |
| * |
| * This function can be used to check whether eloop_terminate() has been called |
| * to request termination of the event loop. This is normally used to abort |
| * operations that may still be queued to be run when eloop_terminate() was |
| * called. |
| */ |
| int eloop_terminated(void); |
| |
| /** |
| * eloop_wait_for_read_sock - Wait for a single reader |
| * @sock: File descriptor number for the socket |
| * |
| * Do a blocking wait for a single read socket. |
| */ |
| void eloop_wait_for_read_sock(int sock); |
| |
| #endif /* ELOOP_H */ |