// Copyright (c) 2006-2008 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be // found in the LICENSE file. #ifndef BASE_WAITABLE_EVENT_WATCHER_H_ #define BASE_WAITABLE_EVENT_WATCHER_H_ #include "build/build_config.h" #if defined(OS_WIN) #include "base/object_watcher.h" #else #include "base/message_loop.h" #include "base/waitable_event.h" #endif namespace base { class Flag; class AsyncWaiter; class AsyncCallbackTask; class WaitableEvent; // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- // This class provides a way to wait on a WaitableEvent asynchronously. // // Each instance of this object can be waiting on a single WaitableEvent. When // the waitable event is signaled, a callback is made in the thread of a given // MessageLoop. This callback can be deleted by deleting the waiter. // // Typical usage: // // class MyClass : public base::WaitableEventWatcher::Delegate { // public: // void DoStuffWhenSignaled(WaitableEvent *waitable_event) { // watcher_.StartWatching(waitable_event, this); // } // virtual void OnWaitableEventSignaled(WaitableEvent* waitable_event) { // // OK, time to do stuff! // } // private: // base::WaitableEventWatcher watcher_; // }; // // In the above example, MyClass wants to "do stuff" when waitable_event // becomes signaled. WaitableEventWatcher makes this task easy. When MyClass // goes out of scope, the watcher_ will be destroyed, and there is no need to // worry about OnWaitableEventSignaled being called on a deleted MyClass // pointer. // // BEWARE: With automatically reset WaitableEvents, a signal may be lost if it // occurs just before a WaitableEventWatcher is deleted. There is currently no // safe way to stop watching an automatic reset WaitableEvent without possibly // missing a signal. // // NOTE: you /are/ allowed to delete the WaitableEvent while still waiting on // it with a Watcher. It will act as if the event was never signaled. // ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- class WaitableEventWatcher #if defined(OS_POSIX) : public MessageLoop::DestructionObserver #endif { public: WaitableEventWatcher(); ~WaitableEventWatcher(); class Delegate { public: virtual ~Delegate() { } // ------------------------------------------------------------------------- // This is called on the MessageLoop thread when WaitableEvent has been // signaled. // // Note: the event may not be signaled by the time that this function is // called. This indicates only that it has been signaled at some point in // the past. // ------------------------------------------------------------------------- virtual void OnWaitableEventSignaled(WaitableEvent* waitable_event) = 0; }; // --------------------------------------------------------------------------- // When @event is signaled, the given delegate is called on the thread of the // current message loop when StartWatching is called. The delegate is not // deleted. // --------------------------------------------------------------------------- bool StartWatching(WaitableEvent* event, Delegate* delegate); // --------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Cancel the current watch. Must be called from the same thread which // started the watch. // // Does nothing if no event is being watched, nor if the watch has completed. // The delegate will *not* be called for the current watch after this // function returns. Since the delegate runs on the same thread as this // function, it cannot be called during this function either. // --------------------------------------------------------------------------- void StopWatching(); // --------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Return the currently watched event, or NULL if no object is currently being // watched. // --------------------------------------------------------------------------- WaitableEvent* GetWatchedEvent(); private: WaitableEvent* event_; #if defined(OS_WIN) // --------------------------------------------------------------------------- // The helper class exists because, if WaitableEventWatcher were to inherit // from ObjectWatcher::Delegate, then it couldn't also have an inner class // called Delegate (at least on Windows). Thus this object exists to proxy // the callback function // --------------------------------------------------------------------------- class ObjectWatcherHelper : public ObjectWatcher::Delegate { public: ObjectWatcherHelper(WaitableEventWatcher* watcher); // ------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Implementation of ObjectWatcher::Delegate // ------------------------------------------------------------------------- void OnObjectSignaled(HANDLE h); private: WaitableEventWatcher *const watcher_; }; void OnObjectSignaled(); Delegate* delegate_; ObjectWatcherHelper helper_; ObjectWatcher watcher_; #else // --------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Implementation of MessageLoop::DestructionObserver // --------------------------------------------------------------------------- void WillDestroyCurrentMessageLoop(); MessageLoop* message_loop_; scoped_refptr cancel_flag_; AsyncWaiter* waiter_; AsyncCallbackTask* callback_task_; scoped_refptr kernel_; #endif }; } // namespace base #endif // BASE_WAITABLE_EVENT_WATCHER_H_