//------------------------------------------------------------------------------ /* This file is part of Beast: https://github.com/vinniefalco/Beast Copyright 2013, Vinnie Falco Portions of this file are from JUCE. Copyright (c) 2013 - Raw Material Software Ltd. Please visit http://www.juce.com Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL , DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. */ //============================================================================== #ifndef BEAST_WAITABLEEVENT_BEASTHEADER #define BEAST_WAITABLEEVENT_BEASTHEADER #include "../text/beast_String.h" //============================================================================== /** Allows threads to wait for events triggered by other threads. A thread can call wait() on a WaitableObject, and this will suspend the calling thread until another thread wakes it up by calling the signal() method. */ class BEAST_API WaitableEvent : LeakChecked , Uncopyable { public: //============================================================================== /** Creates a WaitableEvent object. @param manualReset If this is false, the event will be reset automatically when the wait() method is called. If manualReset is true, then once the event is signalled, the only way to reset it will be by calling the reset() method. */ explicit WaitableEvent (bool manualReset = false) noexcept; /** Destructor. If other threads are waiting on this object when it gets deleted, this can cause nasty errors, so be careful! */ ~WaitableEvent() noexcept; //============================================================================== /** Suspends the calling thread until the event has been signalled. This will wait until the object's signal() method is called by another thread, or until the timeout expires. After the event has been signalled, this method will return true and if manualReset was set to false in the WaitableEvent's constructor, then the event will be reset. @param timeOutMilliseconds the maximum time to wait, in milliseconds. A negative value will cause it to wait forever. @returns true if the object has been signalled, false if the timeout expires first. @see signal, reset */ bool wait (int timeOutMilliseconds = -1) const noexcept; //============================================================================== /** Wakes up any threads that are currently waiting on this object. If signal() is called when nothing is waiting, the next thread to call wait() will return immediately and reset the signal. If the WaitableEvent is manual reset, all current and future threads that wait upon this object will be woken, until reset() is explicitly called. If the WaitableEvent is automatic reset, and one or more threads is waiting upon the object, then one of them will be woken up. If no threads are currently waiting, then the next thread to call wait() will be woken up. As soon as a thread is woken, the signal is automatically reset. @see wait, reset */ void signal() const noexcept; //============================================================================== /** Resets the event to an unsignalled state. If it's not already signalled, this does nothing. */ void reset() const noexcept; private: //============================================================================== #if BEAST_WINDOWS void* internal; #else mutable pthread_cond_t condition; mutable pthread_mutex_t mutex; mutable bool triggered, manualReset; #endif }; #endif // BEAST_WAITABLEEVENT_BEASTHEADER