sd_event_new
systemd
sd_event_new
3
sd_event_new
sd_event_default
sd_event_ref
sd_event_unref
sd_event_unrefp
sd_event_get_tid
sd_event
Acquire and release an event loop object
#include <systemd/sd-event.h>
typedef struct sd_event sd_event;
int sd_event_new
sd_event **event
int sd_event_default
sd_event **event
sd_event *sd_event_ref
sd_event *event
sd_event *sd_event_unref
sd_event *event
void sd_event_unrefp
sd_event **event
int sd_event_get_tid
sd_event *event
pid_t *tid
Description
sd_event_new() allocates a new event
loop object. The event loop object is returned in the
event parameter. After use, drop
the returned reference with
sd_event_unref(). When the last reference is
dropped, the object is freed.
sd_event_default() acquires a reference
to the default event loop object of the calling thread, possibly
allocating a new object if no default event loop object has been
allocated yet for the thread. After use, drop the returned
reference with sd_event_unref(). When the
last reference is dropped, the event loop is freed. If this
function is called while the object returned from a previous call
from the same thread is still referenced, the same object is
returned again, but the reference is increased by one. It is
recommended to use this call instead of
sd_event_new() in order to share event loop
objects between various components that are dispatched in the same
thread. All threads have exactly either zero or one default event loop
objects associated, but never more.
After allocating an event loop object, add event sources to
it with
sd_event_add_io3,
sd_event_add_time3,
sd_event_add_signal3,
sd_event_add_child3,
sd_event_add_inotify3,
sd_event_add_defer3,
sd_event_add_post3 or
sd_event_add_exit3,
and then execute the event loop using
sd_event_loop3.
sd_event_ref() increases the reference
count of the specified event loop object by one.
sd_event_unref() decreases the
reference count of the specified event loop object by one. If
the count hits zero, the object is freed. Note that it
is freed regardless of whether it is the default event loop object for a
thread or not. This means that allocating an event loop with
sd_event_default(), then releasing it, and
then acquiring a new one with
sd_event_default() will result in two
distinct objects. Note that, in order to free an event loop object,
all remaining event sources of the event loop also need to be
freed as each keeps a reference to it.
sd_event_unrefp() is similar to
sd_event_unref() but takes a pointer to a
pointer to an sd_event object. This call is useful in
conjunction with GCC's and LLVM's Clean-up
Variable Attribute. Note that this function is defined as
inline function. Use a declaration like the following,
in order to allocate an event loop object that is freed
automatically as the code block is left:
{
__attribute__((cleanup(sd_event_unrefp)) sd_event *event = NULL;
int r;
…
r = sd_event_default(&event);
if (r < 0)
fprintf(stderr, "Failed to allocate event loop: %s\n", strerror(-r));
…
}
sd_event_ref(),
sd_event_unref() and
sd_event_unrefp() execute no operation if the
passed in event loop object is NULL.
sd_event_get_tid() retrieves the thread
identifier ("TID") of the thread the specified event loop object
is associated with. This call is only supported for event loops
allocated with sd_event_default(), and
returns the identifier for the thread the event loop is the
default event loop of. See gettid2
for more information on thread identifiers.
Return Value
On success, sd_event_new(),
sd_event_default() and
sd_event_get_tid() return 0 or a positive
integer. On failure, they return a negative errno-style error
code. sd_event_ref() always returns a pointer
to the event loop object passed
in. sd_event_unref() always returns
NULL.
Errors
Returned errors may indicate the following problems:
-ENOMEM
Not enough memory to allocate the object.
-EMFILE
The maximum number of event loops has been allocated.
-ENXIO
sd_event_get_tid() was
invoked on an event loop object that was not allocated with
sd_event_default().
See Also
systemd1,
sd-event3,
sd_event_add_io3,
sd_event_add_time3,
sd_event_add_signal3,
sd_event_add_child3,
sd_event_add_inotify3,
sd_event_add_defer3,
sd_event_run3,
gettid2