table of contents
wl_event_loop(3) | Wayland | wl_event_loop(3) |
NAME¶
wl_event_loop -
An event loop context.
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <wayland-server-core.h>
Public Member Functions¶
struct wl_event_loop * wl_event_loop_create (void)
void wl_event_loop_destroy (struct wl_event_loop *loop)
void wl_event_loop_dispatch_idle (struct wl_event_loop *loop)
int wl_event_loop_dispatch (struct wl_event_loop *loop, int
timeout)
int wl_event_loop_get_fd (struct wl_event_loop *loop)
void wl_event_loop_add_destroy_listener (struct wl_event_loop
*loop, struct wl_listener *listener)
struct wl_listener * wl_event_loop_get_destroy_listener (struct
wl_event_loop *loop, wl_notify_func_t notify)
Detailed Description¶
An event loop context.
Usually you create an event loop context, add sources to it, and call wl_event_loop_dispatch() in a loop to process events.
See Also:
Member Function Documentation¶
void wl_event_loop_add_destroy_listener (struct wl_event_loop *loop, struct wl_listener *listener)¶
Register a destroy listener for an event loop context
Parameters:
listener The listener with the callback to be called.
See Also:
struct wl_event_loop * wl_event_loop_create (void)¶
Create a new event loop context
Returns:
This creates a new event loop context. Initially this context is empty. Event sources need to be explicitly added to it.
Normally the event loop is run by calling wl_event_loop_dispatch() in a loop until the program terminates. Alternatively, an event loop can be embedded in another event loop by its file descriptor, see wl_event_loop_get_fd().
void wl_event_loop_destroy (struct wl_event_loop *loop)¶
Destroy an event loop context
Parameters:
This emits the event loop destroy signal, closes the event loop file descriptor, and frees loop.
If the event loop has existing sources, those cannot be safely removed afterwards. Therefore one must call wl_event_source_remove() on all event sources before destroying the event loop context.
int wl_event_loop_dispatch (struct wl_event_loop *loop, inttimeout)¶
Wait for events and dispatch them
Parameters:
timeout The polling timeout in milliseconds.
Returns:
All the associated event sources are polled. This function blocks until any event source delivers an event (idle sources excluded), or the timeout expires. A timeout of -1 disables the timeout, causing the function to block indefinitely. A timeout of zero causes the poll to always return immediately.
All idle sources are dispatched before blocking. An idle source is destroyed when it is dispatched. After blocking, all other ready sources are dispatched. Then, idle sources are dispatched again, in case the dispatched events created idle sources. Finally, all sources marked with wl_event_source_check() are dispatched in a loop until their dispatch functions all return zero.
void wl_event_loop_dispatch_idle (struct wl_event_loop *loop)¶
Dispatch the idle sources
Parameters:
See Also:
struct wl_listener * wl_event_loop_get_destroy_listener (struct wl_event_loop *loop, wl_notify_func_tnotify)¶
Get the listener struct for the specified callback
Parameters:
notify The destroy callback to find.
Returns:
int wl_event_loop_get_fd (struct wl_event_loop *loop)¶
Get the event loop file descriptor
Parameters:
Returns:
This function returns the aggregate file descriptor, that represents all the event sources (idle sources excluded) associated with the given event loop context. When any event source makes an event available, it will be reflected in the aggregate file descriptor.
When the aggregate file descriptor delivers an event, one can call wl_event_loop_dispatch() on the event loop context to dispatch all the available events.
Author¶
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Wed Oct 31 2018 | Version 1.15.0 |