Rocket.Chat.ReactNative/ios/Pods/Flipper-Folly/folly/experimental/ThreadedRepeatingFunctionRu...

163 lines
5.9 KiB
C++

/*
* Copyright (c) Facebook, Inc. and its affiliates.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
#pragma once
#include <folly/Function.h>
#include <condition_variable>
#include <thread>
#include <vector>
namespace folly {
/**
* For each function `fn` you add to this object, `fn` will be run in a loop
* in its own thread, with the thread sleeping between invocations of `fn`
* for the duration returned by `fn`'s previous run.
*
* To clean up these threads, invoke `stop()`, which will interrupt sleeping
* threads. `stop()` will wait for already-running functions to return.
*
* == Alternatives ==
*
* If you want to multiplex multiple functions on the same thread, you can
* either use EventBase with AsyncTimeout objects, or FunctionScheduler for
* a slightly simpler API.
*
* == Thread-safety ==
*
* This type follows the common rule that:
* (1) const member functions are safe to call concurrently with const
* member functions, but
* (2) non-const member functions are not safe to call concurrently with
* any member functions.
*
* == Pitfalls ==
*
* Threads and classes don't mix well in C++, so you have to be very careful
* if you want to have ThreadedRepeatingFunctionRunner as a member of your
* class. A reasonable pattern looks like this:
*
* // Your class must be `final` because inheriting from a class with
* // threads can cause all sorts of subtle issues:
* // - Your base class might start threads that attempt to access derived
* // class state **before** that state was constructed.
* // - Your base class's destructor will only be able to stop threads
* // **after** the derived class state was destroyed -- and that state
* // might be accessed by the threads.
* // In short, any derived class would have to do work to manage the
* // threads itself, which makes inheritance a poor means of composition.
* struct MyClass final {
* // Note that threads are NOT added in the constructor, for two reasons:
* //
* // (1) If you first added some threads, and then had additional
* // initialization (e.g. derived class constructors), `this` might
* // not be fully constructed by the time the function threads
* // started running, causing heisenbugs.
* //
* // (2) If your constructor threw after thread creation, the class
* // destructor would not be invoked, potentially leaving the
* // threads running too long.
* //
* // It is much safer to have explicit two-step initialization, or to
* // lazily add threads the first time they are needed.
* MyClass() : count_(0) {}
*
* // You must stop the threads as early as possible in the destruction
* // process (or even before). If MyClass had derived classes, the final
* // derived class MUST always call stop() as the first thing in its
* // destructor -- otherwise, the worker threads might access already-
* // destroyed state.
* ~MyClass() {
* threads_.stop(); // Stop threads BEFORE destroying any state they use.
* }
*
* // See the constructor for why two-stage initialization is preferred.
* void init() {
* threads_.add(bind(&MyClass::incrementCount, this));
* }
*
* std::chrono::milliseconds incrementCount() {
* ++count_;
* return 10;
* }
*
* private:
* std::atomic<int> count_;
* // CAUTION: Declare last since the threads access other members of `this`.
* ThreadedRepeatingFunctionRunner threads_;
* };
*/
class ThreadedRepeatingFunctionRunner final {
public:
// Returns how long to wait before the next repetition. Must not throw.
using RepeatingFn = folly::Function<std::chrono::milliseconds() noexcept>;
ThreadedRepeatingFunctionRunner();
~ThreadedRepeatingFunctionRunner();
/**
* Ideally, you will call this before initiating the destruction of the
* host object. Otherwise, this should be the first thing in the
* destruction sequence. If it comes any later, worker threads may access
* class state that had already been destroyed.
*/
void stop();
/**
* Run your noexcept function `f` in a background loop, sleeping between
* calls for a duration returned by `f`. Optionally waits for
* `initialSleep` before calling `f` for the first time. Names the thread
* using up to the first 15 chars of `name`.
*
* DANGER: If a non-final class has a ThreadedRepeatingFunctionRunner
* member (which, by the way, must be declared last in the class), then
* you must not call add() in your constructor. Otherwise, your thread
* risks accessing uninitialized data belonging to a child class. To
* avoid this design bug, prefer to use two-stage initialization to start
* your threads.
*/
void add(
std::string name,
RepeatingFn f,
std::chrono::milliseconds initialSleep = std::chrono::milliseconds(0));
size_t size() const {
return threads_.size();
}
private:
// Returns true if this is the first stop().
bool stopImpl();
// Sleep for a duration, or until stop() is called.
bool waitFor(std::chrono::milliseconds duration) noexcept;
// Noexcept allows us to get a good backtrace on crashes -- otherwise,
// std::terminate would get called **outside** of the thread function.
void executeInLoop(
RepeatingFn,
std::chrono::milliseconds initialSleep) noexcept;
std::mutex stopMutex_;
bool stopping_{false}; // protected by stopMutex_
std::condition_variable stopCv_;
std::vector<std::thread> threads_;
};
} // namespace folly