- NAME
- Tcl_CreateChannelHandler, Tcl_DeleteChannelHandler — call a
procedure when a channel becomes readable or writable
- SYNOPSIS
- #include <tcl.h>
- void
- Tcl_CreateChannelHandler(channel, mask, proc,
clientData)
- void
- Tcl_DeleteChannelHandler(channel, proc,
clientData)
- ARGUMENTS
- DESCRIPTION
- SEE
ALSO
- KEYWORDS
Tcl_CreateChannelHandler, Tcl_DeleteChannelHandler — call a
procedure when a channel becomes readable or writable
#include <tcl.h>
void
Tcl_CreateChannelHandler(channel, mask, proc,
clientData)
void
Tcl_DeleteChannelHandler(channel, proc,
clientData)
- Tcl_Channel
channel (in)
- Tcl channel such as returned by Tcl_CreateChannel.
- int mask (in)
- Conditions under which proc should be called: OR-ed
combination of TCL_READABLE, TCL_WRITABLE and
TCL_EXCEPTION. Specify a zero value to temporarily disable
an existing handler.
- Tcl_FileProc *proc (in)
- Procedure to invoke whenever the channel indicated by
channel meets the conditions specified by mask.
- ClientData clientData (in)
- Arbitrary one-word value to pass to proc.
Tcl_CreateChannelHandler arranges for proc to be
called in the future whenever input or output becomes possible on
the channel identified by channel, or whenever an
exceptional condition exists for channel. The conditions of
interest under which proc will be invoked are specified by
the mask argument. See the manual entry for fileevent for a precise
description of what it means for a channel to be readable or
writable. Proc must conform to the following prototype:
typedef void Tcl_ChannelProc(
ClientData clientData,
int mask);
The clientData argument is the same as the value passed
to Tcl_CreateChannelHandler when the handler was created.
Typically, clientData points to a data structure containing
application-specific information about the channel. Mask is
an integer mask indicating which of the requested conditions
actually exists for the channel; it will contain a subset of the
bits from the mask argument to
Tcl_CreateChannelHandler when the handler was created.
Each channel handler is identified by a unique combination of
channel, proc and clientData. There may be
many handlers for a given channel as long as they do not have the
same channel, proc, and clientData. If
Tcl_CreateChannelHandler is invoked when there is already a
handler for channel, proc, and clientData,
then no new handler is created; instead, the mask is changed
for the existing handler.
Tcl_DeleteChannelHandler deletes a channel handler
identified by channel, proc and clientData; if
no such handler exists, the call has no effect.
Channel handlers are invoked via the Tcl event mechanism, so
they are only useful in applications that are event-driven. Note
also that the conditions specified in the mask argument to
proc may no longer exist when proc is invoked: for
example, if there are two handlers for TCL_READABLE on the
same channel, the first handler could consume all of the available
input so that the channel is no longer readable when the second
handler is invoked. For this reason it may be useful to use
nonblocking I/O on channels for which there are event handlers.
Notifier, Tcl_CreateChannel, Tcl_OpenFileChannel,
vwait(n).
blocking, callback, channel, events, handler, nonblocking.
Copyright © 1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc.