guile-user
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: asynchronous socket library


From: Mark H Weaver
Subject: Re: asynchronous socket library
Date: Sat, 24 Aug 2013 17:33:05 -0400
User-agent: Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/24.3 (gnu/linux)

Hi Mark,

Sorry for taking so long to respond.

address@hidden writes:

> Mark H Weaver <address@hidden> writes:
>
>> address@hidden writes:
>>> Reading and writing to a socket seems to lend itself well to custom
>>> binary ports,
>>
>> Why do you say that?  For most purposes, Guile's native file ports are
>> superior, and they seem the natural choice for sockets.
>>
>
> I over-generalized. In my application, I'm using the X protocol, which
> is a binary one. I've been so involved with that I forgot that much of
> the time you want to read/write character data from a socket.

Guile's native file ports (which also work on sockets) can be used for
binary data as well as character data.  There's no need to create a
custom binary port for this purpose.  Indeed, the custom ports have
several major disadvantages compared to the native file ports.

>> 'get-bytevector-some' from (rnrs io ports) might do what you need.  If
>> there's at least one byte available it will not block, but in practice
>> it reads much more than that (for buffered ports).  Guile 2.0.9 has a
>> nice fast implementation.  Prior to 2.0.9, it was less so.
>>
>> In more detail: as of 2.0.9, 'get-bytevector-some' will simply copy the
>> input buffer managed by Guile into a bytevector and return it.  If
>> Guile's input buffer is empty, it will try to refill the buffer using
>> the port type's 'fill_input' method.  For file ports this is
>> fports.c:fport_fill_input, and for custom binary ports it's
>> r6rs-ports.c:cbip_fill_input.
>
> In order to know if the port has at least one byte ready, you need to be
> able to call 'char-ready?', don't you? And as you mentioned, that
> doesn't work on custom binary ports. I'm still exploring this part of
> Guile so I might not have the details right.
>
>>
>> So again I ask, why use custom binary ports for sockets?
>>
>
> Thanks for the detailed explanation; I think I'll move away from
> them. Were they added just to meet the r6rs spec? Are there any good
> uses for custom binary ports that you're aware of?

Yes, custom ports are needed if the data that's being read is not coming
from a file, pipe, device, socket, string, or bytevector (the cases
covered by Guile's existing native port types; maybe I'm forgetting
some).  Similarly for writing.

For example, suppose you wanted a make an input port that reads
keypresses from a GUI interface.  In this case, the keypresses are
received via events during the main event loop.  There is no underlying
POSIX file descriptor to read from, nor is there a single Scheme string
or bytevector.  You could use pipes I suppose, but that assumes POSIX.
Another way is to make a custom port.

In the case of guile-xcb, I see two places where custom ports are used
in auth.scm.  Here's the first case:

--8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
    (define auth-file (open-file (getenv "XAUTHORITY") "rb"))

    (define port
      (make-custom-binary-input-port
       "xcb-auth-input"
       (lambda (bv start count)
         (do ((n 0 (1+ n))
              (ch (read-char auth-file) (read-char auth-file)))
             ((or (>= n count) (eof-object? ch)) n)
           (bytevector-u8-set!
            bv (+ start n) (char->integer ch))))
       #f #f (lambda () (close-port port))))
--8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---

First of all, that '(close-port port)' is wrong.  Here you are trying to
tell Guile how to close 'port', and this just recurses.  I guess it
should be (close-port auth-file)'.

However, I don't see why this custom port is needed at all.  You've
already opened 'auth-file' in binary mode, so you should be able to use
it directly, i.e. replace the above code with:

    (define port (open-file (getenv "XAUTHORITY") "rb"))

The other case is here (also in auth.scm):

--8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
    (define (read! bv start count)
      (let* ((in-bv (make-bytevector count))
             (bytes-read (recv! sock in-bv)))
        (bytevector-copy! in-bv 0 bv start bytes-read)
        bytes-read))
    (define port (make-custom-binary-input-port "xcb-input" read! #f #f #f))
--8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---

Again, I don't see why this custom port should be needed.
You should be able to use 'sock' directly.

Anyway, thanks for working on this! :)

     Regards,
       Mark



reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]