{-# OPTIONS -fglasgow-exts #-}
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- |
-- Module : System.Timeout
-- Copyright : (c) The University of Glasgow 2007
-- License : BSD-style (see the file libraries/base/LICENSE)
--
-- Maintainer : libraries@haskell.org
-- Stability : experimental
-- Portability : non-portable
--
-- Attach a timeout event to arbitrary 'IO' computations.
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
module System.Timeout ( timeout ) where
#if __NHC__
timeout :: Int -> IO a -> IO (Maybe a)
timeout n f = fmap Just f
#else
import Prelude (IO, Ord((<)), Eq((==)), Int, (.), otherwise, fmap)
import Data.Maybe (Maybe(..))
import Control.Monad (Monad(..), guard)
import Control.Concurrent (forkIO, threadDelay, myThreadId, killThread)
import Control.Exception (handleJust, throwDynTo, dynExceptions, bracket)
import Data.Dynamic (Typeable, fromDynamic)
import Data.Unique (Unique, newUnique)
-- An internal type that is thrown as a dynamic exception to
-- interrupt the running IO computation when the timeout has
-- expired.
data Timeout = Timeout Unique deriving (Eq, Typeable)
-- |Wrap an 'IO' computation to time out and return @Nothing@ in case no result
-- is available within @n@ microseconds (@1\/10^6@ seconds). In case a result
-- is available before the timeout expires, @Just a@ is returned. A negative
-- timeout interval means \"wait indefinitely\". When specifying long timeouts,
-- be careful not to exceed @maxBound :: Int@.
--
-- The design of this combinator was guided by the objective that @timeout n f@
-- should behave exactly the same as @f@ as long as @f@ doesn't time out. This
-- means that @f@ has the same 'myThreadId' it would have without the timeout
-- wrapper. Any exceptions @f@ might throw cancel the timeout and propagate
-- further up. It also possible for @f@ to receive exceptions thrown to it by
-- another thread.
--
-- A tricky implementation detail is the question of how to abort an @IO@
-- computation. This combinator relies on asynchronous exceptions internally.
-- The technique works very well for computations executing inside of the
-- Haskell runtime system, but it doesn't work at all for non-Haskell code.
-- Foreign function calls, for example, cannot be timed out with this
-- combinator simply because an arbitrary C function cannot receive
-- asynchronous exceptions. When @timeout@ is used to wrap an FFI call that
-- blocks, no timeout event can be delivered until the FFI call returns, which
-- pretty much negates the purpose of the combinator. In practice, however,
-- this limitation is less severe than it may sound. Standard I\/O functions
-- like 'System.IO.hGetBuf', 'System.IO.hPutBuf', 'Network.Socket.accept', or
-- 'System.IO.hWaitForInput' appear to be blocking, but they really don't
-- because the runtime system uses scheduling mechanisms like @select(2)@ to
-- perform asynchronous I\/O, so it is possible to interrupt standard socket
-- I\/O or file I\/O using this combinator.
timeout :: Int -> IO a -> IO (Maybe a)
timeout n f
| n < 0 = fmap Just f
| n == 0 = return Nothing
| otherwise = do
pid <- myThreadId
ex <- fmap Timeout newUnique
handleJust (\e -> dynExceptions e >>= fromDynamic >>= guard . (ex ==))
(\_ -> return Nothing)
(bracket (forkIO (threadDelay n >> throwDynTo pid ex))
(killThread)
(\_ -> fmap Just f))
#endif