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Closure.pm
package FFI::Platypus::Closure; use strict; use warnings; use FFI::Platypus; use Scalar::Util qw( refaddr); use Carp qw( croak ); use overload '&{}' => sub { my $self = shift; sub { $self->{code}->(@_) }; }, bool => sub { 1 }, fallback => 1; # ABSTRACT: Platypus closure object our $VERSION = '1.31'; # VERSION sub new { my($class, $coderef) = @_; croak "not a coderef" unless ref($coderef) eq 'CODE'; my $self = bless { code => $coderef, cbdata => {}, sticky => 0 }, $class; $self; } sub add_data { my($self, $payload, $type) = @_; $self->{cbdata}{$type} = bless \$payload, 'FFI::Platypus::ClosureData'; } sub get_data { my($self, $type) = @_; if (exists $self->{cbdata}->{$type}) { return ${$self->{cbdata}->{$type}}; } return 0; } sub call { my $self = shift; $self->{code}->(@_) } sub sticky { my($self) = @_; return if $self->{sticky}; $self->{sticky} = 1; $self->_sticky; } sub unstick { my($self) = @_; return unless $self->{sticky}; $self->{sticky} = 0; $self->_unstick; } package FFI::Platypus::ClosureData; our $VERSION = '1.31'; # VERSION 1; __END__ =pod =encoding UTF-8 =head1 NAME FFI::Platypus::Closure - Platypus closure object =head1 VERSION version 1.31 =head1 SYNOPSIS create closure with OO interface use FFI::Platypus::Closure; my $closure = FFI::Platypus::Closure->new(sub { print "hello world\n" }); create closure from Platypus object use FFI::Platypus; my $ffi = FFI::Platypus->new( api => 1 ); my $closure = $ffi->closure(sub { print "hello world\n" }); use closure $ffi->function(foo => ['()->void'] => 'void')->call($closure); =head1 DESCRIPTION This class represents a Perl code reference that can be called from compiled code. When you create a closure object, you can pass it into any function that expects a function pointer. Care needs to be taken with closures because compiled languages typically have a different way of handling lifetimes of objects. You have to make sure that if the compiled code is going to call a closure that the closure object is still in scope somewhere, or has been made sticky, otherwise you may get a segment violation or other mysterious crash. =head1 CONSTRUCTOR =head2 new my $closure = FFI::Platypus::Closure->new($coderef); Create a new closure object; C<$coderef> must be a subroutine code reference. =head1 METHODS =head2 call $closure->call(@arguments); $closure->(@arguments); Call the closure from Perl space. May also be invoked by treating the closure object as a code reference. =head2 sticky $closure->sticky; Mark the closure sticky, meaning that it won't be free'd even if all the reference of the object fall out of scope. =head2 unstick $closure->unstick; Unmark the closure as sticky. =head1 AUTHOR Author: Graham Ollis E<lt>plicease@cpan.orgE<gt> Contributors: Bakkiaraj Murugesan (bakkiaraj) Dylan Cali (calid) pipcet Zaki Mughal (zmughal) Fitz Elliott (felliott) Vickenty Fesunov (vyf) Gregor Herrmann (gregoa) Shlomi Fish (shlomif) Damyan Ivanov Ilya Pavlov (Ilya33) Petr Pisar (ppisar) Mohammad S Anwar (MANWAR) Håkon Hægland (hakonhagland, HAKONH) Meredith (merrilymeredith, MHOWARD) Diab Jerius (DJERIUS) =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is copyright (c) 2015,2016,2017,2018,2019,2020 by Graham Ollis. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself. =cut