On this page:
evt?
sync
sync/  timeout
sync/  enable-break
sync/  timeout/  enable-break
choice-evt
wrap-evt
handle-evt
guard-evt
nack-guard-evt
poll-guard-evt
replace-evt
always-evt
never-evt
system-idle-evt
alarm-evt
handle-evt?
prop:  evt
current-evt-pseudo-random-generator
11.2.1 Events

A synchronizable event (or just event for short) works with the sync procedure to coordinate synchronization among threads. Certain kinds of objects double as events, including ports and threads. Other kinds of objects exist only for their use as events.

At any point in time, an event is either ready for synchronization, or it is not; depending on the kind of event and how it is used by other threads, an event can switch from not ready to ready (or back), at any time. If a thread synchronizes on an event when it is ready, then the event produces a particular synchronization result.

Synchronizing an event may affect the state of the event. For example, when synchronizing a semaphore, then the semaphore’s internal count is decremented, just as with semaphore-wait. For most kinds of events, however (such as a port), synchronizing does not modify the event’s state.

Racket values that act as synchronizable events include asynchronous channels, channels, custodian boxes, log receivers, place channels, ports, semaphores, subprocesses, TCP listeners, threads, and will executors. Libraries can define new synchronizable events, especially though prop:evt.

procedure

(evt? v)  boolean?

  v : any/c
Returns #t if v is a synchronizable event, #f otherwise.

Examples:
> (evt? never-evt)

#t

> (evt? (make-channel))

#t

> (evt? 5)

#f

procedure

(sync evt ...)  any

  evt : evt?
Blocks as long as none of the synchronizable events evts are ready, as defined above.

When at least one evt is ready, its synchronization result (often evt itself) is returned. If multiple evts are ready, one of the evts is chosen pseudo-randomly for the result; the current-evt-pseudo-random-generator parameter sets the random-number generator that controls this choice.

Examples:
> (define ch (make-channel))
> (thread (λ () (displayln (sync ch))))

#<thread>

> (channel-put ch 'hellooooo)

hellooooo

Changed in version 6.1.0.3 of package base: Allow 0 arguments instead of 1 or more.

procedure

(sync/timeout timeout evt ...)  any

  timeout : (or/c #f (and/c real? (not/c negative?)) (-> any))
  evt : evt?
Like sync if timeout is #f. If timeout is a real number, then the result is #f if timeout seconds pass without a successful synchronization. If timeout is a procedure, then it is called in tail position if polling the evts discovers no ready events.

A zero value for timeout is equivalent to (lambda () #f). In either case, each evt is checked at least once before returning #f or calling timeout.

See also alarm-evt for an alternative timeout mechanism.

Examples:
; times out before waking up
> (sync/timeout
   0.5
   (thread (λ () (sleep 1) (displayln "woke up!"))))

#f

> (sync/timeout
   (λ () (displayln "no ready events"))
   never-evt)

no ready events

Changed in version 6.1.0.3 of package base: Allow 1 argument instead of 2 or more.

procedure

(sync/enable-break evt ...)  any

  evt : evt?
Like sync, but breaking is enabled (see Breaks) while waiting on the evts. If breaking is disabled when sync/enable-break is called, then either all evts remain unchosen or the exn:break exception is raised, but not both.

procedure

(sync/timeout/enable-break timeout evt ...)  any

  timeout : (or/c #f (and/c real? (not/c negative?)) (-> any))
  evt : evt?
Like sync/enable-break, but with a timeout as for sync/timeout.

procedure

(choice-evt evt ...)  evt?

  evt : evt?
Creates and returns a single event that combines the evts. Supplying the result to sync is the same as supplying each evt to the same call.

That is, an event returned by choice-evt is ready for synchronization when one or more of the evts supplied to choice-evt are ready for synchronization. If the choice event is chosen, one of its ready evts is chosen pseudo-randomly, and the synchronization result is the chosen evt’s synchronization result.

Examples:
> (define ch1 (make-channel))
> (define ch2 (make-channel))
> (define either-channel (choice-evt ch1 ch2))
> (thread (λ () (displayln (sync either-channel))))

#<thread>

> (channel-put
   (if (> (random) 0.5) ch1 ch2)
   'tuturuu)

tuturuu

procedure

(wrap-evt evt wrap)  evt?

  evt : evt?
  wrap : (any/c ... . -> . any)
Creates an event that is ready for synchronization when evt is ready for synchronization, but whose synchronization result is determined by applying wrap to the synchronization result of evt. The number of arguments accepted by wrap must match the number of values for the synchronization result of evt.

The call to wrap is parameterize-breaked to disable breaks initially.

Examples:
> (define ch (make-channel))
> (define evt (wrap-evt ch (λ (v) (format "you've got mail: ~a" v))))
> (thread (λ () (displayln (sync evt))))

#<thread>

> (channel-put ch "Dear Alice ...")

you've got mail: Dear Alice ...

procedure

(handle-evt evt handle)  handle-evt?

  evt : evt?
  handle : (any/c ... . -> . any)
Like wrap-evt, except that handle is called in tail position with respect to the synchronization request—and without breaks explicitly disabled—when it is not wrapped by wrap-evt, chaperone-evt, or another handle-evt.

Examples:
> (define msg-ch (make-channel))
> (define exit-ch (make-channel))
> (thread
   (λ ()
     (let loop ([val 0])
       (printf "val = ~a~n" val)
       (sync (handle-evt
              msg-ch
              (λ (val) (loop val)))
             (handle-evt
              exit-ch
              (λ (val) (displayln val)))))))

val = 0

#<thread>

> (channel-put msg-ch 5)

val = 5

> (channel-put msg-ch 7)

val = 7

> (channel-put exit-ch 'done)

done

procedure

(guard-evt maker)  evt?

  maker : (-> (or/c evt? any/c))
Creates a value that behaves as an event, but that is actually an event maker.

An event guard returned by guard-evt generates an event when guard is used with sync (or whenever it is part of a choice event used with sync, etc.), where the generated event is the result of calling maker. The maker procedure may be called by sync at most once for a given call to sync, but maker may not be called if a ready event is chosen before guard is even considered.

If maker returns a non-event, then maker’s result is replaced with an event that is ready for synchronization and whose synchronization result is guard.

procedure

(nack-guard-evt maker)  evt?

  maker : (evt? . -> . (or/c evt? any/c))
Like guard-evt, but when maker is called, it is given a NACK (“negative acknowledgment”) event. After starting the call to maker, if the event from maker is not ultimately chosen as the ready event, then the NACK event supplied to maker becomes ready for synchronization with a #<void> value.

The NACK event becomes ready for synchronization when the event is abandoned when either some other event is chosen, the synchronizing thread is dead, or control escapes from the call to sync (even if nack-guard’s maker has not yet returned a value). If the event returned by maker is chosen, then the NACK event never becomes ready for synchronization.

procedure

(poll-guard-evt maker)  evt?

  maker : (boolean? . -> . (or/c evt? any/c))
Like guard-evt, but when maker is called, it is provided a boolean value that indicates whether the event will be used for a poll, #t, or for a blocking synchronization, #f.

If #t is supplied to maker, if breaks are disabled, if the polling thread is not terminated, and if polling the resulting event produces a synchronization result, then the event will certainly be chosen for its result.

procedure

(replace-evt evt maker)  evt?

  evt : evt?
  maker : (any/c ... . -> . (or/c evt? any/c))
Like guard-evt, but maker is called only after evt becomes ready for synchronization, and the synchronization result of evt is passed to maker.

The attempt to synchronize on evt proceeds concurrently as the attempt to synchronize on the result guard from replace-evt; despite that concurrency, if maker is called, it is called in the thread that is synchronizing on guard. Synchronization can succeed for both evt and another synchronized with guard at the same time; the single-choice guarantee of synchronization applies only to the result of maker and other events synchronized with guard.

If maker returns a non-event, then maker’s result is replaced with an event that is ready for synchronization and whose synchronization result is guard.

Added in version 6.1.0.3 of package base.

value

always-evt : evt?

A constant event that is always ready for synchronization, with itself as its synchronization result.

Example:
> (sync always-evt)

#<always-evt>

value

never-evt : evt?

A constant event that is never ready for synchronization.

Example:

procedure

(system-idle-evt)  evt?

Returns an event that is ready for synchronization when the system is otherwise idle: if the result event were replaced by never-evt, no thread in the system would be available to run. In other words, all threads must be suspended or blocked on events with timeouts that have not yet expired. The system-idle event’s synchronization result is #<void>. The result of the system-idle-evt procedure is always the same event.

Examples:
> (define th (thread (λ () (let loop () (loop)))))
> (sync/timeout 0.1 (system-idle-evt))

#f

> (kill-thread th)
> (sync (system-idle-evt))

procedure

(alarm-evt msecs)  evt?

  msecs : real?
Returns a synchronizable event that is not ready for synchronization when (current-inexact-milliseconds) would return a value that is less than msecs, and it is ready for synchronization when (current-inexact-milliseconds) would return a value that is more than msecs. The synchronization result of a alarm event is the alarm event itself.

Examples:
> (define alarm (alarm-evt (+ (current-inexact-milliseconds) 100)))
> (sync alarm)

#<alarm-evt>

procedure

(handle-evt? evt)  boolean?

  evt : evt?
Returns #t if evt was created by handle-evt or by choice-evt applied to another event for which handle-evt? produces #t. For any other event, handle-evt? produces #f.

Examples:

A structure type property that identifies structure types whose instances can serve as synchronizable events. The property value can be any of the following:

For working with foreign libraries, a prop:evt value can also be a result of unsafe-poller, although that possibility is omitted from the safe contract of prop:evt.

Instances of a structure type with the prop:input-port or prop:output-port property are also synchronizable events by virtue of being a port. If the structure type has more than one of prop:evt, prop:input-port, and prop:output-port, then the prop:evt value (if any) takes precedence for determining the instance’s behavior as an event, and the prop:input-port property takes precedence over prop:output-port for synchronization.

Examples:
> (define-struct wt (base val)
                 #:property prop:evt (struct-field-index base))
> (define sema (make-semaphore))
> (sync/timeout 0 (make-wt sema #f))

#f

> (semaphore-post sema)
> (sync/timeout 0 (make-wt sema #f))

#<semaphore>

> (semaphore-post sema)
> (sync/timeout 0 (make-wt (lambda (self) (wt-val self)) sema))

#<semaphore>

> (semaphore-post sema)
> (define my-wt (make-wt (lambda (self) (wrap-evt
                                         (wt-val self)
                                         (lambda (x) self)))
                         sema))
> (sync/timeout 0 my-wt)

#<wt>

> (sync/timeout 0 my-wt)

#f

A parameter that determines the pseudo-random number generator used by sync for events created by choice-evt.