pub struct ReadEventsGuard { /* private fields */ }
Expand description

Guard for synchronizing event reading across multiple threads

If multiple threads need to read events from the Wayland socket concurrently, it is necessary to synchronize their access. Failing to do so may cause some of the threads to not be notified of new events, and sleep much longer than appropriate.

This guard is provided to ensure the proper synchronization is done. The guard is created using the Backend::prepare_read() method. And the event reading is triggered by consuming the guard using the read() method, synchronizing with other threads as necessary so that only one of the threads will actually perform the socket read.

If you plan to poll the Wayland socket for readiness, the file descriptor can be retrieved via the connection_fd method. Note that for the synchronization to correctly occur, you must always create the ReadEventsGuard before polling the socket.

Dropping the guard is valid and will cancel the prepared read.

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impl ReadEventsGuard

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pub fn connection_fd(&self) -> BorrowedFd<'_>

Access the Wayland socket FD for polling

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pub fn read(self) -> Result<usize, WaylandError>

Attempt to read events from the Wayland socket

If multiple threads have a live reading guard, this method will block until all of them are either dropped or have their read() method invoked, at which point one of the threads will read events from the socket and invoke the callbacks for the received events. All threads will then resume their execution.

This returns the number of dispatched events, or 0 if an other thread handled the dispatching. If no events are available to read from the socket, this returns a WouldBlock IO error.

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impl Debug for ReadEventsGuard

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fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> Result<(), Error>

Formats the value using the given formatter. Read more

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type Error = <U as TryFrom<T>>::Error

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