Mail::SpamAssassin::Timeout(images) - phpMan

Mail::SpamAssassin::TiUsertContributed Perl DocuMail::SpamAssassin::Timeout(3)

NAME
       Mail::SpamAssassin::Timeout - safe, reliable timeouts in perl
SYNOPSIS
           # non-timeout code...
           my $t = Mail::SpamAssassin::Timeout->new({ secs => 5, deadline => $when });
           $t->run(sub {
               # code to run with a 5-second timeout...
           });
           if ($t->timed_out()) {
               # do something...
           }
           # more non-timeout code...
DESCRIPTION
       This module provides a safe, reliable and clean API to provide
       alarm(2)-based timeouts for perl code.
       Note that $SIG{ALRM} is used to provide the timeout, so this will not
       interrupt out-of-control regular expression matches.
       Nested timeouts are supported.
PUBLIC METHODS
       my $t = Mail::SpamAssassin::Timeout->new({ ... options ... });
           Constructor.  Options include:
           secs => $seconds
               time interval, in seconds. Optional; if neither "secs" nor
               "deadline" is specified, no timeouts will be applied.
           deadline => $unix_timestamp
               Unix timestamp (seconds since epoch) when a timeout is reached
               in the latest.  Optional; if neither secs nor deadline is
               specified, no timeouts will be applied. If both are specified,
               the shorter interval of the two prevails.
       $t->run($coderef)
           Run a code reference within the currently-defined timeout.
           The timeout is as defined by the secs and deadline parameters to
           the constructor.
           Returns whatever the subroutine returns, or "undef" on timeout.  If
           the timer times out, "$t-<gt"timed_out()> will return 1.
           Time elapsed is not cumulative; multiple runs of "run" will restart
           the timeout from scratch. On the other hand, nested timers do
           observe outer timeouts if they are shorter, resignalling a timeout
           to the level which established them, i.e. code running under an
           inner timer can not exceed the time limit established by an outer
           timer. When restarting an outer timer on return, elapsed time of a
           running code is taken into account.
       $t->run_and_catch($coderef)
           Run a code reference, as per "$t-<gt"run()>, but also catching any
           "die()" calls within the code reference.
           Returns "undef" if no "die()" call was executed and $@ was unset,
           or the value of $@ if it was set.  (The timeout event doesn't count
           as a "die()".)
       $t->timed_out()
           Returns 1 if the most recent code executed in "run()" timed out, or
           "undef" if it did not.
       $t->reset()
           If called within a "run()" code reference, causes the current alarm
           timer to be restored to its original setting (useful after our
           alarm setting was clobbered by some underlying module).

perl v5.16.3                      2014-02-07    Mail::SpamAssassin::Timeout(3)