Note that this is a work in progress and simply a first attempt at
getting some code into place before being able to test it. This code
follows of sorts both the poll and epoll sections of the codebase hoping
to achieve the exact same.
Some pointer casting with abstract types was incorrect, resulting
in strange behavior when trying to use supervisor channels that were
threaded. This fix also adds the ability to supply a supervisor channel
directly when creating a thread.
Introduces close semtantics to channels as well, but otherwise
threaded channels behave much like non-threaded channels. They have
different marshalling behavior though, and can only send values over by
packing and unpacking them. For now, this means only primitive values
although this will be expanded.
Also missing some implementation for closing threaded channels, and a
whole lot of testing. Achtung!, Caveat emptor, here be dragons and bugs.
janet_loop1_interrupt makes the event loop compatible
with safe interruptions for custom scheduling. Does this by exposing
custom events on the event loop. A custom event schedules a function pointer
to run in a way that can interrupt
epoll_wait/poll/GetQueuedCompletionStatus.
This would allow an embedder to suspend the current Janet fiber
via an external event like a signal, other thread, or really anything.
This is a useful primitive for custom schedulers that would call
janet_interpreter_interupt periodically (say, in an interval with SIG_ALRM),
do some work, and then use janet_continue on the janet_root_fiber, or
for embedding into other soft-realtime applications like a game. To say,
only allow about 5ms per frame of interpreter time.
This is mainly meant for use as the entry point to a C wrapper for a
janet program. This maeans the programmer doesn't need to use an ifdef
to handle if the event loop is enabled.
This is the beginning of a system for compiler warnings. This includes
linting, deprecation notices, and other compiler warnings that are best
detected by the `compile` function and don't require the partial
evalutaion of the flychecker.
The (undef rule :tag) combinator lets a user "scope" tagged captures.
After the rule has matched, all captures with tag :tag can no longer be
refered to by their tag. However, such captures from outside
rule are kept as is. If no tag is given, all tagged captures from rule
are unreferenced. Note that this doesn't `drop` the captures, merely
removes their association with the tag. This means subsequent calls to
`backref` and `backmatch` will no longer "see" these tagged captures.