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0.1.0 | Aug 27, 2024 |
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#768 in Asynchronous
Used in rs-event-emitter
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Rust Event Emitter
A thread-safe, flexible event emitter implementation in Rust.
Features
- Thread-safe event emission and handling
- Support for multiple event types and handlers
- Typed event arguments
- Asynchronous event processing
- Easy-to-use macros for event emission
Installation
Add this to your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
event_emitter = "3.0.0"
Usage
Here's a more comprehensive example demonstrating various features of the EventEmitter
and AsyncEventEmitter
:
EventEmitter
The main struct for managing events.
Example
use event_emitter::{EventEmitter, emit};
use std::sync::{Arc, Mutex};
use std::thread;
use std::time::Duration;
fn main() {
// Create a new EventEmitter
let emitter = EventEmitter::new();
// Start the event listener in a separate thread
let listener = emitter.start_listening();
// Create a shared state to demonstrate thread-safe updates
let shared_state = Arc::new(Mutex::new(Vec::new()));
// Handler for a simple greeting event
emitter.on("greet", |(name,): (String,)| {
println!("Hello, {}!", name);
});
// Handler for an event with multiple arguments
{
let state = Arc::clone(&shared_state);
emitter.on("user_action", move |(user, action, value): (String, String, i32)| {
println!("User {} performed action: {} with value: {}", user, action, value);
let mut data = state.lock().unwrap();
data.push((user, action, value));
});
}
// Handler for a more complex event
{
let state = Arc::clone(&shared_state);
emitter.on("process_data", move |(data, callback): (Vec<i32>, Box<dyn Fn(i32) + Send + 'static>)| {
let sum: i32 = data.iter().sum();
callback(sum);
let mut shared_data = state.lock().unwrap();
shared_data.push(("System".to_string(), "process_data".to_string(), sum));
});
}
// Emit events
emit!(emitter, "greet", "Alice".to_string());
emit!(emitter, "user_action", "Bob".to_string(), "click".to_string(), 5);
let callback = Box::new(|result: i32| {
println!("Processing result: {}", result);
});
emit!(emitter, "process_data", vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5], callback);
// Demonstrate emitting events from another thread
let emitter_clone = emitter.clone();
thread::spawn(move || {
thread::sleep(Duration::from_millis(100));
emit!(emitter_clone, "greet", "Thread".to_string());
});
// Wait a bit for all events to be processed
thread::sleep(Duration::from_millis(200));
// Print the final state
let final_state = shared_state.lock().unwrap();
println!("Final state: {:?}", *final_state);
// Stop the event listener
emitter.stop_listening();
listener.join().unwrap();
}
This example demonstrates:
- Creating and starting an
EventEmitter
- Registering handlers for different event types
- Handling events with multiple arguments
- Using shared state across event handlers
- Emitting events with the
emit!
macro - Passing callbacks as event arguments
- Cloning and using the
EventEmitter
in different threads
API
Methods
new()
: Create a newEventEmitter
.with_thread_pool_size(thread_pool_size: usize)
: Create a newEventEmitter
with a specified capacity.on<F, Args>(&self, event: &str, handler: F) -> HandlerId
: Register an event handler.off(&self, event: &str, handler_id: HandlerId)
: Remove all handlers for an event.emit(&self, event: &str, args: Vec<Param>)
: Emit an event.start_listening(&self) -> JoinHandle<()>
: Start the event processing loop.stop_listening(&self)
: Stop the event processing loop.clone(&self) -> Self
: Create a clone of theEventEmitter
.
AsyncEventEmitter
rs-event-emitter = { version = "2.0.2", features = ["async"] }
// or use tokio runtime
rs-event-emitter = { version = "2.0.2", features = ["async", "tokio_runtime"] }
Example
#[tokio::main]
async fn use_tokio_runtime() {
// use tokio runtime
let rt = Arc::new(TokioRuntime::new());
let emitter = AsyncEventEmitter::new(rt);
let counter = Arc::new(AtomicI32::new(0));
let counter_clone = counter.clone();
emitter
.on("test_event", move |_args: ()| {
let counter = counter_clone.clone();
Box::pin(async move {
counter.fetch_add(1, Ordering::SeqCst);
})
})
.await;
emitter.emit("test_event", vec![]).await;
// emitter.emit("test_event", vec![]).await;
async_emit!(emitter, "test_event").await;
assert_eq!(counter.load(Ordering::SeqCst), 2);
println!("done");
}
// or use custom runtime
use rs_event_emitter::runtime::*;
struct CustomRuntime;
impl Runtime for CustomRuntime {
...
}
fn use_custom_runtime() {
// use custom runtime
let rt = Arc::new(CustomRuntime::new());
let emitter = AsyncEventEmitter::new(rt);
}
This example demonstrates:
- Creating and starting an
AsyncEventEmitter
- Registering asynchronous event handlers
- Emitting events with typed arguments
- Using custom async runtimes
- Handling events with multiple arguments
- Emitting events with the
async_emit!
macro
API
Methods
new(rt: Arc<R>)
: Create a newAsyncEventEmitter
with the given async runtime.async on<F, Args>(&self, event: &str, handler: F) -> HandlerId
: Register an asynchronous event handler.async off(&self, event: &str, handler_id: HandlerId)
: Remove a specific handler for an event.async emit(&self, event: &str, args: Vec<Param>)
: Emit an event asynchronously.clone(&self) -> Self
: Create a clone of theAsyncEventEmitter
.
Note: All methods on AsyncEventEmitter
are asynchronous and return Future
s that need to be awaited.
Additional Information
- Event Parameters: Supports up to 16 parameters per event. For more, use structs or collections.
- Macros:
emit!
for convenient event emission with typed arguments. - Threading: Designed to be thread-safe with concurrent event processing.
- Testing: Run tests with
cargo test
.
Macros
emit!
: A convenient macro for emitting events with typed arguments.async_emit!
: A convenient macro for emitting events with typed arguments.
Testing
The library includes a comprehensive test suite. Run the tests using:
cargo test
License
This project is licensed under [LICENSE NAME]. See the LICENSE file for details.
Contributing
Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit a Pull Request.
Dependencies
~0.6–6.5MB
~37K SLoC