ReactPHP's core reactor event loop that libraries can use for evented I/O.
In order for async based libraries to be interoperable, they need to use the
same event loop. This component provides a common LoopInterface
that any
library can target. This allows them to be used in the same loop, with one
single run()
call that is controlled by the user.
Table of Contents
Here is an async HTTP server built with just the event loop.
$loop = React\EventLoop\Factory::create();
$server = stream_socket_server('tcp://127.0.0.1:8080');
stream_set_blocking($server, false);
$loop->addReadStream($server, function ($server) use ($loop) {
$conn = stream_socket_accept($server);
$data = "HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\nContent-Length: 3\r\n\r\nHi\n";
$loop->addWriteStream($conn, function ($conn) use (&$data, $loop) {
$written = fwrite($conn, $data);
if ($written === strlen($data)) {
fclose($conn);
$loop->removeWriteStream($conn);
} else {
$data = substr($data, $written);
}
});
});
$loop->addPeriodicTimer(5, function () {
$memory = memory_get_usage() / 1024;
$formatted = number_format($memory, 3).'K';
echo "Current memory usage: {$formatted}\n";
});
$loop->run();
See also the examples.
Typical applications use a single event loop which is created at the beginning and run at the end of the program.
// [1]
$loop = React\EventLoop\Factory::create();
// [2]
$loop->addPeriodicTimer(1, function () {
echo "Tick\n";
});
$stream = new React\Stream\ReadableResourceStream(
fopen('file.txt', 'r'),
$loop
);
// [3]
$loop->run();
- The loop instance is created at the beginning of the program. A convenience
factory
React\EventLoop\Factory::create()
is provided by this library which picks the best available loop implementation. - The loop instance is used directly or passed to library and application code.
In this example, a periodic timer is registered with the event loop which
simply outputs
Tick
every second and a readable stream is created by using ReactPHP's stream component for demonstration purposes. - The loop is run with a single
$loop->run()
call at the end of the program.
The Factory
class exists as a convenient way to pick the best available
event loop implementation.
The create(): LoopInterface
method can be used to create a new event loop
instance:
$loop = React\EventLoop\Factory::create();
This method always returns an instance implementing LoopInterface
,
the actual event loop implementation is an implementation detail.
This method should usually only be called once at the beginning of the program.
In addition to the LoopInterface
, there are a number of
event loop implementations provided.
All of the event loops support these features:
- File descriptor polling
- One-off timers
- Periodic timers
- Deferred execution on future loop tick
For most consumers of this package, the underlying event loop implementation is
an implementation detail.
You should use the Factory
to automatically create a new instance.
Advanced! If you explicitly need a certain event loop implementation, you can
manually instantiate one of the following classes.
Note that you may have to install the required PHP extensions for the respective
event loop implementation first or they will throw a BadMethodCallException
on creation.
A stream_select()
based event loop.
This uses the stream_select()
function and is the only implementation which works out of the box with PHP.
This event loop works out of the box on PHP 5.3 through PHP 7+ and HHVM.
This means that no installation is required and this library works on all
platforms and supported PHP versions.
Accordingly, the Factory
will use this event loop by default if
you do not install any of the event loop extensions listed below.
Under the hood, it does a simple select
system call.
This system call is limited to the maximum file descriptor number of
FD_SETSIZE
(platform dependent, commonly 1024) and scales with O(m)
(m
being the maximum file descriptor number passed).
This means that you may run into issues when handling thousands of streams
concurrently and you may want to look into using one of the alternative
event loop implementations listed below in this case.
If your use case is among the many common use cases that involve handling only
dozens or a few hundred streams at once, then this event loop implementation
performs really well.
If you want to use signal handling (see also addSignal()
below),
this event loop implementation requires ext-pcntl
.
This extension is only available for Unix-like platforms and does not support
Windows.
It is commonly installed as part of many PHP distributions.
If this extension is missing (or you're running on Windows), signal handling is
not supported and throws a BadMethodCallException
instead.
This event loop is known to rely on wall-clock time to schedule future timers
when using any version before PHP 7.3, because a monotonic time source is
only available as of PHP 7.3 (hrtime()
).
While this does not affect many common use cases, this is an important
distinction for programs that rely on a high time precision or on systems
that are subject to discontinuous time adjustments (time jumps).
This means that if you schedule a timer to trigger in 30s on PHP < 7.3 and
then adjust your system time forward by 20s, the timer may trigger in 10s.
See also addTimer()
for more details.
An ext-event
based event loop.
This uses the event
PECL extension.
It supports the same backends as libevent.
This loop is known to work with PHP 5.4 through PHP 7+.
An ext-ev
based event loop.
This loop uses the ev
PECL extension, that
provides an interface to libev
library.
This loop is known to work with PHP 5.4 through PHP 7+.
An ext-uv
based event loop.
This loop uses the uv
PECL extension, that
provides an interface to libuv
library.
This loop is known to work with PHP 7+.
An ext-libevent
based event loop.
This uses the libevent
PECL extension.
libevent
itself supports a number of system-specific backends (epoll, kqueue).
This event loop does only work with PHP 5.
An unofficial update for
PHP 7 does exist, but it is known to cause regular crashes due to SEGFAULT
s.
To reiterate: Using this event loop on PHP 7 is not recommended.
Accordingly, the Factory
will not try to use this event loop on
PHP 7.
This event loop is known to trigger a readable listener only if
the stream becomes readable (edge-triggered) and may not trigger if the
stream has already been readable from the beginning.
This also implies that a stream may not be recognized as readable when data
is still left in PHP's internal stream buffers.
As such, it's recommended to use stream_set_read_buffer($stream, 0);
to disable PHP's internal read buffer in this case.
See also addReadStream()
for more details.
An ext-libev
based event loop.
This uses an unofficial libev
extension.
It supports the same backends as libevent.
This loop does only work with PHP 5. An update for PHP 7 is unlikely to happen any time soon.
The run(): void
method can be used to
run the event loop until there are no more tasks to perform.
For many applications, this method is the only directly visible invocation on the event loop. As a rule of thumb, it is usally recommended to attach everything to the same loop instance and then run the loop once at the bottom end of the application.
$loop->run();
This method will keep the loop running until there are no more tasks to perform. In other words: This method will block until the last timer, stream and/or signal has been removed.
Likewise, it is imperative to ensure the application actually invokes this method once. Adding listeners to the loop and missing to actually run it will result in the application exiting without actually waiting for any of the attached listeners.
This method MUST NOT be called while the loop is already running.
This method MAY be called more than once after it has explicity been
stop()
ped or after it automatically stopped because it
previously did no longer have anything to do.
The stop(): void
method can be used to
instruct a running event loop to stop.
This method is considered advanced usage and should be used with care. As a rule of thumb, it is usually recommended to let the loop stop only automatically when it no longer has anything to do.
This method can be used to explicitly instruct the event loop to stop:
$loop->addTimer(3.0, function () use ($loop) {
$loop->stop();
});
Calling this method on a loop instance that is not currently running or on a loop instance that has already been stopped has no effect.
The addTimer(float $interval, callable $callback): TimerInterface
method can be used to
enqueue a callback to be invoked once after the given interval.
The timer callback function MUST be able to accept a single parameter, the timer instance as also returned by this method or you MAY use a function which has no parameters at all.
The timer callback function MUST NOT throw an Exception
.
The return value of the timer callback function will be ignored and has
no effect, so for performance reasons you're recommended to not return
any excessive data structures.
Unlike addPeriodicTimer()
, this method will ensure
the callback will be invoked only once after the given interval.
You can invoke cancelTimer
to cancel a pending timer.
$loop->addTimer(0.8, function () {
echo 'world!' . PHP_EOL;
});
$loop->addTimer(0.3, function () {
echo 'hello ';
});
See also example #1.
If you want to access any variables within your callback function, you can bind arbitrary data to a callback closure like this:
function hello($name, LoopInterface $loop)
{
$loop->addTimer(1.0, function () use ($name) {
echo "hello $name\n";
});
}
hello('Tester', $loop);
This interface does not enforce any particular timer resolution, so special care may have to be taken if you rely on very high precision with millisecond accuracy or below. Event loop implementations SHOULD work on a best effort basis and SHOULD provide at least millisecond accuracy unless otherwise noted. Many existing event loop implementations are known to provide microsecond accuracy, but it's generally not recommended to rely on this high precision.
Similarly, the execution order of timers scheduled to execute at the same time (within its possible accuracy) is not guaranteed.
This interface suggests that event loop implementations SHOULD use a monotonic time source if available. Given that a monotonic time source is only available as of PHP 7.3 by default, event loop implementations MAY fall back to using wall-clock time. While this does not affect many common use cases, this is an important distinction for programs that rely on a high time precision or on systems that are subject to discontinuous time adjustments (time jumps). This means that if you schedule a timer to trigger in 30s and then adjust your system time forward by 20s, the timer SHOULD still trigger in 30s. See also event loop implementations for more details.
The addPeriodicTimer(float $interval, callable $callback): TimerInterface
method can be used to
enqueue a callback to be invoked repeatedly after the given interval.
The timer callback function MUST be able to accept a single parameter, the timer instance as also returned by this method or you MAY use a function which has no parameters at all.
The timer callback function MUST NOT throw an Exception
.
The return value of the timer callback function will be ignored and has
no effect, so for performance reasons you're recommended to not return
any excessive data structures.
Unlike addTimer()
, this method will ensure the the
callback will be invoked infinitely after the given interval or until you
invoke cancelTimer
.
$timer = $loop->addPeriodicTimer(0.1, function () {
echo 'tick!' . PHP_EOL;
});
$loop->addTimer(1.0, function () use ($loop, $timer) {
$loop->cancelTimer($timer);
echo 'Done' . PHP_EOL;
});
See also example #2.
If you want to limit the number of executions, you can bind arbitrary data to a callback closure like this:
function hello($name, LoopInterface $loop)
{
$n = 3;
$loop->addPeriodicTimer(1.0, function ($timer) use ($name, $loop, &$n) {
if ($n > 0) {
--$n;
echo "hello $name\n";
} else {
$loop->cancelTimer($timer);
}
});
}
hello('Tester', $loop);
This interface does not enforce any particular timer resolution, so special care may have to be taken if you rely on very high precision with millisecond accuracy or below. Event loop implementations SHOULD work on a best effort basis and SHOULD provide at least millisecond accuracy unless otherwise noted. Many existing event loop implementations are known to provide microsecond accuracy, but it's generally not recommended to rely on this high precision.
Similarly, the execution order of timers scheduled to execute at the same time (within its possible accuracy) is not guaranteed.
This interface suggests that event loop implementations SHOULD use a monotonic time source if available. Given that a monotonic time source is only available as of PHP 7.3 by default, event loop implementations MAY fall back to using wall-clock time. While this does not affect many common use cases, this is an important distinction for programs that rely on a high time precision or on systems that are subject to discontinuous time adjustments (time jumps). This means that if you schedule a timer to trigger in 30s and then adjust your system time forward by 20s, the timer SHOULD still trigger in 30s. See also event loop implementations for more details.
Additionally, periodic timers may be subject to timer drift due to re-scheduling after each invocation. As such, it's generally not recommended to rely on this for high precision intervals with millisecond accuracy or below.
The cancelTimer(TimerInterface $timer): void
method can be used to
cancel a pending timer.
See also addPeriodicTimer()
and example #2.
Calling this method on a timer instance that has not been added to this loop instance or on a timer that has already been cancelled has no effect.
The futureTick(callable $listener): void
method can be used to
schedule a callback to be invoked on a future tick of the event loop.
This works very much similar to timers with an interval of zero seconds, but does not require the overhead of scheduling a timer queue.
The tick callback function MUST be able to accept zero parameters.
The tick callback function MUST NOT throw an Exception
.
The return value of the tick callback function will be ignored and has
no effect, so for performance reasons you're recommended to not return
any excessive data structures.
If you want to access any variables within your callback function, you can bind arbitrary data to a callback closure like this:
function hello($name, LoopInterface $loop)
{
$loop->futureTick(function () use ($name) {
echo "hello $name\n";
});
}
hello('Tester', $loop);
Unlike timers, tick callbacks are guaranteed to be executed in the order they are enqueued. Also, once a callback is enqueued, there's no way to cancel this operation.
This is often used to break down bigger tasks into smaller steps (a form of cooperative multitasking).
$loop->futureTick(function () {
echo 'b';
});
$loop->futureTick(function () {
echo 'c';
});
echo 'a';
See also example #3.
The addSignal(int $signal, callable $listener): void
method can be used to
register a listener to be notified when a signal has been caught by this process.
This is useful to catch user interrupt signals or shutdown signals from
tools like supervisor
or systemd
.
The listener callback function MUST be able to accept a single parameter, the signal added by this method or you MAY use a function which has no parameters at all.
The listener callback function MUST NOT throw an Exception
.
The return value of the listener callback function will be ignored and has
no effect, so for performance reasons you're recommended to not return
any excessive data structures.
$loop->addSignal(SIGINT, function (int $signal) {
echo 'Caught user interrupt signal' . PHP_EOL;
});
See also example #4.
Signaling is only available on Unix-like platform, Windows isn't
supported due to operating system limitations.
This method may throw a BadMethodCallException
if signals aren't
supported on this platform, for example when required extensions are
missing.
Note: A listener can only be added once to the same signal, any attempts to add it more then once will be ignored.
The removeSignal(int $signal, callable $listener): void
method can be used to
remove a previously added signal listener.
$loop->removeSignal(SIGINT, $listener);
Any attempts to remove listeners that aren't registered will be ignored.
Advanced! Note that this low-level API is considered advanced usage. Most use cases should probably use the higher-level readable Stream API instead.
The addReadStream(resource $stream, callable $callback): void
method can be used to
register a listener to be notified when a stream is ready to read.
The first parameter MUST be a valid stream resource that supports
checking whether it is ready to read by this loop implementation.
A single stream resource MUST NOT be added more than once.
Instead, either call removeReadStream()
first or
react to this event with a single listener and then dispatch from this
listener. This method MAY throw an Exception
if the given resource type
is not supported by this loop implementation.
The listener callback function MUST be able to accept a single parameter, the stream resource added by this method or you MAY use a function which has no parameters at all.
The listener callback function MUST NOT throw an Exception
.
The return value of the listener callback function will be ignored and has
no effect, so for performance reasons you're recommended to not return
any excessive data structures.
If you want to access any variables within your callback function, you can bind arbitrary data to a callback closure like this:
$loop->addReadStream($stream, function ($stream) use ($name) {
echo $name . ' said: ' . fread($stream);
});
See also example #11.
You can invoke removeReadStream()
to remove the
read event listener for this stream.
The execution order of listeners when multiple streams become ready at the same time is not guaranteed.
Some event loop implementations are known to only trigger the listener if
the stream becomes readable (edge-triggered) and may not trigger if the
stream has already been readable from the beginning.
This also implies that a stream may not be recognized as readable when data
is still left in PHP's internal stream buffers.
As such, it's recommended to use stream_set_read_buffer($stream, 0);
to disable PHP's internal read buffer in this case.
Advanced! Note that this low-level API is considered advanced usage. Most use cases should probably use the higher-level writable Stream API instead.
The addWriteStream(resource $stream, callable $callback): void
method can be used to
register a listener to be notified when a stream is ready to write.
The first parameter MUST be a valid stream resource that supports
checking whether it is ready to write by this loop implementation.
A single stream resource MUST NOT be added more than once.
Instead, either call removeWriteStream()
first or
react to this event with a single listener and then dispatch from this
listener. This method MAY throw an Exception
if the given resource type
is not supported by this loop implementation.
The listener callback function MUST be able to accept a single parameter, the stream resource added by this method or you MAY use a function which has no parameters at all.
The listener callback function MUST NOT throw an Exception
.
The return value of the listener callback function will be ignored and has
no effect, so for performance reasons you're recommended to not return
any excessive data structures.
If you want to access any variables within your callback function, you can bind arbitrary data to a callback closure like this:
$loop->addWriteStream($stream, function ($stream) use ($name) {
fwrite($stream, 'Hello ' . $name);
});
See also example #12.
You can invoke removeWriteStream()
to remove the
write event listener for this stream.
The execution order of listeners when multiple streams become ready at the same time is not guaranteed.
The removeReadStream(resource $stream): void
method can be used to
remove the read event listener for the given stream.
Removing a stream from the loop that has already been removed or trying to remove a stream that was never added or is invalid has no effect.
The removeWriteStream(resource $stream): void
method can be used to
remove the write event listener for the given stream.
Removing a stream from the loop that has already been removed or trying to remove a stream that was never added or is invalid has no effect.
The recommended way to install this library is through Composer. New to Composer?
This project follows SemVer. This will install the latest supported version:
$ composer require react/event-loop:^1.1.1
See also the CHANGELOG for details about version upgrades.
This project aims to run on any platform and thus does not require any PHP extensions and supports running on legacy PHP 5.3 through current PHP 7+ and HHVM. It's highly recommended to use PHP 7+ for this project.
Installing any of the event loop extensions is suggested, but entirely optional. See also event loop implementations for more details.
To run the test suite, you first need to clone this repo and then install all dependencies through Composer:
$ composer install
To run the test suite, go to the project root and run:
$ php vendor/bin/phpunit
MIT, see LICENSE file.
- See our Stream component for more information on how streams are used in real-world applications.
- See our users wiki and the dependents on Packagist for a list of packages that use the EventLoop in real-world applications.