Event::add

(PECL event >= 1.2.6-beta)

Event::addMakes event pending

Description

public Event::add( float $timeout = ?): bool

Marks event pending. Non-pending event will never occur, and the event callback will never be called. In conjunction with Event::del() an event could be re-scheduled by user at any time.

If Event::add() is called on an already pending event, libevent will leave it pending and re-schedule it with the given timeout(if specified). If in this case timeout is not specified, Event::add() has no effect.

Parameters

timeout

Timeout in seconds.

Return Values

Returns true on success or false on failure.

Examples

Example #1 Adding a custom signal

<?php
/*
Launch it in a terminal window:

$ php examples/signal.php

In another terminal window find out the pid and send SIGTERM, e.g.:

$ ps aux | grep examp
ruslan    3976  0.2  0.0 139896 11256 pts/1    S+   10:25   0:00 php examples/signal.php
ruslan    3978  0.0  0.0   9572   864 pts/2    S+   10:26   0:00 grep --color=auto examp
$ kill -TERM 3976

At the first terminal window you should catch the following:

Caught signal 15
*/
class MyEventSignal {
    private 
$base$ev;

    public function 
__construct($base) {
        
$this->base $base;
        
$this->ev Event::signal($baseSIGTERM, array($this'eventSighandler'));
        
$this->ev->add();
    }

    public function 
eventSighandler($no$c) {
        echo 
"Caught signal $no\n";
        
$this->base->exit();
    }
}

$base = new EventBase();
$c    = new MyEventSignal($base);

$base->loop();
?>

The above example will output something similar to:

Caught signal 15

Example #2 Adding a timer

<?php
$base 
= new EventBase();
$n 2;
$e Event::timer($base, function($n) use (&$e) {
    echo 
"$n seconds elapsed\n";
    
$e->delTimer();
}, 
$n);
$e->add($n);
$base->loop();
?>

The above example will output something similar to:

2 seconds elapsed

See Also

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