KinoSearch::Store::Lock - Abstract class representing an interprocess mutex lock.
my $lock = $lock_factory->make_lock(
name => 'write',
timeout => 5000,
);
$lock->obtain or die "can't get lock for " . $lock->get_name;
do_stuff();
$lock->release;
The Lock class produces an interprocess mutex lock. The default subclass uses dot-lock files, but alternative implementations are possible.
Each lock must have a name which is unique per resource to be locked. Each lock also has a "host" id which should be unique per machine; it is used to help clear away stale locks.
my $lock = KinoSearch::Store::Lock->new(
name => 'commit', # required
folder => $folder, # required
host => $hostname, # required
timeout => 5000, # default: 0
interval => 1000, # default: 100
);
Abstract constructor.
Make one attempt to acquire the lock.
The semantics of request() differ depending on whether shared() returns
true. If the Lock is shared(), then request() should not fail if
another lock is held against the resource identified by
name (though it might fail for other reasons). If it is
not shared() -- i.e. it's an exclusive (write) lock -- then other locks
should cause request() to fail.
Returns: true on success, false on failure (sets KinoSearch->error).
Release the lock.
Indicate whether the resource identified by this lock's name is currently locked.
Returns: true if the resource is locked, false otherwise.
Release all locks that meet the following three conditions: the lock name matches, the host id matches, and the process id that the lock was created under no longer identifies an active process.
Call request() once per interval until request() returns
success or the timeout has been reached.
Returns: true on success, false on failure (sets KinoSearch->error).
KinoSearch::Store::Lock isa KinoSearch::Object::Obj.
Copyright 2005-2011 Marvin Humphrey
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.