create-simple-process name function wait-function &key function-arguments wait-function-arguments priority => process
A string or symbol
A function
A function
A list of arguments for function
A list of arguments for wait-function
A fixnum
The
create-simple-process
function creates and returns a simple process, which is a process that has no stack of its own.
The
name
argument is a string or symbol that names the process. The
function
argument is a function to be run in the process, and the
wait-function
argument is a wait function that determines when the process function is run. The value of
function-arguments
is a list of arguments to which the process function is applied. The value of
wait-function-arguments
is a list of arguments to which the wait function is applied. The :
priority
argument is a fixnum that specifies a priority for the process. The default priority is the value of
*default-simple-process-priority*
, and is usually 0.
When the wait function, applied to the
wait-function-arguments
, returns a value other than
nil
, the process function is applied to the function-arguments. The process function is executed inside an
mp:without-preemption
form. If an error occurs in a simple process, that process is stopped and a continuable error is signaled in the process that was running at the time the simple process was started (or the last process to run if the system was idle). Continuing from the error restarts the simple process.
Because a simple process has no stack of its own, it can be executed on an arbitrary stack. However, simple processes have restrictions, the primary one being that they cannot block. The following interfaces cannot be used in a simple process:
mp:mailbox-read
(with an empty mailbox)
mp:process-allow-scheduling
mp:process-lock
mp:process-wait
mp:process-wait-with-timeout
cl:sleep
mp:sleep-for-time
mp:wait-for-mailbox
mp:wait-processing-events
mp:with-lock
Other Common Lisp functions might not work if they attempt to block. This applies in particular to I/O functions on streams such as pipes and to
(setf gethash)
on a hash table that another process is mapping over.
For more information, see the "Multiprocessing" chapter of the LispWorks User Guide .
The following example creates a simple process that prints the value of
*a*
to the background output when the value is other than
nil
. The process function then sets *a* to
nil
. From a listener, the value of *a* can be set to trigger the process to run once and then sleep again.
(defvar *a* 'i)
*A*
(defun a ()
(let ((a *a*))
(setq *a* nil)
(format mp:*background-standard-output*
"*a* is ~a~%" a)))
A
(defun b () *a*)
B
(setq r (mp:create-simple-process 'test-proc 'a 'b))
#<MP::SIMPLE-PROCESS Name TEST-PROC Priority 0 State NIL>