Elixir v1.5.2 Process View Source

Conveniences for working with processes and the process dictionary.

Besides the functions available in this module, the Kernel module exposes and auto-imports some basic functionality related to processes available through the following functions:

Link to this section Summary

Functions

Tells whether the given process is alive

Deletes the given key from the process dictionary

Demonitors the monitor identifies by the given reference

Sends an exit signal with the given reason to pid

Sets the given flag to value for the calling process

Sets the given flag to value for the given process pid

Returns all key-value pairs in the process dictionary

Returns the value for the given key in the process dictionary, or default if key is not set

Returns all keys in the process dictionary

Returns all keys in the process dictionary that have the given value

Returns the PID of the group leader for the calling process

Sets the group leader of the given pid to leader

Puts the calling process into a “hibernation” state

Returns information about the process identified by pid, or returns nil if the process is not alive

Returns information about the process identified by pid, or returns nil if the process is not alive

Creates a link between the calling process and the given item (process or port)

Returns a list of PIDs corresponding to all the processes currently existing on the local node

Starts monitoring the given item from the calling process

Stores the given key-value pair in the process dictionary

Reads a timer created by send_after/3

Registers the given pid_or_port under the given name

Returns a list of names which have been registered using register/2

Sends a message to the given process

Sends msg to dest after time milliseconds

Sleeps the current process for the given timeout

Spawns the given function according to the given options

Spawns the given function fun from module mod, passing the given args according to the given options

Removes the link between the calling process and the given item (process or port)

Removes the registered name, associated with a PID or a port identifier

Returns the PID or port identifier registered under name or nil if the name is not registered

Link to this section Types

Link to this type spawn_opt() View Source
spawn_opt() ::
  :link |
  :monitor |
  {:priority, :low | :normal | :high} |
  {:fullsweep_after, non_neg_integer()} |
  {:min_heap_size, non_neg_integer()} |
  {:min_bin_vheap_size, non_neg_integer()}
Link to this type spawn_opts() View Source
spawn_opts() :: [spawn_opt()]

Link to this section Functions

Tells whether the given process is alive.

If the process identified by pid is alive (that is, it’s not exiting and has not exited yet) than this function returns true. Otherwise, it returns false.

pid must refer to a process running on the local node.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function cancel_timer(timer_ref, options \\ []) View Source
cancel_timer(reference(), options) ::
  non_neg_integer() |
  false |
  :ok when options: [async: boolean(), info: boolean()]

Cancels a timer returned by send_after/3.

When the result is an integer, it represents the time in milliseconds left until the timer would have expired.

When the result is false, a timer corresponding to timer_ref could not be found. This can happen either because the timer expired, because it has already been canceled, or because timer_ref never corresponded to a timer.

Even if the timer had expired and the message was sent, this function does not tell you if the timeout message has arrived at its destination yet.

Options

  • :async - (boolean) when false, the request for cancellation is synchronous. When true, the request for cancellation is asynchronous, meaning that the request to cancel the timer is issued and :ok is returned right away. Defaults to false.

  • :info - (boolean) whether to return information about the timer being cancelled. When the :async option is false and :info is true, then either an integer or false (like described above) is returned. If :async is false and :info is false, :ok is returned. If :async is true and :info is true, a message in the form {:cancel_timer, timer_ref, result} (where result is an integer or false like described above) is sent to the caller of this function when the cancellation has been performed. If :async is true and :info is false, no message is sent. Defaults to true.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function delete(key) View Source
delete(term()) :: term() | nil

Deletes the given key from the process dictionary.

Returns the value that was under key in the process dictionary, or nil if key was not stored in the process dictionary.

Examples

Process.put(:comments, ["comment", "other comment"])
Process.delete(:comments)
#=> ["comment", "other comment"]
Process.delete(:comments)
#=> nil
Link to this function demonitor(monitor_ref, options \\ []) View Source
demonitor(reference(), options :: [:flush | :info]) :: boolean()

Demonitors the monitor identifies by the given reference.

If monitor_ref is a reference which the calling process obtained by calling monitor/1, that monitoring is turned off. If the monitoring is already turned off, nothing happens.

See :erlang.demonitor/2 for more info.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function exit(pid, reason) View Source
exit(pid(), term()) :: true

Sends an exit signal with the given reason to pid.

The following behaviour applies if reason is any term except :normal or :kill:

  1. If pid is not trapping exits, pid will exit with the given reason.

  2. If pid is trapping exits, the exit signal is transformed into a message {:EXIT, from, reason} and delivered to the message queue of pid.

If reason is the atom :normal, pid will not exit (unless pid is the calling process, in which case it will exit with the reason :normal). If it is trapping exits, the exit signal is transformed into a message {:EXIT, from, :normal} and delivered to its message queue.

If reason is the atom :kill, that is if Process.exit(pid, :kill) is called, an untrappable exit signal is sent to pid which will unconditionally exit with reason :killed.

Inlined by the compiler.

Examples

Process.exit(pid, :kill)
#=> true
Link to this function flag(flag, value) View Source
flag(:trap_exit, boolean()) :: boolean()
flag(:sensitive, boolean()) :: boolean()
flag(:save_calls, 0..10000) :: 0..10000
flag(:priority, priority_level()) :: priority_level()
flag({:monitor_nodes, term()}, term()) :: term()
flag(:monitor_nodes, term()) :: term()
flag(:min_heap_size, non_neg_integer()) :: non_neg_integer()
flag(:min_bin_vheap_size, non_neg_integer()) :: non_neg_integer()
flag(:message_queue_data, :erlang.message_queue_data()) :: :erlang.message_queue_data()
flag(:max_heap_size, heap_size()) :: heap_size()
flag(:error_handler, module()) :: module()

Sets the given flag to value for the calling process.

Returns the old value of flag.

See :erlang.process_flag/2 for more info.

Note that flag values :max_heap_size and :message_queue_data are only available since OTP 19.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function flag(pid, flag, value) View Source
flag(pid(), :save_calls, 0..10000) :: 0..10000

Sets the given flag to value for the given process pid.

Returns the old value of flag.

It raises ArgumentError if pid is not a local process.

The allowed values for flag are only a subset of those allowed in flag/2, namely :save_calls.

See :erlang.process_flag/3 for more info.

Inlined by the compiler.

Returns all key-value pairs in the process dictionary.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function get(key, default \\ nil) View Source
get(term(), default :: term()) :: term()

Returns the value for the given key in the process dictionary, or default if key is not set.

Link to this function get_keys() View Source
get_keys() :: [term()]

Returns all keys in the process dictionary.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function get_keys(value) View Source
get_keys(term()) :: [term()]

Returns all keys in the process dictionary that have the given value.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function group_leader() View Source
group_leader() :: pid()

Returns the PID of the group leader for the calling process.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function group_leader(pid, leader) View Source
group_leader(pid(), leader :: pid()) :: true

Sets the group leader of the given pid to leader.

Typically, this is used when a process started from a certain shell should have a group leader other than :init.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function hibernate(mod, fun_name, args) View Source
hibernate(module(), atom(), list()) :: no_return()

Puts the calling process into a “hibernation” state.

The calling process is put into a waiting state where its memory allocation has been reduced as much as possible, which is useful if the process does not expect to receive any messages in the near future.

See :erlang.hibernate/3 for more info.

Inlined by the compiler.

Returns information about the process identified by pid, or returns nil if the process is not alive.

Use this only for debugging information.

See :erlang.process_info/1 for more info.

Link to this function info(pid, spec) View Source
info(pid(), atom() | [atom()]) ::
  {atom(), term()} |
  [{atom(), term()}] |
  nil

Returns information about the process identified by pid, or returns nil if the process is not alive.

See :erlang.process_info/2 for more info.

Link to this function link(pid_or_port) View Source
link(pid() | port()) :: true

Creates a link between the calling process and the given item (process or port).

Links are bidirectional. Linked processes can be unlinked by using unlink/1.

If such a link exists already, this function does nothing since there can only be one link between two given processes. If a process tries to create a link to itself, nothing will happen.

When two processes are linked, each one receives exit signals from the other (see also exit/2). Let’s assume pid1 and pid2 are linked. If pid2 exits with a reason other than :normal (which is also the exit reason used when a process finishes its job) and pid1 is not trapping exits (see flag/2), then pid1 will exit with the same reason as pid2 and in turn emit an exit signal to all its other linked processes. The behaviour when pid1 is trapping exits is described in exit/2.

See :erlang.link/1 for more info.

Inlined by the compiler.

Returns a list of PIDs corresponding to all the processes currently existing on the local node.

Note that if a process is exiting, it is considered to exist but not be alive. This means that for such process, alive?/1 will return false but its PID will be part of the list of PIDs returned by this function.

See :erlang.processes/0 for more info.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function monitor(item) View Source
monitor(pid() | {reg_name :: atom(), node :: atom()} | reg_name() :: atom()) :: reference()

Starts monitoring the given item from the calling process.

Once the monitored process dies, a message is delivered to the monitoring process in the shape of:

{:DOWN, ref, :process, object, reason}

where:

  • ref is a monitor reference returned by this function;
  • object is either a pid of the monitored process (if monitoring a PID) or {name, node} (if monitoring a remote or local name);
  • reason is the exit reason.

See the need for monitoring for an example. See :erlang.monitor/2 for more info.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function put(key, value) View Source
put(term(), term()) :: term() | nil

Stores the given key-value pair in the process dictionary.

The return value of this function is the value that was previously stored under key, or nil in case no value was stored under key.

Examples

# Assuming :locale was not set
Process.put(:locale, "en")
#=> nil
Process.put(:locale, "fr")
#=> "en"
Link to this function read_timer(timer_ref) View Source
read_timer(reference()) :: non_neg_integer() | false

Reads a timer created by send_after/3.

When the result is an integer, it represents the time in milliseconds left until the timer will expire.

When the result is false, a timer corresponding to timer_ref could not be found. This can be either because the timer expired, because it has already been canceled, or because timer_ref never corresponded to a timer.

Even if the timer had expired and the message was sent, this function does not tell you if the timeout message has arrived at its destination yet.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function register(pid_or_port, name) View Source
register(pid() | port(), atom()) :: true

Registers the given pid_or_port under the given name.

name must be an atom and can then be used instead of the PID/port identifier when sending messages with Kernel.send/2.

register/2 will fail with ArgumentError in any of the following cases:

  • the PID/Port is not existing locally and alive
  • the name is already registered
  • the pid_or_port is already registered under a different name

The following names are reserved and cannot be assigned to processes nor ports:

  • nil
  • false
  • true
  • :undefined
Link to this function registered() View Source
registered() :: [atom()]

Returns a list of names which have been registered using register/2.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function send(dest, msg, options) View Source
send(dest, msg, [option]) ::
  :ok |
  :noconnect |
  :nosuspend when dest: pid() | port() | atom() | {atom(), node()}, msg: any(), option: :noconnect | :nosuspend

Sends a message to the given process.

Options

  • :noconnect - when used, if sending the message would require an auto-connection to another node the message is not sent and :noconnect is returned.

  • :nosuspend - when used, if sending the message would cause the sender to be suspended the message is not sent and :nosuspend is returned.

Otherwise the message is sent and :ok is returned.

Examples

iex> Process.send({:name, :node_that_does_not_exist}, :hi, [:noconnect])
:noconnect

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function send_after(dest, msg, time, opts \\ []) View Source
send_after(pid() | atom(), term(), non_neg_integer(), [option]) :: reference() when option: {:abs, boolean()}

Sends msg to dest after time milliseconds.

If dest is a PID, it must be the PID of a local process, dead or alive. If dest is an atom, it must be the name of a registered process which is looked up at the time of delivery. No error is produced if the name does not refer to a process.

This function returns a timer reference, which can be read with read_timer/1 or canceled with cancel_timer/1.

The timer will be automatically canceled if the given dest is a PID which is not alive or when the given PID exits. Note that timers will not be automatically canceled when dest is an atom (as the atom resolution is done on delivery).

Inlined by the compiler.

Options

  • :abs - (boolean) when false, time is treated as relative to the current monotonic time. When true, time is the absolute value of the Erlang monotonic time at which msg should be delivered to dest. To read more about Erlang monotonic time and other time-related concepts, look at the documentation for the System module. Defaults to false.

Examples

timer_ref = Process.send_after(pid, :hi, 1000)
Link to this function sleep(timeout) View Source
sleep(timeout()) :: :ok

Sleeps the current process for the given timeout.

timeout is either the number of milliseconds to sleep as an integer or the atom :infinity. When :infinity is given, the current process will sleep forever, and not consume or reply to messages.

Use this function with extreme care. For almost all situations where you would use sleep/1 in Elixir, there is likely a more correct, faster and precise way of achieving the same with message passing.

For example, if you are waiting for a process to perform some action, it is better to communicate the progress of such action with messages.

In other words, do not:

Task.start_link fn ->
  do_something()
  ...
end

# Wait until work is done
Process.sleep(2000)

But do:

parent = self()
Task.start_link fn ->
  do_something()
  send parent, :work_is_done
  ...
end

receive do
  :work_is_done -> :ok
after
  30_000 -> :timeout # Optional timeout
end

For cases like the one above, Task.async/1 and Task.await/2 are preferred.

Similarly, if you are waiting for a process to terminate, monitor that process instead of sleeping. Do not:

Task.start_link fn ->
  ...
end

# Wait until task terminates
Process.sleep(2000)

Instead do:

{:ok, pid} =
  Task.start_link fn ->
    ...
  end

ref = Process.monitor(pid)
receive do
  {:DOWN, ^ref, _, _, _} -> :task_is_down
after
  30_000 -> :timeout # Optional timeout
end
Link to this function spawn(fun, opts) View Source
spawn((() -> any()), spawn_opts()) :: pid() | {pid(), reference()}

Spawns the given function according to the given options.

The result depends on the given options. In particular, if :monitor is given as an option, it will return a tuple containing the PID and the monitoring reference, otherwise just the spawned process PID.

More options are available; for the comprehensive list of available options check :erlang.spawn_opt/4.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function spawn(mod, fun, args, opts) View Source
spawn(module(), atom(), list(), spawn_opts()) ::
  pid() |
  {pid(), reference()}

Spawns the given function fun from module mod, passing the given args according to the given options.

The result depends on the given options. In particular, if :monitor is given as an option, it will return a tuple containing the PID and the monitoring reference, otherwise just the spawned process PID.

It also accepts extra options, for the list of available options check :erlang.spawn_opt/4.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function unlink(pid_or_port) View Source
unlink(pid() | port()) :: true

Removes the link between the calling process and the given item (process or port).

If there is no such link, this function does nothing. If pid_or_port does not exist, this function does not produce any errors and simply does nothing.

The return value of this function is always true.

See :erlang.unlink/1 for more info.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function unregister(name) View Source
unregister(atom()) :: true

Removes the registered name, associated with a PID or a port identifier.

Fails with ArgumentError if the name is not registered to any PID or port.

Inlined by the compiler.

Link to this function whereis(name) View Source
whereis(atom()) :: pid() | port() | nil

Returns the PID or port identifier registered under name or nil if the name is not registered.

See :erlang.whereis/1 for more info.