Re: [racket-dev] proposed clarification to async-apply docs
The typesetting on async-apply clearly refers to the argument rather than to a well-known function. This is a convention of the docs that I don't think merits special attention here, although this case may indicate we should make a how to read the documentation section that points out these conventions. Jay On Tue, Nov 16, 2010 at 1:26 PM, John Clements cleme...@brinckerhoff.org wrote: My quick reading of the documentation for the #:async-apply argument to the _fun form led to a misunderstanding; the docs seemed to be suggesting that some built-in 'async-apply' procedure was doing all of these magical things, whereas the point was to indicate that the *user* must provide an async-apply that behaves correctly. I wound up going through and replacing 'async-apply' with 'the given async-apply procedure' in about five places. I think the text is clearer now; let me know if I shouldn't commit these changes. Otherwise, I'll commit them locally and push them sometime soon. John pcp062767pcs:~/plt/collects/scribblings/foreign clements$ git diff types.scrbl diff --git a/collects/scribblings/foreign/types.scrbl b/collects/scribblings/foreign/types.scrbl index 9d753ac..233f48d 100644 --- a/collects/scribblings/foreign/types.scrbl +++ b/collects/scribblings/foreign/types.scrbl @@ -401,19 +401,22 @@ procedure with the generated procedure type can be applied in a foreign thread (i.e., an OS-level thread other than the one used to run Racket). The call in the foreign thread is transferred to the OS-level thread that runs Racket, but the Racket-level thread (in the -sense of @racket[thread]) is unspecified; the job of -...@scheme[async-apply] is to arrange for the callback procedure to be -run in a suitable Racket thread. The @scheme[async-apply] function is +sense of @racket[thread]) is unspecified; the job of the provided +...@scheme[async-apply] procedure is to arrange for the callback procedure to be +run in a suitable Racket thread. The given @scheme[async-apply] procedure is applied to a thunk that encapsulates the specific callback invocation, and the foreign OS-level thread blocks until the thunk is called and completes; the thunk must be called exactly once, and the callback -invocation must return normally. The @scheme[async-apply] procedure +invocation must return normally. The given @scheme[async-apply] procedure itself is called in atomic mode (see @scheme[atomic?] above). If the callback is known to complete quickly, requires no synchronization, and works independent of the Racket thread in which it runs, then -...@scheme[async-apply] can apply the thunk directly. Otherwise, -...@racket[async-apply] must arrange for the thunk to be applied in a -suitable Racket thread sometime after @racket[async-apply] itself +it is safe for the given +...@scheme[async-apply] procedure to apply the thunk directly. Otherwise, +the given @racket[async-apply] procedure +must arrange for the thunk to be applied in a +suitable Racket thread sometime after the given +...@racket[async-apply] procedure itself returns; if the thunk raises an exception or synchronizes within an unsuitable Racket-level thread, it can deadlock or otherwise damage the Racket process. Foreign-thread detection to trigger pcp062767pcs:~/plt/collects/scribblings/foreign clements$ _ For list-related administrative tasks: http://lists.racket-lang.org/listinfo/dev -- Jay McCarthy j...@cs.byu.edu Assistant Professor / Brigham Young University http://faculty.cs.byu.edu/~jay The glory of God is Intelligence - DC 93 _ For list-related administrative tasks: http://lists.racket-lang.org/listinfo/dev
Re: [racket-dev] proposed clarification to async-apply docs
FWIW I agree with John and disagree with Jay. On 11/16/2010 03:45 PM, Jay McCarthy wrote: The typesetting on async-apply clearly refers to the argument rather than to a well-known function. This is a convention of the docs that I don't think merits special attention here, although this case may indicate we should make a how to read the documentation section that points out these conventions. Jay On Tue, Nov 16, 2010 at 1:26 PM, John Clements cleme...@brinckerhoff.org wrote: My quick reading of the documentation for the #:async-apply argument to the _fun form led to a misunderstanding; the docs seemed to be suggesting that some built-in 'async-apply' procedure was doing all of these magical things, whereas the point was to indicate that the *user* must provide an async-apply that behaves correctly. I wound up going through and replacing 'async-apply' with 'the given async-apply procedure' in about five places. I think the text is clearer now; let me know if I shouldn't commit these changes. Otherwise, I'll commit them locally and push them sometime soon. John pcp062767pcs:~/plt/collects/scribblings/foreign clements$ git diff types.scrbl diff --git a/collects/scribblings/foreign/types.scrbl b/collects/scribblings/foreign/types.scrbl index 9d753ac..233f48d 100644 --- a/collects/scribblings/foreign/types.scrbl +++ b/collects/scribblings/foreign/types.scrbl @@ -401,19 +401,22 @@ procedure with the generated procedure type can be applied in a foreign thread (i.e., an OS-level thread other than the one used to run Racket). The call in the foreign thread is transferred to the OS-level thread that runs Racket, but the Racket-level thread (in the -sense of @racket[thread]) is unspecified; the job of -...@scheme[async-apply] is to arrange for the callback procedure to be -run in a suitable Racket thread. The @scheme[async-apply] function is +sense of @racket[thread]) is unspecified; the job of the provided +...@scheme[async-apply] procedure is to arrange for the callback procedure to be +run in a suitable Racket thread. The given @scheme[async-apply] procedure is applied to a thunk that encapsulates the specific callback invocation, and the foreign OS-level thread blocks until the thunk is called and completes; the thunk must be called exactly once, and the callback -invocation must return normally. The @scheme[async-apply] procedure +invocation must return normally. The given @scheme[async-apply] procedure itself is called in atomic mode (see @scheme[atomic?] above). If the callback is known to complete quickly, requires no synchronization, and works independent of the Racket thread in which it runs, then -...@scheme[async-apply] can apply the thunk directly. Otherwise, -...@racket[async-apply] must arrange for the thunk to be applied in a -suitable Racket thread sometime after @racket[async-apply] itself +it is safe for the given +...@scheme[async-apply] procedure to apply the thunk directly. Otherwise, +the given @racket[async-apply] procedure +must arrange for the thunk to be applied in a +suitable Racket thread sometime after the given +...@racket[async-apply] procedure itself returns; if the thunk raises an exception or synchronizes within an unsuitable Racket-level thread, it can deadlock or otherwise damage the Racket process. Foreign-thread detection to trigger pcp062767pcs:~/plt/collects/scribblings/foreign clements$ _ For list-related administrative tasks: http://lists.racket-lang.org/listinfo/dev _ For list-related administrative tasks: http://lists.racket-lang.org/listinfo/dev