I took BrowserUk's example and added Time::Out. It returns a slightly different result.
Not slightly different. Completely different. And wrong.
Your code isn't doing anything like what you think it is doing. Actually, it isn't doing anything at all.
This:
eval {
sub test {
timeout 10, @_ => sub {
print "$_[0]";
};
}
};
evals the sub test into existence, but then it never actually calls that sub.
- The eval is pointless, because the code inside it can never fail.
- The code inside the sub is useless, because it is never called.
- You render the parameter passed to the thread useless, by never using it.
Which in turn renders the purpose of the demonstration -- showing that the timeout is effective -- useless.
- You've used a module which itself is useless, because it uses almost 100 lines of code to do what you can standard Perl in 2 lines.
And with no value add.
- And you compounded that by using it incorrectly, rendering it even less useful.
- Your code ends up being the exact equivalent of:
#! perl -slw
use strict
do {
my $tid = int( rand ); #'threads'->tid;
my $worktime = shift @_;
print "Thread $tid started with a worktime of $worktime";
print "Thread $tid ended ", $@ ? " with error: $@" : "normally";
} for 1 .. 4;
In other words, your post is ... I'll let you guess the word I'm thinking of here. (Sorry, but it's true!)
FWIW: I applaud you for having a go :)
With the rise and rise of 'Social' network sites: 'Computers are making people easier to use everyday'
Examine what is said, not who speaks -- Silence betokens consent -- Love the truth but pardon error.
"Science is about questioning the status quo. Questioning authority".
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