table of contents
Mail::SpamAssassin::AsyncLoop(3) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Mail::SpamAssassin::AsyncLoop(3) |
NAME¶
Mail::SpamAssassin::AsyncLoop - scanner asynchronous event loop
DESCRIPTION¶
An asynchronous event loop used for long-running operations, performed "in the background" during the Mail::SpamAssassin::check() scan operation, such as DNS blocklist lookups.
METHODS¶
- $ent = $async->bgsend_and_start_lookup($name, $type, $class, $ent, $cb, %options)
- Launch async DNS lookups. This is the only official method supported for
plugins since version 4.0.0. Do not use bgsend and start_lookup
separately.
Merges duplicate queries automatically, only launches one and calls all related callbacks on answer.
- $name (required)
- Name to query.
- $type (required)
- Type to query, A, TXT, NS, etc.
- $class (required/deprecated)
- Deprecated, ignored, set as undef.
- $ent is a required hash reference containing the following items:
- $ent->{rulename} (required)
- The rulename that started and/or depends on this query. Required for rule dependencies to work correctly. Can be a single rulename, or array of multiple rulenames.
- $ent->{type} (optional)
- A string, typically one word, used to describe the type of lookup in log messages, such as "DNSBL", "URIBL-A". If not defined, default is value of $type.
- $ent->{zone} (optional)
- A zone specification (typically a DNS zone name - e.g. host, domain, or RBL) which may be used as a key to look up per-zone settings. No semantics on this parameter is imposed by this module. Currently used to fetch by-zone timeouts (from rbl_timeout setting). Defaults to $name.
- $ent->{timeout_initial} (optional)
- An initial value of elapsed time for which we are willing to wait for a
response (time in seconds, floating point value is allowed). When elapsed
time since a query started exceeds the timeout value and there are no
other queries to wait for, the query is aborted. The actual timeout value
ranges from timeout_initial and gradually approaches timeout_min (see next
parameter) as the number of already completed queries approaches the
number of all queries started.
If a caller does not explicitly provide this parameter or its value is undefined, a default initial timeout value is settable by a configuration variable rbl_timeout.
If a value of the timeout_initial parameter is below timeout_min, the initial timeout is set to timeout_min.
- $ent->{timeout_min} (optional)
- A lower bound (in seconds) to which the actual timeout approaches as the number of queries completed approaches the number of all queries started. Defaults to 0.2 * timeout_initial.
- $ent->{key}, $ent->{id} (deprecated)
- Deprecated, ignored, automatically generated since 4.0.0.
- $ent->{YOUR_OWN_ITEM}
- Any other custom values/objects that you want to pass on to the answer callback.
- $cb (required)
- Callback function for answer, called as $cb->($ent, $pkt). $ent is the same object that bgsend_and_start_lookup was called with. $pkt is the packet object for the response, Net::DNS:RR objects can be found from $pkt->answer.
- %options (required)
- Hash of options. Only supported and required option is master_deadline:
master_deadline => $pms->{master_deadline}
- $ent = $async->start_lookup($ent, $master_deadline)
- DIRECT USE DEPRECATED since 4.0.0, please use bgsend_and_start_lookup.
- $ent = $async->get_lookup($key)
- DEPRECATED since 4.0.0. Do not use.
- $async->log_lookups_timing()
- Log sorted timing for all completed lookups.
- $alldone = $async->complete_lookups()
- Perform a poll of the pending lookups, to see if any are completed.
Callbacks on completed queries will be called from
poll_responses().
If there are no lookups remaining, or if too much time has elapsed since any results were returned, 1 is returned, otherwise 0.
- $async->abort_remaining_lookups()
- Abort any remaining lookups.
- $async->set_response_packet($id, $pkt, $key, $timestamp)
- For internal use, do not call from plugins.
Register a "response packet" for a given query. $id is the ID for the query, and must match the "id" supplied in start_lookup(). $pkt is the packet object for the response. A parameter $key identifies an entry in a hash %{$self->{pending_lookups}} where the object which spawned this query can be found, and through which further information about the query is accessible.
$pkt may be undef, indicating that no response packet is available, but a query has completed (e.g. was aborted or dismissed) and is no longer "pending".
The DNS resolver's response packet $pkt will be made available to a callback subroutine through its argument as well as in "$ent->{response_packet}".
- $async->report_id_complete($id,$key,$key,$timestamp)
- DEPRECATED since 4.0.0. Do not use.
Legacy. Equivalent to $self->set_response_packet($id,undef,$key,$timestamp), i.e. providing undef as a response packet. Register that a query has completed and is no longer "pending". $id is the ID for the query, and must match the "id" supplied in start_lookup().
One or the other of set_response_packet() or report_id_complete() should be called, but not both.
- $time = $async->last_poll_responses_time()
- Get the time of the last call to poll_responses() (which is called from complete_lookups(). If poll_responses() was never called or abort_remaining_lookups() has been called last_poll_responses_time() will return undef.
2024-04-10 | perl v5.40.0 |