Struct actix_web::rt::task::JoinHandle
[−]pub struct JoinHandle<T> { /* private fields */ }
Expand description
An owned permission to join on a task (await its termination).
This can be thought of as the equivalent of std::thread::JoinHandle
for
a task rather than a thread.
A JoinHandle
detaches the associated task when it is dropped, which
means that there is no longer any handle to the task, and no way to join
on it.
This struct
is created by the task::spawn
and task::spawn_blocking
functions.
Examples
Creation from task::spawn
:
use tokio::task;
let join_handle: task::JoinHandle<_> = task::spawn(async {
// some work here
});
Creation from task::spawn_blocking
:
use tokio::task;
let join_handle: task::JoinHandle<_> = task::spawn_blocking(|| {
// some blocking work here
});
The generic parameter T
in JoinHandle<T>
is the return type of the spawned task.
If the return value is an i32, the join handle has type JoinHandle<i32>
:
use tokio::task;
let join_handle: task::JoinHandle<i32> = task::spawn(async {
5 + 3
});
If the task does not have a return value, the join handle has type JoinHandle<()>
:
use tokio::task;
let join_handle: task::JoinHandle<()> = task::spawn(async {
println!("I return nothing.");
});
Note that handle.await
doesn’t give you the return type directly. It is wrapped in a
Result
because panics in the spawned task are caught by Tokio. The ?
operator has
to be double chained to extract the returned value:
use tokio::task;
use std::io;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> io::Result<()> {
let join_handle: task::JoinHandle<Result<i32, io::Error>> = tokio::spawn(async {
Ok(5 + 3)
});
let result = join_handle.await??;
assert_eq!(result, 8);
Ok(())
}
If the task panics, the error is a JoinError
that contains the panic:
use tokio::task;
use std::io;
use std::panic;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> io::Result<()> {
let join_handle: task::JoinHandle<Result<i32, io::Error>> = tokio::spawn(async {
panic!("boom");
});
let err = join_handle.await.unwrap_err();
assert!(err.is_panic());
Ok(())
}
Child being detached and outliving its parent:
use tokio::task;
use tokio::time;
use std::time::Duration;
let original_task = task::spawn(async {
let _detached_task = task::spawn(async {
// Here we sleep to make sure that the first task returns before.
time::sleep(Duration::from_millis(10)).await;
// This will be called, even though the JoinHandle is dropped.
println!("♫ Still alive ♫");
});
});
original_task.await.expect("The task being joined has panicked");
println!("Original task is joined.");
// We make sure that the new task has time to run, before the main
// task returns.
time::sleep(Duration::from_millis(1000)).await;
Implementations
impl<T> JoinHandle<T>
impl<T> JoinHandle<T>
pub fn abort(&self)
pub fn abort(&self)
Abort the task associated with the handle.
Awaiting a cancelled task might complete as usual if the task was
already completed at the time it was cancelled, but most likely it
will fail with a cancelled JoinError
.
use tokio::time;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
let mut handles = Vec::new();
handles.push(tokio::spawn(async {
time::sleep(time::Duration::from_secs(10)).await;
true
}));
handles.push(tokio::spawn(async {
time::sleep(time::Duration::from_secs(10)).await;
false
}));
for handle in &handles {
handle.abort();
}
for handle in handles {
assert!(handle.await.unwrap_err().is_cancelled());
}
}
Trait Implementations
impl<T> Debug for JoinHandle<T> where
T: Debug,
impl<T> Debug for JoinHandle<T> where
T: Debug,
impl<T> Drop for JoinHandle<T>
impl<T> Drop for JoinHandle<T>
impl<T> Future for JoinHandle<T>
impl<T> Future for JoinHandle<T>
pub fn poll(
self: Pin<&mut JoinHandle<T>>,
cx: &mut Context<'_>
) -> Poll<<JoinHandle<T> as Future>::Output>
pub fn poll(
self: Pin<&mut JoinHandle<T>>,
cx: &mut Context<'_>
) -> Poll<<JoinHandle<T> as Future>::Output>
Attempt to resolve the future to a final value, registering the current task for wakeup if the value is not yet available. Read more
impl<T> Send for JoinHandle<T> where
T: Send,
impl<T> Sync for JoinHandle<T> where
T: Send,
impl<T> Unpin for JoinHandle<T>
Auto Trait Implementations
impl<T> !RefUnwindSafe for JoinHandle<T>
impl<T> !UnwindSafe for JoinHandle<T>
Blanket Implementations
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
Map this future’s output to a different type, returning a new future of the resulting type. Read more
Map this future’s output to a different type, returning a new future of the resulting type. Read more
Chain on a computation for when a future finished, passing the result of
the future to the provided closure f
. Read more
Wrap this future in an Either
future, making it the left-hand variant
of that Either
. Read more
Wrap this future in an Either
future, making it the right-hand variant
of that Either
. Read more
Convert this future into a single element stream. Read more
Flatten the execution of this future when the output of this future is itself another future. Read more
Flatten the execution of this future when the successful result of this future is a stream. Read more
Fuse a future such that poll
will never again be called once it has
completed. This method can be used to turn any Future
into a
FusedFuture
. Read more
Do something with the output of a future before passing it on. Read more
Wrap the future in a Box, pinning it. Read more
Wrap the future in a Box, pinning it. Read more
Turns a Future<Output = T>
into a
TryFuture<Ok = T, Error = ()
>. Read more
Turns a Future<Output = T>
into a
TryFuture<Ok = T, Error = Never
>. Read more
A convenience for calling Future::poll
on Unpin
future types.
Evaluates and consumes the future, returning the resulting output if
the future is ready after the first call to Future::poll
. Read more
into_future
)The output that the future will produce on completion.
type Future = F
type Future = F
into_future
)Which kind of future are we turning this into?
into_future
)Creates a future from a value.
Maps this future’s success value to a different value. Read more
fn map_ok_or_else<T, E, F>(self, e: E, f: F) -> MapOkOrElse<Self, F, E> where
F: FnOnce(Self::Ok) -> T,
E: FnOnce(Self::Error) -> T,
fn map_ok_or_else<T, E, F>(self, e: E, f: F) -> MapOkOrElse<Self, F, E> where
F: FnOnce(Self::Ok) -> T,
E: FnOnce(Self::Error) -> T,
Maps this future’s success value to a different value, and permits for error handling resulting in the same type. Read more
Maps this future’s error value to a different value. Read more
Executes another future after this one resolves successfully. The success value is passed to a closure to create this subsequent future. Read more
Executes another future if this one resolves to an error. The error value is passed to a closure to create this subsequent future. Read more
Do something with the success value of a future before passing it on. Read more
Do something with the error value of a future before passing it on. Read more
fn try_flatten(self) -> TryFlatten<Self, Self::Ok> where
Self::Ok: TryFuture,
<Self::Ok as TryFuture>::Error == Self::Error,
fn try_flatten(self) -> TryFlatten<Self, Self::Ok> where
Self::Ok: TryFuture,
<Self::Ok as TryFuture>::Error == Self::Error,
Flatten the execution of this future when the successful result of this future is another future. Read more
fn try_flatten_stream(self) -> TryFlattenStream<Self> where
Self::Ok: TryStream,
<Self::Ok as TryStream>::Error == Self::Error,
fn try_flatten_stream(self) -> TryFlattenStream<Self> where
Self::Ok: TryStream,
<Self::Ok as TryStream>::Error == Self::Error,
Flatten the execution of this future when the successful result of this future is a stream. Read more
fn unwrap_or_else<F>(self, f: F) -> UnwrapOrElse<Self, F> where
F: FnOnce(Self::Error) -> Self::Ok,
fn unwrap_or_else<F>(self, f: F) -> UnwrapOrElse<Self, F> where
F: FnOnce(Self::Error) -> Self::Ok,
pub fn vzip(self) -> V
Attaches the provided Subscriber
to this type, returning a
WithDispatch
wrapper. Read more
Attaches the current default Subscriber
to this type, returning a
WithDispatch
wrapper. Read more