pub struct Handle { /* private fields */ }
rt
only.Expand description
Handle to the runtime.
The handle is internally reference-counted and can be freely cloned. A handle can be
obtained using the Runtime::handle
method.
Implementations§
Source§impl Handle
impl Handle
Sourcepub fn enter(&self) -> EnterGuard<'_>
pub fn enter(&self) -> EnterGuard<'_>
Enters the runtime context. This allows you to construct types that must
have an executor available on creation such as Sleep
or
TcpStream
. It will also allow you to call methods such as
tokio::spawn
and Handle::current
without panicking.
§Panics
When calling Handle::enter
multiple times, the returned guards
must be dropped in the reverse order that they were acquired.
Failure to do so will result in a panic and possible memory leaks.
§Examples
use tokio::runtime::Runtime;
let rt = Runtime::new().unwrap();
let _guard = rt.enter();
tokio::spawn(async {
println!("Hello world!");
});
Do not do the following, this shows a scenario that will result in a panic and possible memory leak.
use tokio::runtime::Runtime;
let rt1 = Runtime::new().unwrap();
let rt2 = Runtime::new().unwrap();
let enter1 = rt1.enter();
let enter2 = rt2.enter();
drop(enter1);
drop(enter2);
Sourcepub fn current() -> Self
pub fn current() -> Self
Returns a Handle
view over the currently running Runtime
.
§Panics
This will panic if called outside the context of a Tokio runtime. That means that you must
call this on one of the threads being run by the runtime, or from a thread with an active
EnterGuard
. Calling this from within a thread created by std::thread::spawn
(for example)
will cause a panic unless that thread has an active EnterGuard
.
§Examples
This can be used to obtain the handle of the surrounding runtime from an async block or function running on that runtime.
use tokio::runtime::Handle;
// Inside an async block or function.
let handle = Handle::current();
handle.spawn(async {
println!("now running in the existing Runtime");
});
thread::spawn(move || {
// Notice that the handle is created outside of this thread and then moved in
handle.spawn(async { /* ... */ });
// This next line would cause a panic because we haven't entered the runtime
// and created an EnterGuard
// let handle2 = Handle::current(); // panic
// So we create a guard here with Handle::enter();
let _guard = handle.enter();
// Now we can call Handle::current();
let handle2 = Handle::current();
});
Sourcepub fn try_current() -> Result<Self, TryCurrentError>
pub fn try_current() -> Result<Self, TryCurrentError>
Returns a Handle view over the currently running Runtime
Returns an error if no Runtime has been started
Contrary to current
, this never panics
Sourcepub fn spawn<F>(&self, future: F) -> JoinHandle<F::Output> ⓘ
pub fn spawn<F>(&self, future: F) -> JoinHandle<F::Output> ⓘ
Spawns a future onto the Tokio runtime.
This spawns the given future onto the runtime’s executor, usually a thread pool. The thread pool is then responsible for polling the future until it completes.
The provided future will start running in the background immediately
when spawn
is called, even if you don’t await the returned
JoinHandle
.
See module level documentation for more details.
§Examples
use tokio::runtime::Runtime;
// Create the runtime
let rt = Runtime::new().unwrap();
// Get a handle from this runtime
let handle = rt.handle();
// Spawn a future onto the runtime using the handle
handle.spawn(async {
println!("now running on a worker thread");
});
Sourcepub fn spawn_blocking<F, R>(&self, func: F) -> JoinHandle<R> ⓘ
pub fn spawn_blocking<F, R>(&self, func: F) -> JoinHandle<R> ⓘ
Runs the provided function on an executor dedicated to blocking operations.
§Examples
use tokio::runtime::Runtime;
// Create the runtime
let rt = Runtime::new().unwrap();
// Get a handle from this runtime
let handle = rt.handle();
// Spawn a blocking function onto the runtime using the handle
handle.spawn_blocking(|| {
println!("now running on a worker thread");
});
Sourcepub fn block_on<F: Future>(&self, future: F) -> F::Output
pub fn block_on<F: Future>(&self, future: F) -> F::Output
Runs a future to completion on this Handle
’s associated Runtime
.
This runs the given future on the current thread, blocking until it is complete, and yielding its resolved result. Any tasks or timers which the future spawns internally will be executed on the runtime.
When this is used on a current_thread
runtime, only the
Runtime::block_on
method can drive the IO and timer drivers, but the
Handle::block_on
method cannot drive them. This means that, when using
this method on a current_thread
runtime, anything that relies on IO or
timers will not work unless there is another thread currently calling
Runtime::block_on
on the same runtime.
§If the runtime has been shut down
If the Handle
’s associated Runtime
has been shut down (through
Runtime::shutdown_background
, Runtime::shutdown_timeout
, or by
dropping it) and Handle::block_on
is used it might return an error or
panic. Specifically IO resources will return an error and timers will
panic. Runtime independent futures will run as normal.
§Panics
This function panics if the provided future panics, if called within an asynchronous execution context, or if a timer future is executed on a runtime that has been shut down.
§Examples
use tokio::runtime::Runtime;
// Create the runtime
let rt = Runtime::new().unwrap();
// Get a handle from this runtime
let handle = rt.handle();
// Execute the future, blocking the current thread until completion
handle.block_on(async {
println!("hello");
});
Or using Handle::current
:
use tokio::runtime::Handle;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main () {
let handle = Handle::current();
std::thread::spawn(move || {
// Using Handle::block_on to run async code in the new thread.
handle.block_on(async {
println!("hello");
});
});
}
Sourcepub fn runtime_flavor(&self) -> RuntimeFlavor
pub fn runtime_flavor(&self) -> RuntimeFlavor
Returns the flavor of the current Runtime
.
§Examples
use tokio::runtime::{Handle, RuntimeFlavor};
#[tokio::main(flavor = "current_thread")]
async fn main() {
assert_eq!(RuntimeFlavor::CurrentThread, Handle::current().runtime_flavor());
}
use tokio::runtime::{Handle, RuntimeFlavor};
#[tokio::main(flavor = "multi_thread", worker_threads = 4)]
async fn main() {
assert_eq!(RuntimeFlavor::MultiThread, Handle::current().runtime_flavor());
}
Sourcepub fn id(&self) -> Id
Available on tokio_unstable
only.
pub fn id(&self) -> Id
tokio_unstable
only.Returns the Id
of the current Runtime
.
§Examples
use tokio::runtime::Handle;
#[tokio::main(flavor = "current_thread")]
async fn main() {
println!("Current runtime id: {}", Handle::current().id());
}
Note: This is an unstable API. The public API of this type may break in 1.x releases. See the documentation on unstable features for details.
Source§impl Handle
impl Handle
Sourcepub fn metrics(&self) -> RuntimeMetrics
Available on tokio_unstable
only.
pub fn metrics(&self) -> RuntimeMetrics
tokio_unstable
only.Returns a view that lets you get information about how the runtime is performing.
Source§impl Handle
impl Handle
Sourcepub async fn dump(&self) -> Dump
pub async fn dump(&self) -> Dump
Captures a snapshot of the runtime’s state.
This functionality is experimental, and comes with a number of requirements and limitations.
§Examples
This can be used to get call traces of each task in the runtime.
Calls to Handle::dump
should usually be enclosed in a
timeout, so that dumping does not escalate a
single blocked runtime thread into an entirely blocked runtime.
use tokio::runtime::Handle;
use tokio::time::{timeout, Duration};
// Inside an async block or function.
let handle = Handle::current();
if let Ok(dump) = timeout(Duration::from_secs(2), handle.dump()).await {
for (i, task) in dump.tasks().iter().enumerate() {
let trace = task.trace();
println!("TASK {i}:");
println!("{trace}\n");
}
}
This produces highly detailed traces of tasks; e.g.:
TASK 0:
╼ dump::main::{{closure}}::a::{{closure}} at /tokio/examples/dump.rs:18:20
└╼ dump::main::{{closure}}::b::{{closure}} at /tokio/examples/dump.rs:23:20
└╼ dump::main::{{closure}}::c::{{closure}} at /tokio/examples/dump.rs:28:24
└╼ tokio::sync::barrier::Barrier::wait::{{closure}} at /tokio/tokio/src/sync/barrier.rs:129:10
└╼ <tokio::util::trace::InstrumentedAsyncOp<F> as core::future::future::Future>::poll at /tokio/tokio/src/util/trace.rs:77:46
└╼ tokio::sync::barrier::Barrier::wait_internal::{{closure}} at /tokio/tokio/src/sync/barrier.rs:183:36
└╼ tokio::sync::watch::Receiver<T>::changed::{{closure}} at /tokio/tokio/src/sync/watch.rs:604:55
└╼ tokio::sync::watch::changed_impl::{{closure}} at /tokio/tokio/src/sync/watch.rs:755:18
└╼ <tokio::sync::notify::Notified as core::future::future::Future>::poll at /tokio/tokio/src/sync/notify.rs:1103:9
└╼ tokio::sync::notify::Notified::poll_notified at /tokio/tokio/src/sync/notify.rs:996:32
§Requirements
§Debug Info Must Be Available
To produce task traces, the application must not be compiled
with split debuginfo
. On Linux, including debuginfo
within the
application binary is the (correct) default. You can further ensure
this behavior with the following directive in your Cargo.toml
:
[profile.*]
split-debuginfo = "off"
§Unstable Features
This functionality is unstable, and requires both the
tokio_unstable
and tokio_taskdump
cfg
flags to be set.
You can do this by setting the RUSTFLAGS
environment variable
before invoking cargo
; e.g.:
RUSTFLAGS="--cfg tokio_unstable --cfg tokio_taskdump" cargo run --example dump
Or by configuring rustflags
in
.cargo/config.toml
:
[build]
rustflags = ["--cfg", "tokio_unstable", "--cfg", "tokio_taskdump"]
§Platform Requirements
Task dumps are supported on Linux atop aarch64
, x86
and x86_64
.
§Current Thread Runtime Requirements
On the current_thread
runtime, task dumps may only be requested
from within the context of the runtime being dumped. Do not, for
example, await Handle::dump()
on a different runtime.
§Limitations
§Performance
Although enabling the tokio_taskdump
feature imposes virtually no
additional runtime overhead, actually calling Handle::dump
is
expensive. The runtime must synchronize and pause its workers, then
re-poll every task in a special tracing mode. Avoid requesting dumps
often.
§Local Executors
Tasks managed by local executors (e.g., FuturesUnordered
and
LocalSet
) may not appear in task dumps.
§Non-Termination When Workers Are Blocked
The future produced by Handle::dump
may never produce Ready
if
another runtime worker is blocked for more than 250ms. This may
occur if a dump is requested during shutdown, or if another runtime
worker is infinite looping or synchronously deadlocked. For these
reasons, task dumping should usually be paired with an explicit
timeout.