1// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. 2// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style 3// license that can be found in the LICENSE file. 4 5package time 6 7import ( 8 "internal/godebug" 9 "unsafe" 10) 11 12// Sleep pauses the current goroutine for at least the duration d. 13// A negative or zero duration causes Sleep to return immediately. 14func Sleep(d Duration) 15 16var asynctimerchan = godebug.New("asynctimerchan") 17 18// syncTimer returns c as an unsafe.Pointer, for passing to newTimer. 19// If the GODEBUG asynctimerchan has disabled the async timer chan 20// code, then syncTimer always returns nil, to disable the special 21// channel code paths in the runtime. 22func syncTimer(c chan Time) unsafe.Pointer { 23 // If asynctimerchan=1, we don't even tell the runtime 24 // about channel timers, so that we get the pre-Go 1.23 code paths. 25 if asynctimerchan.Value() == "1" { 26 asynctimerchan.IncNonDefault() 27 return nil 28 } 29 30 // Otherwise pass to runtime. 31 // This handles asynctimerchan=0, which is the default Go 1.23 behavior, 32 // as well as asynctimerchan=2, which is like asynctimerchan=1 33 // but implemented entirely by the runtime. 34 // The only reason to use asynctimerchan=2 is for debugging 35 // a problem fixed by asynctimerchan=1: it enables the new 36 // GC-able timer channels (#61542) but not the sync channels (#37196). 37 // 38 // If we decide to roll back the sync channels, we will still have 39 // a fully tested async runtime implementation (asynctimerchan=2) 40 // and can make this function always return c. 41 // 42 // If we decide to keep the sync channels, we can delete all the 43 // handling of asynctimerchan in the runtime and keep just this 44 // function to handle asynctimerchan=1. 45 return *(*unsafe.Pointer)(unsafe.Pointer(&c)) 46} 47 48// when is a helper function for setting the 'when' field of a runtimeTimer. 49// It returns what the time will be, in nanoseconds, Duration d in the future. 50// If d is negative, it is ignored. If the returned value would be less than 51// zero because of an overflow, MaxInt64 is returned. 52func when(d Duration) int64 { 53 if d <= 0 { 54 return runtimeNano() 55 } 56 t := runtimeNano() + int64(d) 57 if t < 0 { 58 // N.B. runtimeNano() and d are always positive, so addition 59 // (including overflow) will never result in t == 0. 60 t = 1<<63 - 1 // math.MaxInt64 61 } 62 return t 63} 64 65// These functions are pushed to package time from package runtime. 66 67// The arg cp is a chan Time, but the declaration in runtime uses a pointer, 68// so we use a pointer here too. This keeps some tools that aggressively 69// compare linknamed symbol definitions happier. 70// 71//go:linkname newTimer 72func newTimer(when, period int64, f func(any, uintptr, int64), arg any, cp unsafe.Pointer) *Timer 73 74//go:linkname stopTimer 75func stopTimer(*Timer) bool 76 77//go:linkname resetTimer 78func resetTimer(t *Timer, when, period int64) bool 79 80// Note: The runtime knows the layout of struct Timer, since newTimer allocates it. 81// The runtime also knows that Ticker and Timer have the same layout. 82// There are extra fields after the channel, reserved for the runtime 83// and inaccessible to users. 84 85// The Timer type represents a single event. 86// When the Timer expires, the current time will be sent on C, 87// unless the Timer was created by [AfterFunc]. 88// A Timer must be created with [NewTimer] or AfterFunc. 89type Timer struct { 90 C <-chan Time 91 initTimer bool 92} 93 94// Stop prevents the [Timer] from firing. 95// It returns true if the call stops the timer, false if the timer has already 96// expired or been stopped. 97// 98// For a func-based timer created with [AfterFunc](d, f), 99// if t.Stop returns false, then the timer has already expired 100// and the function f has been started in its own goroutine; 101// Stop does not wait for f to complete before returning. 102// If the caller needs to know whether f is completed, 103// it must coordinate with f explicitly. 104// 105// For a chan-based timer created with NewTimer(d), as of Go 1.23, 106// any receive from t.C after Stop has returned is guaranteed to block 107// rather than receive a stale time value from before the Stop; 108// if the program has not received from t.C already and the timer is 109// running, Stop is guaranteed to return true. 110// Before Go 1.23, the only safe way to use Stop was insert an extra 111// <-t.C if Stop returned false to drain a potential stale value. 112// See the [NewTimer] documentation for more details. 113func (t *Timer) Stop() bool { 114 if !t.initTimer { 115 panic("time: Stop called on uninitialized Timer") 116 } 117 return stopTimer(t) 118} 119 120// NewTimer creates a new Timer that will send 121// the current time on its channel after at least duration d. 122// 123// Before Go 1.23, the garbage collector did not recover 124// timers that had not yet expired or been stopped, so code often 125// immediately deferred t.Stop after calling NewTimer, to make 126// the timer recoverable when it was no longer needed. 127// As of Go 1.23, the garbage collector can recover unreferenced 128// timers, even if they haven't expired or been stopped. 129// The Stop method is no longer necessary to help the garbage collector. 130// (Code may of course still want to call Stop to stop the timer for other reasons.) 131// 132// Before Go 1.23, the channel associated with a Timer was 133// asynchronous (buffered, capacity 1), which meant that 134// stale time values could be received even after [Timer.Stop] 135// or [Timer.Reset] returned. 136// As of Go 1.23, the channel is synchronous (unbuffered, capacity 0), 137// eliminating the possibility of those stale values. 138// 139// The GODEBUG setting asynctimerchan=1 restores both pre-Go 1.23 140// behaviors: when set, unexpired timers won't be garbage collected, and 141// channels will have buffered capacity. This setting may be removed 142// in Go 1.27 or later. 143func NewTimer(d Duration) *Timer { 144 c := make(chan Time, 1) 145 t := (*Timer)(newTimer(when(d), 0, sendTime, c, syncTimer(c))) 146 t.C = c 147 return t 148} 149 150// Reset changes the timer to expire after duration d. 151// It returns true if the timer had been active, false if the timer had 152// expired or been stopped. 153// 154// For a func-based timer created with [AfterFunc](d, f), Reset either reschedules 155// when f will run, in which case Reset returns true, or schedules f 156// to run again, in which case it returns false. 157// When Reset returns false, Reset neither waits for the prior f to 158// complete before returning nor does it guarantee that the subsequent 159// goroutine running f does not run concurrently with the prior 160// one. If the caller needs to know whether the prior execution of 161// f is completed, it must coordinate with f explicitly. 162// 163// For a chan-based timer created with NewTimer, as of Go 1.23, 164// any receive from t.C after Reset has returned is guaranteed not 165// to receive a time value corresponding to the previous timer settings; 166// if the program has not received from t.C already and the timer is 167// running, Reset is guaranteed to return true. 168// Before Go 1.23, the only safe way to use Reset was to [Stop] and 169// explicitly drain the timer first. 170// See the [NewTimer] documentation for more details. 171func (t *Timer) Reset(d Duration) bool { 172 if !t.initTimer { 173 panic("time: Reset called on uninitialized Timer") 174 } 175 w := when(d) 176 return resetTimer(t, w, 0) 177} 178 179// sendTime does a non-blocking send of the current time on c. 180func sendTime(c any, seq uintptr, delta int64) { 181 // delta is how long ago the channel send was supposed to happen. 182 // The current time can be arbitrarily far into the future, because the runtime 183 // can delay a sendTime call until a goroutines tries to receive from 184 // the channel. Subtract delta to go back to the old time that we 185 // used to send. 186 select { 187 case c.(chan Time) <- Now().Add(Duration(-delta)): 188 default: 189 } 190} 191 192// After waits for the duration to elapse and then sends the current time 193// on the returned channel. 194// It is equivalent to [NewTimer](d).C. 195// 196// Before Go 1.23, this documentation warned that the underlying 197// [Timer] would not be recovered by the garbage collector until the 198// timer fired, and that if efficiency was a concern, code should use 199// NewTimer instead and call [Timer.Stop] if the timer is no longer needed. 200// As of Go 1.23, the garbage collector can recover unreferenced, 201// unstopped timers. There is no reason to prefer NewTimer when After will do. 202func After(d Duration) <-chan Time { 203 return NewTimer(d).C 204} 205 206// AfterFunc waits for the duration to elapse and then calls f 207// in its own goroutine. It returns a [Timer] that can 208// be used to cancel the call using its Stop method. 209// The returned Timer's C field is not used and will be nil. 210func AfterFunc(d Duration, f func()) *Timer { 211 return (*Timer)(newTimer(when(d), 0, goFunc, f, nil)) 212} 213 214func goFunc(arg any, seq uintptr, delta int64) { 215 go arg.(func())() 216} 217