ttrss/vendor/thecodingmachine/safe/generated/sem.php

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<?php
namespace Safe;
use Safe\Exceptions\SemException;
/**
* Checks whether the message queue key exists.
*
* @param int $key Queue key.
* @throws SemException
*
*/
function msg_queue_exists(int $key): void
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \msg_queue_exists($key);
if ($result === false) {
throw SemException::createFromPhpError();
}
}
/**
* msg_receive will receive the first message from the
* specified queue of the type specified by
* desiredmsgtype.
*
* @param resource $queue Message queue resource handle
* @param int $desiredmsgtype If desiredmsgtype is 0, the message from the front
* of the queue is returned. If desiredmsgtype is
* greater than 0, then the first message of that type is returned.
* If desiredmsgtype is less than 0, the first
* message on the queue with a type less than or equal to the
* absolute value of desiredmsgtype will be read.
* If no messages match the criteria, your script will wait until a suitable
* message arrives on the queue. You can prevent the script from blocking
* by specifying MSG_IPC_NOWAIT in the
* flags parameter.
* @param int|null $msgtype The type of the message that was received will be stored in this
* parameter.
* @param int $maxsize The maximum size of message to be accepted is specified by the
* maxsize; if the message in the queue is larger
* than this size the function will fail (unless you set
* flags as described below).
* @param mixed $message The received message will be stored in message,
* unless there were errors receiving the message.
* @param bool $unserialize If set to
* TRUE, the message is treated as though it was serialized using the
* same mechanism as the session module. The message will be unserialized
* and then returned to your script. This allows you to easily receive
* arrays or complex object structures from other PHP scripts, or if you
* are using the WDDX serializer, from any WDDX compatible source.
*
* If unserialize is FALSE, the message will be
* returned as a binary-safe string.
* @param int $flags The optional flags allows you to pass flags to the
* low-level msgrcv system call. It defaults to 0, but you may specify one
* or more of the following values (by adding or ORing them together).
*
* Flag values for msg_receive
*
*
*
* MSG_IPC_NOWAIT
* If there are no messages of the
* desiredmsgtype, return immediately and do not
* wait. The function will fail and return an integer value
* corresponding to MSG_ENOMSG.
*
*
*
* MSG_EXCEPT
* Using this flag in combination with a
* desiredmsgtype greater than 0 will cause the
* function to receive the first message that is not equal to
* desiredmsgtype.
*
*
* MSG_NOERROR
*
* If the message is longer than maxsize,
* setting this flag will truncate the message to
* maxsize and will not signal an error.
*
*
*
*
*
* @param int|null $errorcode If the function fails, the optional errorcode
* will be set to the value of the system errno variable.
* @throws SemException
*
*/
function msg_receive($queue, int $desiredmsgtype, ?int &$msgtype, int $maxsize, &$message, bool $unserialize = true, int $flags = 0, ?int &$errorcode = null): void
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \msg_receive($queue, $desiredmsgtype, $msgtype, $maxsize, $message, $unserialize, $flags, $errorcode);
if ($result === false) {
throw SemException::createFromPhpError();
}
}
/**
* msg_remove_queue destroys the message queue specified
* by the queue. Only use this function when all
* processes have finished working with the message queue and you need to
* release the system resources held by it.
*
* @param resource $queue Message queue resource handle
* @throws SemException
*
*/
function msg_remove_queue($queue): void
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \msg_remove_queue($queue);
if ($result === false) {
throw SemException::createFromPhpError();
}
}
/**
* msg_send sends a message of type
* msgtype (which MUST be greater than 0) to
* the message queue specified by queue.
*
* @param resource $queue Message queue resource handle
* @param int $msgtype The type of the message (MUST be greater than 0)
* @param mixed $message The body of the message.
*
* If serialize set to FALSE is supplied,
* MUST be of type: string, integer, float
* or bool. In other case a warning will be issued.
* @param bool $serialize The optional serialize controls how the
* message is sent. serialize
* defaults to TRUE which means that the message is
* serialized using the same mechanism as the session module before being
* sent to the queue. This allows complex arrays and objects to be sent to
* other PHP scripts, or if you are using the WDDX serializer, to any WDDX
* compatible client.
* @param bool $blocking If the message is too large to fit in the queue, your script will wait
* until another process reads messages from the queue and frees enough
* space for your message to be sent.
* This is called blocking; you can prevent blocking by setting the
* optional blocking parameter to FALSE, in which
* case msg_send will immediately return FALSE if the
* message is too big for the queue, and set the optional
* errorcode to MSG_EAGAIN,
* indicating that you should try to send your message again a little
* later on.
* @param int|null $errorcode If the function fails, the optional errorcode will be set to the value of the system errno variable.
* @throws SemException
*
*/
function msg_send($queue, int $msgtype, $message, bool $serialize = true, bool $blocking = true, ?int &$errorcode = null): void
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \msg_send($queue, $msgtype, $message, $serialize, $blocking, $errorcode);
if ($result === false) {
throw SemException::createFromPhpError();
}
}
/**
* msg_set_queue allows you to change the values of the
* msg_perm.uid, msg_perm.gid, msg_perm.mode and msg_qbytes fields of the
* underlying message queue data structure.
*
* Changing the data structure will require that PHP be running as the same
* user that created the queue, owns the queue (as determined by the
* existing msg_perm.xxx fields), or be running with root privileges.
* root privileges are required to raise the msg_qbytes values above the
* system defined limit.
*
* @param resource $queue Message queue resource handle
* @param array $data You specify the values you require by setting the value of the keys
* that you require in the data array.
* @throws SemException
*
*/
function msg_set_queue($queue, array $data): void
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \msg_set_queue($queue, $data);
if ($result === false) {
throw SemException::createFromPhpError();
}
}
/**
* sem_acquire by default blocks (if necessary) until the
* semaphore can be acquired. A process attempting to acquire a semaphore which
* it has already acquired will block forever if acquiring the semaphore would
* cause its maximum number of semaphore to be exceeded.
*
* After processing a request, any semaphores acquired by the process but not
* explicitly released will be released automatically and a warning will be
* generated.
*
* @param resource $sem_identifier sem_identifier is a semaphore resource,
* obtained from sem_get.
* @param bool $nowait Specifies if the process shouldn't wait for the semaphore to be acquired.
* If set to true, the call will return
* false immediately if a semaphore cannot be immediately
* acquired.
* @throws SemException
*
*/
function sem_acquire($sem_identifier, bool $nowait = false): void
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \sem_acquire($sem_identifier, $nowait);
if ($result === false) {
throw SemException::createFromPhpError();
}
}
/**
* sem_get returns an id that can be used to
* access the System V semaphore with the given key.
*
* A second call to sem_get for the same key
* will return a different semaphore identifier, but both
* identifiers access the same underlying semaphore.
*
* If key is 0, a new private semaphore
* is created for each call to sem_get.
*
* @param int $key
* @param int $max_acquire The number of processes that can acquire the semaphore simultaneously
* is set to max_acquire.
* @param int $perm The semaphore permissions. Actually this value is
* set only if the process finds it is the only process currently
* attached to the semaphore.
* @param int $auto_release Specifies if the semaphore should be automatically released on request
* shutdown.
* @return resource Returns a positive semaphore identifier on success.
* @throws SemException
*
*/
function sem_get(int $key, int $max_acquire = 1, int $perm = 0666, int $auto_release = 1)
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \sem_get($key, $max_acquire, $perm, $auto_release);
if ($result === false) {
throw SemException::createFromPhpError();
}
return $result;
}
/**
* sem_release releases the semaphore if it
* is currently acquired by the calling process, otherwise
* a warning is generated.
*
* After releasing the semaphore, sem_acquire
* may be called to re-acquire it.
*
* @param resource $sem_identifier A Semaphore resource handle as returned by
* sem_get.
* @throws SemException
*
*/
function sem_release($sem_identifier): void
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \sem_release($sem_identifier);
if ($result === false) {
throw SemException::createFromPhpError();
}
}
/**
* sem_remove removes the given semaphore.
*
* After removing the semaphore, it is no longer accessible.
*
* @param resource $sem_identifier A semaphore resource identifier as returned
* by sem_get.
* @throws SemException
*
*/
function sem_remove($sem_identifier): void
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \sem_remove($sem_identifier);
if ($result === false) {
throw SemException::createFromPhpError();
}
}
/**
* shm_put_var inserts or updates the
* variable with the given
* variable_key.
*
* Warnings (E_WARNING level) will be issued if
* shm_identifier is not a valid SysV shared memory
* index or if there was not enough shared memory remaining to complete your
* request.
*
* @param resource $shm_identifier A shared memory resource handle as returned by
* shm_attach
* @param int $variable_key The variable key.
* @param mixed $variable The variable. All variable types
* that serialize supports may be used: generally
* this means all types except for resources and some internal objects
* that cannot be serialized.
* @throws SemException
*
*/
function shm_put_var($shm_identifier, int $variable_key, $variable): void
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \shm_put_var($shm_identifier, $variable_key, $variable);
if ($result === false) {
throw SemException::createFromPhpError();
}
}
/**
* Removes a variable with a given variable_key
* and frees the occupied memory.
*
* @param resource $shm_identifier The shared memory identifier as returned by
* shm_attach
* @param int $variable_key The variable key.
* @throws SemException
*
*/
function shm_remove_var($shm_identifier, int $variable_key): void
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \shm_remove_var($shm_identifier, $variable_key);
if ($result === false) {
throw SemException::createFromPhpError();
}
}
/**
* shm_remove removes the shared memory
* shm_identifier. All data will be destroyed.
*
* @param resource $shm_identifier The shared memory identifier as returned by
* shm_attach
* @throws SemException
*
*/
function shm_remove($shm_identifier): void
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \shm_remove($shm_identifier);
if ($result === false) {
throw SemException::createFromPhpError();
}
}