module Mutex_m
mutex_m.rb¶ ↑
When ‘mutex_m’ is required, any object that extends or includes Mutex_m
will be treated like a Mutex.
Start by requiring the standard library Mutex_m
:
require "mutex_m.rb"
From here you can extend an object with Mutex instance methods:
obj = Object.new obj.extend Mutex_m
Or mixin Mutex_m
into your module to your class inherit Mutex instance methods — remember to call super() in your class initialize method.
class Foo include Mutex_m def initialize # ... super() end # ... end obj = Foo.new # this obj can be handled like Mutex
Constants
- VERSION
Public Instance Methods
mu_lock()
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See Thread::Mutex#lock
# File mutex_m-0.2.0/lib/mutex_m.rb, line 91 def mu_lock @_mutex.lock end
mu_locked?()
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See Thread::Mutex#locked?
# File mutex_m-0.2.0/lib/mutex_m.rb, line 81 def mu_locked? @_mutex.locked? end
mu_synchronize(&block)
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See Thread::Mutex#synchronize
# File mutex_m-0.2.0/lib/mutex_m.rb, line 76 def mu_synchronize(&block) @_mutex.synchronize(&block) end
mu_try_lock()
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See Thread::Mutex#try_lock
# File mutex_m-0.2.0/lib/mutex_m.rb, line 86 def mu_try_lock @_mutex.try_lock end
mu_unlock()
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See Thread::Mutex#unlock
# File mutex_m-0.2.0/lib/mutex_m.rb, line 96 def mu_unlock @_mutex.unlock end
sleep(timeout = nil)
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See Thread::Mutex#sleep
# File mutex_m-0.2.0/lib/mutex_m.rb, line 101 def sleep(timeout = nil) @_mutex.sleep(timeout) end