Tcl_CreateEventSource, Tcl_DeleteEventSource, Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime,
Tcl_QueueEvent, Tcl_ThreadQueueEvent, Tcl_ThreadAlert, Tcl_GetCurrentThread,
Tcl_DeleteEvents, Tcl_InitNotifier, Tcl_FinalizeNotifier, Tcl_WaitForEvent,
Tcl_AlertNotifier, Tcl_SetTimer, Tcl_ServiceAll, Tcl_ServiceEvent,
Tcl_GetServiceMode, Tcl_SetServiceMode, Tcl_ServiceModeHook, Tcl_SetNotifier -
the event queue and notifier interfaces
#include <tcl.h>
void
Tcl_CreateEventSource(setupProc, checkProc, clientData)
void
Tcl_DeleteEventSource(setupProc, checkProc, clientData)
void
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime(timePtr)
void
Tcl_QueueEvent(evPtr, position)
void
Tcl_ThreadQueueEvent(threadId, evPtr, position)
void
Tcl_ThreadAlert(threadId)
Tcl_ThreadId
Tcl_GetCurrentThread()
void
Tcl_DeleteEvents(deleteProc, clientData)
ClientData
Tcl_InitNotifier()
void
Tcl_FinalizeNotifier(clientData)
int
Tcl_WaitForEvent(timePtr)
void
Tcl_AlertNotifier(clientData)
void
Tcl_SetTimer(timePtr)
int
Tcl_ServiceAll()
int
Tcl_ServiceEvent(flags)
int
Tcl_GetServiceMode()
int
Tcl_SetServiceMode(mode)
void
Tcl_ServiceModeHook(mode)
void
Tcl_SetNotifier(notifierProcPtr)
- Tcl_EventSetupProc *setupProc (in)
- Procedure to invoke to prepare for event wait in
Tcl_DoOneEvent.
- Tcl_EventCheckProc *checkProc (in)
- Procedure for Tcl_DoOneEvent to invoke after waiting
for events. Checks to see if any events have occurred and, if so, queues
them.
- ClientData clientData (in)
- Arbitrary one-word value to pass to setupProc,
checkProc, or deleteProc.
- const Tcl_Time *timePtr (in)
- Indicates the maximum amount of time to wait for an event.
This is specified as an interval (how long to wait), not an absolute time
(when to wakeup). If the pointer passed to Tcl_WaitForEvent is
NULL, it means there is no maximum wait time: wait forever if
necessary.
- Tcl_Event *evPtr (in)
- An event to add to the event queue. The storage for the
event must have been allocated by the caller using Tcl_Alloc or
ckalloc.
- Tcl_QueuePosition position (in)
- Where to add the new event in the queue:
TCL_QUEUE_TAIL, TCL_QUEUE_HEAD, or
TCL_QUEUE_MARK.
- Tcl_ThreadId threadId (in)
- A unique identifier for a thread.
- Tcl_EventDeleteProc *deleteProc (in)
- Procedure to invoke for each queued event in
Tcl_DeleteEvents.
- int flags (in)
- What types of events to service. These flags are the same
as those passed to Tcl_DoOneEvent.
- int mode (in)
- Indicates whether events should be serviced by
Tcl_ServiceAll. Must be one of TCL_SERVICE_NONE or
TCL_SERVICE_ALL.
- Tcl_NotifierProcs* notifierProcPtr (in)
- Structure of function pointers describing notifier
procedures that are to replace the ones installed in the executable. See
REPLACING THE NOTIFIER for details.
The interfaces described here are used to customize the Tcl event loop. The two
most common customizations are to add new sources of events and to merge Tcl's
event loop with some other event loop, such as one provided by an application
in which Tcl is embedded. Each of these tasks is described in a separate
section below.
The procedures in this manual entry are the building blocks out of which the Tcl
event notifier is constructed. The event notifier is the lowest layer in the
Tcl event mechanism. It consists of three things:
- [1]
- Event sources: these represent the ways in which events can
be generated. For example, there is a timer event source that implements
the Tcl_CreateTimerHandler procedure and the after command,
and there is a file event source that implements the
Tcl_CreateFileHandler procedure on Unix systems. An event source
must work with the notifier to detect events at the right times, record
them on the event queue, and eventually notify higher-level software that
they have occurred. The procedures Tcl_CreateEventSource,
Tcl_DeleteEventSource, and Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime,
Tcl_QueueEvent, and Tcl_DeleteEvents are used primarily by
event sources.
- [2]
- The event queue: for non-threaded applications, there is a
single queue for the whole application, containing events that have been
detected but not yet serviced. Event sources place events onto the queue
so that they may be processed in order at appropriate times during the
event loop. The event queue guarantees a fair discipline of event
handling, so that no event source can starve the others. It also allows
events to be saved for servicing at a future time. Threaded applications
work in a similar manner, except that there is a separate event queue for
each thread containing a Tcl interpreter. Tcl_QueueEvent is used
(primarily by event sources) to add events to the event queue and
Tcl_DeleteEvents is used to remove events from the queue without
processing them. In a threaded application, Tcl_QueueEvent adds an
event to the current thread's queue, and Tcl_ThreadQueueEvent adds
an event to a queue in a specific thread.
- [3]
- The event loop: in order to detect and process events, the
application enters a loop that waits for events to occur, places them on
the event queue, and then processes them. Most applications will do this
by calling the procedure Tcl_DoOneEvent, which is described in a
separate manual entry.
Most Tcl applications need not worry about any of the internals of the Tcl
notifier. However, the notifier now has enough flexibility to be retargeted
either for a new platform or to use an external event loop (such as the Motif
event loop, when Tcl is embedded in a Motif application). The procedures
Tcl_WaitForEvent and
Tcl_SetTimer are normally implemented by
Tcl, but may be replaced with new versions to retarget the notifier (the
Tcl_InitNotifier,
Tcl_AlertNotifier,
Tcl_FinalizeNotifier,
Tcl_Sleep,
Tcl_CreateFileHandler,
and
Tcl_DeleteFileHandler must also be replaced; see CREATING A NEW
NOTIFIER below for details). The procedures
Tcl_ServiceAll,
Tcl_ServiceEvent,
Tcl_GetServiceMode, and
Tcl_SetServiceMode are provided to help connect Tcl's event loop to an
external event loop such as Motif's.
The easiest way to understand how the notifier works is to consider what happens
when
Tcl_DoOneEvent is called.
Tcl_DoOneEvent is passed a
flags argument that indicates what sort of events it is OK to process
and also whether or not to block if no events are ready.
Tcl_DoOneEvent
does the following things:
- [1]
- Check the event queue to see if it contains any events that
can be serviced. If so, service the first possible event, remove it from
the queue, and return. It does this by calling Tcl_ServiceEvent and
passing in the flags argument.
- [2]
- Prepare to block for an event. To do this,
Tcl_DoOneEvent invokes a setup procedure in each event
source. The event source will perform event-source specific initialization
and possibly call Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime to limit how long
Tcl_WaitForEvent will block if no new events occur.
- [3]
- Call Tcl_WaitForEvent. This procedure is implemented
differently on different platforms; it waits for an event to occur, based
on the information provided by the event sources. It may cause the
application to block if timePtr specifies an interval other than 0.
Tcl_WaitForEvent returns when something has happened, such as a
file becoming readable or the interval given by timePtr expiring.
If there are no events for Tcl_WaitForEvent to wait for, so that it
would block forever, then it returns immediately and Tcl_DoOneEvent
returns 0.
- [4]
- Call a check procedure in each event source. The
check procedure determines whether any events of interest to this source
occurred. If so, the events are added to the event queue.
- [5]
- Check the event queue to see if it contains any events that
can be serviced. If so, service the first possible event, remove it from
the queue, and return.
- [6]
- See if there are idle callbacks pending. If so, invoke all
of them and return.
- [7]
- Either return 0 to indicate that no events were ready, or
go back to step [2] if blocking was requested by the caller.
An event source consists of three procedures invoked by the notifier, plus
additional C procedures that are invoked by higher-level code to arrange for
event-driven callbacks. The three procedures called by the notifier consist of
the setup and check procedures described above, plus an additional procedure
that is invoked when an event is removed from the event queue for servicing.
The procedure
Tcl_CreateEventSource creates a new event source. Its
arguments specify the setup procedure and check procedure for the event
source.
SetupProc should match the following prototype:
typedef void Tcl_EventSetupProc(
ClientData clientData,
int flags);
The
clientData argument will be the same as the
clientData
argument to
Tcl_CreateEventSource; it is typically used to point to
private information managed by the event source. The
flags argument
will be the same as the
flags argument passed to
Tcl_DoOneEvent
except that it will never be 0 (
Tcl_DoOneEvent replaces 0 with
TCL_ALL_EVENTS).
Flags indicates what kinds of events should be
considered; if the bit corresponding to this event source is not set, the
event source should return immediately without doing anything. For example,
the file event source checks for the
TCL_FILE_EVENTS bit.
SetupProc's job is to make sure that the application wakes up when events
of the desired type occur. This is typically done in a platform-dependent
fashion. For example, under Unix an event source might call
Tcl_CreateFileHandler; under Windows it might request notification with
a Windows event. For timer-driven event sources such as timer events or any
polled event, the event source can call
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime to force
the application to wake up after a specified time even if no events have
occurred. If no event source calls
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime then
Tcl_WaitForEvent will wait as long as necessary for an event to occur;
otherwise, it will only wait as long as the shortest interval passed to
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime by one of the event sources. If an event source
knows that it already has events ready to report, it can request a zero
maximum block time. For example, the setup procedure for the X event source
looks to see if there are events already queued. If there are, it calls
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime with a 0 block time so that
Tcl_WaitForEvent
does not block if there is no new data on the X connection. The
timePtr
argument to
Tcl_WaitForEvent points to a structure that describes a
time interval in seconds and microseconds:
typedef struct Tcl_Time {
long sec;
long usec;
} Tcl_Time;
The
usec field should be less than 1000000.
Information provided to
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime is only used for the next
call to
Tcl_WaitForEvent; it is discarded after
Tcl_WaitForEvent
returns. The next time an event wait is done each of the event sources' setup
procedures will be called again, and they can specify new information for that
event wait.
If the application uses an external event loop rather than
Tcl_DoOneEvent, the event sources may need to call
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime at other times. For example, if a new event handler
is registered that needs to poll for events, the event source may call
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime to set the block time to zero to force the external
event loop to call Tcl. In this case,
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime invokes
Tcl_SetTimer with the shortest interval seen since the last call to
Tcl_DoOneEvent or
Tcl_ServiceAll.
In addition to the generic procedure
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime, other
platform-specific procedures may also be available for
setupProc, if
there is additional information needed by
Tcl_WaitForEvent on that
platform. For example, on Unix systems the
Tcl_CreateFileHandler
interface can be used to wait for file events.
The second procedure provided by each event source is its check procedure,
indicated by the
checkProc argument to
Tcl_CreateEventSource.
CheckProc must match the following prototype:
typedef void Tcl_EventCheckProc(
ClientData clientData,
int flags);
The arguments to this procedure are the same as those for
setupProc.
CheckProc is invoked by
Tcl_DoOneEvent after it has waited for
events. Presumably at least one event source is now prepared to queue an
event.
Tcl_DoOneEvent calls each of the event sources in turn, so they
all have a chance to queue any events that are ready. The check procedure does
two things. First, it must see if any events have triggered. Different event
sources do this in different ways.
If an event source's check procedure detects an interesting event, it must add
the event to Tcl's event queue. To do this, the event source calls
Tcl_QueueEvent. The
evPtr argument is a pointer to a dynamically
allocated structure containing the event (see below for more information on
memory management issues). Each event source can define its own event
structure with whatever information is relevant to that event source. However,
the first element of the structure must be a structure of type
Tcl_Event, and the address of this structure is used when communicating
between the event source and the rest of the notifier. A
Tcl_Event has
the following definition:
typedef struct {
Tcl_EventProc * proc;
struct Tcl_Event * nextPtr;
} Tcl_Event;
The event source must fill in the
proc field of the event before calling
Tcl_QueueEvent. The
nextPtr is used to link together the events
in the queue and should not be modified by the event source.
An event may be added to the queue at any of three positions, depending on the
position argument to
Tcl_QueueEvent:
- TCL_QUEUE_TAIL
- Add the event at the back of the queue, so that all other
pending events will be serviced first. This is almost always the right
place for new events.
- TCL_QUEUE_HEAD
- Add the event at the front of the queue, so that it will be
serviced before all other queued events.
- TCL_QUEUE_MARK
- Add the event at the front of the queue, unless there are
other events at the front whose position is TCL_QUEUE_MARK; if so,
add the new event just after all other TCL_QUEUE_MARK events. This
value of position is used to insert an ordered sequence of events
at the front of the queue, such as a series of Enter and Leave events
synthesized during a grab or ungrab operation in Tk.
When it is time to handle an event from the queue (steps 1 and 4 above)
Tcl_ServiceEvent will invoke the
proc specified in the first
queued
Tcl_Event structure.
Proc must match the following
prototype:
typedef int Tcl_EventProc(
Tcl_Event * evPtr,
int flags);
The first argument to
proc is a pointer to the event, which will be the
same as the first argument to the
Tcl_QueueEvent call that added the
event to the queue. The second argument to
proc is the
flags
argument for the current call to
Tcl_ServiceEvent; this is used by the
event source to return immediately if its events are not relevant.
It is up to
proc to handle the event, typically by invoking one or more
Tcl commands or C-level callbacks. Once the event source has finished handling
the event it returns 1 to indicate that the event can be removed from the
queue. If for some reason the event source decides that the event cannot be
handled at this time, it may return 0 to indicate that the event should be
deferred for processing later; in this case
Tcl_ServiceEvent will go on
to the next event in the queue and attempt to service it. There are several
reasons why an event source might defer an event. One possibility is that
events of this type are excluded by the
flags argument. For example,
the file event source will always return 0 if the
TCL_FILE_EVENTS bit
is not set in
flags. Another example of deferring events happens in Tk
if
Tk_RestrictEvents has been invoked to defer certain kinds of window
events.
When
proc returns 1,
Tcl_ServiceEvent will remove the event from
the event queue and free its storage. Note that the storage for an event must
be allocated by the event source (using
Tcl_Alloc or the Tcl macro
ckalloc) before calling
Tcl_QueueEvent, but it will be freed by
Tcl_ServiceEvent, not by the event source.
Threaded applications work in a similar manner, except that there is a separate
event queue for each thread containing a Tcl interpreter. Calling
Tcl_QueueEvent in a multithreaded application adds an event to the
current thread's queue. To add an event to another thread's queue, use
Tcl_ThreadQueueEvent.
Tcl_ThreadQueueEvent accepts as an
argument a Tcl_ThreadId argument, which uniquely identifies a thread in a Tcl
application. To obtain the Tcl_ThreadId for the current thread, use the
Tcl_GetCurrentThread procedure. (A thread would then need to pass this
identifier to other threads for those threads to be able to add events to its
queue.) After adding an event to another thread's queue, you then typically
need to call
Tcl_ThreadAlert to “wake up” that thread's
notifier to alert it to the new event.
Tcl_DeleteEvents can be used to explicitly remove one or more events from
the event queue.
Tcl_DeleteEvents calls
proc for each event in
the queue, deleting those for with the procedure returns 1. Events for which
the procedure returns 0 are left in the queue.
Proc should match the
following prototype:
typedef int Tcl_EventDeleteProc(
Tcl_Event * evPtr,
ClientData clientData);
The
clientData argument will be the same as the
clientData
argument to
Tcl_DeleteEvents; it is typically used to point to private
information managed by the event source. The
evPtr will point to the
next event in the queue.
Tcl_DeleteEventSource deletes an event source. The
setupProc,
checkProc, and
clientData arguments must exactly match those
provided to the
Tcl_CreateEventSource for the event source to be
deleted. If no such source exists,
Tcl_DeleteEventSource has no effect.
The notifier consists of all the procedures described in this manual entry, plus
Tcl_DoOneEvent and
Tcl_Sleep, which are available on all
platforms, and
Tcl_CreateFileHandler and
Tcl_DeleteFileHandler,
which are Unix-specific. Most of these procedures are generic, in that they
are the same for all notifiers. However, none of the procedures are
notifier-dependent:
Tcl_InitNotifier,
Tcl_AlertNotifier,
Tcl_FinalizeNotifier,
Tcl_SetTimer,
Tcl_Sleep,
Tcl_WaitForEvent,
Tcl_CreateFileHandler,
Tcl_DeleteFileHandler and
Tcl_ServiceModeHook. To support a new
platform or to integrate Tcl with an application-specific event loop, you must
write new versions of these procedures.
Tcl_InitNotifier initializes the notifier state and returns a handle to
the notifier state. Tcl calls this procedure when initializing a Tcl
interpreter. Similarly,
Tcl_FinalizeNotifier shuts down the notifier,
and is called by
Tcl_Finalize when shutting down a Tcl interpreter.
Tcl_WaitForEvent is the lowest-level procedure in the notifier; it is
responsible for waiting for an “interesting” event to occur or
for a given time to elapse. Before
Tcl_WaitForEvent is invoked, each of
the event sources' setup procedure will have been invoked. The
timePtr
argument to
Tcl_WaitForEvent gives the maximum time to block for an
event, based on calls to
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime made by setup procedures
and on other information (such as the
TCL_DONT_WAIT bit in
flags).
Ideally,
Tcl_WaitForEvent should only wait for an event to occur; it
should not actually process the event in any way. Later on, the event sources
will process the raw events and create Tcl_Events on the event queue in their
checkProc procedures. However, on some platforms (such as Windows) this
is not possible; events may be processed in
Tcl_WaitForEvent, including
queuing Tcl_Events and more (for example, callbacks for native widgets may be
invoked). The return value from
Tcl_WaitForEvent must be either 0, 1,
or -1. On platforms such as Windows where events get processed in
Tcl_WaitForEvent, a return value of 1 means that there may be more
events still pending that have not been processed. This is a sign to the
caller that it must call
Tcl_WaitForEvent again if it wants all pending
events to be processed. A 0 return value means that calling
Tcl_WaitForEvent again will not have any effect: either this is a
platform where
Tcl_WaitForEvent only waits without doing any event
processing, or
Tcl_WaitForEvent knows for sure that there are no
additional events to process (e.g. it returned because the time elapsed).
Finally, a return value of -1 means that the event loop is no longer
operational and the application should probably unwind and terminate. Under
Windows this happens when a WM_QUIT message is received; under Unix it happens
when
Tcl_WaitForEvent would have waited forever because there were no
active event sources and the timeout was infinite.
Tcl_AlertNotifier is used in multithreaded applications to allow any
thread to “wake up” the notifier to alert it to new events on
its queue.
Tcl_AlertNotifier requires as an argument the notifier
handle returned by
Tcl_InitNotifier.
If the notifier will be used with an external event loop, then it must also
support the
Tcl_SetTimer interface.
Tcl_SetTimer is invoked by
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime whenever the maximum blocking time has been
reduced.
Tcl_SetTimer should arrange for the external event loop to
invoke
Tcl_ServiceAll after the specified interval even if no events
have occurred. This interface is needed because
Tcl_WaitForEvent is not
invoked when there is an external event loop. If the notifier will only be
used from
Tcl_DoOneEvent, then
Tcl_SetTimer need not do
anything.
Tcl_ServiceModeHook is called by the platform-independent portion of the
notifier when client code makes a call to
Tcl_SetServiceMode. This hook
is provided to support operating systems that require special event handling
when the application is in a modal loop (the Windows notifier, for instance,
uses this hook to create a communication window).
On Unix systems, the file event source also needs support from the notifier. The
file event source consists of the
Tcl_CreateFileHandler and
Tcl_DeleteFileHandler procedures, which are described in the
Tcl_CreateFileHandler manual page.
The
Tcl_Sleep and
Tcl_DoOneEvent interfaces are described in their
respective manual pages.
The easiest way to create a new notifier is to look at the code for an existing
notifier, such as the files
unix/tclUnixNotfy.c or
win/tclWinNotify.c in the Tcl source distribution.
A notifier that has been written according to the conventions above can also be
installed in a running process in place of the standard notifier. This
mechanism is used so that a single executable can be used (with the standard
notifier) as a stand-alone program and reused (with a replacement notifier in
a loadable extension) as an extension to another program, such as a Web
browser plugin.
To do this, the extension makes a call to
Tcl_SetNotifier passing a
pointer to a
Tcl_NotifierProcs data structure. The structure has the
following layout:
typedef struct Tcl_NotifierProcs {
Tcl_SetTimerProc * setTimerProc;
Tcl_WaitForEventProc * waitForEventProc;
Tcl_CreateFileHandlerProc * createFileHandlerProc;
Tcl_DeleteFileHandlerProc * deleteFileHandlerProc;
Tcl_InitNotifierProc * initNotifierProc;
Tcl_FinalizeNotifierProc * finalizeNotifierProc;
Tcl_AlertNotifierProc * alertNotifierProc;
Tcl_ServiceModeHookProc * serviceModeHookProc;
} Tcl_NotifierProcs;
Following the call to
Tcl_SetNotifier, the pointers given in the
Tcl_NotifierProcs structure replace whatever notifier had been
installed in the process.
It is extraordinarily unwise to replace a running notifier. Normally,
Tcl_SetNotifier should be called at process initialization time before
the first call to
Tcl_InitNotifier.
The notifier interfaces are designed so that Tcl can be embedded into
applications that have their own private event loops. In this case, the
application does not call
Tcl_DoOneEvent except in the case of
recursive event loops such as calls to the Tcl commands
update or
vwait. Most of the time is spent in the external event loop of the
application. In this case the notifier must arrange for the external event
loop to call back into Tcl when something happens on the various Tcl event
sources. These callbacks should arrange for appropriate Tcl events to be
placed on the Tcl event queue.
Because the external event loop is not calling
Tcl_DoOneEvent on a
regular basis, it is up to the notifier to arrange for
Tcl_ServiceEvent
to be called whenever events are pending on the Tcl event queue. The easiest
way to do this is to invoke
Tcl_ServiceAll at the end of each callback
from the external event loop. This will ensure that all of the event sources
are polled, any queued events are serviced, and any pending idle handlers are
processed before returning control to the application. In addition, event
sources that need to poll for events can call
Tcl_SetMaxBlockTime to
force the external event loop to call Tcl even if no events are available on
the system event queue.
As a side effect of processing events detected in the main external event loop,
Tcl may invoke
Tcl_DoOneEvent to start a recursive event loop in
commands like
vwait.
Tcl_DoOneEvent will invoke the external
event loop, which will result in callbacks as described in the preceding
paragraph, which will result in calls to
Tcl_ServiceAll. However, in
these cases it is undesirable to service events in
Tcl_ServiceAll.
Servicing events there is unnecessary because control will immediately return
to the external event loop and hence to
Tcl_DoOneEvent, which can
service the events itself. Furthermore,
Tcl_DoOneEvent is supposed to
service only a single event, whereas
Tcl_ServiceAll normally services
all pending events. To handle this situation,
Tcl_DoOneEvent sets a
flag for
Tcl_ServiceAll that causes it to return without servicing any
events. This flag is called the
service mode;
Tcl_DoOneEvent
restores it to its previous value before it returns.
In some cases, however, it may be necessary for
Tcl_ServiceAll to service
events even when it has been invoked from
Tcl_DoOneEvent. This happens
when there is yet another recursive event loop invoked via an event handler
called by
Tcl_DoOneEvent (such as one that is part of a native widget).
In this case,
Tcl_DoOneEvent may not have a chance to service events so
Tcl_ServiceAll must service them all. Any recursive event loop that
calls an external event loop rather than
Tcl_DoOneEvent must reset the
service mode so that all events get processed in
Tcl_ServiceAll. This
is done by invoking the
Tcl_SetServiceMode procedure. If
Tcl_SetServiceMode is passed
TCL_SERVICE_NONE, then calls to
Tcl_ServiceAll will return immediately without processing any events.
If
Tcl_SetServiceMode is passed
TCL_SERVICE_ALL, then calls to
Tcl_ServiceAll will behave normally.
Tcl_SetServiceMode returns
the previous value of the service mode, which should be restored when the
recursive loop exits.
Tcl_GetServiceMode returns the current value of
the service mode.
Tcl_CreateFileHandler(3tcl),
Tcl_DeleteFileHandler(3tcl),
Tcl_Sleep(3tcl),
Tcl_DoOneEvent(3tcl),
Thread(3tcl)
event, notifier, event queue, event sources, file events, timer, idle, service
mode, threads