module Shutdown: Shutdownval shutdown : ?force:unit Import.Deferred.t -> int -> unitshutdown ?force status initiates shutdown, which runs all the at_shutdown
functions, waits for them to finish, and then exits with the supplied status. The
at_shutdown functions can block -- one can use ~force to forcibly exit (with
status 1) if the at_shutdown functions do not finish in a reasonable amount of time.
By default, force is after (sec 10.).
Repeated calls to shutdown with the same status will have no effect. Any call to
shutdown with nonzero status will cause that to be the status that is exited with.
A call to shutdown with different nonzero status from the original call will
raise.
val exit : ?force:unit Import.Deferred.t -> int -> 'a Import.Deferred.texit ?force status is shutdown ?force status; Deferred.never ().
We do not have an exit function that returns a non-deferred:
val exit : ?force:unit Deferred.t -> int -> _
Such a function should not exist, for the same reason that we do not have:
val block : 'a Deferred.t -> 'a
The semantics of such an exit function would allow one to block a running async job,
and to switch to another one (to run the at_shutdown handlers), without expressing
that switch in the type system via a Deferred.t. That would eliminate all the nice
reasoning guarantees that async gives about concurrent jobs.
val shutting_down : unit -> [ `No | `Yes of int ]shutting_down () reports whether we are currently shutting down, and if so, with
what status.val at_shutdown : (unit -> unit Import.Deferred.t) -> unitat_shutdown f causes f () to be run when shutdown is called, and for shutdown
to wait until the returned deferred finishes.val don't_finish_before : unit Import.Deferred.t -> unitdon't_finish_before d causes shutdown to wait until d becomes determined before
finishing. It is like at_shutdown (fun _ -> d), except it is more efficient, and
will not take any space once d is determined. There is a a single at_shutdown
shared among all deferreds supplied to don't_finish_before.