Boost
C++ Libraries
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Coding Standards
This is an older version of Boost and was released in 2023. The current version is 1.89.0.
The coroutine
class provides support for stackless coroutines. Stackless coroutines enable
programs to implement asynchronous logic in a synchronous manner, with
minimal overhead, as shown in the following example:
struct session : boost::asio::coroutine { boost::shared_ptr<tcp::socket> socket_; boost::shared_ptr<std::vector<char> > buffer_; session(boost::shared_ptr<tcp::socket> socket) : socket_(socket), buffer_(new std::vector<char>(1024)) { } void operator()(boost::system::error_code ec = boost::system::error_code(), std::size_t n = 0) { if (!ec) reenter (this) { for (;;) { yield socket_->async_read_some(boost::asio::buffer(*buffer_), *this); yield boost::asio::async_write(*socket_, boost::asio::buffer(*buffer_, n), *this); } } } };
The coroutine class is
used in conjunction with the pseudo-keywords reenter,
yield and fork. These are preprocessor macros,
and are implemented in terms of a switch
statement using a technique similar to Duff's Device. The coroutine class's documentation
provides a complete description of these pseudo-keywords.