/*!
 * Ext JS Library 3.3.1
 * Copyright(c) 2006-2010 Sencha Inc.
 * [email protected]
 * http://www.sencha.com/license
 */
/** * @class Ext.util.TaskRunner * Provides the ability to execute one or more arbitrary tasks in a multithreaded * manner. Generally, you can use the singleton {@link Ext.TaskMgr} instead, but * if needed, you can create separate instances of TaskRunner. Any number of * separate tasks can be started at any time and will run independently of each * other. Example usage: *

// Start a simple clock task that updates a div once per second
var updateClock = function(){
    Ext.fly('clock').update(new Date().format('g:i:s A'));
} 
var task = {
    run: updateClock,
    interval: 1000 //1 second
}
var runner = new Ext.util.TaskRunner();
runner.start(task);

// equivalent using TaskMgr
Ext.TaskMgr.start({
    run: updateClock,
    interval: 1000
});

 * 
*

See the {@link #start} method for details about how to configure a task object.

* Also see {@link Ext.util.DelayedTask}. * * @constructor * @param {Number} interval (optional) The minimum precision in milliseconds supported by this TaskRunner instance * (defaults to 10) */ Ext.util.TaskRunner = function(interval){ interval = interval || 10; var tasks = [], removeQueue = [], id = 0, running = false, // private stopThread = function(){ running = false; clearInterval(id); id = 0; }, // private startThread = function(){ if(!running){ running = true; id = setInterval(runTasks, interval); } }, // private removeTask = function(t){ removeQueue.push(t); if(t.onStop){ t.onStop.apply(t.scope || t); } }, // private runTasks = function(){ var rqLen = removeQueue.length, now = new Date().getTime(); if(rqLen > 0){ for(var i = 0; i < rqLen; i++){ tasks.remove(removeQueue[i]); } removeQueue = []; if(tasks.length < 1){ stopThread(); return; } } for(var i = 0, t, itime, rt, len = tasks.length; i < len; ++i){ t = tasks[i]; itime = now - t.taskRunTime; if(t.interval <= itime){ rt = t.run.apply(t.scope || t, t.args || [++t.taskRunCount]); t.taskRunTime = now; if(rt === false || t.taskRunCount === t.repeat){ removeTask(t); return; } } if(t.duration && t.duration <= (now - t.taskStartTime)){ removeTask(t); } } };
/** * Starts a new task. * @method start * @param {Object} task

A config object that supports the following properties:

*

Before each invocation, Ext injects the property taskRunCount into the task object so * that calculations based on the repeat count can be performed.

* @return {Object} The task */ this.start = function(task){ tasks.push(task); task.taskStartTime = new Date().getTime(); task.taskRunTime = 0; task.taskRunCount = 0; startThread(); return task; };
/** * Stops an existing running task. * @method stop * @param {Object} task The task to stop * @return {Object} The task */ this.stop = function(task){ removeTask(task); return task; };
/** * Stops all tasks that are currently running. * @method stopAll */ this.stopAll = function(){ stopThread(); for(var i = 0, len = tasks.length; i < len; i++){ if(tasks[i].onStop){ tasks[i].onStop(); } } tasks = []; removeQueue = []; }; };
/** * @class Ext.TaskMgr * @extends Ext.util.TaskRunner * A static {@link Ext.util.TaskRunner} instance that can be used to start and stop arbitrary tasks. See * {@link Ext.util.TaskRunner} for supported methods and task config properties. *

// Start a simple clock task that updates a div once per second
var task = {
    run: function(){
        Ext.fly('clock').update(new Date().format('g:i:s A'));
    },
    interval: 1000 //1 second
}
Ext.TaskMgr.start(task);
*

See the {@link #start} method for details about how to configure a task object.

* @singleton */ Ext.TaskMgr = new Ext.util.TaskRunner();