MailboxProcessor.PostAndAsyncReply<'Msg,'Reply> Method (F#)
Posts a message to an agent and await a reply on the channel, asynchronously.
Namespace/Module Path: Microsoft.FSharp.Control
Assembly: FSharp.Core (in FSharp.Core.dll)
// Signature:
member this.PostAndAsyncReply : (AsyncReplyChannel<'Reply> -> 'Msg) * ?int -> Async<'Reply>
// Usage:
mailboxProcessor.PostAndAsyncReply (buildMessage)
mailboxProcessor.PostAndAsyncReply (buildMessage, timeout = timeout)
Parameters
buildMessage
Type: AsyncReplyChannel<'Reply> -> 'MsgThe function to incorporate the AsyncReplyChannel into the message to be sent.
timeout
Type: intAn optional timeout parameter (in milliseconds) to wait for a reply message. The default is -1 which corresponds to Infinite().
Return Value
An asychronous computation (Async object) that will wait for the reply from the agent.
Remarks
The message is generated by applying buildMessage to a new reply channel to be incorporated into the message. The receiving agent must process this message and invoke the Reply method on this reply channel precisely once.
Example
The following code example shows a mailbox processor agent that uses PostAndAsyncReply. The return value of PostAndAsyncReply is an asynchronous workflow, which in this example is started by using Async.StartWithContinuations, to set up the code that handles the reply.
open System
type Message = string * AsyncReplyChannel<string>
let formatString = "Message number {0} was received. Message contents: {1}"
let agent = MailboxProcessor<Message>.Start(fun inbox ->
let rec loop n =
async {
let! (message, replyChannel) = inbox.Receive();
// Delay so that the responses come in a different order.
do! Async.Sleep( 5000 - 1000 * n);
replyChannel.Reply(String.Format(formatString, n, message))
do! loop (n + 1)
}
loop (0))
printfn "Mailbox Processor Test"
printfn "Type some text and press Enter to submit a message."
let isCompleted = false
while (not isCompleted) do
printf "> "
let input = Console.ReadLine()
let messageAsync = agent.PostAndAsyncReply(fun replyChannel -> input, replyChannel)
// Set up a continuation function (the first argument below) that prints the reply.
// The second argument is the exception continuation (not used).
// The third argument is the cancellation continuation (not used).
Async.StartWithContinuations(messageAsync,
(fun reply -> printfn "%s" reply),
(fun _ -> ()),
(fun _ -> ()))
printfn "Press Enter to continue."
Console.ReadLine() |> ignore
Following is an example session. The output might be interleaved, which shows that the message processing function is running on multiple threads.
Mailbox Processor Test Type some text and press Enter to submit a message. > hello > hello? > testing > testing Message number 0 was received. Message contents: hello 1 > testing2 > Message number 1 was received. Message contents: hello? testing3 > Message number 2 was received. Message contents: testing Message number 3 was received. Message contents: testing 1 MeMessage number 5 was received. Message contents: testing3 ssage number 4 was received. Message contents: testing2
Platforms
Windows 7, Windows Vista SP2, Windows XP SP3, Windows XP x64 SP2, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Server 2008 SP2, Windows Server 2003 SP2
Version Information
F# Runtime
Supported in: 2.0, 4.0
Silverlight
Supported in: 3
See Also
Reference
Control.MailboxProcessor<'Msg> Class (F#)
Microsoft.FSharp.Control Namespace (F#)
Change History
Date |
History |
Reason |
---|---|---|
January 2011 |
Added code example. |
Information enhancement. |