// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. package time import "unsafe" // Note: The runtime knows the layout of struct Ticker, since newTimer allocates it. // Note also that Ticker and Timer have the same layout, so that newTimer can handle both. // The initTimer and initTicker fields are named differently so that // users cannot convert between the two without unsafe. // A Ticker holds a channel that delivers “ticks” of a clock // at intervals. type Ticker struct { C <-chan Time // The channel on which the ticks are delivered. initTicker bool } // NewTicker returns a new [Ticker] containing a channel that will send // the current time on the channel after each tick. The period of the // ticks is specified by the duration argument. The ticker will adjust // the time interval or drop ticks to make up for slow receivers. // The duration d must be greater than zero; if not, NewTicker will // panic. // // Before Go 1.23, the garbage collector did not recover // tickers that had not yet expired or been stopped, so code often // immediately deferred t.Stop after calling NewTicker, to make // the ticker recoverable when it was no longer needed. // As of Go 1.23, the garbage collector can recover unreferenced // tickers, even if they haven't been stopped. // The Stop method is no longer necessary to help the garbage collector. // (Code may of course still want to call Stop to stop the ticker for other reasons.) func NewTicker(d Duration) *Ticker { if d <= 0 { panic("non-positive interval for NewTicker") } // Give the channel a 1-element time buffer. // If the client falls behind while reading, we drop ticks // on the floor until the client catches up. c := make(chan Time, 1) t := (*Ticker)(unsafe.Pointer(newTimer(when(d), int64(d), sendTime, c, syncTimer(c)))) t.C = c return t } // Stop turns off a ticker. After Stop, no more ticks will be sent. // Stop does not close the channel, to prevent a concurrent goroutine // reading from the channel from seeing an erroneous "tick". func (t *Ticker) Stop() { if !t.initTicker { // This is misuse, and the same for time.Timer would panic, // but this didn't always panic, and we keep it not panicking // to avoid breaking old programs. See issue 21874. return } stopTimer((*Timer)(unsafe.Pointer(t))) } // Reset stops a ticker and resets its period to the specified duration. // The next tick will arrive after the new period elapses. The duration d // must be greater than zero; if not, Reset will panic. func (t *Ticker) Reset(d Duration) { if d <= 0 { panic("non-positive interval for Ticker.Reset") } if !t.initTicker { panic("time: Reset called on uninitialized Ticker") } resetTimer((*Timer)(unsafe.Pointer(t)), when(d), int64(d)) } // Tick is a convenience wrapper for [NewTicker] providing access to the ticking // channel only. Unlike NewTicker, Tick will return nil if d <= 0. // // Before Go 1.23, this documentation warned that the underlying // [Ticker] would never be recovered by the garbage collector, and that // if efficiency was a concern, code should use NewTicker instead and // call [Ticker.Stop] when the ticker is no longer needed. // As of Go 1.23, the garbage collector can recover unreferenced // tickers, even if they haven't been stopped. // The Stop method is no longer necessary to help the garbage collector. // There is no longer any reason to prefer NewTicker when Tick will do. func Tick(d Duration) <-chan Time { if d <= 0 { return nil } return NewTicker(d).C }