1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722
|
<!--- INCLUDE .*/example-([a-z]+)-([0-9a-z]+)\.kt
/*
* Copyright 2016-2018 JetBrains s.r.o. Use of this source code is governed by the Apache 2.0 license.
*/
// This file was automatically generated from coroutines-guide.md by Knit tool. Do not edit.
package kotlinx.coroutines.guide.$$1$$2
-->
<!--- KNIT ../core/kotlinx-coroutines-core/test/guide/.*\.kt -->
<!--- TEST_OUT ../core/kotlinx-coroutines-core/test/guide/test/ChannelsGuideTest.kt
// This file was automatically generated from coroutines-guide.md by Knit tool. Do not edit.
package kotlinx.coroutines.guide.test
import org.junit.Test
class ChannelsGuideTest {
-->
## Table of contents
<!--- TOC -->
* [Channels (experimental)](#channels-experimental)
* [Channel basics](#channel-basics)
* [Closing and iteration over channels](#closing-and-iteration-over-channels)
* [Building channel producers](#building-channel-producers)
* [Pipelines](#pipelines)
* [Prime numbers with pipeline](#prime-numbers-with-pipeline)
* [Fan-out](#fan-out)
* [Fan-in](#fan-in)
* [Buffered channels](#buffered-channels)
* [Channels are fair](#channels-are-fair)
* [Ticker channels](#ticker-channels)
<!--- END_TOC -->
## Channels (experimental)
Deferred values provide a convenient way to transfer a single value between coroutines.
Channels provide a way to transfer a stream of values.
> Channels are an experimental feature of `kotlinx.coroutines`. Their API is expected to
evolve in the upcoming updates of the `kotlinx.coroutines` library with potentially
breaking changes.
### Channel basics
A [Channel] is conceptually very similar to `BlockingQueue`. One key difference is that
instead of a blocking `put` operation it has a suspending [send][SendChannel.send], and instead of
a blocking `take` operation it has a suspending [receive][ReceiveChannel.receive].
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-min-compiler-version="1.3">
```kotlin
import kotlinx.coroutines.*
import kotlinx.coroutines.channels.*
fun main() = runBlocking {
//sampleStart
val channel = Channel<Int>()
launch {
// this might be heavy CPU-consuming computation or async logic, we'll just send five squares
for (x in 1..5) channel.send(x * x)
}
// here we print five received integers:
repeat(5) { println(channel.receive()) }
println("Done!")
//sampleEnd
}
```
</div>
> You can get full code [here](../core/kotlinx-coroutines-core/test/guide/example-channel-01.kt)
The output of this code is:
```text
1
4
9
16
25
Done!
```
<!--- TEST -->
### Closing and iteration over channels
Unlike a queue, a channel can be closed to indicate that no more elements are coming.
On the receiver side it is convenient to use a regular `for` loop to receive elements
from the channel.
Conceptually, a [close][SendChannel.close] is like sending a special close token to the channel.
The iteration stops as soon as this close token is received, so there is a guarantee
that all previously sent elements before the close are received:
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-min-compiler-version="1.3">
```kotlin
import kotlinx.coroutines.*
import kotlinx.coroutines.channels.*
fun main() = runBlocking {
//sampleStart
val channel = Channel<Int>()
launch {
for (x in 1..5) channel.send(x * x)
channel.close() // we're done sending
}
// here we print received values using `for` loop (until the channel is closed)
for (y in channel) println(y)
println("Done!")
//sampleEnd
}
```
</div>
> You can get full code [here](../core/kotlinx-coroutines-core/test/guide/example-channel-02.kt)
<!--- TEST
1
4
9
16
25
Done!
-->
### Building channel producers
The pattern where a coroutine is producing a sequence of elements is quite common.
This is a part of _producer-consumer_ pattern that is often found in concurrent code.
You could abstract such a producer into a function that takes channel as its parameter, but this goes contrary
to common sense that results must be returned from functions.
There is a convenient coroutine builder named [produce] that makes it easy to do it right on producer side,
and an extension function [consumeEach], that replaces a `for` loop on the consumer side:
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-min-compiler-version="1.3">
```kotlin
import kotlinx.coroutines.*
import kotlinx.coroutines.channels.*
fun CoroutineScope.produceSquares(): ReceiveChannel<Int> = produce {
for (x in 1..5) send(x * x)
}
fun main() = runBlocking {
//sampleStart
val squares = produceSquares()
squares.consumeEach { println(it) }
println("Done!")
//sampleEnd
}
```
</div>
> You can get full code [here](../core/kotlinx-coroutines-core/test/guide/example-channel-03.kt)
<!--- TEST
1
4
9
16
25
Done!
-->
### Pipelines
A pipeline is a pattern where one coroutine is producing, possibly infinite, stream of values:
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-highlight-only>
```kotlin
fun CoroutineScope.produceNumbers() = produce<Int> {
var x = 1
while (true) send(x++) // infinite stream of integers starting from 1
}
```
</div>
And another coroutine or coroutines are consuming that stream, doing some processing, and producing some other results.
In the example below, the numbers are just squared:
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-highlight-only>
```kotlin
fun CoroutineScope.square(numbers: ReceiveChannel<Int>): ReceiveChannel<Int> = produce {
for (x in numbers) send(x * x)
}
```
</div>
The main code starts and connects the whole pipeline:
<!--- CLEAR -->
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-min-compiler-version="1.3">
```kotlin
import kotlinx.coroutines.*
import kotlinx.coroutines.channels.*
fun main() = runBlocking {
//sampleStart
val numbers = produceNumbers() // produces integers from 1 and on
val squares = square(numbers) // squares integers
for (i in 1..5) println(squares.receive()) // print first five
println("Done!") // we are done
coroutineContext.cancelChildren() // cancel children coroutines
//sampleEnd
}
fun CoroutineScope.produceSquares(): ReceiveChannel<Int> = produce {
for (x in 1..5) send(x * x)
}
fun CoroutineScope.produceNumbers() = produce<Int> {
var x = 1
while (true) send(x++) // infinite stream of integers starting from 1
}
fun CoroutineScope.square(numbers: ReceiveChannel<Int>): ReceiveChannel<Int> = produce {
for (x in numbers) send(x * x)
}
```
</div>
> You can get full code [here](../core/kotlinx-coroutines-core/test/guide/example-channel-04.kt)
<!--- TEST
1
4
9
16
25
Done!
-->
> All functions that create coroutines are defined as extensions on [CoroutineScope],
so that we can rely on [structured concurrency](https://kotlinlang.org/docs/reference/coroutines/composing-suspending-functions.html#structured-concurrency-with-async) to make
sure that we don't have lingering global coroutines in our application.
### Prime numbers with pipeline
Let's take pipelines to the extreme with an example that generates prime numbers using a pipeline
of coroutines. We start with an infinite sequence of numbers.
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-highlight-only>
```kotlin
fun CoroutineScope.numbersFrom(start: Int) = produce<Int> {
var x = start
while (true) send(x++) // infinite stream of integers from start
}
```
</div>
The following pipeline stage filters an incoming stream of numbers, removing all the numbers
that are divisible by the given prime number:
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-highlight-only>
```kotlin
fun CoroutineScope.filter(numbers: ReceiveChannel<Int>, prime: Int) = produce<Int> {
for (x in numbers) if (x % prime != 0) send(x)
}
```
</div>
Now we build our pipeline by starting a stream of numbers from 2, taking a prime number from the current channel,
and launching new pipeline stage for each prime number found:
```
numbersFrom(2) -> filter(2) -> filter(3) -> filter(5) -> filter(7) ...
```
The following example prints the first ten prime numbers,
running the whole pipeline in the context of the main thread. Since all the coroutines are launched in
the scope of the main [runBlocking] coroutine
we don't have to keep an explicit list of all the coroutines we have started.
We use [cancelChildren][kotlin.coroutines.CoroutineContext.cancelChildren]
extension function to cancel all the children coroutines after we have printed
the first ten prime numbers.
<!--- CLEAR -->
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-min-compiler-version="1.3">
```kotlin
import kotlinx.coroutines.*
import kotlinx.coroutines.channels.*
fun main() = runBlocking {
//sampleStart
var cur = numbersFrom(2)
for (i in 1..10) {
val prime = cur.receive()
println(prime)
cur = filter(cur, prime)
}
coroutineContext.cancelChildren() // cancel all children to let main finish
//sampleEnd
}
fun CoroutineScope.numbersFrom(start: Int) = produce<Int> {
var x = start
while (true) send(x++) // infinite stream of integers from start
}
fun CoroutineScope.filter(numbers: ReceiveChannel<Int>, prime: Int) = produce<Int> {
for (x in numbers) if (x % prime != 0) send(x)
}
```
</div>
> You can get full code [here](../core/kotlinx-coroutines-core/test/guide/example-channel-05.kt)
The output of this code is:
```text
2
3
5
7
11
13
17
19
23
29
```
<!--- TEST -->
Note, that you can build the same pipeline using
[`buildIterator`](https://kotlinlang.org/api/latest/jvm/stdlib/kotlin.coroutines/build-iterator.html)
coroutine builder from the standard library.
Replace `produce` with `buildIterator`, `send` with `yield`, `receive` with `next`,
`ReceiveChannel` with `Iterator`, and get rid of the coroutine scope. You will not need `runBlocking` either.
However, the benefit of a pipeline that uses channels as shown above is that it can actually use
multiple CPU cores if you run it in [Dispatchers.Default] context.
Anyway, this is an extremely impractical way to find prime numbers. In practice, pipelines do involve some
other suspending invocations (like asynchronous calls to remote services) and these pipelines cannot be
built using `buildSequence`/`buildIterator`, because they do not allow arbitrary suspension, unlike
`produce`, which is fully asynchronous.
### Fan-out
Multiple coroutines may receive from the same channel, distributing work between themselves.
Let us start with a producer coroutine that is periodically producing integers
(ten numbers per second):
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-highlight-only>
```kotlin
fun CoroutineScope.produceNumbers() = produce<Int> {
var x = 1 // start from 1
while (true) {
send(x++) // produce next
delay(100) // wait 0.1s
}
}
```
</div>
Then we can have several processor coroutines. In this example, they just print their id and
received number:
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-highlight-only>
```kotlin
fun CoroutineScope.launchProcessor(id: Int, channel: ReceiveChannel<Int>) = launch {
for (msg in channel) {
println("Processor #$id received $msg")
}
}
```
</div>
Now let us launch five processors and let them work for almost a second. See what happens:
<!--- CLEAR -->
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-min-compiler-version="1.3">
```kotlin
import kotlinx.coroutines.*
import kotlinx.coroutines.channels.*
fun main() = runBlocking<Unit> {
//sampleStart
val producer = produceNumbers()
repeat(5) { launchProcessor(it, producer) }
delay(950)
producer.cancel() // cancel producer coroutine and thus kill them all
//sampleEnd
}
fun CoroutineScope.produceNumbers() = produce<Int> {
var x = 1 // start from 1
while (true) {
send(x++) // produce next
delay(100) // wait 0.1s
}
}
fun CoroutineScope.launchProcessor(id: Int, channel: ReceiveChannel<Int>) = launch {
for (msg in channel) {
println("Processor #$id received $msg")
}
}
```
</div>
> You can get full code [here](../core/kotlinx-coroutines-core/test/guide/example-channel-06.kt)
The output will be similar to the the following one, albeit the processor ids that receive
each specific integer may be different:
```
Processor #2 received 1
Processor #4 received 2
Processor #0 received 3
Processor #1 received 4
Processor #3 received 5
Processor #2 received 6
Processor #4 received 7
Processor #0 received 8
Processor #1 received 9
Processor #3 received 10
```
<!--- TEST lines.size == 10 && lines.withIndex().all { (i, line) -> line.startsWith("Processor #") && line.endsWith(" received ${i + 1}") } -->
Note, that cancelling a producer coroutine closes its channel, thus eventually terminating iteration
over the channel that processor coroutines are doing.
Also, pay attention to how we explicitly iterate over channel with `for` loop to perform fan-out in `launchProcessor` code.
Unlike `consumeEach`, this `for` loop pattern is perfectly safe to use from multiple coroutines. If one of the processor
coroutines fails, then others would still be processing the channel, while a processor that is written via `consumeEach`
always consumes (cancels) the underlying channel on its normal or abnormal completion.
### Fan-in
Multiple coroutines may send to the same channel.
For example, let us have a channel of strings, and a suspending function that
repeatedly sends a specified string to this channel with a specified delay:
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-highlight-only>
```kotlin
suspend fun sendString(channel: SendChannel<String>, s: String, time: Long) {
while (true) {
delay(time)
channel.send(s)
}
}
```
</div>
Now, let us see what happens if we launch a couple of coroutines sending strings
(in this example we launch them in the context of the main thread as main coroutine's children):
<!--- CLEAR -->
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-min-compiler-version="1.3">
```kotlin
import kotlinx.coroutines.*
import kotlinx.coroutines.channels.*
fun main() = runBlocking {
//sampleStart
val channel = Channel<String>()
launch { sendString(channel, "foo", 200L) }
launch { sendString(channel, "BAR!", 500L) }
repeat(6) { // receive first six
println(channel.receive())
}
coroutineContext.cancelChildren() // cancel all children to let main finish
//sampleEnd
}
suspend fun sendString(channel: SendChannel<String>, s: String, time: Long) {
while (true) {
delay(time)
channel.send(s)
}
}
```
</div>
> You can get full code [here](../core/kotlinx-coroutines-core/test/guide/example-channel-07.kt)
The output is:
```text
foo
foo
BAR!
foo
foo
BAR!
```
<!--- TEST -->
### Buffered channels
The channels shown so far had no buffer. Unbuffered channels transfer elements when sender and receiver
meet each other (aka rendezvous). If send is invoked first, then it is suspended until receive is invoked,
if receive is invoked first, it is suspended until send is invoked.
Both [Channel()] factory function and [produce] builder take an optional `capacity` parameter to
specify _buffer size_. Buffer allows senders to send multiple elements before suspending,
similar to the `BlockingQueue` with a specified capacity, which blocks when buffer is full.
Take a look at the behavior of the following code:
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-min-compiler-version="1.3">
```kotlin
import kotlinx.coroutines.*
import kotlinx.coroutines.channels.*
fun main() = runBlocking<Unit> {
//sampleStart
val channel = Channel<Int>(4) // create buffered channel
val sender = launch { // launch sender coroutine
repeat(10) {
println("Sending $it") // print before sending each element
channel.send(it) // will suspend when buffer is full
}
}
// don't receive anything... just wait....
delay(1000)
sender.cancel() // cancel sender coroutine
//sampleEnd
}
```
</div>
> You can get full code [here](../core/kotlinx-coroutines-core/test/guide/example-channel-08.kt)
It prints "sending" _five_ times using a buffered channel with capacity of _four_:
```text
Sending 0
Sending 1
Sending 2
Sending 3
Sending 4
```
<!--- TEST -->
The first four elements are added to the buffer and the sender suspends when trying to send the fifth one.
### Channels are fair
Send and receive operations to channels are _fair_ with respect to the order of their invocation from
multiple coroutines. They are served in first-in first-out order, e.g. the first coroutine to invoke `receive`
gets the element. In the following example two coroutines "ping" and "pong" are
receiving the "ball" object from the shared "table" channel.
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-min-compiler-version="1.3">
```kotlin
import kotlinx.coroutines.*
import kotlinx.coroutines.channels.*
//sampleStart
data class Ball(var hits: Int)
fun main() = runBlocking {
val table = Channel<Ball>() // a shared table
launch { player("ping", table) }
launch { player("pong", table) }
table.send(Ball(0)) // serve the ball
delay(1000) // delay 1 second
coroutineContext.cancelChildren() // game over, cancel them
}
suspend fun player(name: String, table: Channel<Ball>) {
for (ball in table) { // receive the ball in a loop
ball.hits++
println("$name $ball")
delay(300) // wait a bit
table.send(ball) // send the ball back
}
}
//sampleEnd
```
</div>
> You can get full code [here](../core/kotlinx-coroutines-core/test/guide/example-channel-09.kt)
The "ping" coroutine is started first, so it is the first one to receive the ball. Even though "ping"
coroutine immediately starts receiving the ball again after sending it back to the table, the ball gets
received by the "pong" coroutine, because it was already waiting for it:
```text
ping Ball(hits=1)
pong Ball(hits=2)
ping Ball(hits=3)
pong Ball(hits=4)
```
<!--- TEST -->
Note, that sometimes channels may produce executions that look unfair due to the nature of the executor
that is being used. See [this issue](https://github.com/Kotlin/kotlinx.coroutines/issues/111) for details.
### Ticker channels
Ticker channel is a special rendezvous channel that produces `Unit` every time given delay passes since last consumption from this channel.
Though it may seem to be useless standalone, it is a useful building block to create complex time-based [produce]
pipelines and operators that do windowing and other time-dependent processing.
Ticker channel can be used in [select] to perform "on tick" action.
To create such channel use a factory method [ticker].
To indicate that no further elements are needed use [ReceiveChannel.cancel] method on it.
Now let's see how it works in practice:
<div class="sample" markdown="1" theme="idea" data-highlight-only>
```kotlin
import kotlinx.coroutines.*
import kotlinx.coroutines.channels.*
fun main() = runBlocking<Unit> {
val tickerChannel = ticker(delayMillis = 100, initialDelayMillis = 0) // create ticker channel
var nextElement = withTimeoutOrNull(1) { tickerChannel.receive() }
println("Initial element is available immediately: $nextElement") // initial delay hasn't passed yet
nextElement = withTimeoutOrNull(50) { tickerChannel.receive() } // all subsequent elements has 100ms delay
println("Next element is not ready in 50 ms: $nextElement")
nextElement = withTimeoutOrNull(60) { tickerChannel.receive() }
println("Next element is ready in 100 ms: $nextElement")
// Emulate large consumption delays
println("Consumer pauses for 150ms")
delay(150)
// Next element is available immediately
nextElement = withTimeoutOrNull(1) { tickerChannel.receive() }
println("Next element is available immediately after large consumer delay: $nextElement")
// Note that the pause between `receive` calls is taken into account and next element arrives faster
nextElement = withTimeoutOrNull(60) { tickerChannel.receive() }
println("Next element is ready in 50ms after consumer pause in 150ms: $nextElement")
tickerChannel.cancel() // indicate that no more elements are needed
}
```
</div>
> You can get full code [here](../core/kotlinx-coroutines-core/test/guide/example-channel-10.kt)
It prints following lines:
```text
Initial element is available immediately: kotlin.Unit
Next element is not ready in 50 ms: null
Next element is ready in 100 ms: kotlin.Unit
Consumer pauses for 150ms
Next element is available immediately after large consumer delay: kotlin.Unit
Next element is ready in 50ms after consumer pause in 150ms: kotlin.Unit
```
<!--- TEST -->
Note that [ticker] is aware of possible consumer pauses and, by default, adjusts next produced element
delay if a pause occurs, trying to maintain a fixed rate of produced elements.
Optionally, a `mode` parameter equal to [TickerMode.FIXED_DELAY] can be specified to maintain a fixed
delay between elements.
<!--- MODULE kotlinx-coroutines-core -->
<!--- INDEX kotlinx.coroutines -->
[CoroutineScope]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines/-coroutine-scope/index.html
[runBlocking]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines/run-blocking.html
[kotlin.coroutines.CoroutineContext.cancelChildren]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlin.coroutines.-coroutine-context/cancel-children.html
[Dispatchers.Default]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines/-dispatchers/-default.html
<!--- INDEX kotlinx.coroutines.channels -->
[Channel]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines.channels/-channel/index.html
[SendChannel.send]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines.channels/-send-channel/send.html
[ReceiveChannel.receive]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines.channels/-receive-channel/receive.html
[SendChannel.close]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines.channels/-send-channel/close.html
[produce]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines.channels/produce.html
[consumeEach]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines.channels/consume-each.html
[Channel()]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines.channels/-channel.html
[ticker]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines.channels/ticker.html
[ReceiveChannel.cancel]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines.channels/-receive-channel/cancel.html
[TickerMode.FIXED_DELAY]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines.channels/-ticker-mode/-f-i-x-e-d_-d-e-l-a-y.html
<!--- INDEX kotlinx.coroutines.selects -->
[select]: https://kotlin.github.io/kotlinx.coroutines/kotlinx-coroutines-core/kotlinx.coroutines.selects/select.html
<!--- END -->
|