Availability:built-in
- as(+Location)
- Location is one of
first
(default) orlast
and determines whether the new handler is expected as first or last. - name(+Atom)
- Give the handler a name. A new registration using the same name replaces the existing handler rather than adding a new handler. Names are local to the Channel, i.e., different channels can use the same name.
Defined channels are described below. The Channel argument is the name of the term listed below. The arguments are added as additional arguments to the given Closure.
- abort
- Called by abort/0.
- erase(DbRef)
- Called on an erased recorded database reference or clause. Note that a
retracted clauses is not immediately removed. Clauses are reclaimed by
garbage_collect_clauses/0,
which is normally executed automatially in the
gc
thread. This specific channel is used by clause_info/5 to reclaim source layout of reclaimed clauses. User applications should typically use the PredicateIndicator channel. - break(Action, ClauseRef, PCOffset)
- Traps events related to Prolog break points. See library
library(prolog_breakpoints)
- frame_finished(FrameRef)
- Indicates that a stack frame that has been examined using prolog_current_frame/1, prolog_frame_attribute/3 and friends has been deleted. Used by the source level debugger to avoid that the stack view references non-existing frames.
- thread_exit(Thread)
- Globally registered channel that is called by any thread just before the thread is terminated.
- this_thread_exit
- Thread local version of the
thread_exit
channel that is also used by theat_exit(Closure)
option of thread_create/3. - PredicateIndicator(Action, Context)
- Track changes to a predicate. This notably allows tracking modifications
to dynamic predicates. The channel also allows tracking changes to
monotonic tables (section
7.8). Both monotonic and incremental tabling use this to track
changes to
incremental
andmonotonic
dynamic predicates. Below is an example illustrating events from changing a dynamic predicate.:- dynamic p/1. :- prolog_listen(p/1, updated(p/1)). updated(Pred, Action, Context) :- format('Updated ~p: ~p ~p~n', [Pred, Action, Context]).
?- assert(p(a)). Updated p/1: assertz <clause>(0x55db261709d0) ?- retractall(p(_)). Updated p/1: retractall start(user:p(_12294)) Updated p/1: retract <clause>(0x55db261719c0) Updated p/1: retractall end(user:p(_12294))
- asserta
- assertz
- A new clauses has been added as first (last) for the given predicate. Context is a clause reference. The hook is called after the clause has been added. If the hook fails the clause is removed.
- retract
- A clause was retracted from the given predicate using either retract/1, erase/1 or retractall/1. Context is a clause reference. The hook is called before the clause is removed. If the hook fails, the clause is not removed.
- retractall
- The begining and end of retractall/1
is indicated with the Action
retractall
. The context argument isstart(Head)
orend(Head)
. - rollback(Action)
- Issued when rolling back (discarding) a transaction. Action
is the local action being reverted and is one of
asserta
,assertz
orretract
. Context is the involved clause. See transaction/1 and snapshot/1. - new_answer
- A new answer was added to a tabled predicate. The context is the answer term. Currently implemented for monotonic tabling only. Future versions may also implement this for normal tabling. See section 7.8.2.