GenServer.init
init, go back to GenServer module for more information.
Specs
init(init_arg :: term()) :: {:ok, state} | {:ok, state, timeout() | :hibernate | {:continue, term()}} | :ignore | {:stop, reason :: any()} when state: any()
Invoked when the server is started. start_link/3 or start/3 will
block until it returns.
init_arg is the argument term (second argument) passed to start_link/3.
Returning {:ok, state} will cause start_link/3 to return
{:ok, pid} and the process to enter its loop.
Returning {:ok, state, timeout} is similar to {:ok, state},
except that it also sets a timeout. See the "Timeouts" section
in the module documentation for more information.
Returning {:ok, state, :hibernate} is similar to {:ok, state}
except the process is hibernated before entering the loop. See
handle_call/3 for more information on hibernation.
Returning {:ok, state, {:continue, continue}} is similar to
{:ok, state} except that immediately after entering the loop,
the handle_continue/2 callback will be invoked with the value
continue as first argument.
Returning :ignore will cause start_link/3 to return :ignore and
the process will exit normally without entering the loop or calling
terminate/2. If used when part of a supervision tree the parent
supervisor will not fail to start nor immediately try to restart the
GenServer. The remainder of the supervision tree will be started
and so the GenServer should not be required by other processes.
It can be started later with Supervisor.restart_child/2 as the child
specification is saved in the parent supervisor. The main use cases for
this are:
- The
GenServeris disabled by configuration but might be enabled later. - An error occurred and it will be handled by a different mechanism than the
Supervisor. Likely this approach involves callingSupervisor.restart_child/2after a delay to attempt a restart.
Returning {:stop, reason} will cause start_link/3 to return
{:error, reason} and the process to exit with reason reason without
entering the loop or calling terminate/2.