lh | 9ed821d | 2023-04-07 01:36:19 -0700 | [diff] [blame^] | 1 | @node POSIX Threads |
| 2 | @c @node POSIX Threads, , Top, Top |
| 3 | @chapter POSIX Threads |
| 4 | @c %MENU% The standard threads library |
| 5 | |
| 6 | @c This chapter needs more work bigtime. -zw |
| 7 | |
| 8 | This chapter describes the pthreads (POSIX threads) library. This |
| 9 | library provides support functions for multithreaded programs: thread |
| 10 | primitives, synchronization objects, and so forth. It also implements |
| 11 | POSIX 1003.1b semaphores (not to be confused with System V semaphores). |
| 12 | |
| 13 | The threads operations (@samp{pthread_*}) do not use @var{errno}. |
| 14 | Instead they return an error code directly. The semaphore operations do |
| 15 | use @var{errno}. |
| 16 | |
| 17 | @menu |
| 18 | * Basic Thread Operations:: Creating, terminating, and waiting for threads. |
| 19 | * Thread Attributes:: Tuning thread scheduling. |
| 20 | * Cancellation:: Stopping a thread before it's done. |
| 21 | * Cleanup Handlers:: Deallocating resources when a thread is |
| 22 | canceled. |
| 23 | * Mutexes:: One way to synchronize threads. |
| 24 | * Condition Variables:: Another way. |
| 25 | * POSIX Semaphores:: And a third way. |
| 26 | * Thread-Specific Data:: Variables with different values in |
| 27 | different threads. |
| 28 | * Threads and Signal Handling:: Why you should avoid mixing the two, and |
| 29 | how to do it if you must. |
| 30 | * Threads and Fork:: Interactions between threads and the |
| 31 | @code{fork} function. |
| 32 | * Streams and Fork:: Interactions between stdio streams and |
| 33 | @code{fork}. |
| 34 | * Miscellaneous Thread Functions:: A grab bag of utility routines. |
| 35 | @end menu |
| 36 | |
| 37 | @node Basic Thread Operations |
| 38 | @section Basic Thread Operations |
| 39 | |
| 40 | These functions are the thread equivalents of @code{fork}, @code{exit}, |
| 41 | and @code{wait}. |
| 42 | |
| 43 | @comment pthread.h |
| 44 | @comment POSIX |
| 45 | @deftypefun int pthread_create (pthread_t * @var{thread}, pthread_attr_t * @var{attr}, void * (*@var{start_routine})(void *), void * @var{arg}) |
| 46 | @code{pthread_create} creates a new thread of control that executes |
| 47 | concurrently with the calling thread. The new thread calls the |
| 48 | function @var{start_routine}, passing it @var{arg} as first argument. The |
| 49 | new thread terminates either explicitly, by calling @code{pthread_exit}, |
| 50 | or implicitly, by returning from the @var{start_routine} function. The |
| 51 | latter case is equivalent to calling @code{pthread_exit} with the result |
| 52 | returned by @var{start_routine} as exit code. |
| 53 | |
| 54 | The @var{attr} argument specifies thread attributes to be applied to the |
| 55 | new thread. @xref{Thread Attributes}, for details. The @var{attr} |
| 56 | argument can also be @code{NULL}, in which case default attributes are |
| 57 | used: the created thread is joinable (not detached) and has an ordinary |
| 58 | (not realtime) scheduling policy. |
| 59 | |
| 60 | On success, the identifier of the newly created thread is stored in the |
| 61 | location pointed by the @var{thread} argument, and a 0 is returned. On |
| 62 | error, a non-zero error code is returned. |
| 63 | |
| 64 | This function may return the following errors: |
| 65 | @table @code |
| 66 | @item EAGAIN |
| 67 | Not enough system resources to create a process for the new thread, |
| 68 | or more than @code{PTHREAD_THREADS_MAX} threads are already active. |
| 69 | @end table |
| 70 | @end deftypefun |
| 71 | |
| 72 | @comment pthread.h |
| 73 | @comment POSIX |
| 74 | @deftypefun void pthread_exit (void *@var{retval}) |
| 75 | @code{pthread_exit} terminates the execution of the calling thread. All |
| 76 | cleanup handlers (@pxref{Cleanup Handlers}) that have been set for the |
| 77 | calling thread with @code{pthread_cleanup_push} are executed in reverse |
| 78 | order (the most recently pushed handler is executed first). Finalization |
| 79 | functions for thread-specific data are then called for all keys that |
| 80 | have non-@code{NULL} values associated with them in the calling thread |
| 81 | (@pxref{Thread-Specific Data}). Finally, execution of the calling |
| 82 | thread is stopped. |
| 83 | |
| 84 | The @var{retval} argument is the return value of the thread. It can be |
| 85 | retrieved from another thread using @code{pthread_join}. |
| 86 | |
| 87 | The @code{pthread_exit} function never returns. |
| 88 | @end deftypefun |
| 89 | |
| 90 | @comment pthread.h |
| 91 | @comment POSIX |
| 92 | @deftypefun int pthread_cancel (pthread_t @var{thread}) |
| 93 | |
| 94 | @code{pthread_cancel} sends a cancellation request to the thread denoted |
| 95 | by the @var{thread} argument. If there is no such thread, |
| 96 | @code{pthread_cancel} fails and returns @code{ESRCH}. Otherwise it |
| 97 | returns 0. @xref{Cancellation}, for details. |
| 98 | @end deftypefun |
| 99 | |
| 100 | @comment pthread.h |
| 101 | @comment POSIX |
| 102 | @deftypefun int pthread_join (pthread_t @var{th}, void **thread_@var{return}) |
| 103 | @code{pthread_join} suspends the execution of the calling thread until |
| 104 | the thread identified by @var{th} terminates, either by calling |
| 105 | @code{pthread_exit} or by being canceled. |
| 106 | |
| 107 | If @var{thread_return} is not @code{NULL}, the return value of @var{th} |
| 108 | is stored in the location pointed to by @var{thread_return}. The return |
| 109 | value of @var{th} is either the argument it gave to @code{pthread_exit}, |
| 110 | or @code{PTHREAD_CANCELED} if @var{th} was canceled. |
| 111 | |
| 112 | The joined thread @code{th} must be in the joinable state: it must not |
| 113 | have been detached using @code{pthread_detach} or the |
| 114 | @code{PTHREAD_CREATE_DETACHED} attribute to @code{pthread_create}. |
| 115 | |
| 116 | When a joinable thread terminates, its memory resources (thread |
| 117 | descriptor and stack) are not deallocated until another thread performs |
| 118 | @code{pthread_join} on it. Therefore, @code{pthread_join} must be called |
| 119 | once for each joinable thread created to avoid memory leaks. |
| 120 | |
| 121 | At most one thread can wait for the termination of a given |
| 122 | thread. Calling @code{pthread_join} on a thread @var{th} on which |
| 123 | another thread is already waiting for termination returns an error. |
| 124 | |
| 125 | @code{pthread_join} is a cancellation point. If a thread is canceled |
| 126 | while suspended in @code{pthread_join}, the thread execution resumes |
| 127 | immediately and the cancellation is executed without waiting for the |
| 128 | @var{th} thread to terminate. If cancellation occurs during |
| 129 | @code{pthread_join}, the @var{th} thread remains not joined. |
| 130 | |
| 131 | On success, the return value of @var{th} is stored in the location |
| 132 | pointed to by @var{thread_return}, and 0 is returned. On error, one of |
| 133 | the following values is returned: |
| 134 | @table @code |
| 135 | @item ESRCH |
| 136 | No thread could be found corresponding to that specified by @var{th}. |
| 137 | @item EINVAL |
| 138 | The @var{th} thread has been detached, or another thread is already |
| 139 | waiting on termination of @var{th}. |
| 140 | @item EDEADLK |
| 141 | The @var{th} argument refers to the calling thread. |
| 142 | @end table |
| 143 | @end deftypefun |
| 144 | |
| 145 | @node Thread Attributes |
| 146 | @section Thread Attributes |
| 147 | |
| 148 | @comment pthread.h |
| 149 | @comment POSIX |
| 150 | |
| 151 | Threads have a number of attributes that may be set at creation time. |
| 152 | This is done by filling a thread attribute object @var{attr} of type |
| 153 | @code{pthread_attr_t}, then passing it as second argument to |
| 154 | @code{pthread_create}. Passing @code{NULL} is equivalent to passing a |
| 155 | thread attribute object with all attributes set to their default values. |
| 156 | |
| 157 | Attribute objects are consulted only when creating a new thread. The |
| 158 | same attribute object can be used for creating several threads. |
| 159 | Modifying an attribute object after a call to @code{pthread_create} does |
| 160 | not change the attributes of the thread previously created. |
| 161 | |
| 162 | @comment pthread.h |
| 163 | @comment POSIX |
| 164 | @deftypefun int pthread_attr_init (pthread_attr_t *@var{attr}) |
| 165 | @code{pthread_attr_init} initializes the thread attribute object |
| 166 | @var{attr} and fills it with default values for the attributes. (The |
| 167 | default values are listed below for each attribute.) |
| 168 | |
| 169 | Each attribute @var{attrname} (see below for a list of all attributes) |
| 170 | can be individually set using the function |
| 171 | @code{pthread_attr_set@var{attrname}} and retrieved using the function |
| 172 | @code{pthread_attr_get@var{attrname}}. |
| 173 | @end deftypefun |
| 174 | |
| 175 | @comment pthread.h |
| 176 | @comment POSIX |
| 177 | @deftypefun int pthread_attr_destroy (pthread_attr_t *@var{attr}) |
| 178 | @code{pthread_attr_destroy} destroys the attribute object pointed to by |
| 179 | @var{attr} releasing any resources associated with it. @var{attr} is |
| 180 | left in an undefined state, and you must not use it again in a call to |
| 181 | any pthreads function until it has been reinitialized. |
| 182 | @end deftypefun |
| 183 | |
| 184 | @findex pthread_attr_setdetachstate |
| 185 | @findex pthread_attr_setguardsize |
| 186 | @findex pthread_attr_setinheritsched |
| 187 | @findex pthread_attr_setschedparam |
| 188 | @findex pthread_attr_setschedpolicy |
| 189 | @findex pthread_attr_setscope |
| 190 | @findex pthread_attr_setstack |
| 191 | @findex pthread_attr_setstackaddr |
| 192 | @findex pthread_attr_setstacksize |
| 193 | @comment pthread.h |
| 194 | @comment POSIX |
| 195 | @deftypefun int pthread_attr_setattr (pthread_attr_t *@var{obj}, int @var{value}) |
| 196 | Set attribute @var{attr} to @var{value} in the attribute object pointed |
| 197 | to by @var{obj}. See below for a list of possible attributes and the |
| 198 | values they can take. |
| 199 | |
| 200 | On success, these functions return 0. If @var{value} is not meaningful |
| 201 | for the @var{attr} being modified, they will return the error code |
| 202 | @code{EINVAL}. Some of the functions have other failure modes; see |
| 203 | below. |
| 204 | @end deftypefun |
| 205 | |
| 206 | @findex pthread_attr_getdetachstate |
| 207 | @findex pthread_attr_getguardsize |
| 208 | @findex pthread_attr_getinheritsched |
| 209 | @findex pthread_attr_getschedparam |
| 210 | @findex pthread_attr_getschedpolicy |
| 211 | @findex pthread_attr_getscope |
| 212 | @findex pthread_attr_getstack |
| 213 | @findex pthread_attr_getstackaddr |
| 214 | @findex pthread_attr_getstacksize |
| 215 | @comment pthread.h |
| 216 | @comment POSIX |
| 217 | @deftypefun int pthread_attr_getattr (const pthread_attr_t *@var{obj}, int *@var{value}) |
| 218 | Store the current setting of @var{attr} in @var{obj} into the variable |
| 219 | pointed to by @var{value}. |
| 220 | |
| 221 | These functions always return 0. |
| 222 | @end deftypefun |
| 223 | |
| 224 | The following thread attributes are supported: |
| 225 | @table @samp |
| 226 | @item detachstate |
| 227 | Choose whether the thread is created in the joinable state (value |
| 228 | @code{PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE}) or in the detached state |
| 229 | (@code{PTHREAD_CREATE_DETACHED}). The default is |
| 230 | @code{PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE}. |
| 231 | |
| 232 | In the joinable state, another thread can synchronize on the thread |
| 233 | termination and recover its termination code using @code{pthread_join}, |
| 234 | but some of the thread resources are kept allocated after the thread |
| 235 | terminates, and reclaimed only when another thread performs |
| 236 | @code{pthread_join} on that thread. |
| 237 | |
| 238 | In the detached state, the thread resources are immediately freed when |
| 239 | it terminates, but @code{pthread_join} cannot be used to synchronize on |
| 240 | the thread termination. |
| 241 | |
| 242 | A thread created in the joinable state can later be put in the detached |
| 243 | thread using @code{pthread_detach}. |
| 244 | |
| 245 | @item schedpolicy |
| 246 | Select the scheduling policy for the thread: one of @code{SCHED_OTHER} |
| 247 | (regular, non-realtime scheduling), @code{SCHED_RR} (realtime, |
| 248 | round-robin) or @code{SCHED_FIFO} (realtime, first-in first-out). |
| 249 | The default is @code{SCHED_OTHER}. |
| 250 | @c Not doc'd in our manual: FIXME. |
| 251 | @c See @code{sched_setpolicy} for more information on scheduling policies. |
| 252 | |
| 253 | The realtime scheduling policies @code{SCHED_RR} and @code{SCHED_FIFO} |
| 254 | are available only to processes with superuser privileges. |
| 255 | @code{pthread_attr_setschedparam} will fail and return @code{ENOTSUP} if |
| 256 | you try to set a realtime policy when you are unprivileged. |
| 257 | |
| 258 | The scheduling policy of a thread can be changed after creation with |
| 259 | @code{pthread_setschedparam}. |
| 260 | |
| 261 | @item schedparam |
| 262 | Change the scheduling parameter (the scheduling priority) |
| 263 | for the thread. The default is 0. |
| 264 | |
| 265 | This attribute is not significant if the scheduling policy is |
| 266 | @code{SCHED_OTHER}; it only matters for the realtime policies |
| 267 | @code{SCHED_RR} and @code{SCHED_FIFO}. |
| 268 | |
| 269 | The scheduling priority of a thread can be changed after creation with |
| 270 | @code{pthread_setschedparam}. |
| 271 | |
| 272 | @item inheritsched |
| 273 | Choose whether the scheduling policy and scheduling parameter for the |
| 274 | newly created thread are determined by the values of the |
| 275 | @var{schedpolicy} and @var{schedparam} attributes (value |
| 276 | @code{PTHREAD_EXPLICIT_SCHED}) or are inherited from the parent thread |
| 277 | (value @code{PTHREAD_INHERIT_SCHED}). The default is |
| 278 | @code{PTHREAD_EXPLICIT_SCHED}. |
| 279 | |
| 280 | @item scope |
| 281 | Choose the scheduling contention scope for the created thread. The |
| 282 | default is @code{PTHREAD_SCOPE_SYSTEM}, meaning that the threads contend |
| 283 | for CPU time with all processes running on the machine. In particular, |
| 284 | thread priorities are interpreted relative to the priorities of all |
| 285 | other processes on the machine. The other possibility, |
| 286 | @code{PTHREAD_SCOPE_PROCESS}, means that scheduling contention occurs |
| 287 | only between the threads of the running process: thread priorities are |
| 288 | interpreted relative to the priorities of the other threads of the |
| 289 | process, regardless of the priorities of other processes. |
| 290 | |
| 291 | @code{PTHREAD_SCOPE_PROCESS} is not supported in LinuxThreads. If you |
| 292 | try to set the scope to this value, @code{pthread_attr_setscope} will |
| 293 | fail and return @code{ENOTSUP}. |
| 294 | |
| 295 | @item stackaddr |
| 296 | Provide an address for an application managed stack. The size of the |
| 297 | stack must be at least @code{PTHREAD_STACK_MIN}. |
| 298 | |
| 299 | @item stacksize |
| 300 | Change the size of the stack created for the thread. The value defines |
| 301 | the minimum stack size, in bytes. |
| 302 | |
| 303 | If the value exceeds the system's maximum stack size, or is smaller |
| 304 | than @code{PTHREAD_STACK_MIN}, @code{pthread_attr_setstacksize} will |
| 305 | fail and return @code{EINVAL}. |
| 306 | |
| 307 | @item stack |
| 308 | Provide both the address and size of an application managed stack to |
| 309 | use for the new thread. The base of the memory area is @var{stackaddr} |
| 310 | with the size of the memory area, @var{stacksize}, measured in bytes. |
| 311 | |
| 312 | If the value of @var{stacksize} is less than @code{PTHREAD_STACK_MIN}, |
| 313 | or greater than the system's maximum stack size, or if the value of |
| 314 | @var{stackaddr} lacks the proper alignment, @code{pthread_attr_setstack} |
| 315 | will fail and return @code{EINVAL}. |
| 316 | |
| 317 | @item guardsize |
| 318 | Change the minimum size in bytes of the guard area for the thread's |
| 319 | stack. The default size is a single page. If this value is set, it |
| 320 | will be rounded up to the nearest page size. If the value is set to 0, |
| 321 | a guard area will not be created for this thread. The space allocated |
| 322 | for the guard area is used to catch stack overflow. Therefore, when |
| 323 | allocating large structures on the stack, a larger guard area may be |
| 324 | required to catch a stack overflow. |
| 325 | |
| 326 | If the caller is managing their own stacks (if the @code{stackaddr} |
| 327 | attribute has been set), then the @code{guardsize} attribute is ignored. |
| 328 | |
| 329 | If the value exceeds the @code{stacksize}, @code{pthread_atrr_setguardsize} |
| 330 | will fail and return @code{EINVAL}. |
| 331 | @end table |
| 332 | |
| 333 | @node Cancellation |
| 334 | @section Cancellation |
| 335 | |
| 336 | Cancellation is the mechanism by which a thread can terminate the |
| 337 | execution of another thread. More precisely, a thread can send a |
| 338 | cancellation request to another thread. Depending on its settings, the |
| 339 | target thread can then either ignore the request, honor it immediately, |
| 340 | or defer it till it reaches a cancellation point. When threads are |
| 341 | first created by @code{pthread_create}, they always defer cancellation |
| 342 | requests. |
| 343 | |
| 344 | When a thread eventually honors a cancellation request, it behaves as if |
| 345 | @code{pthread_exit(PTHREAD_CANCELED)} was called. All cleanup handlers |
| 346 | are executed in reverse order, finalization functions for |
| 347 | thread-specific data are called, and finally the thread stops executing. |
| 348 | If the canceled thread was joinable, the return value |
| 349 | @code{PTHREAD_CANCELED} is provided to whichever thread calls |
| 350 | @var{pthread_join} on it. See @code{pthread_exit} for more information. |
| 351 | |
| 352 | Cancellation points are the points where the thread checks for pending |
| 353 | cancellation requests and performs them. The POSIX threads functions |
| 354 | @code{pthread_join}, @code{pthread_cond_wait}, |
| 355 | @code{pthread_cond_timedwait}, @code{pthread_testcancel}, |
| 356 | @code{sem_wait}, and @code{sigwait} are cancellation points. In |
| 357 | addition, these system calls are cancellation points: |
| 358 | |
| 359 | @multitable @columnfractions .33 .33 .33 |
| 360 | @item @t{accept} @tab @t{open} @tab @t{sendmsg} |
| 361 | @item @t{close} @tab @t{pause} @tab @t{sendto} |
| 362 | @item @t{connect} @tab @t{read} @tab @t{system} |
| 363 | @item @t{fcntl} @tab @t{recv} @tab @t{tcdrain} |
| 364 | @item @t{fsync} @tab @t{recvfrom} @tab @t{wait} |
| 365 | @item @t{lseek} @tab @t{recvmsg} @tab @t{waitpid} |
| 366 | @item @t{msync} @tab @t{send} @tab @t{write} |
| 367 | @item @t{nanosleep} |
| 368 | @end multitable |
| 369 | |
| 370 | @noindent |
| 371 | All library functions that call these functions (such as |
| 372 | @code{printf}) are also cancellation points. |
| 373 | |
| 374 | @comment pthread.h |
| 375 | @comment POSIX |
| 376 | @deftypefun int pthread_setcancelstate (int @var{state}, int *@var{oldstate}) |
| 377 | @code{pthread_setcancelstate} changes the cancellation state for the |
| 378 | calling thread -- that is, whether cancellation requests are ignored or |
| 379 | not. The @var{state} argument is the new cancellation state: either |
| 380 | @code{PTHREAD_CANCEL_ENABLE} to enable cancellation, or |
| 381 | @code{PTHREAD_CANCEL_DISABLE} to disable cancellation (cancellation |
| 382 | requests are ignored). |
| 383 | |
| 384 | If @var{oldstate} is not @code{NULL}, the previous cancellation state is |
| 385 | stored in the location pointed to by @var{oldstate}, and can thus be |
| 386 | restored later by another call to @code{pthread_setcancelstate}. |
| 387 | |
| 388 | If the @var{state} argument is not @code{PTHREAD_CANCEL_ENABLE} or |
| 389 | @code{PTHREAD_CANCEL_DISABLE}, @code{pthread_setcancelstate} fails and |
| 390 | returns @code{EINVAL}. Otherwise it returns 0. |
| 391 | @end deftypefun |
| 392 | |
| 393 | @comment pthread.h |
| 394 | @comment POSIX |
| 395 | @deftypefun int pthread_setcanceltype (int @var{type}, int *@var{oldtype}) |
| 396 | @code{pthread_setcanceltype} changes the type of responses to |
| 397 | cancellation requests for the calling thread: asynchronous (immediate) |
| 398 | or deferred. The @var{type} argument is the new cancellation type: |
| 399 | either @code{PTHREAD_CANCEL_ASYNCHRONOUS} to cancel the calling thread |
| 400 | as soon as the cancellation request is received, or |
| 401 | @code{PTHREAD_CANCEL_DEFERRED} to keep the cancellation request pending |
| 402 | until the next cancellation point. If @var{oldtype} is not @code{NULL}, |
| 403 | the previous cancellation state is stored in the location pointed to by |
| 404 | @var{oldtype}, and can thus be restored later by another call to |
| 405 | @code{pthread_setcanceltype}. |
| 406 | |
| 407 | If the @var{type} argument is not @code{PTHREAD_CANCEL_DEFERRED} or |
| 408 | @code{PTHREAD_CANCEL_ASYNCHRONOUS}, @code{pthread_setcanceltype} fails |
| 409 | and returns @code{EINVAL}. Otherwise it returns 0. |
| 410 | @end deftypefun |
| 411 | |
| 412 | @comment pthread.h |
| 413 | @comment POSIX |
| 414 | @deftypefun void pthread_testcancel (@var{void}) |
| 415 | @code{pthread_testcancel} does nothing except testing for pending |
| 416 | cancellation and executing it. Its purpose is to introduce explicit |
| 417 | checks for cancellation in long sequences of code that do not call |
| 418 | cancellation point functions otherwise. |
| 419 | @end deftypefun |
| 420 | |
| 421 | @node Cleanup Handlers |
| 422 | @section Cleanup Handlers |
| 423 | |
| 424 | Cleanup handlers are functions that get called when a thread terminates, |
| 425 | either by calling @code{pthread_exit} or because of |
| 426 | cancellation. Cleanup handlers are installed and removed following a |
| 427 | stack-like discipline. |
| 428 | |
| 429 | The purpose of cleanup handlers is to free the resources that a thread |
| 430 | may hold at the time it terminates. In particular, if a thread exits or |
| 431 | is canceled while it owns a locked mutex, the mutex will remain locked |
| 432 | forever and prevent other threads from executing normally. The best way |
| 433 | to avoid this is, just before locking the mutex, to install a cleanup |
| 434 | handler whose effect is to unlock the mutex. Cleanup handlers can be |
| 435 | used similarly to free blocks allocated with @code{malloc} or close file |
| 436 | descriptors on thread termination. |
| 437 | |
| 438 | Here is how to lock a mutex @var{mut} in such a way that it will be |
| 439 | unlocked if the thread is canceled while @var{mut} is locked: |
| 440 | |
| 441 | @smallexample |
| 442 | pthread_cleanup_push(pthread_mutex_unlock, (void *) &mut); |
| 443 | pthread_mutex_lock(&mut); |
| 444 | /* do some work */ |
| 445 | pthread_mutex_unlock(&mut); |
| 446 | pthread_cleanup_pop(0); |
| 447 | @end smallexample |
| 448 | |
| 449 | Equivalently, the last two lines can be replaced by |
| 450 | |
| 451 | @smallexample |
| 452 | pthread_cleanup_pop(1); |
| 453 | @end smallexample |
| 454 | |
| 455 | Notice that the code above is safe only in deferred cancellation mode |
| 456 | (see @code{pthread_setcanceltype}). In asynchronous cancellation mode, a |
| 457 | cancellation can occur between @code{pthread_cleanup_push} and |
| 458 | @code{pthread_mutex_lock}, or between @code{pthread_mutex_unlock} and |
| 459 | @code{pthread_cleanup_pop}, resulting in both cases in the thread trying |
| 460 | to unlock a mutex not locked by the current thread. This is the main |
| 461 | reason why asynchronous cancellation is difficult to use. |
| 462 | |
| 463 | If the code above must also work in asynchronous cancellation mode, |
| 464 | then it must switch to deferred mode for locking and unlocking the |
| 465 | mutex: |
| 466 | |
| 467 | @smallexample |
| 468 | pthread_setcanceltype(PTHREAD_CANCEL_DEFERRED, &oldtype); |
| 469 | pthread_cleanup_push(pthread_mutex_unlock, (void *) &mut); |
| 470 | pthread_mutex_lock(&mut); |
| 471 | /* do some work */ |
| 472 | pthread_cleanup_pop(1); |
| 473 | pthread_setcanceltype(oldtype, NULL); |
| 474 | @end smallexample |
| 475 | |
| 476 | The code above can be rewritten in a more compact and efficient way, |
| 477 | using the non-portable functions @code{pthread_cleanup_push_defer_np} |
| 478 | and @code{pthread_cleanup_pop_restore_np}: |
| 479 | |
| 480 | @smallexample |
| 481 | pthread_cleanup_push_defer_np(pthread_mutex_unlock, (void *) &mut); |
| 482 | pthread_mutex_lock(&mut); |
| 483 | /* do some work */ |
| 484 | pthread_cleanup_pop_restore_np(1); |
| 485 | @end smallexample |
| 486 | |
| 487 | @comment pthread.h |
| 488 | @comment POSIX |
| 489 | @deftypefun void pthread_cleanup_push (void (*@var{routine}) (void *), void *@var{arg}) |
| 490 | |
| 491 | @code{pthread_cleanup_push} installs the @var{routine} function with |
| 492 | argument @var{arg} as a cleanup handler. From this point on to the |
| 493 | matching @code{pthread_cleanup_pop}, the function @var{routine} will be |
| 494 | called with arguments @var{arg} when the thread terminates, either |
| 495 | through @code{pthread_exit} or by cancellation. If several cleanup |
| 496 | handlers are active at that point, they are called in LIFO order: the |
| 497 | most recently installed handler is called first. |
| 498 | @end deftypefun |
| 499 | |
| 500 | @comment pthread.h |
| 501 | @comment POSIX |
| 502 | @deftypefun void pthread_cleanup_pop (int @var{execute}) |
| 503 | @code{pthread_cleanup_pop} removes the most recently installed cleanup |
| 504 | handler. If the @var{execute} argument is not 0, it also executes the |
| 505 | handler, by calling the @var{routine} function with arguments |
| 506 | @var{arg}. If the @var{execute} argument is 0, the handler is only |
| 507 | removed but not executed. |
| 508 | @end deftypefun |
| 509 | |
| 510 | Matching pairs of @code{pthread_cleanup_push} and |
| 511 | @code{pthread_cleanup_pop} must occur in the same function, at the same |
| 512 | level of block nesting. Actually, @code{pthread_cleanup_push} and |
| 513 | @code{pthread_cleanup_pop} are macros, and the expansion of |
| 514 | @code{pthread_cleanup_push} introduces an open brace @code{@{} with the |
| 515 | matching closing brace @code{@}} being introduced by the expansion of the |
| 516 | matching @code{pthread_cleanup_pop}. |
| 517 | |
| 518 | @comment pthread.h |
| 519 | @comment GNU |
| 520 | @deftypefun void pthread_cleanup_push_defer_np (void (*@var{routine}) (void *), void *@var{arg}) |
| 521 | @code{pthread_cleanup_push_defer_np} is a non-portable extension that |
| 522 | combines @code{pthread_cleanup_push} and @code{pthread_setcanceltype}. |
| 523 | It pushes a cleanup handler just as @code{pthread_cleanup_push} does, |
| 524 | but also saves the current cancellation type and sets it to deferred |
| 525 | cancellation. This ensures that the cleanup mechanism is effective even |
| 526 | if the thread was initially in asynchronous cancellation mode. |
| 527 | @end deftypefun |
| 528 | |
| 529 | @comment pthread.h |
| 530 | @comment GNU |
| 531 | @deftypefun void pthread_cleanup_pop_restore_np (int @var{execute}) |
| 532 | @code{pthread_cleanup_pop_restore_np} pops a cleanup handler introduced |
| 533 | by @code{pthread_cleanup_push_defer_np}, and restores the cancellation |
| 534 | type to its value at the time @code{pthread_cleanup_push_defer_np} was |
| 535 | called. |
| 536 | @end deftypefun |
| 537 | |
| 538 | @code{pthread_cleanup_push_defer_np} and |
| 539 | @code{pthread_cleanup_pop_restore_np} must occur in matching pairs, at |
| 540 | the same level of block nesting. |
| 541 | |
| 542 | The sequence |
| 543 | |
| 544 | @smallexample |
| 545 | pthread_cleanup_push_defer_np(routine, arg); |
| 546 | ... |
| 547 | pthread_cleanup_pop_restore_np(execute); |
| 548 | @end smallexample |
| 549 | |
| 550 | @noindent |
| 551 | is functionally equivalent to (but more compact and efficient than) |
| 552 | |
| 553 | @smallexample |
| 554 | @{ |
| 555 | int oldtype; |
| 556 | pthread_setcanceltype(PTHREAD_CANCEL_DEFERRED, &oldtype); |
| 557 | pthread_cleanup_push(routine, arg); |
| 558 | ... |
| 559 | pthread_cleanup_pop(execute); |
| 560 | pthread_setcanceltype(oldtype, NULL); |
| 561 | @} |
| 562 | @end smallexample |
| 563 | |
| 564 | |
| 565 | @node Mutexes |
| 566 | @section Mutexes |
| 567 | |
| 568 | A mutex is a MUTual EXclusion device, and is useful for protecting |
| 569 | shared data structures from concurrent modifications, and implementing |
| 570 | critical sections and monitors. |
| 571 | |
| 572 | A mutex has two possible states: unlocked (not owned by any thread), |
| 573 | and locked (owned by one thread). A mutex can never be owned by two |
| 574 | different threads simultaneously. A thread attempting to lock a mutex |
| 575 | that is already locked by another thread is suspended until the owning |
| 576 | thread unlocks the mutex first. |
| 577 | |
| 578 | None of the mutex functions is a cancellation point, not even |
| 579 | @code{pthread_mutex_lock}, in spite of the fact that it can suspend a |
| 580 | thread for arbitrary durations. This way, the status of mutexes at |
| 581 | cancellation points is predictable, allowing cancellation handlers to |
| 582 | unlock precisely those mutexes that need to be unlocked before the |
| 583 | thread stops executing. Consequently, threads using deferred |
| 584 | cancellation should never hold a mutex for extended periods of time. |
| 585 | |
| 586 | It is not safe to call mutex functions from a signal handler. In |
| 587 | particular, calling @code{pthread_mutex_lock} or |
| 588 | @code{pthread_mutex_unlock} from a signal handler may deadlock the |
| 589 | calling thread. |
| 590 | |
| 591 | @comment pthread.h |
| 592 | @comment POSIX |
| 593 | @deftypefun int pthread_mutex_init (pthread_mutex_t *@var{mutex}, const pthread_mutexattr_t *@var{mutexattr}) |
| 594 | |
| 595 | @code{pthread_mutex_init} initializes the mutex object pointed to by |
| 596 | @var{mutex} according to the mutex attributes specified in @var{mutexattr}. |
| 597 | If @var{mutexattr} is @code{NULL}, default attributes are used instead. |
| 598 | |
| 599 | The LinuxThreads implementation supports only one mutex attribute, |
| 600 | the @var{mutex type}, which is either ``fast'', ``recursive'', or |
| 601 | ``error checking''. The type of a mutex determines whether |
| 602 | it can be locked again by a thread that already owns it. |
| 603 | The default type is ``fast''. |
| 604 | |
| 605 | Variables of type @code{pthread_mutex_t} can also be initialized |
| 606 | statically, using the constants @code{PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER} (for |
| 607 | timed mutexes), @code{PTHREAD_RECURSIVE_MUTEX_INITIALIZER_NP} (for |
| 608 | recursive mutexes), @code{PTHREAD_ADAPTIVE_MUTEX_INITIALIZER_NP} |
| 609 | (for fast mutexes(, and @code{PTHREAD_ERRORCHECK_MUTEX_INITIALIZER_NP} |
| 610 | (for error checking mutexes). |
| 611 | |
| 612 | @code{pthread_mutex_init} always returns 0. |
| 613 | @end deftypefun |
| 614 | |
| 615 | @comment pthread.h |
| 616 | @comment POSIX |
| 617 | @deftypefun int pthread_mutex_lock (pthread_mutex_t *mutex)) |
| 618 | @code{pthread_mutex_lock} locks the given mutex. If the mutex is |
| 619 | currently unlocked, it becomes locked and owned by the calling thread, |
| 620 | and @code{pthread_mutex_lock} returns immediately. If the mutex is |
| 621 | already locked by another thread, @code{pthread_mutex_lock} suspends the |
| 622 | calling thread until the mutex is unlocked. |
| 623 | |
| 624 | If the mutex is already locked by the calling thread, the behavior of |
| 625 | @code{pthread_mutex_lock} depends on the type of the mutex. If the mutex |
| 626 | is of the ``fast'' type, the calling thread is suspended. It will |
| 627 | remain suspended forever, because no other thread can unlock the mutex. |
| 628 | If the mutex is of the ``error checking'' type, @code{pthread_mutex_lock} |
| 629 | returns immediately with the error code @code{EDEADLK}. If the mutex is |
| 630 | of the ``recursive'' type, @code{pthread_mutex_lock} succeeds and |
| 631 | returns immediately, recording the number of times the calling thread |
| 632 | has locked the mutex. An equal number of @code{pthread_mutex_unlock} |
| 633 | operations must be performed before the mutex returns to the unlocked |
| 634 | state. |
| 635 | @c This doesn't discuss PTHREAD_MUTEX_TIMED_NP mutex attributes. FIXME |
| 636 | @end deftypefun |
| 637 | |
| 638 | @comment pthread.h |
| 639 | @comment POSIX |
| 640 | @deftypefun int pthread_mutex_trylock (pthread_mutex_t *@var{mutex}) |
| 641 | @code{pthread_mutex_trylock} behaves identically to |
| 642 | @code{pthread_mutex_lock}, except that it does not block the calling |
| 643 | thread if the mutex is already locked by another thread (or by the |
| 644 | calling thread in the case of a ``fast'' mutex). Instead, |
| 645 | @code{pthread_mutex_trylock} returns immediately with the error code |
| 646 | @code{EBUSY}. |
| 647 | @end deftypefun |
| 648 | |
| 649 | @comment pthread.h |
| 650 | @comment POSIX |
| 651 | @deftypefun int pthread_mutex_timedlock (pthread_mutex_t *@var{mutex}, const struct timespec *@var{abstime}) |
| 652 | The @code{pthread_mutex_timedlock} is similar to the |
| 653 | @code{pthread_mutex_lock} function but instead of blocking for in |
| 654 | indefinite time if the mutex is locked by another thread, it returns |
| 655 | when the time specified in @var{abstime} is reached. |
| 656 | |
| 657 | This function can only be used on standard (``timed'') and ``error |
| 658 | checking'' mutexes. It behaves just like @code{pthread_mutex_lock} for |
| 659 | all other types. |
| 660 | |
| 661 | If the mutex is successfully locked, the function returns zero. If the |
| 662 | time specified in @var{abstime} is reached without the mutex being locked, |
| 663 | @code{ETIMEDOUT} is returned. |
| 664 | |
| 665 | This function was introduced in the POSIX.1d revision of the POSIX standard. |
| 666 | @end deftypefun |
| 667 | |
| 668 | @comment pthread.h |
| 669 | @comment POSIX |
| 670 | @deftypefun int pthread_mutex_unlock (pthread_mutex_t *@var{mutex}) |
| 671 | @code{pthread_mutex_unlock} unlocks the given mutex. The mutex is |
| 672 | assumed to be locked and owned by the calling thread on entrance to |
| 673 | @code{pthread_mutex_unlock}. If the mutex is of the ``fast'' type, |
| 674 | @code{pthread_mutex_unlock} always returns it to the unlocked state. If |
| 675 | it is of the ``recursive'' type, it decrements the locking count of the |
| 676 | mutex (number of @code{pthread_mutex_lock} operations performed on it by |
| 677 | the calling thread), and only when this count reaches zero is the mutex |
| 678 | actually unlocked. |
| 679 | |
| 680 | On ``error checking'' mutexes, @code{pthread_mutex_unlock} actually |
| 681 | checks at run-time that the mutex is locked on entrance, and that it was |
| 682 | locked by the same thread that is now calling |
| 683 | @code{pthread_mutex_unlock}. If these conditions are not met, |
| 684 | @code{pthread_mutex_unlock} returns @code{EPERM}, and the mutex remains |
| 685 | unchanged. ``Fast'' and ``recursive'' mutexes perform no such checks, |
| 686 | thus allowing a locked mutex to be unlocked by a thread other than its |
| 687 | owner. This is non-portable behavior and must not be relied upon. |
| 688 | @end deftypefun |
| 689 | |
| 690 | @comment pthread.h |
| 691 | @comment POSIX |
| 692 | @deftypefun int pthread_mutex_destroy (pthread_mutex_t *@var{mutex}) |
| 693 | @code{pthread_mutex_destroy} destroys a mutex object, freeing the |
| 694 | resources it might hold. The mutex must be unlocked on entrance. In the |
| 695 | LinuxThreads implementation, no resources are associated with mutex |
| 696 | objects, thus @code{pthread_mutex_destroy} actually does nothing except |
| 697 | checking that the mutex is unlocked. |
| 698 | |
| 699 | If the mutex is locked by some thread, @code{pthread_mutex_destroy} |
| 700 | returns @code{EBUSY}. Otherwise it returns 0. |
| 701 | @end deftypefun |
| 702 | |
| 703 | If any of the above functions (except @code{pthread_mutex_init}) |
| 704 | is applied to an uninitialized mutex, they will simply return |
| 705 | @code{EINVAL} and do nothing. |
| 706 | |
| 707 | A shared global variable @var{x} can be protected by a mutex as follows: |
| 708 | |
| 709 | @smallexample |
| 710 | int x; |
| 711 | pthread_mutex_t mut = PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER; |
| 712 | @end smallexample |
| 713 | |
| 714 | All accesses and modifications to @var{x} should be bracketed by calls to |
| 715 | @code{pthread_mutex_lock} and @code{pthread_mutex_unlock} as follows: |
| 716 | |
| 717 | @smallexample |
| 718 | pthread_mutex_lock(&mut); |
| 719 | /* operate on x */ |
| 720 | pthread_mutex_unlock(&mut); |
| 721 | @end smallexample |
| 722 | |
| 723 | Mutex attributes can be specified at mutex creation time, by passing a |
| 724 | mutex attribute object as second argument to @code{pthread_mutex_init}. |
| 725 | Passing @code{NULL} is equivalent to passing a mutex attribute object |
| 726 | with all attributes set to their default values. |
| 727 | |
| 728 | @comment pthread.h |
| 729 | @comment POSIX |
| 730 | @deftypefun int pthread_mutexattr_init (pthread_mutexattr_t *@var{attr}) |
| 731 | @code{pthread_mutexattr_init} initializes the mutex attribute object |
| 732 | @var{attr} and fills it with default values for the attributes. |
| 733 | |
| 734 | This function always returns 0. |
| 735 | @end deftypefun |
| 736 | |
| 737 | @comment pthread.h |
| 738 | @comment POSIX |
| 739 | @deftypefun int pthread_mutexattr_destroy (pthread_mutexattr_t *@var{attr}) |
| 740 | @code{pthread_mutexattr_destroy} destroys a mutex attribute object, |
| 741 | which must not be reused until it is |
| 742 | reinitialized. @code{pthread_mutexattr_destroy} does nothing in the |
| 743 | LinuxThreads implementation. |
| 744 | |
| 745 | This function always returns 0. |
| 746 | @end deftypefun |
| 747 | |
| 748 | LinuxThreads supports only one mutex attribute: the mutex type, which is |
| 749 | either @code{PTHREAD_MUTEX_ADAPTIVE_NP} for ``fast'' mutexes, |
| 750 | @code{PTHREAD_MUTEX_RECURSIVE_NP} for ``recursive'' mutexes, |
| 751 | @code{PTHREAD_MUTEX_TIMED_NP} for ``timed'' mutexes, or |
| 752 | @code{PTHREAD_MUTEX_ERRORCHECK_NP} for ``error checking'' mutexes. As |
| 753 | the @code{NP} suffix indicates, this is a non-portable extension to the |
| 754 | POSIX standard and should not be employed in portable programs. |
| 755 | |
| 756 | The mutex type determines what happens if a thread attempts to lock a |
| 757 | mutex it already owns with @code{pthread_mutex_lock}. If the mutex is of |
| 758 | the ``fast'' type, @code{pthread_mutex_lock} simply suspends the calling |
| 759 | thread forever. If the mutex is of the ``error checking'' type, |
| 760 | @code{pthread_mutex_lock} returns immediately with the error code |
| 761 | @code{EDEADLK}. If the mutex is of the ``recursive'' type, the call to |
| 762 | @code{pthread_mutex_lock} returns immediately with a success return |
| 763 | code. The number of times the thread owning the mutex has locked it is |
| 764 | recorded in the mutex. The owning thread must call |
| 765 | @code{pthread_mutex_unlock} the same number of times before the mutex |
| 766 | returns to the unlocked state. |
| 767 | |
| 768 | The default mutex type is ``timed'', that is, @code{PTHREAD_MUTEX_TIMED_NP}. |
| 769 | @c This doesn't describe how a ``timed'' mutex behaves. FIXME |
| 770 | |
| 771 | @comment pthread.h |
| 772 | @comment POSIX |
| 773 | @deftypefun int pthread_mutexattr_settype (pthread_mutexattr_t *@var{attr}, int @var{type}) |
| 774 | @code{pthread_mutexattr_settype} sets the mutex type attribute in |
| 775 | @var{attr} to the value specified by @var{type}. |
| 776 | |
| 777 | If @var{type} is not @code{PTHREAD_MUTEX_ADAPTIVE_NP}, |
| 778 | @code{PTHREAD_MUTEX_RECURSIVE_NP}, @code{PTHREAD_MUTEX_TIMED_NP}, or |
| 779 | @code{PTHREAD_MUTEX_ERRORCHECK_NP}, this function will return |
| 780 | @code{EINVAL} and leave @var{attr} unchanged. |
| 781 | |
| 782 | The standard Unix98 identifiers @code{PTHREAD_MUTEX_DEFAULT}, |
| 783 | @code{PTHREAD_MUTEX_NORMAL}, @code{PTHREAD_MUTEX_RECURSIVE}, |
| 784 | and @code{PTHREAD_MUTEX_ERRORCHECK} are also permitted. |
| 785 | |
| 786 | @end deftypefun |
| 787 | |
| 788 | @comment pthread.h |
| 789 | @comment POSIX |
| 790 | @deftypefun int pthread_mutexattr_gettype (const pthread_mutexattr_t *@var{attr}, int *@var{type}) |
| 791 | @code{pthread_mutexattr_gettype} retrieves the current value of the |
| 792 | mutex type attribute in @var{attr} and stores it in the location pointed |
| 793 | to by @var{type}. |
| 794 | |
| 795 | This function always returns 0. |
| 796 | @end deftypefun |
| 797 | |
| 798 | @node Condition Variables |
| 799 | @section Condition Variables |
| 800 | |
| 801 | A condition (short for ``condition variable'') is a synchronization |
| 802 | device that allows threads to suspend execution until some predicate on |
| 803 | shared data is satisfied. The basic operations on conditions are: signal |
| 804 | the condition (when the predicate becomes true), and wait for the |
| 805 | condition, suspending the thread execution until another thread signals |
| 806 | the condition. |
| 807 | |
| 808 | A condition variable must always be associated with a mutex, to avoid |
| 809 | the race condition where a thread prepares to wait on a condition |
| 810 | variable and another thread signals the condition just before the first |
| 811 | thread actually waits on it. |
| 812 | |
| 813 | @comment pthread.h |
| 814 | @comment POSIX |
| 815 | @deftypefun int pthread_cond_init (pthread_cond_t *@var{cond}, pthread_condattr_t *cond_@var{attr}) |
| 816 | |
| 817 | @code{pthread_cond_init} initializes the condition variable @var{cond}, |
| 818 | using the condition attributes specified in @var{cond_attr}, or default |
| 819 | attributes if @var{cond_attr} is @code{NULL}. The LinuxThreads |
| 820 | implementation supports no attributes for conditions, hence the |
| 821 | @var{cond_attr} parameter is actually ignored. |
| 822 | |
| 823 | Variables of type @code{pthread_cond_t} can also be initialized |
| 824 | statically, using the constant @code{PTHREAD_COND_INITIALIZER}. |
| 825 | |
| 826 | This function always returns 0. |
| 827 | @end deftypefun |
| 828 | |
| 829 | @comment pthread.h |
| 830 | @comment POSIX |
| 831 | @deftypefun int pthread_cond_signal (pthread_cond_t *@var{cond}) |
| 832 | @code{pthread_cond_signal} restarts one of the threads that are waiting |
| 833 | on the condition variable @var{cond}. If no threads are waiting on |
| 834 | @var{cond}, nothing happens. If several threads are waiting on |
| 835 | @var{cond}, exactly one is restarted, but it is not specified which. |
| 836 | |
| 837 | This function always returns 0. |
| 838 | @end deftypefun |
| 839 | |
| 840 | @comment pthread.h |
| 841 | @comment POSIX |
| 842 | @deftypefun int pthread_cond_broadcast (pthread_cond_t *@var{cond}) |
| 843 | @code{pthread_cond_broadcast} restarts all the threads that are waiting |
| 844 | on the condition variable @var{cond}. Nothing happens if no threads are |
| 845 | waiting on @var{cond}. |
| 846 | |
| 847 | This function always returns 0. |
| 848 | @end deftypefun |
| 849 | |
| 850 | @comment pthread.h |
| 851 | @comment POSIX |
| 852 | @deftypefun int pthread_cond_wait (pthread_cond_t *@var{cond}, pthread_mutex_t *@var{mutex}) |
| 853 | @code{pthread_cond_wait} atomically unlocks the @var{mutex} (as per |
| 854 | @code{pthread_unlock_mutex}) and waits for the condition variable |
| 855 | @var{cond} to be signaled. The thread execution is suspended and does |
| 856 | not consume any CPU time until the condition variable is signaled. The |
| 857 | @var{mutex} must be locked by the calling thread on entrance to |
| 858 | @code{pthread_cond_wait}. Before returning to the calling thread, |
| 859 | @code{pthread_cond_wait} re-acquires @var{mutex} (as per |
| 860 | @code{pthread_lock_mutex}). |
| 861 | |
| 862 | Unlocking the mutex and suspending on the condition variable is done |
| 863 | atomically. Thus, if all threads always acquire the mutex before |
| 864 | signaling the condition, this guarantees that the condition cannot be |
| 865 | signaled (and thus ignored) between the time a thread locks the mutex |
| 866 | and the time it waits on the condition variable. |
| 867 | |
| 868 | This function always returns 0. |
| 869 | @end deftypefun |
| 870 | |
| 871 | @comment pthread.h |
| 872 | @comment POSIX |
| 873 | @deftypefun int pthread_cond_timedwait (pthread_cond_t *@var{cond}, pthread_mutex_t *@var{mutex}, const struct timespec *@var{abstime}) |
| 874 | @code{pthread_cond_timedwait} atomically unlocks @var{mutex} and waits |
| 875 | on @var{cond}, as @code{pthread_cond_wait} does, but it also bounds the |
| 876 | duration of the wait. If @var{cond} has not been signaled before time |
| 877 | @var{abstime}, the mutex @var{mutex} is re-acquired and |
| 878 | @code{pthread_cond_timedwait} returns the error code @code{ETIMEDOUT}. |
| 879 | The wait can also be interrupted by a signal; in that case |
| 880 | @code{pthread_cond_timedwait} returns @code{EINTR}. |
| 881 | |
| 882 | The @var{abstime} parameter specifies an absolute time, with the same |
| 883 | origin as @code{time} and @code{gettimeofday}: an @var{abstime} of 0 |
| 884 | corresponds to 00:00:00 GMT, January 1, 1970. |
| 885 | @end deftypefun |
| 886 | |
| 887 | @comment pthread.h |
| 888 | @comment POSIX |
| 889 | @deftypefun int pthread_cond_destroy (pthread_cond_t *@var{cond}) |
| 890 | @code{pthread_cond_destroy} destroys the condition variable @var{cond}, |
| 891 | freeing the resources it might hold. If any threads are waiting on the |
| 892 | condition variable, @code{pthread_cond_destroy} leaves @var{cond} |
| 893 | untouched and returns @code{EBUSY}. Otherwise it returns 0, and |
| 894 | @var{cond} must not be used again until it is reinitialized. |
| 895 | |
| 896 | In the LinuxThreads implementation, no resources are associated with |
| 897 | condition variables, so @code{pthread_cond_destroy} actually does |
| 898 | nothing. |
| 899 | @end deftypefun |
| 900 | |
| 901 | @code{pthread_cond_wait} and @code{pthread_cond_timedwait} are |
| 902 | cancellation points. If a thread is canceled while suspended in one of |
| 903 | these functions, the thread immediately resumes execution, relocks the |
| 904 | mutex specified by @var{mutex}, and finally executes the cancellation. |
| 905 | Consequently, cleanup handlers are assured that @var{mutex} is locked |
| 906 | when they are called. |
| 907 | |
| 908 | It is not safe to call the condition variable functions from a signal |
| 909 | handler. In particular, calling @code{pthread_cond_signal} or |
| 910 | @code{pthread_cond_broadcast} from a signal handler may deadlock the |
| 911 | calling thread. |
| 912 | |
| 913 | Consider two shared variables @var{x} and @var{y}, protected by the |
| 914 | mutex @var{mut}, and a condition variable @var{cond} that is to be |
| 915 | signaled whenever @var{x} becomes greater than @var{y}. |
| 916 | |
| 917 | @smallexample |
| 918 | int x,y; |
| 919 | pthread_mutex_t mut = PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER; |
| 920 | pthread_cond_t cond = PTHREAD_COND_INITIALIZER; |
| 921 | @end smallexample |
| 922 | |
| 923 | Waiting until @var{x} is greater than @var{y} is performed as follows: |
| 924 | |
| 925 | @smallexample |
| 926 | pthread_mutex_lock(&mut); |
| 927 | while (x <= y) @{ |
| 928 | pthread_cond_wait(&cond, &mut); |
| 929 | @} |
| 930 | /* operate on x and y */ |
| 931 | pthread_mutex_unlock(&mut); |
| 932 | @end smallexample |
| 933 | |
| 934 | Modifications on @var{x} and @var{y} that may cause @var{x} to become greater than |
| 935 | @var{y} should signal the condition if needed: |
| 936 | |
| 937 | @smallexample |
| 938 | pthread_mutex_lock(&mut); |
| 939 | /* modify x and y */ |
| 940 | if (x > y) pthread_cond_broadcast(&cond); |
| 941 | pthread_mutex_unlock(&mut); |
| 942 | @end smallexample |
| 943 | |
| 944 | If it can be proved that at most one waiting thread needs to be waken |
| 945 | up (for instance, if there are only two threads communicating through |
| 946 | @var{x} and @var{y}), @code{pthread_cond_signal} can be used as a slightly more |
| 947 | efficient alternative to @code{pthread_cond_broadcast}. In doubt, use |
| 948 | @code{pthread_cond_broadcast}. |
| 949 | |
| 950 | To wait for @var{x} to becomes greater than @var{y} with a timeout of 5 |
| 951 | seconds, do: |
| 952 | |
| 953 | @smallexample |
| 954 | struct timeval now; |
| 955 | struct timespec timeout; |
| 956 | int retcode; |
| 957 | |
| 958 | pthread_mutex_lock(&mut); |
| 959 | gettimeofday(&now); |
| 960 | timeout.tv_sec = now.tv_sec + 5; |
| 961 | timeout.tv_nsec = now.tv_usec * 1000; |
| 962 | retcode = 0; |
| 963 | while (x <= y && retcode != ETIMEDOUT) @{ |
| 964 | retcode = pthread_cond_timedwait(&cond, &mut, &timeout); |
| 965 | @} |
| 966 | if (retcode == ETIMEDOUT) @{ |
| 967 | /* timeout occurred */ |
| 968 | @} else @{ |
| 969 | /* operate on x and y */ |
| 970 | @} |
| 971 | pthread_mutex_unlock(&mut); |
| 972 | @end smallexample |
| 973 | |
| 974 | Condition attributes can be specified at condition creation time, by |
| 975 | passing a condition attribute object as second argument to |
| 976 | @code{pthread_cond_init}. Passing @code{NULL} is equivalent to passing |
| 977 | a condition attribute object with all attributes set to their default |
| 978 | values. |
| 979 | |
| 980 | The LinuxThreads implementation supports no attributes for |
| 981 | conditions. The functions on condition attributes are included only for |
| 982 | compliance with the POSIX standard. |
| 983 | |
| 984 | @comment pthread.h |
| 985 | @comment POSIX |
| 986 | @deftypefun int pthread_condattr_init (pthread_condattr_t *@var{attr}) |
| 987 | @deftypefunx int pthread_condattr_destroy (pthread_condattr_t *@var{attr}) |
| 988 | @code{pthread_condattr_init} initializes the condition attribute object |
| 989 | @var{attr} and fills it with default values for the attributes. |
| 990 | @code{pthread_condattr_destroy} destroys the condition attribute object |
| 991 | @var{attr}. |
| 992 | |
| 993 | Both functions do nothing in the LinuxThreads implementation. |
| 994 | |
| 995 | @code{pthread_condattr_init} and @code{pthread_condattr_destroy} always |
| 996 | return 0. |
| 997 | @end deftypefun |
| 998 | |
| 999 | @node POSIX Semaphores |
| 1000 | @section POSIX Semaphores |
| 1001 | |
| 1002 | @vindex SEM_VALUE_MAX |
| 1003 | Semaphores are counters for resources shared between threads. The |
| 1004 | basic operations on semaphores are: increment the counter atomically, |
| 1005 | and wait until the counter is non-null and decrement it atomically. |
| 1006 | |
| 1007 | Semaphores have a maximum value past which they cannot be incremented. |
| 1008 | The macro @code{SEM_VALUE_MAX} is defined to be this maximum value. In |
| 1009 | the GNU C library, @code{SEM_VALUE_MAX} is equal to @code{INT_MAX} |
| 1010 | (@pxref{Range of Type}), but it may be much smaller on other systems. |
| 1011 | |
| 1012 | The pthreads library implements POSIX 1003.1b semaphores. These should |
| 1013 | not be confused with System V semaphores (@code{ipc}, @code{semctl} and |
| 1014 | @code{semop}). |
| 1015 | @c !!! SysV IPC is not doc'd at all in our manual |
| 1016 | |
| 1017 | All the semaphore functions and macros are defined in @file{semaphore.h}. |
| 1018 | |
| 1019 | @comment semaphore.h |
| 1020 | @comment POSIX |
| 1021 | @deftypefun int sem_init (sem_t *@var{sem}, int @var{pshared}, unsigned int @var{value}) |
| 1022 | @code{sem_init} initializes the semaphore object pointed to by |
| 1023 | @var{sem}. The count associated with the semaphore is set initially to |
| 1024 | @var{value}. The @var{pshared} argument indicates whether the semaphore |
| 1025 | is local to the current process (@var{pshared} is zero) or is to be |
| 1026 | shared between several processes (@var{pshared} is not zero). |
| 1027 | |
| 1028 | On success @code{sem_init} returns 0. On failure it returns -1 and sets |
| 1029 | @var{errno} to one of the following values: |
| 1030 | |
| 1031 | @table @code |
| 1032 | @item EINVAL |
| 1033 | @var{value} exceeds the maximal counter value @code{SEM_VALUE_MAX} |
| 1034 | |
| 1035 | @item ENOSYS |
| 1036 | @var{pshared} is not zero. LinuxThreads currently does not support |
| 1037 | process-shared semaphores. (This will eventually change.) |
| 1038 | @end table |
| 1039 | @end deftypefun |
| 1040 | |
| 1041 | @comment semaphore.h |
| 1042 | @comment POSIX |
| 1043 | @deftypefun int sem_destroy (sem_t * @var{sem}) |
| 1044 | @code{sem_destroy} destroys a semaphore object, freeing the resources it |
| 1045 | might hold. If any threads are waiting on the semaphore when |
| 1046 | @code{sem_destroy} is called, it fails and sets @var{errno} to |
| 1047 | @code{EBUSY}. |
| 1048 | |
| 1049 | In the LinuxThreads implementation, no resources are associated with |
| 1050 | semaphore objects, thus @code{sem_destroy} actually does nothing except |
| 1051 | checking that no thread is waiting on the semaphore. This will change |
| 1052 | when process-shared semaphores are implemented. |
| 1053 | @end deftypefun |
| 1054 | |
| 1055 | @comment semaphore.h |
| 1056 | @comment POSIX |
| 1057 | @deftypefun int sem_wait (sem_t * @var{sem}) |
| 1058 | @code{sem_wait} suspends the calling thread until the semaphore pointed |
| 1059 | to by @var{sem} has non-zero count. It then atomically decreases the |
| 1060 | semaphore count. |
| 1061 | |
| 1062 | @code{sem_wait} is a cancellation point. It always returns 0. |
| 1063 | @end deftypefun |
| 1064 | |
| 1065 | @comment semaphore.h |
| 1066 | @comment POSIX |
| 1067 | @deftypefun int sem_trywait (sem_t * @var{sem}) |
| 1068 | @code{sem_trywait} is a non-blocking variant of @code{sem_wait}. If the |
| 1069 | semaphore pointed to by @var{sem} has non-zero count, the count is |
| 1070 | atomically decreased and @code{sem_trywait} immediately returns 0. If |
| 1071 | the semaphore count is zero, @code{sem_trywait} immediately returns -1 |
| 1072 | and sets errno to @code{EAGAIN}. |
| 1073 | @end deftypefun |
| 1074 | |
| 1075 | @comment semaphore.h |
| 1076 | @comment POSIX |
| 1077 | @deftypefun int sem_post (sem_t * @var{sem}) |
| 1078 | @code{sem_post} atomically increases the count of the semaphore pointed to |
| 1079 | by @var{sem}. This function never blocks. |
| 1080 | |
| 1081 | @c !!! This para appears not to agree with the code. |
| 1082 | On processors supporting atomic compare-and-swap (Intel 486, Pentium and |
| 1083 | later, Alpha, PowerPC, MIPS II, Motorola 68k, Ultrasparc), the |
| 1084 | @code{sem_post} function is can safely be called from signal handlers. |
| 1085 | This is the only thread synchronization function provided by POSIX |
| 1086 | threads that is async-signal safe. On the Intel 386 and earlier Sparc |
| 1087 | chips, the current LinuxThreads implementation of @code{sem_post} is not |
| 1088 | async-signal safe, because the hardware does not support the required |
| 1089 | atomic operations. |
| 1090 | |
| 1091 | @code{sem_post} always succeeds and returns 0, unless the semaphore |
| 1092 | count would exceed @code{SEM_VALUE_MAX} after being incremented. In |
| 1093 | that case @code{sem_post} returns -1 and sets @var{errno} to |
| 1094 | @code{EINVAL}. The semaphore count is left unchanged. |
| 1095 | @end deftypefun |
| 1096 | |
| 1097 | @comment semaphore.h |
| 1098 | @comment POSIX |
| 1099 | @deftypefun int sem_getvalue (sem_t * @var{sem}, int * @var{sval}) |
| 1100 | @code{sem_getvalue} stores in the location pointed to by @var{sval} the |
| 1101 | current count of the semaphore @var{sem}. It always returns 0. |
| 1102 | @end deftypefun |
| 1103 | |
| 1104 | @node Thread-Specific Data |
| 1105 | @section Thread-Specific Data |
| 1106 | |
| 1107 | Programs often need global or static variables that have different |
| 1108 | values in different threads. Since threads share one memory space, this |
| 1109 | cannot be achieved with regular variables. Thread-specific data is the |
| 1110 | POSIX threads answer to this need. |
| 1111 | |
| 1112 | Each thread possesses a private memory block, the thread-specific data |
| 1113 | area, or TSD area for short. This area is indexed by TSD keys. The TSD |
| 1114 | area associates values of type @code{void *} to TSD keys. TSD keys are |
| 1115 | common to all threads, but the value associated with a given TSD key can |
| 1116 | be different in each thread. |
| 1117 | |
| 1118 | For concreteness, the TSD areas can be viewed as arrays of @code{void *} |
| 1119 | pointers, TSD keys as integer indices into these arrays, and the value |
| 1120 | of a TSD key as the value of the corresponding array element in the |
| 1121 | calling thread. |
| 1122 | |
| 1123 | When a thread is created, its TSD area initially associates @code{NULL} |
| 1124 | with all keys. |
| 1125 | |
| 1126 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1127 | @comment POSIX |
| 1128 | @deftypefun int pthread_key_create (pthread_key_t *@var{key}, void (*destr_function) (void *)) |
| 1129 | @code{pthread_key_create} allocates a new TSD key. The key is stored in |
| 1130 | the location pointed to by @var{key}. There is a limit of |
| 1131 | @code{PTHREAD_KEYS_MAX} on the number of keys allocated at a given |
| 1132 | time. The value initially associated with the returned key is |
| 1133 | @code{NULL} in all currently executing threads. |
| 1134 | |
| 1135 | The @var{destr_function} argument, if not @code{NULL}, specifies a |
| 1136 | destructor function associated with the key. When a thread terminates |
| 1137 | via @code{pthread_exit} or by cancellation, @var{destr_function} is |
| 1138 | called on the value associated with the key in that thread. The |
| 1139 | @var{destr_function} is not called if a key is deleted with |
| 1140 | @code{pthread_key_delete} or a value is changed with |
| 1141 | @code{pthread_setspecific}. The order in which destructor functions are |
| 1142 | called at thread termination time is unspecified. |
| 1143 | |
| 1144 | Before the destructor function is called, the @code{NULL} value is |
| 1145 | associated with the key in the current thread. A destructor function |
| 1146 | might, however, re-associate non-@code{NULL} values to that key or some |
| 1147 | other key. To deal with this, if after all the destructors have been |
| 1148 | called for all non-@code{NULL} values, there are still some |
| 1149 | non-@code{NULL} values with associated destructors, then the process is |
| 1150 | repeated. The LinuxThreads implementation stops the process after |
| 1151 | @code{PTHREAD_DESTRUCTOR_ITERATIONS} iterations, even if some |
| 1152 | non-@code{NULL} values with associated descriptors remain. Other |
| 1153 | implementations may loop indefinitely. |
| 1154 | |
| 1155 | @code{pthread_key_create} returns 0 unless @code{PTHREAD_KEYS_MAX} keys |
| 1156 | have already been allocated, in which case it fails and returns |
| 1157 | @code{EAGAIN}. |
| 1158 | @end deftypefun |
| 1159 | |
| 1160 | |
| 1161 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1162 | @comment POSIX |
| 1163 | @deftypefun int pthread_key_delete (pthread_key_t @var{key}) |
| 1164 | @code{pthread_key_delete} deallocates a TSD key. It does not check |
| 1165 | whether non-@code{NULL} values are associated with that key in the |
| 1166 | currently executing threads, nor call the destructor function associated |
| 1167 | with the key. |
| 1168 | |
| 1169 | If there is no such key @var{key}, it returns @code{EINVAL}. Otherwise |
| 1170 | it returns 0. |
| 1171 | @end deftypefun |
| 1172 | |
| 1173 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1174 | @comment POSIX |
| 1175 | @deftypefun int pthread_setspecific (pthread_key_t @var{key}, const void *@var{pointer}) |
| 1176 | @code{pthread_setspecific} changes the value associated with @var{key} |
| 1177 | in the calling thread, storing the given @var{pointer} instead. |
| 1178 | |
| 1179 | If there is no such key @var{key}, it returns @code{EINVAL}. Otherwise |
| 1180 | it returns 0. |
| 1181 | @end deftypefun |
| 1182 | |
| 1183 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1184 | @comment POSIX |
| 1185 | @deftypefun {void *} pthread_getspecific (pthread_key_t @var{key}) |
| 1186 | @code{pthread_getspecific} returns the value currently associated with |
| 1187 | @var{key} in the calling thread. |
| 1188 | |
| 1189 | If there is no such key @var{key}, it returns @code{NULL}. |
| 1190 | @end deftypefun |
| 1191 | |
| 1192 | The following code fragment allocates a thread-specific array of 100 |
| 1193 | characters, with automatic reclaimation at thread exit: |
| 1194 | |
| 1195 | @smallexample |
| 1196 | /* Key for the thread-specific buffer */ |
| 1197 | static pthread_key_t buffer_key; |
| 1198 | |
| 1199 | /* Once-only initialisation of the key */ |
| 1200 | static pthread_once_t buffer_key_once = PTHREAD_ONCE_INIT; |
| 1201 | |
| 1202 | /* Allocate the thread-specific buffer */ |
| 1203 | void buffer_alloc(void) |
| 1204 | @{ |
| 1205 | pthread_once(&buffer_key_once, buffer_key_alloc); |
| 1206 | pthread_setspecific(buffer_key, malloc(100)); |
| 1207 | @} |
| 1208 | |
| 1209 | /* Return the thread-specific buffer */ |
| 1210 | char * get_buffer(void) |
| 1211 | @{ |
| 1212 | return (char *) pthread_getspecific(buffer_key); |
| 1213 | @} |
| 1214 | |
| 1215 | /* Allocate the key */ |
| 1216 | static void buffer_key_alloc() |
| 1217 | @{ |
| 1218 | pthread_key_create(&buffer_key, buffer_destroy); |
| 1219 | @} |
| 1220 | |
| 1221 | /* Free the thread-specific buffer */ |
| 1222 | static void buffer_destroy(void * buf) |
| 1223 | @{ |
| 1224 | free(buf); |
| 1225 | @} |
| 1226 | @end smallexample |
| 1227 | |
| 1228 | @node Threads and Signal Handling |
| 1229 | @section Threads and Signal Handling |
| 1230 | |
| 1231 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1232 | @comment POSIX |
| 1233 | @deftypefun int pthread_sigmask (int @var{how}, const sigset_t *@var{newmask}, sigset_t *@var{oldmask}) |
| 1234 | @code{pthread_sigmask} changes the signal mask for the calling thread as |
| 1235 | described by the @var{how} and @var{newmask} arguments. If @var{oldmask} |
| 1236 | is not @code{NULL}, the previous signal mask is stored in the location |
| 1237 | pointed to by @var{oldmask}. |
| 1238 | |
| 1239 | The meaning of the @var{how} and @var{newmask} arguments is the same as |
| 1240 | for @code{sigprocmask}. If @var{how} is @code{SIG_SETMASK}, the signal |
| 1241 | mask is set to @var{newmask}. If @var{how} is @code{SIG_BLOCK}, the |
| 1242 | signals specified to @var{newmask} are added to the current signal mask. |
| 1243 | If @var{how} is @code{SIG_UNBLOCK}, the signals specified to |
| 1244 | @var{newmask} are removed from the current signal mask. |
| 1245 | |
| 1246 | Recall that signal masks are set on a per-thread basis, but signal |
| 1247 | actions and signal handlers, as set with @code{sigaction}, are shared |
| 1248 | between all threads. |
| 1249 | |
| 1250 | The @code{pthread_sigmask} function returns 0 on success, and one of the |
| 1251 | following error codes on error: |
| 1252 | @table @code |
| 1253 | @item EINVAL |
| 1254 | @var{how} is not one of @code{SIG_SETMASK}, @code{SIG_BLOCK}, or @code{SIG_UNBLOCK} |
| 1255 | |
| 1256 | @item EFAULT |
| 1257 | @var{newmask} or @var{oldmask} point to invalid addresses |
| 1258 | @end table |
| 1259 | @end deftypefun |
| 1260 | |
| 1261 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1262 | @comment POSIX |
| 1263 | @deftypefun int pthread_kill (pthread_t @var{thread}, int @var{signo}) |
| 1264 | @code{pthread_kill} sends signal number @var{signo} to the thread |
| 1265 | @var{thread}. The signal is delivered and handled as described in |
| 1266 | @ref{Signal Handling}. |
| 1267 | |
| 1268 | @code{pthread_kill} returns 0 on success, one of the following error codes |
| 1269 | on error: |
| 1270 | @table @code |
| 1271 | @item EINVAL |
| 1272 | @var{signo} is not a valid signal number |
| 1273 | |
| 1274 | @item ESRCH |
| 1275 | The thread @var{thread} does not exist (e.g. it has already terminated) |
| 1276 | @end table |
| 1277 | @end deftypefun |
| 1278 | |
| 1279 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1280 | @comment POSIX |
| 1281 | @deftypefun int sigwait (const sigset_t *@var{set}, int *@var{sig}) |
| 1282 | @code{sigwait} suspends the calling thread until one of the signals in |
| 1283 | @var{set} is delivered to the calling thread. It then stores the number |
| 1284 | of the signal received in the location pointed to by @var{sig} and |
| 1285 | returns. The signals in @var{set} must be blocked and not ignored on |
| 1286 | entrance to @code{sigwait}. If the delivered signal has a signal handler |
| 1287 | function attached, that function is @emph{not} called. |
| 1288 | |
| 1289 | @code{sigwait} is a cancellation point. It always returns 0. |
| 1290 | @end deftypefun |
| 1291 | |
| 1292 | For @code{sigwait} to work reliably, the signals being waited for must be |
| 1293 | blocked in all threads, not only in the calling thread, since |
| 1294 | otherwise the POSIX semantics for signal delivery do not guarantee |
| 1295 | that it's the thread doing the @code{sigwait} that will receive the signal. |
| 1296 | The best way to achieve this is block those signals before any threads |
| 1297 | are created, and never unblock them in the program other than by |
| 1298 | calling @code{sigwait}. |
| 1299 | |
| 1300 | Signal handling in LinuxThreads departs significantly from the POSIX |
| 1301 | standard. According to the standard, ``asynchronous'' (external) signals |
| 1302 | are addressed to the whole process (the collection of all threads), |
| 1303 | which then delivers them to one particular thread. The thread that |
| 1304 | actually receives the signal is any thread that does not currently block |
| 1305 | the signal. |
| 1306 | |
| 1307 | In LinuxThreads, each thread is actually a kernel process with its own |
| 1308 | PID, so external signals are always directed to one particular thread. |
| 1309 | If, for instance, another thread is blocked in @code{sigwait} on that |
| 1310 | signal, it will not be restarted. |
| 1311 | |
| 1312 | The LinuxThreads implementation of @code{sigwait} installs dummy signal |
| 1313 | handlers for the signals in @var{set} for the duration of the |
| 1314 | wait. Since signal handlers are shared between all threads, other |
| 1315 | threads must not attach their own signal handlers to these signals, or |
| 1316 | alternatively they should all block these signals (which is recommended |
| 1317 | anyway). |
| 1318 | |
| 1319 | @node Threads and Fork |
| 1320 | @section Threads and Fork |
| 1321 | |
| 1322 | It's not intuitively obvious what should happen when a multi-threaded POSIX |
| 1323 | process calls @code{fork}. Not only are the semantics tricky, but you may |
| 1324 | need to write code that does the right thing at fork time even if that code |
| 1325 | doesn't use the @code{fork} function. Moreover, you need to be aware of |
| 1326 | interaction between @code{fork} and some library features like |
| 1327 | @code{pthread_once} and stdio streams. |
| 1328 | |
| 1329 | When @code{fork} is called by one of the threads of a process, it creates a new |
| 1330 | process which is copy of the calling process. Effectively, in addition to |
| 1331 | copying certain system objects, the function takes a snapshot of the memory |
| 1332 | areas of the parent process, and creates identical areas in the child. |
| 1333 | To make matters more complicated, with threads it's possible for two or more |
| 1334 | threads to concurrently call fork to create two or more child processes. |
| 1335 | |
| 1336 | The child process has a copy of the address space of the parent, but it does |
| 1337 | not inherit any of its threads. Execution of the child process is carried out |
| 1338 | by a new thread which returns from @code{fork} function with a return value of |
| 1339 | zero; it is the only thread in the child process. Because threads are not |
| 1340 | inherited across fork, issues arise. At the time of the call to @code{fork}, |
| 1341 | threads in the parent process other than the one calling @code{fork} may have |
| 1342 | been executing critical regions of code. As a result, the child process may |
| 1343 | get a copy of objects that are not in a well-defined state. This potential |
| 1344 | problem affects all components of the program. |
| 1345 | |
| 1346 | Any program component which will continue being used in a child process must |
| 1347 | correctly handle its state during @code{fork}. For this purpose, the POSIX |
| 1348 | interface provides the special function @code{pthread_atfork} for installing |
| 1349 | pointers to handler functions which are called from within @code{fork}. |
| 1350 | |
| 1351 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1352 | @comment POSIX |
| 1353 | @deftypefun int pthread_atfork (void (*@var{prepare})(void), void (*@var{parent})(void), void (*@var{child})(void)) |
| 1354 | |
| 1355 | @code{pthread_atfork} registers handler functions to be called just |
| 1356 | before and just after a new process is created with @code{fork}. The |
| 1357 | @var{prepare} handler will be called from the parent process, just |
| 1358 | before the new process is created. The @var{parent} handler will be |
| 1359 | called from the parent process, just before @code{fork} returns. The |
| 1360 | @var{child} handler will be called from the child process, just before |
| 1361 | @code{fork} returns. |
| 1362 | |
| 1363 | @code{pthread_atfork} returns 0 on success and a non-zero error code on |
| 1364 | error. |
| 1365 | |
| 1366 | One or more of the three handlers @var{prepare}, @var{parent} and |
| 1367 | @var{child} can be given as @code{NULL}, meaning that no handler needs |
| 1368 | to be called at the corresponding point. |
| 1369 | |
| 1370 | @code{pthread_atfork} can be called several times to install several |
| 1371 | sets of handlers. At @code{fork} time, the @var{prepare} handlers are |
| 1372 | called in LIFO order (last added with @code{pthread_atfork}, first |
| 1373 | called before @code{fork}), while the @var{parent} and @var{child} |
| 1374 | handlers are called in FIFO order (first added, first called). |
| 1375 | |
| 1376 | If there is insufficient memory available to register the handlers, |
| 1377 | @code{pthread_atfork} fails and returns @code{ENOMEM}. Otherwise it |
| 1378 | returns 0. |
| 1379 | |
| 1380 | The functions @code{fork} and @code{pthread_atfork} must not be regarded as |
| 1381 | reentrant from the context of the handlers. That is to say, if a |
| 1382 | @code{pthread_atfork} handler invoked from within @code{fork} calls |
| 1383 | @code{pthread_atfork} or @code{fork}, the behavior is undefined. |
| 1384 | |
| 1385 | Registering a triplet of handlers is an atomic operation with respect to fork. |
| 1386 | If new handlers are registered at about the same time as a fork occurs, either |
| 1387 | all three handlers will be called, or none of them will be called. |
| 1388 | |
| 1389 | The handlers are inherited by the child process, and there is no |
| 1390 | way to remove them, short of using @code{exec} to load a new |
| 1391 | pocess image. |
| 1392 | |
| 1393 | @end deftypefun |
| 1394 | |
| 1395 | To understand the purpose of @code{pthread_atfork}, recall that |
| 1396 | @code{fork} duplicates the whole memory space, including mutexes in |
| 1397 | their current locking state, but only the calling thread: other threads |
| 1398 | are not running in the child process. The mutexes are not usable after |
| 1399 | the @code{fork} and must be initialized with @code{pthread_mutex_init} |
| 1400 | in the child process. This is a limitation of the current |
| 1401 | implementation and might or might not be present in future versions. |
| 1402 | |
| 1403 | To avoid this, install handlers with @code{pthread_atfork} as follows: have the |
| 1404 | @var{prepare} handler lock the mutexes (in locking order), and the |
| 1405 | @var{parent} handler unlock the mutexes. The @var{child} handler should reset |
| 1406 | the mutexes using @code{pthread_mutex_init}, as well as any other |
| 1407 | synchronization objects such as condition variables. |
| 1408 | |
| 1409 | Locking the global mutexes before the fork ensures that all other threads are |
| 1410 | locked out of the critical regions of code protected by those mutexes. Thus |
| 1411 | when @code{fork} takes a snapshot of the parent's address space, that snapshot |
| 1412 | will copy valid, stable data. Resetting the synchronization objects in the |
| 1413 | child process will ensure they are properly cleansed of any artifacts from the |
| 1414 | threading subsystem of the parent process. For example, a mutex may inherit |
| 1415 | a wait queue of threads waiting for the lock; this wait queue makes no sense |
| 1416 | in the child process. Initializing the mutex takes care of this. |
| 1417 | |
| 1418 | @node Streams and Fork |
| 1419 | @section Streams and Fork |
| 1420 | |
| 1421 | The GNU standard I/O library has an internal mutex which guards the internal |
| 1422 | linked list of all standard C FILE objects. This mutex is properly taken care |
| 1423 | of during @code{fork} so that the child receives an intact copy of the list. |
| 1424 | This allows the @code{fopen} function, and related stream-creating functions, |
| 1425 | to work correctly in the child process, since these functions need to insert |
| 1426 | into the list. |
| 1427 | |
| 1428 | However, the individual stream locks are not completely taken care of. Thus |
| 1429 | unless the multithreaded application takes special precautions in its use of |
| 1430 | @code{fork}, the child process might not be able to safely use the streams that |
| 1431 | it inherited from the parent. In general, for any given open stream in the |
| 1432 | parent that is to be used by the child process, the application must ensure |
| 1433 | that that stream is not in use by another thread when @code{fork} is called. |
| 1434 | Otherwise an inconsistent copy of the stream object be produced. An easy way to |
| 1435 | ensure this is to use @code{flockfile} to lock the stream prior to calling |
| 1436 | @code{fork} and then unlock it with @code{funlockfile} inside the parent |
| 1437 | process, provided that the parent's threads properly honor these locks. |
| 1438 | Nothing special needs to be done in the child process, since the library |
| 1439 | internally resets all stream locks. |
| 1440 | |
| 1441 | Note that the stream locks are not shared between the parent and child. |
| 1442 | For example, even if you ensure that, say, the stream @code{stdout} is properly |
| 1443 | treated and can be safely used in the child, the stream locks do not provide |
| 1444 | an exclusion mechanism between the parent and child. If both processes write |
| 1445 | to @code{stdout}, strangely interleaved output may result regardless of |
| 1446 | the explicit use of @code{flockfile} or implicit locks. |
| 1447 | |
| 1448 | Also note that these provisions are a GNU extension; other systems might not |
| 1449 | provide any way for streams to be used in the child of a multithreaded process. |
| 1450 | POSIX requires that such a child process confines itself to calling only |
| 1451 | asynchronous safe functions, which excludes much of the library, including |
| 1452 | standard I/O. |
| 1453 | |
| 1454 | @node Miscellaneous Thread Functions |
| 1455 | @section Miscellaneous Thread Functions |
| 1456 | |
| 1457 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1458 | @comment POSIX |
| 1459 | @deftypefun {pthread_t} pthread_self (@var{void}) |
| 1460 | @code{pthread_self} returns the thread identifier for the calling thread. |
| 1461 | @end deftypefun |
| 1462 | |
| 1463 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1464 | @comment POSIX |
| 1465 | @deftypefun int pthread_equal (pthread_t thread1, pthread_t thread2) |
| 1466 | @code{pthread_equal} determines if two thread identifiers refer to the same |
| 1467 | thread. |
| 1468 | |
| 1469 | A non-zero value is returned if @var{thread1} and @var{thread2} refer to |
| 1470 | the same thread. Otherwise, 0 is returned. |
| 1471 | @end deftypefun |
| 1472 | |
| 1473 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1474 | @comment POSIX |
| 1475 | @deftypefun int pthread_detach (pthread_t @var{th}) |
| 1476 | @code{pthread_detach} puts the thread @var{th} in the detached |
| 1477 | state. This guarantees that the memory resources consumed by @var{th} |
| 1478 | will be freed immediately when @var{th} terminates. However, this |
| 1479 | prevents other threads from synchronizing on the termination of @var{th} |
| 1480 | using @code{pthread_join}. |
| 1481 | |
| 1482 | A thread can be created initially in the detached state, using the |
| 1483 | @code{detachstate} attribute to @code{pthread_create}. In contrast, |
| 1484 | @code{pthread_detach} applies to threads created in the joinable state, |
| 1485 | and which need to be put in the detached state later. |
| 1486 | |
| 1487 | After @code{pthread_detach} completes, subsequent attempts to perform |
| 1488 | @code{pthread_join} on @var{th} will fail. If another thread is already |
| 1489 | joining the thread @var{th} at the time @code{pthread_detach} is called, |
| 1490 | @code{pthread_detach} does nothing and leaves @var{th} in the joinable |
| 1491 | state. |
| 1492 | |
| 1493 | On success, 0 is returned. On error, one of the following codes is |
| 1494 | returned: |
| 1495 | @table @code |
| 1496 | @item ESRCH |
| 1497 | No thread could be found corresponding to that specified by @var{th} |
| 1498 | @item EINVAL |
| 1499 | The thread @var{th} is already in the detached state |
| 1500 | @end table |
| 1501 | @end deftypefun |
| 1502 | |
| 1503 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1504 | @comment GNU |
| 1505 | @deftypefun void pthread_kill_other_threads_np (@var{void}) |
| 1506 | @code{pthread_kill_other_threads_np} is a non-portable LinuxThreads extension. |
| 1507 | It causes all threads in the program to terminate immediately, except |
| 1508 | the calling thread which proceeds normally. It is intended to be |
| 1509 | called just before a thread calls one of the @code{exec} functions, |
| 1510 | e.g. @code{execve}. |
| 1511 | |
| 1512 | Termination of the other threads is not performed through |
| 1513 | @code{pthread_cancel} and completely bypasses the cancellation |
| 1514 | mechanism. Hence, the current settings for cancellation state and |
| 1515 | cancellation type are ignored, and the cleanup handlers are not |
| 1516 | executed in the terminated threads. |
| 1517 | |
| 1518 | According to POSIX 1003.1c, a successful @code{exec*} in one of the |
| 1519 | threads should automatically terminate all other threads in the program. |
| 1520 | This behavior is not yet implemented in LinuxThreads. Calling |
| 1521 | @code{pthread_kill_other_threads_np} before @code{exec*} achieves much |
| 1522 | of the same behavior, except that if @code{exec*} ultimately fails, then |
| 1523 | all other threads are already killed. |
| 1524 | @end deftypefun |
| 1525 | |
| 1526 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1527 | @comment POSIX |
| 1528 | @deftypefun int pthread_once (pthread_once_t *once_@var{control}, void (*@var{init_routine}) (void)) |
| 1529 | |
| 1530 | The purpose of @code{pthread_once} is to ensure that a piece of |
| 1531 | initialization code is executed at most once. The @var{once_control} |
| 1532 | argument points to a static or extern variable statically initialized |
| 1533 | to @code{PTHREAD_ONCE_INIT}. |
| 1534 | |
| 1535 | The first time @code{pthread_once} is called with a given |
| 1536 | @var{once_control} argument, it calls @var{init_routine} with no |
| 1537 | argument and changes the value of the @var{once_control} variable to |
| 1538 | record that initialization has been performed. Subsequent calls to |
| 1539 | @code{pthread_once} with the same @code{once_control} argument do |
| 1540 | nothing. |
| 1541 | |
| 1542 | If a thread is cancelled while executing @var{init_routine} |
| 1543 | the state of the @var{once_control} variable is reset so that |
| 1544 | a future call to @code{pthread_once} will call the routine again. |
| 1545 | |
| 1546 | If the process forks while one or more threads are executing |
| 1547 | @code{pthread_once} initialization routines, the states of their respective |
| 1548 | @var{once_control} variables will appear to be reset in the child process so |
| 1549 | that if the child calls @code{pthread_once}, the routines will be executed. |
| 1550 | |
| 1551 | @code{pthread_once} always returns 0. |
| 1552 | @end deftypefun |
| 1553 | |
| 1554 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1555 | @comment POSIX |
| 1556 | @deftypefun int pthread_setschedparam (pthread_t target_@var{thread}, int @var{policy}, const struct sched_param *@var{param}) |
| 1557 | |
| 1558 | @code{pthread_setschedparam} sets the scheduling parameters for the |
| 1559 | thread @var{target_thread} as indicated by @var{policy} and |
| 1560 | @var{param}. @var{policy} can be either @code{SCHED_OTHER} (regular, |
| 1561 | non-realtime scheduling), @code{SCHED_RR} (realtime, round-robin) or |
| 1562 | @code{SCHED_FIFO} (realtime, first-in first-out). @var{param} specifies |
| 1563 | the scheduling priority for the two realtime policies. See |
| 1564 | @code{sched_setpolicy} for more information on scheduling policies. |
| 1565 | |
| 1566 | The realtime scheduling policies @code{SCHED_RR} and @code{SCHED_FIFO} |
| 1567 | are available only to processes with superuser privileges. |
| 1568 | |
| 1569 | On success, @code{pthread_setschedparam} returns 0. On error it returns |
| 1570 | one of the following codes: |
| 1571 | @table @code |
| 1572 | @item EINVAL |
| 1573 | @var{policy} is not one of @code{SCHED_OTHER}, @code{SCHED_RR}, |
| 1574 | @code{SCHED_FIFO}, or the priority value specified by @var{param} is not |
| 1575 | valid for the specified policy |
| 1576 | |
| 1577 | @item EPERM |
| 1578 | Realtime scheduling was requested but the calling process does not have |
| 1579 | sufficient privileges. |
| 1580 | |
| 1581 | @item ESRCH |
| 1582 | The @var{target_thread} is invalid or has already terminated |
| 1583 | |
| 1584 | @item EFAULT |
| 1585 | @var{param} points outside the process memory space |
| 1586 | @end table |
| 1587 | @end deftypefun |
| 1588 | |
| 1589 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1590 | @comment POSIX |
| 1591 | @deftypefun int pthread_getschedparam (pthread_t target_@var{thread}, int *@var{policy}, struct sched_param *@var{param}) |
| 1592 | |
| 1593 | @code{pthread_getschedparam} retrieves the scheduling policy and |
| 1594 | scheduling parameters for the thread @var{target_thread} and stores them |
| 1595 | in the locations pointed to by @var{policy} and @var{param}, |
| 1596 | respectively. |
| 1597 | |
| 1598 | @code{pthread_getschedparam} returns 0 on success, or one of the |
| 1599 | following error codes on failure: |
| 1600 | @table @code |
| 1601 | @item ESRCH |
| 1602 | The @var{target_thread} is invalid or has already terminated. |
| 1603 | |
| 1604 | @item EFAULT |
| 1605 | @var{policy} or @var{param} point outside the process memory space. |
| 1606 | |
| 1607 | @end table |
| 1608 | @end deftypefun |
| 1609 | |
| 1610 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1611 | @comment POSIX |
| 1612 | @deftypefun int pthread_setconcurrency (int @var{level}) |
| 1613 | @code{pthread_setconcurrency} is unused in LinuxThreads due to the lack |
| 1614 | of a mapping of user threads to kernel threads. It exists for source |
| 1615 | compatibility. It does store the value @var{level} so that it can be |
| 1616 | returned by a subsequent call to @code{pthread_getconcurrency}. It takes |
| 1617 | no other action however. |
| 1618 | @end deftypefun |
| 1619 | |
| 1620 | @comment pthread.h |
| 1621 | @comment POSIX |
| 1622 | @deftypefun int pthread_getconcurrency () |
| 1623 | @code{pthread_getconcurrency} is unused in LinuxThreads due to the lack |
| 1624 | of a mapping of user threads to kernel threads. It exists for source |
| 1625 | compatibility. However, it will return the value that was set by the |
| 1626 | last call to @code{pthread_setconcurrency}. |
| 1627 | @end deftypefun |