POSIX Threads for Windows – REFERENCE - Pthreads-w32

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Name

pthread_cond_init, pthread_cond_destroy, pthread_cond_signal, pthread_cond_broadcast, pthread_cond_wait, pthread_cond_timedwait - operations on conditions

Synopsis

#include <pthread.h>

pthread_cond_t cond = PTHREAD_COND_INITIALIZER;

int pthread_cond_init(pthread_cond_t *cond, pthread_condattr_t *cond_attr);

int pthread_cond_signal(pthread_cond_t *cond);

int pthread_cond_broadcast(pthread_cond_t *cond);

int pthread_cond_wait(pthread_cond_t *cond, pthread_mutex_t *mutex);

int pthread_cond_timedwait(pthread_cond_t *cond, pthread_mutex_t *mutex, const struct timespec *abstime);

int pthread_cond_destroy(pthread_cond_t *cond);

Description

A condition (short for ‘‘condition variable’’) is a synchronization device that allows threads to suspend execution and relinquish the processors until some predicate on shared data is satisfied. The basic operations on conditions are: signal the condition (when the predicate becomes true), and wait for the condition, suspending the thread execution until another thread signals the condition.

A condition variable must always be associated with a mutex, to avoid the race condition where a thread prepares to wait on a condition variable and another thread signals the condition just before the first thread actually waits on it.

pthread_cond_init initializes the condition variable cond, using the condition attributes specified in cond_attr, or default attributes if cond_attr is NULL.

Variables of type pthread_cond_t can also be initialized statically, using the constant PTHREAD_COND_INITIALIZER. In the Pthreads-w32 implementation, an application should still call pthread_cond_destroy at some point to ensure that any resources consumed by the condition variable are released.

pthread_cond_signal restarts one of the threads that are waiting on the condition variable cond. If no threads are waiting on cond, nothing happens. If several threads are waiting on cond, exactly one is restarted, but it is not specified which.

pthread_cond_broadcast restarts all the threads that are waiting on the condition variable cond. Nothing happens if no threads are waiting on cond.

pthread_cond_wait atomically unlocks the mutex (as per pthread_unlock_mutex) and waits for the condition variable cond to be signalled. The thread execution is suspended and does not consume any CPU time until the condition variable is signalled. The mutex must be locked by the calling thread on entrance to pthread_cond_wait. Before returning to the calling thread, pthread_cond_wait re-acquires mutex (as per pthread_lock_mutex).

Unlocking the mutex and suspending on the condition variable is done atomically. Thus, if all threads always acquire the mutex before signalling the condition, this guarantees that the condition cannot be signalled (and thus ignored) between the time a thread locks the mutex and the time it waits on the condition variable.

pthread_cond_timedwait atomically unlocks mutex and waits on cond, as pthread_cond_wait does, but it also bounds the duration of the wait. If cond has not been signalled within the amount of time specified by abstime, the mutex mutex is re-acquired and pthread_cond_timedwait returns the error ETIMEDOUT. The abstime parameter specifies an absolute time, with the same origin as time(2) and gettimeofday(2).

pthread_cond_destroy destroys a condition variable, freeing the resources it might hold. No threads must be waiting on the condition variable on entrance to pthread_cond_destroy.

Cancellation

pthread_cond_wait and pthread_cond_timedwait are cancellation points. If a thread is cancelled while suspended in one of these functions, the thread immediately resumes execution, then locks again the mutex argument to pthread_cond_wait and pthread_cond_timedwait, and finally executes the cancellation. Consequently, cleanup handlers are assured that mutex is locked when they are called.

Async-signal Safety

The condition functions are not async-signal safe, and should not be called from a signal handler. In particular, calling pthread_cond_signal or pthread_cond_broadcast from a signal handler may deadlock the calling thread.

Return Value

All condition variable functions return 0 on success and a non-zero error code on error.

Errors

pthread_cond_init, pthread_cond_signal, pthread_cond_broadcast, and pthread_cond_wait never return an error code.

The pthread_cond_init function returns the following error codes on error:

EINVAL
The cond argument is invalid.
ENOMEM
There was not enough memory to allocate the condition variable.

The pthread_cond_signal function returns the following error codes on error:

EINVAL
The cond argument is invalid.

The pthread_cond_broadcast function returns the following error codes on error:

EINVAL
The cond argument is invalid.

The pthread_cond_wait function returns the following error codes on error:

EINVAL
The cond argument is invalid.
ENOMEM
There was not enough memory to allocate the statically initialised condition variable. Statically initialised condition variables are dynamically allocated by the first thread to wait on them.

The pthread_cond_timedwait function returns the following error codes on error:

EINVAL

The cond argument is invalid.

ETIMEDOUT
The condition variable was not signalled before the timeout specified by abstime
ENOMEM
There was not enough memory to allocate the statically initialised condition variable. Statically initialised condition variables are dynamically allocated by the first thread to wait on them.

The pthread_cond_destroy function returns the following error code on error:

EINVAL

The cond argument is invalid.

EBUSY
Some threads are currently waiting on cond.

Author

Xavier Leroy <Xavier.Leroy@inria.fr>

Modified by Ross Johnson for use with Pthreads-w32.

See Also

pthread_condattr_init(3) , pthread_mutex_lock(3) , pthread_mutex_unlock(3) , pthread_cancel(3).

Example

Consider two shared variables x and y, protected by the mutex mut, and a condition variable cond that is to be signaled whenever x becomes greater than y.

int x,y;
pthread_mutex_t mut = PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER;
pthread_cond_t cond = PTHREAD_COND_INITIALIZER;
Waiting until x is greater than y is performed as follows:
pthread_mutex_lock(&mut);
while (x <= y) {
        pthread_cond_wait(&cond, &mut);
}
/* operate on x and y */
pthread_mutex_unlock(&mut);
Modifications on x and y that may cause x to become greater than y should signal the condition if needed:
pthread_mutex_lock(&mut);
/* modify x and y */
if (x > y) pthread_cond_broadcast(&cond);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&mut);
If it can be proved that at most one waiting thread needs to be waken up (for instance, if there are only two threads communicating through x and y), pthread_cond_signal can be used as a slightly more efficient alternative to pthread_cond_broadcast. If in doubt, use pthread_cond_broadcast.
To wait for x to become greater than y with a timeout of 5 seconds, do:
struct timeval now;
struct timespec timeout;
int retcode;
pthread_mutex_lock(&mut);
gettimeofday(&now);
timeout.tv_sec = now.tv_sec + 5;
timeout.tv_nsec = now.tv_usec * 1000;
retcode = 0;
while (x <= y && retcode != ETIMEDOUT) {
        retcode = pthread_cond_timedwait(&cond, &mut, &timeout);
}
if (retcode == ETIMEDOUT) {
        /* timeout occurred */
} else {
        /* operate on x and y */
}
pthread_mutex_unlock(&mut);

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