fpc/rtl/freebsd/tthread.inc
peter 4ace790492 * remove $Log
git-svn-id: trunk@231 -
2005-06-07 09:47:55 +00:00

314 lines
8.8 KiB
PHP

{
This file is part of the Free Pascal run time library.
(c) 2000-2003 by Marco van de Voort
member of the Free Pascal development team.
See the file COPYING.FPC, included in this distribution,
for details about the copyright.
TThread implementation old (1.0) and new (pthreads) style
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY;without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
}
{
What follows, is a short description on my implementation of TThread.
Most information can also be found by reading the source and accompanying
comments.
A thread is created using BeginThread, which in turn calls
pthread_create. So the threads here are always posix threads.
Posix doesn't define anything for suspending threads as this is
inherintly unsafe. Just don't suspend threads at points they cannot
control. Therefore, I didn't implement .Suspend() if its called from
outside the threads execution flow (except on Linux _without_ NPTL).
The implementation for .suspend uses a semaphore, which is initialized
at thread creation. If the thread tries to suspend itself, we simply
let it wait on the semaphore until it is unblocked by someone else
who calls .Resume.
If a thread is supposed to be suspended (from outside its own path of
execution) on a system where the symbol LINUX is defined, two things
are possible.
1) the system has the LinuxThreads pthread implementation
2) the system has NPTL as the pthread implementation.
In the first case, each thread is a process on its own, which as far as
know actually violates posix with respect to signal handling.
But we can detect this case, because getpid(2) will
return a different PID for each thread. In that case, sending SIGSTOP
to the PID associated with a thread will actually stop that thread
only.
In the second case, this is not possible. But getpid(2) returns the same
PID across all threads, which is detected, and TThread.Suspend() does
nothing in that case. This should probably be changed, but I know of
no way to suspend a thread when using NPTL.
If the symbol LINUX is not defined, then the unimplemented
function SuspendThread is called.
Johannes Berg <johannes@sipsolutions.de>, Sunday, November 16 2003
}
// ========== semaphore stuff ==========
{
I don't like this. It eats up 2 filedescriptors for each thread,
and those are a limited resource. If you have a server programm
handling client connections (one per thread) it will not be able
to handle many if we use 2 fds already for internal structures.
However, right now I don't see a better option unless some sem_*
functions are added to systhrds.
I encapsulated all used functions here to make it easier to
change them completely.
}
function SemaphoreInit: Pointer;
begin
SemaphoreInit := GetMem(SizeOf(TFilDes));
fppipe(PFilDes(SemaphoreInit)^);
end;
procedure SemaphoreWait(const FSem: Pointer);
var
b: byte;
begin
fpread(PFilDes(FSem)^[0], b, 1);
end;
procedure SemaphorePost(const FSem: Pointer);
begin
fpwrite(PFilDes(FSem)^[1], #0, 1);
end;
procedure SemaphoreDestroy(const FSem: Pointer);
begin
fpclose(PFilDes(FSem)^[0]);
fpclose(PFilDes(FSem)^[1]);
FreeMemory(FSem);
end;
// =========== semaphore end ===========
var
ThreadsInited: boolean = false;
{$IFDEF LINUX}
GMainPID: LongInt = 0;
{$ENDIF}
const
// stupid, considering its not even implemented...
Priorities: array [TThreadPriority] of Integer =
(-20,-19,-10,0,9,18,19);
procedure InitThreads;
begin
if not ThreadsInited then begin
ThreadsInited := true;
{$IFDEF LINUX}
GMainPid := fpgetpid();
{$ENDIF}
end;
end;
procedure DoneThreads;
begin
ThreadsInited := false;
end;
{ ok, so this is a hack, but it works nicely. Just never use
a multiline argument with WRITE_DEBUG! }
{$MACRO ON}
{$IFDEF DEBUG_MT}
{$define WRITE_DEBUG := writeln} // actually write something
{$ELSE}
{$define WRITE_DEBUG := //} // just comment out those lines
{$ENDIF}
function ThreadFunc(parameter: Pointer): LongInt;
var
LThread: TThread;
c: char;
begin
WRITE_DEBUG('ThreadFunc is here...');
LThread := TThread(parameter);
{$IFDEF LINUX}
// save the PID of the "thread"
// this is different from the PID of the main thread if
// the LinuxThreads implementation is used
LThread.FPid := fpgetpid();
{$ENDIF}
WRITE_DEBUG('thread initing, parameter = ', LongInt(LThread));
try
if LThread.FInitialSuspended then begin
SemaphoreWait(LThread.FSem);
if not LThread.FSuspended then begin
LThread.FInitialSuspended := false;
WRITE_DEBUG('going into LThread.Execute');
LThread.Execute;
end;
end else begin
WRITE_DEBUG('going into LThread.Execute');
LThread.Execute;
end;
except
on e: exception do begin
WRITE_DEBUG('got exception: ',e.message);
LThread.FFatalException := TObject(AcquireExceptionObject);
// not sure if we should really do this...
// but .Destroy was called, so why not try FreeOnTerminate?
if e is EThreadDestroyCalled then LThread.FFreeOnTerminate := true;
end;
end;
WRITE_DEBUG('thread done running');
Result := LThread.FReturnValue;
WRITE_DEBUG('Result is ',Result);
LThread.FFinished := True;
LThread.DoTerminate;
if LThread.FreeOnTerminate then begin
WRITE_DEBUG('Thread should be freed');
LThread.Free;
WRITE_DEBUG('Thread freed');
end;
WRITE_DEBUG('thread func exiting');
end;
{ TThread }
constructor TThread.Create(CreateSuspended: Boolean);
begin
// lets just hope that the user doesn't create a thread
// via BeginThread and creates the first TThread Object in there!
InitThreads;
inherited Create;
FSem := SemaphoreInit;
FSuspended := CreateSuspended;
FSuspendedExternal := false;
FInitialSuspended := CreateSuspended;
FFatalException := nil;
WRITE_DEBUG('creating thread, self = ',longint(self));
FHandle:= BeginThread(@ThreadFunc, Pointer(Self), FThreadID);
WRITE_DEBUG('TThread.Create done');
end;
destructor TThread.Destroy;
begin
if FThreadID = GetCurrentThreadID then begin
raise EThreadDestroyCalled.Create('A thread cannot destroy itself except by setting FreeOnTerminate and leaving!');
end;
// if someone calls .Free on a thread with
// FreeOnTerminate, then don't crash!
FFreeOnTerminate := false;
if not FFinished and not FSuspended then begin
Terminate;
WaitFor;
end;
if (FInitialSuspended) then begin
// thread was created suspended but never woken up.
SemaphorePost(FSem);
WaitFor;
end;
FFatalException.Free;
FFatalException := nil;
SemaphoreDestroy(FSem);
inherited Destroy;
end;
procedure TThread.SetSuspended(Value: Boolean);
begin
if Value <> FSuspended then
if Value then
Suspend
else
Resume;
end;
procedure TThread.Suspend;
begin
if not FSuspended then begin
if FThreadID = GetCurrentThreadID then begin
FSuspended := true;
SemaphoreWait(FSem);
end else begin
FSuspendedExternal := true;
{$IFDEF LINUX}
// naughty hack if the user doesn't have Linux with NPTL...
// in that case, the PID of threads will not be identical
// to the other threads, which means that our thread is a normal
// process that we can suspend via SIGSTOP...
// this violates POSIX, but is the way it works on the
// LinuxThreads pthread implementation. Not with NPTL, but in that case
// getpid(2) also behaves properly and returns the same PID for
// all threads. Thats actually (FINALLY!) native thread support :-)
if FPid <> GMainPID then begin
FSuspended := true;
fpkill(FPid, SIGSTOP);
end;
{$ELSE}
SuspendThread(FHandle);
{$ENDIF}
end;
end;
end;
procedure TThread.Resume;
begin
if (not FSuspendedExternal) then begin
if FSuspended then begin
FSuspended := False;
SemaphorePost(FSem);
end;
end else begin
FSuspendedExternal := false;
ResumeThread(FHandle);
end;
end;
procedure TThread.Terminate;
begin
FTerminated := True;
end;
function TThread.WaitFor: Integer;
begin
WRITE_DEBUG('waiting for thread ',FHandle);
WaitFor := WaitForThreadTerminate(FHandle, 0);
WRITE_DEBUG('thread terminated');
end;
procedure TThread.CallOnTerminate;
begin
// no need to check if FOnTerminate <> nil, because
// thats already done in DoTerminate
FOnTerminate(self);
end;
procedure TThread.DoTerminate;
begin
if Assigned(FOnTerminate) then
Synchronize(@CallOnTerminate);
end;
function TThread.GetPriority: TThreadPriority;
var
P: Integer;
I: TThreadPriority;
begin
P := ThreadGetPriority(FHandle);
Result := tpNormal;
for I := Low(TThreadPriority) to High(TThreadPriority) do
if Priorities[I] = P then
Result := I;
end;
procedure TThread.SetPriority(Value: TThreadPriority);
begin
ThreadSetPriority(FHandle, Priorities[Value]);
end;