glibc/nptl/pthread_create.c
Florian Weimer 8fbb33b3f7 nptl: Move __free_tcb into libc
Under the name __nptl_free_tcb.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella  <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2021-05-11 11:24:36 +02:00

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/* Copyright (C) 2002-2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
Contributed by Ulrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com>, 2002.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library 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. See the GNU
Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
<https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#include <ctype.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include "pthreadP.h"
#include <hp-timing.h>
#include <ldsodefs.h>
#include <atomic.h>
#include <libc-diag.h>
#include <libc-internal.h>
#include <resolv.h>
#include <kernel-features.h>
#include <exit-thread.h>
#include <default-sched.h>
#include <futex-internal.h>
#include <tls-setup.h>
#include "libioP.h"
#include <sys/single_threaded.h>
#include <shlib-compat.h>
#include <stap-probe.h>
/* Globally enabled events. */
static td_thr_events_t __nptl_threads_events __attribute_used__;
/* Pointer to descriptor with the last event. */
static struct pthread *__nptl_last_event __attribute_used__;
#ifdef SHARED
/* This variable is used to access _rtld_global from libthread_db. If
GDB loads libpthread before ld.so, it is not possible to resolve
_rtld_global directly during libpthread initialization. */
static struct rtld_global *__nptl_rtld_global __attribute_used__
= &_rtld_global;
#endif
/* Code to allocate and deallocate a stack. */
#include "allocatestack.c"
/* CONCURRENCY NOTES:
Understanding who is the owner of the 'struct pthread' or 'PD'
(refers to the value of the 'struct pthread *pd' function argument)
is critically important in determining exactly which operations are
allowed and which are not and when, particularly when it comes to the
implementation of pthread_create, pthread_join, pthread_detach, and
other functions which all operate on PD.
The owner of PD is responsible for freeing the final resources
associated with PD, and may examine the memory underlying PD at any
point in time until it frees it back to the OS or to reuse by the
runtime.
The thread which calls pthread_create is called the creating thread.
The creating thread begins as the owner of PD.
During startup the new thread may examine PD in coordination with the
owner thread (which may be itself).
The four cases of ownership transfer are:
(1) Ownership of PD is released to the process (all threads may use it)
after the new thread starts in a joinable state
i.e. pthread_create returns a usable pthread_t.
(2) Ownership of PD is released to the new thread starting in a detached
state.
(3) Ownership of PD is dynamically released to a running thread via
pthread_detach.
(4) Ownership of PD is acquired by the thread which calls pthread_join.
Implementation notes:
The PD->stopped_start and thread_ran variables are used to determine
exactly which of the four ownership states we are in and therefore
what actions can be taken. For example after (2) we cannot read or
write from PD anymore since the thread may no longer exist and the
memory may be unmapped.
It is important to point out that PD->lock is being used both
similar to a one-shot semaphore and subsequently as a mutex. The
lock is taken in the parent to force the child to wait, and then the
child releases the lock. However, this semaphore-like effect is used
only for synchronizing the parent and child. After startup the lock
is used like a mutex to create a critical section during which a
single owner modifies the thread parameters.
The most complicated cases happen during thread startup:
(a) If the created thread is in a detached (PTHREAD_CREATE_DETACHED),
or joinable (default PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE) state and
STOPPED_START is true, then the creating thread has ownership of
PD until the PD->lock is released by pthread_create. If any
errors occur we are in states (c), (d), or (e) below.
(b) If the created thread is in a detached state
(PTHREAD_CREATED_DETACHED), and STOPPED_START is false, then the
creating thread has ownership of PD until it invokes the OS
kernel's thread creation routine. If this routine returns
without error, then the created thread owns PD; otherwise, see
(c) and (e) below.
(c) If the detached thread setup failed and THREAD_RAN is true, then
the creating thread releases ownership to the new thread by
sending a cancellation signal. All threads set THREAD_RAN to
true as quickly as possible after returning from the OS kernel's
thread creation routine.
(d) If the joinable thread setup failed and THREAD_RAN is true, then
then the creating thread retains ownership of PD and must cleanup
state. Ownership cannot be released to the process via the
return of pthread_create since a non-zero result entails PD is
undefined and therefore cannot be joined to free the resources.
We privately call pthread_join on the thread to finish handling
the resource shutdown (Or at least we should, see bug 19511).
(e) If the thread creation failed and THREAD_RAN is false, then the
creating thread retains ownership of PD and must cleanup state.
No waiting for the new thread is required because it never
started.
The nptl_db interface:
The interface with nptl_db requires that we enqueue PD into a linked
list and then call a function which the debugger will trap. The PD
will then be dequeued and control returned to the thread. The caller
at the time must have ownership of PD and such ownership remains
after control returns to thread. The enqueued PD is removed from the
linked list by the nptl_db callback td_thr_event_getmsg. The debugger
must ensure that the thread does not resume execution, otherwise
ownership of PD may be lost and examining PD will not be possible.
Note that the GNU Debugger as of (December 10th 2015) commit
c2c2a31fdb228d41ce3db62b268efea04bd39c18 no longer uses
td_thr_event_getmsg and several other related nptl_db interfaces. The
principal reason for this is that nptl_db does not support non-stop
mode where other threads can run concurrently and modify runtime
structures currently in use by the debugger and the nptl_db
interface.
Axioms:
* The create_thread function can never set stopped_start to false.
* The created thread can read stopped_start but never write to it.
* The variable thread_ran is set some time after the OS thread
creation routine returns, how much time after the thread is created
is unspecified, but it should be as quickly as possible.
*/
/* CREATE THREAD NOTES:
createthread.c defines the create_thread function, and two macros:
START_THREAD_DEFN and START_THREAD_SELF (see below).
create_thread must initialize PD->stopped_start. It should be true
if the STOPPED_START parameter is true, or if create_thread needs the
new thread to synchronize at startup for some other implementation
reason. If STOPPED_START will be true, then create_thread is obliged
to lock PD->lock before starting the thread. Then pthread_create
unlocks PD->lock which synchronizes-with START_THREAD_DEFN in the
child thread which does an acquire/release of PD->lock as the last
action before calling the user entry point. The goal of all of this
is to ensure that the required initial thread attributes are applied
(by the creating thread) before the new thread runs user code. Note
that the the functions pthread_getschedparam, pthread_setschedparam,
pthread_setschedprio, __pthread_tpp_change_priority, and
__pthread_current_priority reuse the same lock, PD->lock, for a
similar purpose e.g. synchronizing the setting of similar thread
attributes. These functions are never called before the thread is
created, so don't participate in startup syncronization, but given
that the lock is present already and in the unlocked state, reusing
it saves space.
The return value is zero for success or an errno code for failure.
If the return value is ENOMEM, that will be translated to EAGAIN,
so create_thread need not do that. On failure, *THREAD_RAN should
be set to true iff the thread actually started up and then got
canceled before calling user code (*PD->start_routine). */
static int create_thread (struct pthread *pd, const struct pthread_attr *attr,
bool *stopped_start, STACK_VARIABLES_PARMS,
bool *thread_ran);
#include <createthread.c>
/* Local function to start thread and handle cleanup.
createthread.c defines the macro START_THREAD_DEFN to the
declaration that its create_thread function will refer to, and
START_THREAD_SELF to the expression to optimally deliver the new
thread's THREAD_SELF value. */
START_THREAD_DEFN
{
struct pthread *pd = START_THREAD_SELF;
/* Initialize resolver state pointer. */
__resp = &pd->res;
/* Initialize pointers to locale data. */
__ctype_init ();
#ifndef __ASSUME_SET_ROBUST_LIST
if (__nptl_set_robust_list_avail)
#endif
{
/* This call should never fail because the initial call in init.c
succeeded. */
INTERNAL_SYSCALL_CALL (set_robust_list, &pd->robust_head,
sizeof (struct robust_list_head));
}
/* This is where the try/finally block should be created. For
compilers without that support we do use setjmp. */
struct pthread_unwind_buf unwind_buf;
int not_first_call;
DIAG_PUSH_NEEDS_COMMENT;
#if __GNUC_PREREQ (7, 0)
/* This call results in a -Wstringop-overflow warning because struct
pthread_unwind_buf is smaller than jmp_buf. setjmp and longjmp
do not use anything beyond the common prefix (they never access
the saved signal mask), so that is a false positive. */
DIAG_IGNORE_NEEDS_COMMENT (11, "-Wstringop-overflow=");
#endif
not_first_call = setjmp ((struct __jmp_buf_tag *) unwind_buf.cancel_jmp_buf);
DIAG_POP_NEEDS_COMMENT;
/* No previous handlers. NB: This must be done after setjmp since the
private space in the unwind jump buffer may overlap space used by
setjmp to store extra architecture-specific information which is
never used by the cancellation-specific __libc_unwind_longjmp.
The private space is allowed to overlap because the unwinder never
has to return through any of the jumped-to call frames, and thus
only a minimum amount of saved data need be stored, and for example,
need not include the process signal mask information. This is all
an optimization to reduce stack usage when pushing cancellation
handlers. */
unwind_buf.priv.data.prev = NULL;
unwind_buf.priv.data.cleanup = NULL;
__libc_signal_restore_set (&pd->sigmask);
/* Allow setxid from now onwards. */
if (__glibc_unlikely (atomic_exchange_acq (&pd->setxid_futex, 0) == -2))
futex_wake (&pd->setxid_futex, 1, FUTEX_PRIVATE);
if (__glibc_likely (! not_first_call))
{
/* Store the new cleanup handler info. */
THREAD_SETMEM (pd, cleanup_jmp_buf, &unwind_buf);
/* We are either in (a) or (b), and in either case we either own
PD already (2) or are about to own PD (1), and so our only
restriction would be that we can't free PD until we know we
have ownership (see CONCURRENCY NOTES above). */
if (__glibc_unlikely (pd->stopped_start))
{
int oldtype = LIBC_CANCEL_ASYNC ();
/* Get the lock the parent locked to force synchronization. */
lll_lock (pd->lock, LLL_PRIVATE);
/* We have ownership of PD now. */
/* And give it up right away. */
lll_unlock (pd->lock, LLL_PRIVATE);
LIBC_CANCEL_RESET (oldtype);
}
LIBC_PROBE (pthread_start, 3, (pthread_t) pd, pd->start_routine, pd->arg);
/* Run the code the user provided. */
void *ret;
if (pd->c11)
{
/* The function pointer of the c11 thread start is cast to an incorrect
type on __pthread_create_2_1 call, however it is casted back to correct
one so the call behavior is well-defined (it is assumed that pointers
to void are able to represent all values of int. */
int (*start)(void*) = (int (*) (void*)) pd->start_routine;
ret = (void*) (uintptr_t) start (pd->arg);
}
else
ret = pd->start_routine (pd->arg);
THREAD_SETMEM (pd, result, ret);
}
/* Call destructors for the thread_local TLS variables. */
#ifndef SHARED
if (&__call_tls_dtors != NULL)
#endif
__call_tls_dtors ();
/* Run the destructor for the thread-local data. */
__nptl_deallocate_tsd ();
/* Clean up any state libc stored in thread-local variables. */
__libc_thread_freeres ();
/* If this is the last thread we terminate the process now. We
do not notify the debugger, it might just irritate it if there
is no thread left. */
if (__glibc_unlikely (atomic_decrement_and_test (&__nptl_nthreads)))
/* This was the last thread. */
exit (0);
/* Report the death of the thread if this is wanted. */
if (__glibc_unlikely (pd->report_events))
{
/* See whether TD_DEATH is in any of the mask. */
const int idx = __td_eventword (TD_DEATH);
const uint32_t mask = __td_eventmask (TD_DEATH);
if ((mask & (__nptl_threads_events.event_bits[idx]
| pd->eventbuf.eventmask.event_bits[idx])) != 0)
{
/* Yep, we have to signal the death. Add the descriptor to
the list but only if it is not already on it. */
if (pd->nextevent == NULL)
{
pd->eventbuf.eventnum = TD_DEATH;
pd->eventbuf.eventdata = pd;
do
pd->nextevent = __nptl_last_event;
while (atomic_compare_and_exchange_bool_acq (&__nptl_last_event,
pd, pd->nextevent));
}
/* Now call the function which signals the event. See
CONCURRENCY NOTES for the nptl_db interface comments. */
__nptl_death_event ();
}
}
/* The thread is exiting now. Don't set this bit until after we've hit
the event-reporting breakpoint, so that td_thr_get_info on us while at
the breakpoint reports TD_THR_RUN state rather than TD_THR_ZOMBIE. */
atomic_bit_set (&pd->cancelhandling, EXITING_BIT);
#ifndef __ASSUME_SET_ROBUST_LIST
/* If this thread has any robust mutexes locked, handle them now. */
# if __PTHREAD_MUTEX_HAVE_PREV
void *robust = pd->robust_head.list;
# else
__pthread_slist_t *robust = pd->robust_list.__next;
# endif
/* We let the kernel do the notification if it is able to do so.
If we have to do it here there for sure are no PI mutexes involved
since the kernel support for them is even more recent. */
if (!__nptl_set_robust_list_avail
&& __builtin_expect (robust != (void *) &pd->robust_head, 0))
{
do
{
struct __pthread_mutex_s *this = (struct __pthread_mutex_s *)
((char *) robust - offsetof (struct __pthread_mutex_s,
__list.__next));
robust = *((void **) robust);
# if __PTHREAD_MUTEX_HAVE_PREV
this->__list.__prev = NULL;
# endif
this->__list.__next = NULL;
atomic_or (&this->__lock, FUTEX_OWNER_DIED);
futex_wake ((unsigned int *) &this->__lock, 1,
/* XYZ */ FUTEX_SHARED);
}
while (robust != (void *) &pd->robust_head);
}
#endif
if (!pd->user_stack)
advise_stack_range (pd->stackblock, pd->stackblock_size, (uintptr_t) pd,
pd->guardsize);
if (__glibc_unlikely (pd->cancelhandling & SETXID_BITMASK))
{
/* Some other thread might call any of the setXid functions and expect
us to reply. In this case wait until we did that. */
do
/* XXX This differs from the typical futex_wait_simple pattern in that
the futex_wait condition (setxid_futex) is different from the
condition used in the surrounding loop (cancelhandling). We need
to check and document why this is correct. */
futex_wait_simple (&pd->setxid_futex, 0, FUTEX_PRIVATE);
while (pd->cancelhandling & SETXID_BITMASK);
/* Reset the value so that the stack can be reused. */
pd->setxid_futex = 0;
}
/* If the thread is detached free the TCB. */
if (IS_DETACHED (pd))
/* Free the TCB. */
__nptl_free_tcb (pd);
/* We cannot call '_exit' here. '_exit' will terminate the process.
The 'exit' implementation in the kernel will signal when the
process is really dead since 'clone' got passed the CLONE_CHILD_CLEARTID
flag. The 'tid' field in the TCB will be set to zero.
The exit code is zero since in case all threads exit by calling
'pthread_exit' the exit status must be 0 (zero). */
__exit_thread ();
/* NOTREACHED */
}
/* Return true iff obliged to report TD_CREATE events. */
static bool
report_thread_creation (struct pthread *pd)
{
if (__glibc_unlikely (THREAD_GETMEM (THREAD_SELF, report_events)))
{
/* The parent thread is supposed to report events.
Check whether the TD_CREATE event is needed, too. */
const size_t idx = __td_eventword (TD_CREATE);
const uint32_t mask = __td_eventmask (TD_CREATE);
return ((mask & (__nptl_threads_events.event_bits[idx]
| pd->eventbuf.eventmask.event_bits[idx])) != 0);
}
return false;
}
int
__pthread_create_2_1 (pthread_t *newthread, const pthread_attr_t *attr,
void *(*start_routine) (void *), void *arg)
{
STACK_VARIABLES;
/* Avoid a data race in the multi-threaded case. */
if (__libc_single_threaded)
__libc_single_threaded = 0;
const struct pthread_attr *iattr = (struct pthread_attr *) attr;
union pthread_attr_transparent default_attr;
bool destroy_default_attr = false;
bool c11 = (attr == ATTR_C11_THREAD);
if (iattr == NULL || c11)
{
int ret = __pthread_getattr_default_np (&default_attr.external);
if (ret != 0)
return ret;
destroy_default_attr = true;
iattr = &default_attr.internal;
}
struct pthread *pd = NULL;
int err = ALLOCATE_STACK (iattr, &pd);
int retval = 0;
if (__glibc_unlikely (err != 0))
/* Something went wrong. Maybe a parameter of the attributes is
invalid or we could not allocate memory. Note we have to
translate error codes. */
{
retval = err == ENOMEM ? EAGAIN : err;
goto out;
}
/* Initialize the TCB. All initializations with zero should be
performed in 'get_cached_stack'. This way we avoid doing this if
the stack freshly allocated with 'mmap'. */
#if TLS_TCB_AT_TP
/* Reference to the TCB itself. */
pd->header.self = pd;
/* Self-reference for TLS. */
pd->header.tcb = pd;
#endif
/* Store the address of the start routine and the parameter. Since
we do not start the function directly the stillborn thread will
get the information from its thread descriptor. */
pd->start_routine = start_routine;
pd->arg = arg;
pd->c11 = c11;
/* Copy the thread attribute flags. */
struct pthread *self = THREAD_SELF;
pd->flags = ((iattr->flags & ~(ATTR_FLAG_SCHED_SET | ATTR_FLAG_POLICY_SET))
| (self->flags & (ATTR_FLAG_SCHED_SET | ATTR_FLAG_POLICY_SET)));
/* Initialize the field for the ID of the thread which is waiting
for us. This is a self-reference in case the thread is created
detached. */
pd->joinid = iattr->flags & ATTR_FLAG_DETACHSTATE ? pd : NULL;
/* The debug events are inherited from the parent. */
pd->eventbuf = self->eventbuf;
/* Copy the parent's scheduling parameters. The flags will say what
is valid and what is not. */
pd->schedpolicy = self->schedpolicy;
pd->schedparam = self->schedparam;
/* Copy the stack guard canary. */
#ifdef THREAD_COPY_STACK_GUARD
THREAD_COPY_STACK_GUARD (pd);
#endif
/* Copy the pointer guard value. */
#ifdef THREAD_COPY_POINTER_GUARD
THREAD_COPY_POINTER_GUARD (pd);
#endif
/* Setup tcbhead. */
tls_setup_tcbhead (pd);
/* Verify the sysinfo bits were copied in allocate_stack if needed. */
#ifdef NEED_DL_SYSINFO
CHECK_THREAD_SYSINFO (pd);
#endif
/* Determine scheduling parameters for the thread. */
if (__builtin_expect ((iattr->flags & ATTR_FLAG_NOTINHERITSCHED) != 0, 0)
&& (iattr->flags & (ATTR_FLAG_SCHED_SET | ATTR_FLAG_POLICY_SET)) != 0)
{
/* Use the scheduling parameters the user provided. */
if (iattr->flags & ATTR_FLAG_POLICY_SET)
{
pd->schedpolicy = iattr->schedpolicy;
pd->flags |= ATTR_FLAG_POLICY_SET;
}
if (iattr->flags & ATTR_FLAG_SCHED_SET)
{
/* The values were validated in pthread_attr_setschedparam. */
pd->schedparam = iattr->schedparam;
pd->flags |= ATTR_FLAG_SCHED_SET;
}
if ((pd->flags & (ATTR_FLAG_SCHED_SET | ATTR_FLAG_POLICY_SET))
!= (ATTR_FLAG_SCHED_SET | ATTR_FLAG_POLICY_SET))
collect_default_sched (pd);
}
if (__glibc_unlikely (__nptl_nthreads == 1))
_IO_enable_locks ();
/* Pass the descriptor to the caller. */
*newthread = (pthread_t) pd;
LIBC_PROBE (pthread_create, 4, newthread, attr, start_routine, arg);
/* One more thread. We cannot have the thread do this itself, since it
might exist but not have been scheduled yet by the time we've returned
and need to check the value to behave correctly. We must do it before
creating the thread, in case it does get scheduled first and then
might mistakenly think it was the only thread. In the failure case,
we momentarily store a false value; this doesn't matter because there
is no kosher thing a signal handler interrupting us right here can do
that cares whether the thread count is correct. */
atomic_increment (&__nptl_nthreads);
/* Our local value of stopped_start and thread_ran can be accessed at
any time. The PD->stopped_start may only be accessed if we have
ownership of PD (see CONCURRENCY NOTES above). */
bool stopped_start = false; bool thread_ran = false;
/* Block all signals, so that the new thread starts out with
signals disabled. This avoids race conditions in the thread
startup. */
sigset_t original_sigmask;
__libc_signal_block_all (&original_sigmask);
if (iattr->extension != NULL && iattr->extension->sigmask_set)
/* Use the signal mask in the attribute. The internal signals
have already been filtered by the public
pthread_attr_setsigmask_np interface. */
pd->sigmask = iattr->extension->sigmask;
else
{
/* Conceptually, the new thread needs to inherit the signal mask
of this thread. Therefore, it needs to restore the saved
signal mask of this thread, so save it in the startup
information. */
pd->sigmask = original_sigmask;
/* Reset the cancellation signal mask in case this thread is
running cancellation. */
__sigdelset (&pd->sigmask, SIGCANCEL);
}
/* Start the thread. */
if (__glibc_unlikely (report_thread_creation (pd)))
{
stopped_start = true;
/* We always create the thread stopped at startup so we can
notify the debugger. */
retval = create_thread (pd, iattr, &stopped_start,
STACK_VARIABLES_ARGS, &thread_ran);
if (retval == 0)
{
/* We retain ownership of PD until (a) (see CONCURRENCY NOTES
above). */
/* Assert stopped_start is true in both our local copy and the
PD copy. */
assert (stopped_start);
assert (pd->stopped_start);
/* Now fill in the information about the new thread in
the newly created thread's data structure. We cannot let
the new thread do this since we don't know whether it was
already scheduled when we send the event. */
pd->eventbuf.eventnum = TD_CREATE;
pd->eventbuf.eventdata = pd;
/* Enqueue the descriptor. */
do
pd->nextevent = __nptl_last_event;
while (atomic_compare_and_exchange_bool_acq (&__nptl_last_event,
pd, pd->nextevent)
!= 0);
/* Now call the function which signals the event. See
CONCURRENCY NOTES for the nptl_db interface comments. */
__nptl_create_event ();
}
}
else
retval = create_thread (pd, iattr, &stopped_start,
STACK_VARIABLES_ARGS, &thread_ran);
/* Return to the previous signal mask, after creating the new
thread. */
__libc_signal_restore_set (&original_sigmask);
if (__glibc_unlikely (retval != 0))
{
if (thread_ran)
/* State (c) or (d) and we may not have PD ownership (see
CONCURRENCY NOTES above). We can assert that STOPPED_START
must have been true because thread creation didn't fail, but
thread attribute setting did. */
/* See bug 19511 which explains why doing nothing here is a
resource leak for a joinable thread. */
assert (stopped_start);
else
{
/* State (e) and we have ownership of PD (see CONCURRENCY
NOTES above). */
/* Oops, we lied for a second. */
atomic_decrement (&__nptl_nthreads);
/* Perhaps a thread wants to change the IDs and is waiting for this
stillborn thread. */
if (__glibc_unlikely (atomic_exchange_acq (&pd->setxid_futex, 0)
== -2))
futex_wake (&pd->setxid_futex, 1, FUTEX_PRIVATE);
/* Free the resources. */
__nptl_deallocate_stack (pd);
}
/* We have to translate error codes. */
if (retval == ENOMEM)
retval = EAGAIN;
}
else
{
/* We don't know if we have PD ownership. Once we check the local
stopped_start we'll know if we're in state (a) or (b) (see
CONCURRENCY NOTES above). */
if (stopped_start)
/* State (a), we own PD. The thread blocked on this lock either
because we're doing TD_CREATE event reporting, or for some
other reason that create_thread chose. Now let it run
free. */
lll_unlock (pd->lock, LLL_PRIVATE);
/* We now have for sure more than one thread. The main thread might
not yet have the flag set. No need to set the global variable
again if this is what we use. */
THREAD_SETMEM (THREAD_SELF, header.multiple_threads, 1);
}
out:
if (destroy_default_attr)
__pthread_attr_destroy (&default_attr.external);
return retval;
}
versioned_symbol (libpthread, __pthread_create_2_1, pthread_create, GLIBC_2_1);
#if SHLIB_COMPAT(libpthread, GLIBC_2_0, GLIBC_2_1)
int
__pthread_create_2_0 (pthread_t *newthread, const pthread_attr_t *attr,
void *(*start_routine) (void *), void *arg)
{
/* The ATTR attribute is not really of type `pthread_attr_t *'. It has
the old size and access to the new members might crash the program.
We convert the struct now. */
struct pthread_attr new_attr;
if (attr != NULL)
{
struct pthread_attr *iattr = (struct pthread_attr *) attr;
size_t ps = __getpagesize ();
/* Copy values from the user-provided attributes. */
new_attr.schedparam = iattr->schedparam;
new_attr.schedpolicy = iattr->schedpolicy;
new_attr.flags = iattr->flags;
/* Fill in default values for the fields not present in the old
implementation. */
new_attr.guardsize = ps;
new_attr.stackaddr = NULL;
new_attr.stacksize = 0;
new_attr.extension = NULL;
/* We will pass this value on to the real implementation. */
attr = (pthread_attr_t *) &new_attr;
}
return __pthread_create_2_1 (newthread, attr, start_routine, arg);
}
compat_symbol (libpthread, __pthread_create_2_0, pthread_create,
GLIBC_2_0);
#endif
/* Information for libthread_db. */
#include "../nptl_db/db_info.c"
/* If pthread_create is present, libgcc_eh.a and libsupc++.a expects some other POSIX thread
functions to be present as well. */
PTHREAD_STATIC_FN_REQUIRE (__pthread_mutex_lock)
PTHREAD_STATIC_FN_REQUIRE (__pthread_mutex_trylock)
PTHREAD_STATIC_FN_REQUIRE (__pthread_mutex_unlock)
PTHREAD_STATIC_FN_REQUIRE (__pthread_once)
PTHREAD_STATIC_FN_REQUIRE (__pthread_cancel)
PTHREAD_STATIC_FN_REQUIRE (__pthread_key_create)
PTHREAD_STATIC_FN_REQUIRE (__pthread_key_delete)
PTHREAD_STATIC_FN_REQUIRE (__pthread_setspecific)
PTHREAD_STATIC_FN_REQUIRE (__pthread_getspecific)