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133 lines
3.9 KiB
Groff
133 lines
3.9 KiB
Groff
.TH SEMAPHORES 3 LinuxThreads
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.XREF sem_wait
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.XREF sem_trywait
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.XREF sem_post
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.XREF sem_getvalue
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.XREF sem_destroy
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.SH NAME
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sem_init, sem_wait, sem_trywait, sem_post, sem_getvalue, sem_destroy \- operations on semaphores
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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#include <semaphore.h>
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int sem_init(sem_t *sem, int pshared, unsigned int value);
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int sem_wait(sem_t * sem);
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int sem_trywait(sem_t * sem);
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int sem_post(sem_t * sem);
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int sem_getvalue(sem_t * sem, int * sval);
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int sem_destroy(sem_t * sem);
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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This manual page documents POSIX 1003.1b semaphores, not to be
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confused with SystemV semaphores as described in !ipc!(5), !semctl!(2)
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and !semop!(2).
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Semaphores are counters for resources shared between threads. The
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basic operations on semaphores are: increment the counter atomically,
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and wait until the counter is non-null and decrement it atomically.
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!sem_init! initializes the semaphore object pointed to by |sem|. The
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count associated with the semaphore is set initially to |value|. The
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|pshared| argument indicates whether the semaphore is local to the
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current process (|pshared| is zero) or is to be shared between several
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processes (|pshared| is not zero). LinuxThreads currently does not
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support process-shared semaphores, thus !sem_init! always returns with
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error !ENOSYS! if |pshared| is not zero.
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!sem_wait! suspends the calling thread until the semaphore pointed to
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by |sem| has non-zero count. It then atomically decreases the
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semaphore count.
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!sem_trywait! is a non-blocking variant of !sem_wait!. If the
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semaphore pointed to by |sem| has non-zero count, the count is
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atomically decreased and !sem_trywait! immediately returns 0.
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If the semaphore count is zero, !sem_trywait! immediately returns with
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error !EAGAIN!.
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!sem_post! atomically increases the count of the semaphore pointed to
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by |sem|. This function never blocks and can safely be used in
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asynchronous signal handlers.
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!sem_getvalue! stores in the location pointed to by |sval| the current
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count of the semaphore |sem|.
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!sem_destroy! destroys a semaphore object, freeing the resources it
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might hold. No threads should be waiting on the semaphore at the time
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!sem_destroy! is called. In the LinuxThreads implementation, no
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resources are associated with semaphore objects, thus !sem_destroy!
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actually does nothing except checking that no thread is waiting on the
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semaphore.
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.SH CANCELLATION
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!sem_wait! is a cancellation point.
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.SH "ASYNC-SIGNAL SAFETY"
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On processors supporting atomic compare-and-swap (Intel 486, Pentium
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and later, Alpha, PowerPC, MIPS II, Motorola 68k), the !sem_post!
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function is async-signal safe and can therefore be
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called from signal handlers. This is the only thread synchronization
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function provided by POSIX threads that is async-signal safe.
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On the Intel 386 and the Sparc, the current LinuxThreads
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implementation of !sem_post! is not async-signal safe by lack of the
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required atomic operations.
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.SH "RETURN VALUE"
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The !sem_wait! and !sem_getvalue! functions always return 0.
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All other semaphore functions return 0 on success and -1 on error, in
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addition to writing an error code in !errno!.
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.SH ERRORS
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The !sem_init! function sets !errno! to the following codes on error:
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.RS
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.TP
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!EINVAL!
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|value| exceeds the maximal counter value !SEM_VALUE_MAX!
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.TP
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!ENOSYS!
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|pshared| is not zero
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.RE
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The !sem_trywait! function sets !errno! to the following error code on error:
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.RS
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.TP
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!EAGAIN!
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the semaphore count is currently 0
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.RE
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The !sem_post! function sets !errno! to the following error code on error:
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.RS
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.TP
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!ERANGE!
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after incrementation, the semaphore value would exceed !SEM_VALUE_MAX!
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(the semaphore count is left unchanged in this case)
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.RE
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The !sem_destroy! function sets !errno! to the following error code on error:
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.RS
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.TP
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!EBUSY!
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some threads are currently blocked waiting on the semaphore.
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.RE
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.SH AUTHOR
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Xavier Leroy <Xavier.Leroy@inria.fr>
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.SH "SEE ALSO"
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!pthread_mutex_init!(3),
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!pthread_cond_init!(3),
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!pthread_cancel!(3),
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!ipc!(5).
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