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author | Malcolm Beattie <mbeattie@sable.ox.ac.uk> | 1997-08-11 15:46:29 +0000 |
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committer | Malcolm Beattie <mbeattie@sable.ox.ac.uk> | 1997-08-11 15:46:29 +0000 |
commit | 0f15f207c55ce70f46ebbd3be6c3d54763665084 (patch) | |
tree | d4cbbe278d8bb662e537d2b219246ee872cb20e6 /README.threads | |
parent | 12ca11f6c16e7b63e13bbf5bc251f214e8de5211 (diff) | |
download | perl-0f15f207c55ce70f46ebbd3be6c3d54763665084.tar.gz |
Assorted changes for multi-threading (now works rather more).
p4raw-id: //depot/perl@44
Diffstat (limited to 'README.threads')
-rw-r--r-- | README.threads | 52 |
1 files changed, 52 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/README.threads b/README.threads new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..7dae3efbcb --- /dev/null +++ b/README.threads @@ -0,0 +1,52 @@ +Some old globals (e.g. stack_sp, op) and some old per-interpreter +variables (e.g. tmps_stack, cxstack) move into struct thread. +All fields of struct thread (apart from a few only applicable to +FAKE_THREADS) are of the form Tfoo. For example, stack_sp becomes +the field Tstack_sp of struct thread. For those fields which moved +from original perl, thread.h does + #define foo (thr->Tfoo) +This means that all functions in perl which need to use one of these +fields need an (automatic) variable thr which points at the current +thread's struct thread. For pp_foo functions, it is passed around as +an argument, for other functions they do + dTHR; +which declares and initialises thr from thread-specific data +via pthread_getspecific. If a function fails to compile with an +error about "no such variable thr", it probably just needs a dTHR +at the top. + +For FAKE_THREADS, thr is a global variable and perl schedules threads +by altering thr in between appropriate ops. The next and prev fields +of struct thread keep all fake threads on a doubly linked list and +the next_run and prev_run fields keep all runnable threads on a +doubly linked list. Mutexes are stubs for FAKE_THREADS. Condition +variables are implemented as a list of waiting threads. + + +Mutexes and condition variables + +The API is via macros MUTEX_{INIT,LOCK,UNLOCK,DESTROY} and +COND_{INIT,WAIT,SIGNAL,BROADCAST,DESTROY}. For POSIX threads, +perl mutexes and condition variables correspond to POSIX ones. +For FAKE_THREADS, mutexes are stubs and condition variables are +implmented as lists of waiting threads. For FAKE_THREADS, a thread +waits on a condition variable by removing itself from the runnable +list, calling SCHEDULE to change thr to the next appropriate +runnable thread and returning op (i.e. the new threads next op). +This means that fake threads can only block while in PP code. +A PP function which contains a COND_WAIT must be prepared to +handle such restarts and can use the field "private" of struct +thread to record its state. For fake threads, COND_SIGNAL and +COND_BROADCAST work by putting back all the threads on the +condition variables list into the run queue. Note that a mutex +must *not* be held while returning from a PP function. + +Perl locks are a condpair_t structure (a triple of a mutex, a +condtion variable and an owner thread field) attached by 'm' +magic to any SV. pp_lock locks such an object by waiting on the +condition variable until the owner field is zero and then setting +the owner field to its own thread pointer. The lock is recursive +so if the owner field already matches the current thread then +pp_lock returns straight away. If the owner field has to be filled +in then unlock_condpair is queued as an end-of-block destructor and +that function zeroes out the owner field, releasing the lock. |