| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166 |         Linuxthreads - POSIX 1003.1c kernel threads for Linux      Copyright 1996, 1997 Xavier Leroy (Xavier.Leroy@inria.fr)DESCRIPTION:This is release 0.7 (late beta) of LinuxThreads, a BiCapitalizedimplementation of the Posix 1003.1c "pthread" interface for Linux.LinuxThreads provides kernel-level threads: each thread is a separateUnix process, sharing its address space with the other threads throughthe new system call clone(). Scheduling between threads is handled bythe kernel scheduler, just like scheduling between Unix processes.REQUIREMENTS:- Linux version 2.0 and up (requires the new clone() system call  and the new realtime scheduler).- For Intel platforms: libc 5.2.18 or later is required.  5.2.18 or 5.4.12 or later are recommended;  5.3.12 and 5.4.7 have problems (see the FAQ.html file for more info).- Also supports glibc 2 (a.k.a. libc 6), which actually comes with  a specially-adapted version of this library.- Currently supports Intel, Alpha, Sparc, Motorola 68k, ARM and MIPS  platforms.- Multiprocessors are supported.INSTALLATION:- Edit the Makefile, set the variables in the "Configuration" section.- Do "make".- Do "make install".USING LINUXTHREADS:        gcc -D_REENTRANT ... -lpthreadA complete set of manual pages is included. Also see the subdirectoryExamples/ for some sample programs.STATUS:- All functions in the Posix 1003.1c base interface implemented.  Also supports priority scheduling.- For users of libc 5 (H.J.Lu's libc), a number of C library functions  are reimplemented or wrapped to make them thread-safe, including:  * malloc functions  * stdio functions (define _REENTRANT before including <stdio.h>)  * per-thread errno variable (define _REENTRANT before including <errno.h>)  * directory reading functions (opendir(), etc)  * sleep()  * gmtime(), localtime()  New library functions provided:  * flockfile(), funlockfile(), ftrylockfile()  * reentrant versions of network database functions (gethostbyname_r(), etc)    and password functions (getpwnam_r(), etc).- libc 6 (glibc 2) provides much better thread support than libc 5,  and comes with a specially-adapted version of LinuxThreads.  For serious multithreaded programming, you should consider switching  to glibc 2. It is available from ftp.gnu.org:/pub/gnu and its mirrors.WARNING:Many existing libraries are not compatible with LinuxThreads,either because they are not inherently thread-safe, or because theyhave not been compiled with the -D_REENTRANT.  For more info, see theFAQ.html file in this directory.A prime example of the latter is Xlib. If you link it withLinuxThreads, you'll probably get an "unknown 0 error" veryearly. This is just a consequence of the Xlib binaries using theglobal variable "errno" to fetch error codes, while LinuxThreads andthe C library use the per-thread "errno" location.See the file README.Xfree3.3 for info on how to compile the Xfree 3.3libraries to make them compatible with LinuxThreads.KNOWN BUGS AND LIMITATIONS:- Threads share pretty much everything they should share according  to the standard: memory space, file descriptors, signal handlers,  current working directory, etc. One thing that they do not share  is their pid's and parent pid's. According to the standard, they  should have the same, but that's one thing we cannot achieve  in this implementation (until the CLONE_PID flag to clone() becomes  usable).- The current implementation uses the two signals SIGUSR1 and SIGUSR2,  so user-level code cannot employ them. Ideally, there should be two  signals reserved for this library. One signal is used for restarting  threads blocked on mutexes or conditions; the other is for thread  cancellation.  *** This is not anymore true when the application runs on a kernel      newer than approximately 2.1.60.- The stacks for the threads are allocated high in the memory space,  below the stack of the initial process, and spaced 2M apart.  Stacks are allocated with the "grow on demand" flag, so they don't  use much virtual space initially (4k, currently), but can grow  up to 2M if needed.  Reserving such a large address space for each thread means that,  on a 32-bit architecture, no more than about 1000 threads can  coexist (assuming a 2Gb address space for user processes),  but this is reasonable, since each thread uses up one entry in the  kernel's process table, which is usually limited to 512 processes.  Another potential problem of the "grow on demand" scheme is that  nothing prevents the user from mmap'ing something in the 2M address  window reserved for a thread stack, possibly causing later extensions of  that stack to fail. Mapping at fixed addresses should be avoided  when using this library.- Signal handling does not fully conform to the Posix standard,  due to the fact that threads are here distinct processes that can be  sent signals individually, so there's no notion of sending a signal  to "the" process (the collection of all threads).  More precisely, here is a summary of the standard requirements  and how they are met by the implementation:  1- Synchronous signals (generated by the thread execution, e.g. SIGFPE)     are delivered to the thread that raised them.     (OK.)  2- A fatal asynchronous signal terminates all threads in the process.     (OK. The thread manager notices when a thread dies on a signal      and kills all other threads with the same signal.)  3- An asynchronous signal will be delivered to one of the threads     of the program which does not block the signal (it is unspecified     which).     (No, the signal is delivered to the thread it's been sent to,      based on the pid of the thread. If that thread is currently      blocking the signal, the signal remains pending.)  4- The signal will be delivered to at most one thread.     (OK, except for signals generated from the terminal or sent to      the process group, which will be delivered to all threads.)- The current implementation of the MIPS support assumes a MIPS ISA II  processor or better.  These processors support atomic operations by  ll/sc instructions.  Older R2000/R3000 series processors are not  supported yet; support for these will have higher overhead.- The current implementation of the ARM support assumes that the SWP  (atomic swap register with memory) instruction is available.  This is  the case for all processors except for the ARM1 and ARM2.  On StrongARM,  the SWP instruction does not bypass the cache, so multi-processor support  will be more troublesome.
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