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author | Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org> | 2005-12-27 09:53:03 +0000 |
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committer | Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org> | 2005-12-27 09:53:03 +0000 |
commit | 0644d70924f95944ad8ce1b411e2a4634057cc90 (patch) | |
tree | 6208dbcd4364fd143773f910124773be07deca58 /libpthread/linuxthreads.old/README | |
parent | 9acaf58149a23501ae138efce10f8944a20e214d (diff) |
cut pointless files
Diffstat (limited to 'libpthread/linuxthreads.old/README')
-rw-r--r-- | libpthread/linuxthreads.old/README | 166 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 166 deletions
diff --git a/libpthread/linuxthreads.old/README b/libpthread/linuxthreads.old/README deleted file mode 100644 index 955bd59e7..000000000 --- a/libpthread/linuxthreads.old/README +++ /dev/null @@ -1,166 +0,0 @@ - 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 BiCapitalized -implementation of the Posix 1003.1c "pthread" interface for Linux. - -LinuxThreads provides kernel-level threads: each thread is a separate -Unix process, sharing its address space with the other threads through -the new system call clone(). Scheduling between threads is handled by -the 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 ... -lpthread - -A complete set of manual pages is included. Also see the subdirectory -Examples/ 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 they -have not been compiled with the -D_REENTRANT. For more info, see the -FAQ.html file in this directory. - -A prime example of the latter is Xlib. If you link it with -LinuxThreads, you'll probably get an "unknown 0 error" very -early. This is just a consequence of the Xlib binaries using the -global variable "errno" to fetch error codes, while LinuxThreads and -the C library use the per-thread "errno" location. - -See the file README.Xfree3.3 for info on how to compile the Xfree 3.3 -libraries 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. |