PTHREAD_SETCANCELSTATE(3) | Linux Programmer's Manual | PTHREAD_SETCANCELSTATE(3) |
pthread_setcancelstate, pthread_setcanceltype - set cancelability state and type
#include <pthread.h>
int pthread_setcancelstate(int state, int *oldstate); int pthread_setcanceltype(int type, int *oldtype);
Compile and link with -pthread.
The pthread_setcancelstate() sets the cancelability state of the calling thread to the value given in state. The previous cancelability state of the thread is returned in the buffer pointed to by oldstate. The state argument must have one of the following values:
The pthread_setcanceltype() sets the cancelability type of the calling thread to the value given in type. The previous cancelability type of the thread is returned in the buffer pointed to by oldtype. The type argument must have one of the following values:
The set-and-get operation performed by each of these functions is atomic with respect to other threads in the process calling the same function.
On success, these functions return 0; on error, they return a nonzero error number.
The pthread_setcancelstate() can fail with the following error:
The pthread_setcanceltype() can fail with the following error:
For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see attributes(7).
Interface | Attribute | Value |
pthread_setcancelstate (), pthread_setcanceltype () | Thread safety | MT-Safe |
pthread_setcancelstate (), pthread_setcanceltype () | Async-cancel-safety | AC-Safe |
POSIX.1-2001, POSIX.1-2008.
For details of what happens when a thread is canceled, see pthread_cancel(3).
Briefly disabling cancelability is useful if a thread performs some critical action that must not be interrupted by a cancellation request. Beware of disabling cancelability for long periods, or around operations that may block for long periods, since that will render the thread unresponsive to cancellation requests.
Setting the cancelability type to PTHREAD_CANCEL_ASYNCHRONOUS is rarely useful. Since the thread could be canceled at any time, it cannot safely reserve resources (e.g., allocating memory with malloc(3)), acquire mutexes, semaphores, or locks, and so on. Reserving resources is unsafe because the application has no way of knowing what the state of these resources is when the thread is canceled; that is, did cancellation occur before the resources were reserved, while they were reserved, or after they were released? Furthermore, some internal data structures (e.g., the linked list of free blocks managed by the malloc(3) family of functions) may be left in an inconsistent state if cancellation occurs in the middle of the function call. Consequently, clean-up handlers cease to be useful.
Functions that can be safely asynchronously canceled are called async-cancel-safe functions. POSIX.1-2001 and POSIX.1-2008 require only that pthread_cancel(3), pthread_setcancelstate(), and pthread_setcanceltype() be async-cancel-safe. In general, other library functions can't be safely called from an asynchronously cancelable thread.
One of the few circumstances in which asynchronous cancelability is useful is for cancellation of a thread that is in a pure compute-bound loop.
The Linux threading implementations permit the oldstate argument of pthread_setcancelstate() to be NULL, in which case the information about the previous cancelability state is not returned to the caller. Many other implementations also permit a NULL oldstat argument, but POSIX.1 does not specify this point, so portable applications should always specify a non-NULL value in oldstate. A precisely analogous set of statements applies for the oldtype argument of pthread_setcanceltype().
See pthread_cancel(3).
pthread_cancel(3), pthread_cleanup_push(3), pthread_testcancel(3), pthreads(7)
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2020-06-09 | Linux |