TIMER_CREATE(2) | System Calls Manual | TIMER_CREATE(2) |
timer_create
—
create a per-process timer (REALTIME)
POSIX Real-time Library (librt, -lrt)
#include <time.h>
#include <signal.h>
int
timer_create
(clockid_t clockid,
struct sigevent *restrict evp, timer_t
*restrict timerid);
The
timer_create
()
system call creates a per-process timer using the specified clock,
clock_id, as the timing base. The
timer_create
() system call returns, in the location
referenced by timerid, a timer ID of type
timer_t used to identify the timer in timer requests.
This timer ID is unique within the calling process until the timer is
deleted. The particular clock, clock_id, is defined in
<time.h>
. The timer whose ID
is returned is in a disarmed state upon return from
timer_create
().
The evp argument, if
non-NULL
, points to a sigevent
structure. This structure, allocated by the application, defines the
asynchronous notification to occur when the timer expires.
If evp->sigev_notify is
SIGEV_SIGNO
or
SIGEV_THREAD_ID
, the signal specified in
evp->sigev_signo will be sent to the calling
process (SIGEV_SIGNO
) or to the thread whose LWP ID
is evp->sigev_notify_thread_id
(SIGEV_THREAD_ID
). The information for the queued
signal will include:
Member | Value |
si_code | SI_TIMER |
si_value | the value stored in evp->sigev_value |
si_timerid | timer ID |
si_overrun | timer overrun count |
si_errno | If timer overrun is {DELAYTIMER_MAX }, an error
code defined in
<errno.h> |
If the evp argument is
NULL
, the effect is as if the
evp argument pointed to a
sigevent structure with the
sigev_notify member having the value
SIGEV_SIGNAL
, the sigev_signo
having a default signal number (SIGALRM
), and the
sigev_value member having the value of the timer
ID.
This implementation supports a clock_id of
CLOCK_REALTIME
or
CLOCK_MONOTONIC
.
If
evp->sigev_notify is
SIGEV_THREAD
and
sev->sigev_notify_attributes is not
NULL
, if the attribute pointed to by
sev->sigev_notify_attributes has a thread stack
address specified by a call to
pthread_attr_setstack
()
or
pthread_attr_setstackaddr
(),
the results are unspecified if the signal is generated more than once.
If the call succeeds, timer_create
()
returns zero and updates the location referenced by
timerid to a timer_t, which can
be passed to the per-process timer calls. If an error occurs, the system
call returns a value of -1 and the global variable
errno is set to indicate the error. The value of
timerid is undefined if an error occurs.
The timer_create
() system call will fail
if:
EAGAIN
]EINVAL
]EINVAL
]EFAULT
]clock_getres(2), timer_delete(2), timer_getoverrun(2), sigevent(3), siginfo(3)
The timer_create
() system call conforms to
IEEE Std 1003.1-2004 (“POSIX.1”).
Support for POSIX per-process timer first appeared in FreeBSD 7.0.
July 15, 2016 | Debian |