Computer Science
PTHREAD_SPECIFIC(3) PTHREAD_SPECIFIC(3)
NAME
pthread_key_create, pthread_key_delete, pthread_setspe-
cific, pthread_getspecific - management of thread-specific
data
SYNOPSIS
#include <pthread.h>
int pthread_key_create(pthread_key_t *key, void
(*destr_function) (void *));
int pthread_key_delete(pthread_key_t key);
int pthread_setspecific(pthread_key_t key, const void
*pointer);
void * pthread_getspecific(pthread_key_t key);
DESCRIPTION
Programs often need global or static variables that have
different values in different threads. Since threads share
one memory space, this cannot be achieved with regular
variables. Thread-specific data is the POSIX threads
answer to this need.
Each thread possesses a private memory block, the thread-
specific data area, or TSD area for short. This area is
indexed by TSD keys. The TSD area associates values of
type void * to TSD keys. TSD keys are common to all
threads, but the value associated with a given TSD key can
be different in each thread.
For concreteness, the TSD areas can be viewed as arrays of
void * pointers, TSD keys as integer indices into these
arrays, and the value of a TSD key as the value of the
corresponding array element in the calling thread.
When a thread is created, its TSD area initially associ-
ates NULL with all keys.
pthread_key_create allocates a new TSD key. The key is
stored in the location pointed to by key. There is a
limit of PTHREAD_KEYS_MAX on the number of keys allocated
at a given time. The value initially associated with the
returned key is NULL in all currently executing threads.
The destr_function argument, if not NULL, specifies a
destructor function associated with the key. When a thread
terminates via pthread_exit or by cancellation,
destr_function is called with arguments the value associ-
ated with the key in that thread. The destr_function is
not called if that value is NULL. The order in which
destructor functions are called at thread termination time
is unspecified.
Before the destructor function is called, the NULL value
is associated with the key in the current thread. A
destructor function might, however, re-associate non- NULL
values to that key or some other key. To deal with this,
if after all the destructors have been called for all non-
NULL values, there are still some non- NULL values with
associated destructors, then the process is repeated. The
LinuxThreads implementation stops the process after
PTHREAD_DESTRUCTOR_ITERATIONS iterations, even if some
non- NULL values with associated descriptors remain.
Other implementations may loop indefinitely.
pthread_key_delete deallocates a TSD key. It does not
check whether non- NULL values are associated with that
key in the currently executing threads, nor call the
destructor function associated with the key.
pthread_setspecific changes the value associated with key
in the calling thread, storing the given pointer instead.
pthread_getspecific returns the value currently associated
with key in the calling thread.
RETURN VALUE
pthread_key_create, pthread_key_delete, and pthread_set-
specific return 0 on success and a non-zero error code on
failure. If successful, pthread_key_create stores the
newly allocated key in the location pointed to by its key
argument.
pthread_getspecific returns the value associated with key
on success, and NULL on error.
ERRORS
pthread_key_create returns the following error code on
error:
EAGAIN PTHREAD_KEYS_MAX keys are already allocated
pthread_key_delete and pthread_setspecific return the fol-
lowing error code on error:
EINVAL key is not a valid, allocated TSD key
pthread_getspecific returns NULL if key is not a valid,
allocated TSD key.
AUTHOR
Xavier Leroy <Xavier.Leroy@inria.fr>
SEE ALSO
pthread_create(3), pthread_exit(3), pthread_testcancel(3).
EXAMPLE
The following code fragment allocates a thread-specific
array of 100 characters, with automatic reclaimation at
thread exit:
/* Key for the thread-specific buffer */
static pthread_key_t buffer_key;
/* Once-only initialisation of the key */
static pthread_once_t buffer_key_once = PTHREAD_ONCE_INIT;
/* Allocate the thread-specific buffer */
void buffer_alloc(void)
{
pthread_once(&buffer_key_once, buffer_key_alloc);
pthread_setspecific(buffer_key, malloc(100));
}
/* Return the thread-specific buffer */
char * get_buffer(void)
{
return (char *) pthread_getspecific(buffer_key);
}
/* Allocate the key */
static void buffer_key_alloc()
{
pthread_key_create(&buffer_key, buffer_destroy);
}
/* Free the thread-specific buffer */
static void buffer_destroy(void * buf)
{
free(buf);
}
LinuxThreads 1
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