diff options
author | rpj <rpj> | 2004-11-22 08:28:15 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | rpj <rpj> | 2004-11-22 08:28:15 +0000 |
commit | 91f42a2d730786fba0675fd39379ac2216b95d08 (patch) | |
tree | fbcb427a6347f46208960f87f362178337ff42b6 /NEWS | |
parent | 21a6ce96d18908790e6e7f5144dd6c4b64d4204f (diff) |
Copyright update
Diffstat (limited to 'NEWS')
-rw-r--r-- | NEWS | 1343 |
1 files changed, 696 insertions, 647 deletions
@@ -1,647 +1,696 @@ -SNAPSHOT 2004-11-03 -------------------- - -DLLs produced from this snapshot cannot be used with older applications without -recompiling the application, due to a change to pthread_t to provide unique POSIX -thread IDs. - -Although this snapshot passes the extended test suite, many of the changes are -fairly major, and some applications may show different behaviour than previously, -so adopt with care. Hopefully, any changed behaviour will be due to the library -being better at it's job, not worse. - -Bug fixes ---------- - -* pthread_create() no longer accepts NULL as the thread reference arg. -A segfault (memory access fault) will result, and no thread will be -created. - -* pthread_barrier_wait() no longer acts as a cancelation point. - -* Fix potential race condition in pthread_once() -- Tristan Savatier <tristan at mpegtv.com> - -* Changes to pthread_cond_destroy() exposed some coding weaknesses in several -test suite mini-apps because pthread_cond_destroy() now returns EBUSY if the CV -is still in use. - -New features ------------- - -* Added for compatibility: -PTHREAD_RECURSIVE_MUTEX_INITIALIZER, -PTHREAD_ERRORCHECK_MUTEX_INITIALIZER, -PTHREAD_RECURSIVE_MUTEX_INITIALIZER_NP, -PTHREAD_ERRORCHECK_MUTEX_INITIALIZER_NP - -* Initial support for Digital Mars compiler -- Anuj Goyal <anuj.goyal at gmail.com> - -* Faster Mutexes. These have been been rewritten following a model provided by -Alexander Terekhov that reduces kernel space checks, and eliminates some additional -critical sections used to manage a race between timedlock expiration and unlock. -Please be aware that the new mutexes do not enforce strict absolute FIFO scheduling -of mutexes, however any out-of-order lock acquisition should be very rare. - -* Faster semaphores. Following a similar model to mutexes above, these have been -rewritten to use preliminary users space checks. - -* sem_getvalue() now returns the number of waiters. - -* The POSIX thread ID now has much stronger uniqueness characteristics. The library -garrantees not to reuse the same thread ID for at least 2^(wordsize) thread -destruction/creation cycles. - -New tests ---------- - -* semaphore4.c: Tests cancelation of the new sem_wait(). - -* semaphore4t.c: Likewise for sem_timedwait(). - -* rwlock8.c: Tests and times the slow execution paths of r/w locks, and the CVs, -mutexes, and semaphores that they're built on. - - -SNAPSHOT 2004-05-16 -------------------- - -Attempt to add Watcom to the list of compilers that can build the library. -This failed in the end due to it's non-thread-aware errno. The library -builds but the test suite fails. See README.Watcom for more details. - -Bug fixes ---------- -* Bug and memory leak in sem_init() -- Alex Blanco <Alex.Blanco at motorola.com> - -* ptw32_getprocessors() now returns CPU count of 1 for WinCE. -- James Ewing <james.ewing at sveasoft.com> - -* pthread_cond_wait() could be canceled at a point where it should not -be cancelable. Fixed. -- Alexander Terekhov <TEREKHOV at de.ibm.com> - -* sem_timedwait() had an incorrect timeout calculation. -- Philippe Di Cristo <philipped at voicebox.com> - -* Fix a memory leak left behind after threads are destroyed. -- P. van Bruggen <pietvb at newbridges.nl> - -New features ------------- -* Ported to AMD64. -- Makoto Kato <raven at oldskool.jp> - -* True pre-emptive asynchronous cancelation of threads. This is optional -and requires that Panagiotis E. Hadjidoukas's QueueUserAPCEx package be -installed. This package is included in the pthreads-win32 self-unpacking -Zip archive starting from this snapshot. See the README.txt file inside -the package for installation details. - -Note: If you don't use async cancelation in your application, or don't need -to cancel threads that are blocked on system resources such as network I/O, -then the default non-preemptive async cancelation is probably good enough. -However, pthreads-win32 auto-detects the availability of these components -at run-time, so you don't need to rebuild the library from source if you -change your mind later. - -All of the advice available in books and elsewhere on the undesirability -of using async cancelation in any application still stands, but this -feature is a welcome addition with respect to the library's conformance to -the POSIX standard. - -SNAPSHOT 2003-09-18 -------------------- - -Cleanup of thread priority management. In particular, setting of thread -priority now attempts to map invalid Win32 values within the range returned -by sched_get_priority_min/max() to useful values. See README.NONPORTABLE -under "Thread priority". - -Bug fixes ---------- -* pthread_getschedparam() now returns the priority given by the most recent -call to pthread_setschedparam() or established by pthread_create(), as -required by the standard. Previously, pthread_getschedparam() incorrectly -returned the running thread priority at the time of the call, which may have -been adjusted or temporarily promoted/demoted. - -* sched_get_priority_min() and sched_get_priority_max() now return -1 on error -and set errno. Previously, they incorrectly returned the error value directly. - - -SNAPSHOT 2003-09-04 -------------------- - -Bug fixes ---------- -* ptw32_cancelableWait() now allows cancelation of waiting implicit POSIX -threads. - -New test --------- -* cancel8.c tests cancelation of Win32 threads waiting at a POSIX cancelation -point. - - -SNAPSHOT 2003-09-03 -------------------- - -Bug fixes ---------- -* pthread_self() would free the newly created implicit POSIX thread handle if -DuplicateHandle failed instead of recycle it (very unlikely). - -* pthread_exit() was neither freeing nor recycling the POSIX thread struct -for implicit POSIX threads. - -New feature - Cancelation of/by Win32 (non-POSIX) threads ---------------------------------------------------------- -Since John Bossom's original implementation, the library has allowed non-POSIX -initialised threads (Win32 threads) to call pthreads-win32 routines and -therefore interact with POSIX threads. This is done by creating an on-the-fly -POSIX thread ID for the Win32 thread that, once created, allows fully -reciprical interaction. This did not extend to thread cancelation (async or -deferred). Now it does. - -Any thread can be canceled by any other thread (Win32 or POSIX) if the former -thread's POSIX pthread_t value is known. It's TSD destructors and POSIX -cleanup handlers will be run before the thread exits with an exit code of -PTHREAD_CANCELED (retrieved with GetExitCodeThread()). - -This allows a Win32 thread to, for example, call POSIX CV routines in the same way -that POSIX threads would/should, with pthread_cond_wait() cancelability and -cleanup handlers (pthread_cond_wait() is a POSIX cancelation point). - -By adding cancelation, Win32 threads should now be able to call all POSIX -threads routines that make sense including semaphores, mutexes, condition -variables, read/write locks, barriers, spinlocks, tsd, cleanup push/pop, -cancelation, pthread_exit, scheduling, etc. - -Note that these on-the-fly 'implicit' POSIX thread IDs are initialised as detached -(not joinable) with deferred cancelation type. The POSIX thread ID will be created -automatically by any POSIX routines that need a POSIX handle (unless the routine -needs a pthread_t as a parameter of course). A Win32 thread can discover it's own -POSIX thread ID by calling pthread_self(), which will create the handle if -necessary and return the pthread_t value. - -New tests ---------- -Test the above new feature. - - -SNAPSHOT 2003-08-19 -------------------- - -This snapshot fixes some accidental corruption to new test case sources. -There are no changes to the library source code. - - -SNAPSHOT 2003-08-15 -------------------- - -Bug fixes ---------- - -* pthread.dsp now uses correct compile flags (/MD). -- Viv <vcotirlea@hotmail.com> - -* pthread_win32_process_detach_np() fixed memory leak. -- Steven Reddie <Steven.Reddie@ca.com> - -* pthread_mutex_destroy() fixed incorrect return code. -- Nicolas Barry <boozai@yahoo.com> - -* pthread_spin_destroy() fixed memory leak. -- Piet van Bruggen <pietvb@newbridges.nl> - -* Various changes to tighten arg checking, and to work with later versions of -MinGW32 and MsysDTK. - -* pthread_getschedparam() etc, fixed dangerous thread validity checking. -- Nicolas Barry <boozai@yahoo.com> - -* POSIX thread handles are now reused and their memory is not freed on thread exit. -This allows for stronger thread validity checking. - -New standard routine --------------------- - -* pthread_kill() added to provide thread validity checking to applications. -It does not accept any non zero values for the signal arg. - -New test cases --------------- - -* New test cases to confirm validity checking, pthread_kill(), and thread reuse. - - -SNAPSHOT 2003-05-10 -------------------- - -Bug fixes ---------- - -* pthread_mutex_trylock() now returns correct error values. -pthread_mutex_destroy() will no longer destroy a recursively locked mutex. -pthread_mutex_lock() is no longer inadvertantly behaving as a cancelation point. -- Thomas Pfaff <tpfaff@gmx.net> - -* pthread_mutex_timedlock() no longer occasionally sets incorrect mutex -ownership, causing deadlocks in some applications. -- Robert Strycek <strycek@posam.sk> and Alexander Terekhov <TEREKHOV@de.ibm.com> - - -SNAPSHOT 2002-11-04 -------------------- - -Bug fixes ---------- - -* sem_getvalue() now returns the correct value under Win NT and WinCE. -- Rob Fanner <rfanner@stonethree.com> - -* sem_timedwait() now uses tighter checks for unreasonable -abstime values - that would result in unexpected timeout values. - -* ptw32_cond_wait_cleanup() no longer mysteriously consumes -CV signals but may produce more spurious wakeups. It is believed -that the sem_timedwait() call is consuming a CV signal that it -shouldn't. -- Alexander Terekhov <TEREKHOV@de.ibm.com> - -* Fixed a memory leak in ptw32_threadDestroy() for implicit threads. - -* Fixed potential for deadlock in pthread_cond_destroy(). -A deadlock could occur for statically declared CVs (PTHREAD_COND_INITIALIZER), -when one thread is attempting to destroy the condition variable while another -is attempting to dynamically initialize it. -- Michael Johnson <michaelj@maine.rr.com> - - -SNAPSHOT 2002-03-02 -------------------- - -Cleanup code default style. (IMPORTANT) ----------------------------------------------------------------------- -Previously, if not defined, the cleanup style was determined automatically -from the compiler/language, and one of the following was defined accordingly: - - __CLEANUP_SEH MSVC only - __CLEANUP_CXX C++, including MSVC++, GNU G++ - __CLEANUP_C C, including GNU GCC, not MSVC - -These defines determine the style of cleanup (see pthread.h) and, -most importantly, the way that cancelation and thread exit (via -pthread_exit) is performed (see the routine ptw32_throw() in private.c). - -In short, the exceptions versions of the library throw an exception -when a thread is canceled or exits (via pthread_exit()), which is -caught by a handler in the thread startup routine, so that the -the correct stack unwinding occurs regardless of where the thread -is when it's canceled or exits via pthread_exit(). - -In this and future snapshots, unless the build explicitly defines (e.g. -via a compiler option) __CLEANUP_SEH, __CLEANUP_CXX, or __CLEANUP_C, then -the build NOW always defaults to __CLEANUP_C style cleanup. This style -uses setjmp/longjmp in the cancelation and pthread_exit implementations, -and therefore won't do stack unwinding even when linked to applications -that have it (e.g. C++ apps). This is for consistency with most -current commercial Unix POSIX threads implementations. Compaq's TRU64 -may be an exception (no pun intended) and possible future trend. - -Although it was not clearly documented before, it is still necessary to -build your application using the same __CLEANUP_* define as was -used for the version of the library that you link with, so that the -correct parts of pthread.h are included. That is, the possible -defines require the following library versions: - - __CLEANUP_SEH pthreadVSE.dll - __CLEANUP_CXX pthreadVCE.dll or pthreadGCE.dll - __CLEANUP_C pthreadVC.dll or pthreadGC.dll - -E.g. regardless of whether your app is C or C++, if you link with -pthreadVC.lib or libpthreadGC.a, then you must define __CLEANUP_C. - - -THE POINT OF ALL THIS IS: if you have not been defining one of these -explicitly, then the defaults as described at the top of this -section were being used. - -THIS NOW CHANGES, as has been explained above, but to try to make this -clearer here's an example: - -If you were building your application with MSVC++ i.e. using C++ -exceptions and not explicitly defining one of __CLEANUP_*, then -__CLEANUP_C++ was automatically defined for you in pthread.h. -You should have been linking with pthreadVCE.dll, which does -stack unwinding. - -If you now build your application as you had before, pthread.h will now -automatically set __CLEANUP_C as the default style, and you will need to -link with pthreadVC.dll. Stack unwinding will now NOT occur when a thread -is canceled, or the thread calls pthread_exit(). - -Your application will now most likely behave differently to previous -versions, and in non-obvious ways. Most likely is that locally -instantiated objects may not be destroyed or cleaned up after a thread -is canceled. - -If you want the same behaviour as before, then you must now define -__CLEANUP_C++ explicitly using a compiler option and link with -pthreadVCE.dll as you did before. - - -WHY ARE WE MAKING THE DEFAULT STYLE LESS EXCEPTION-FRIENDLY? -Because no commercial Unix POSIX threads implementation allows you to -choose to have stack unwinding. Therefore, providing it in pthread-win32 -as a default is dangerous. We still provide the choice but unless -you consciously choose to do otherwise, your pthreads applications will -now run or crash in similar ways irrespective of the threads platform -you use. Or at least this is the hope. - - -WHY NOT REMOVE THE EXCEPTIONS VERSIONS OF THE LIBRARY ALTOGETHER? -There are a few reasons: -- because there are well respected POSIX threads people who believe - that POSIX threads implementations should be exceptions aware and - do the expected thing in that context. (There are equally respected - people who believe it should not be easily accessible, if it's there - at all, for unconditional conformity to other implementations.) -- because pthreads-win32 is one of the few implementations that has - the choice, perhaps the only freely available one, and so offers - a laboratory to people who may want to explore the effects; -- although the code will always be around somewhere for anyone who - wants it, once it's removed from the current version it will not be - nearly as visible to people who may have a use for it. - - -Source module splitting ------------------------ -In order to enable smaller image sizes to be generated -for applications that link statically with the library, -most routines have been separated out into individual -source code files. - -This is being done in such a way as to be backward compatible. -The old source files are reused to congregate the individual -routine files into larger translation units (via a bunch of -# includes) so that the compiler can still optimise wherever -possible, e.g. through inlining, which can only be done -within the same translation unit. - -It is also possible to build the entire library by compiling -the single file named "pthread.c", which just #includes all -the secondary congregation source files. The compiler -may be able to use this to do more inlining of routines. - -Although the GNU compiler is able to produce libraries with -the necessary separation (the -ffunction-segments switch), -AFAIK, the MSVC and other compilers don't have this feature. - -Finally, since I use makefiles and command-line compilation, -I don't know what havoc this reorganisation may wreak amongst -IDE project file users. You should be able to continue -using your existing project files without modification. - - -New non-portable functions --------------------------- -pthread_num_processors_np(): - Returns the number of processors in the system that are - available to the process, as determined from the processor - affinity mask. - -pthread_timechange_handler_np(): - To improve tolerance against operator or time service initiated - system clock changes. - - This routine can be called by an application when it - receives a WM_TIMECHANGE message from the system. At present - it broadcasts all condition variables so that waiting threads - can wake up and re-evaluate their conditions and restart - their timed waits if required. - - Suggested by Alexander Terekhov - - -Platform dependence -------------------- -As Win95 doesn't provide one, the library now contains -it's own InterlockedCompareExchange() routine, which is used -whenever Windows doesn't provide it. InterlockedCompareExchange() -is used to implement spinlocks and barriers, and also in mutexes. -This routine relies on the CMPXCHG machine instruction which -is not available on i386 CPUs. This library (from snapshot -20010712 onwards) is therefore no longer supported on i386 -processor platforms. - - -New standard routines ---------------------- -For source code portability only - rwlocks cannot be process shared yet. - - pthread_rwlockattr_init() - pthread_rwlockattr_destroy() - pthread_rwlockattr_setpshared() - pthread_rwlockattr_getpshared() - -As defined in the new POSIX standard, and the Single Unix Spec version 3: - - sem_timedwait() - pthread_mutex_timedlock() - Alexander Terekhov and Thomas Pfaff - pthread_rwlock_timedrdlock() - adapted from pthread_rwlock_rdlock() - pthread_rwlock_timedwrlock() - adapted from pthread_rwlock_wrlock() - - -pthread.h no longer includes windows.h --------------------------------------- -[Not yet for G++] - -This was done to prevent conflicts. - -HANDLE, DWORD, and NULL are temporarily defined within pthread.h if -they are not already. - - -pthread.h, sched.h and semaphore.h now use dllexport/dllimport --------------------------------------------------------------- -Not only to avoid the need for the pthread.def file, but to -improve performance. Apparently, declaring functions with dllimport -generates a direct call to the function and avoids the overhead -of a stub function call. - -Bug fixes ---------- -* Fixed potential NULL pointer dereferences in pthread_mutexattr_init, -pthread_mutexattr_getpshared, pthread_barrierattr_init, -pthread_barrierattr_getpshared, and pthread_condattr_getpshared. -- Scott McCaskill <scott@magruder.org> - -* Removed potential race condition in pthread_mutex_trylock and -pthread_mutex_lock; -- Alexander Terekhov <TEREKHOV@de.ibm.com> - -* The behaviour of pthread_mutex_trylock in relation to -recursive mutexes was inconsistent with commercial implementations. -Trylock would return EBUSY if the lock was owned already by the -calling thread regardless of mutex type. Trylock now increments the -recursion count and returns 0 for RECURSIVE mutexes, and will -return EDEADLK rather than EBUSY for ERRORCHECK mutexes. This is -consistent with Solaris. -- Thomas Pfaff <tpfaff@gmx.net> - -* Found a fix for the library and workaround for applications for -the known bug #2, i.e. where __CLEANUP_CXX or __CLEANUP_SEH is defined. -See the "Known Bugs in this snapshot" section below. - -This could be made transparent to applications by replacing the macros that -define the current C++ and SEH versions of pthread_cleanup_push/pop -with the C version, but AFAIK cleanup handlers would not then run in the -correct sequence with destructors and exception cleanup handlers when -an exception occurs. - -* Cancelation once started in a thread cannot now be inadvertantly -double canceled. That is, once a thread begins it's cancelation run, -cancelation is disabled and a subsequent cancel request will -return an error (ESRCH). - -* errno: An incorrect compiler directive caused a local version -of errno to be used instead of the Win32 errno. Both instances are -thread-safe but applications checking errno after a pthreads-win32 -call would be wrong. Fixing this also fixed a bad compiler -option in the testsuite (/MT should have been /MD) which is -needed to link with the correct library MSVCRT.LIB. - - -SNAPSHOT 2001-07-12 -------------------- - -To be added - - -SNAPSHOT 2001-07-03 -------------------- - -To be added - - -SNAPSHOT 2000-08-13 -------------------- - -New: -- Renamed DLL and LIB files: - pthreadVSE.dll (MS VC++/Structured EH) - pthreadVSE.lib - pthreadVCE.dll (MS VC++/C++ EH) - pthreadVCE.lib - pthreadGCE.dll (GNU G++/C++ EH) - libpthreadw32.a - - Both your application and the pthread dll should use the - same exception handling scheme. - -Bugs fixed: -- MSVC++ C++ exception handling. - -Some new tests have been added. - - -SNAPSHOT 2000-08-10 -------------------- - -New: -- asynchronous cancelation on X86 (Jason Nye) -- Makefile compatible with MS nmake to replace - buildlib.bat -- GNUmakefile for Mingw32 -- tests/Makefile for MS nmake replaces runall.bat -- tests/GNUmakefile for Mingw32 - -Bugs fixed: -- kernel32 load/free problem -- attempt to hide internel exceptions from application - exception handlers (__try/__except and try/catch blocks) -- Win32 thread handle leakage bug - (David Baggett/Paul Redondo/Eyal Lebedinsky) - -Some new tests have been added. - - -SNAPSHOT 1999-11-02 -------------------- - -Bugs fixed: -- ctime_r macro had an incorrect argument (Erik Hensema), -- threads were not being created - PTHREAD_CANCEL_DEFERRED. This should have - had little effect as deferred is the only - supported type. (Ross Johnson). - -Some compatibility improvements added, eg. -- pthread_setcancelstate accepts NULL pointer - for the previous value argument. Ditto for - pthread_setcanceltype. This is compatible - with Solaris but should not affect - standard applications (Erik Hensema) - -Some new tests have been added. - - -SNAPSHOT 1999-10-17 -------------------- - -Bug fix - Cancelation of threads waiting on condition variables -now works properly (Lorin Hochstein and Peter Slacik) - - -SNAPSHOT 1999-08-12 -------------------- - -Fixed exception stack cleanup if calling pthread_exit() -- (Lorin Hochstein and John Bossom). - -Fixed bugs in condition variables - (Peter Slacik): - - additional contention checks - - properly adjust number of waiting threads after timed - condvar timeout. - - -SNAPSHOT 1999-05-30 -------------------- - -Some minor bugs have been fixed. See the ChangeLog file for details. - -Some more POSIX 1b functions are now included but ony return an -error (ENOSYS) if called. They are: - - sem_open - sem_close - sem_unlink - sem_getvalue - - -SNAPSHOT 1999-04-07 -------------------- - -Some POSIX 1b functions which were internally supported are now -available as exported functions: - - sem_init - sem_destroy - sem_wait - sem_trywait - sem_post - sched_yield - sched_get_priority_min - sched_get_priority_max - -Some minor bugs have been fixed. See the ChangeLog file for details. - - -SNAPSHOT 1999-03-16 -------------------- - -Initial release. - +SNAPSHOT 2004-11-22
+-------------------
+
+This snapshot primarily fixes the condvar bug introduced in
+snapshot-2004-11-03. DLL versioning has also been included to allow
+applications to runtime check the Microsoft compatible DLL version
+information, and to extend the DLL naming system for ABI and major
+(non-backward compatible) API changes. See the README file for details.
+
+Bug fixes
+---------
+
+* Condition variables no longer deadlock (bug introduced in
+snapshot-2004-11-03).
+-
+
+* DLL naming extended to avoid 'DLL hell' in the future, and to
+accommodate the ABI change introduced in snapshot-2004-11-03. Snapshot
+2004-11-03 will be removed from FTP sites.
+
+New features
+------------
+
+* A Microsoft-style version resource has been added to the DLL for
+applications that wish to check DLL compatibility at runtime.
+
+* Pthreads-win32 DLL naming has been extended to allow incompatible DLL
+versions to co-exist in the same filesystem. See the README file for details,
+but briefly: while the version information inside the DLL will change with
+each release from now on, the DLL version names will only change if the new
+DLL is not backward compatible with older applications.
+
+The versioning scheme has been borrowed from GNU Libtool, and the DLL
+naming scheme is from Cygwin. Provided the Libtool-style numbering rules are
+honoured, the Cygwin DLL naming scheme automatcally ensures that DLL name
+changes are minimal and that applications will not load an incompatible
+pthreads-win32 DLL.
+
+Those who use the pre-built DLLs will find that the DLL/LIB names have a new
+suffix (1) in this snapshot. E.g. pthreadVC1.dll etc.
+
+* The POSIX thread ID reuse uniqueness feature introduced in the last snapshot
+has been kept as default, but the behaviour can now be controlled when the DLL
+is built to effectively switch it off. This makes the library much more
+sensitive to applications that assume that POSIX thread IDs are unique, i.e.
+are not strictly compliant with POSIX. See the PTW32_THREAD_ID_REUSE_INCREMENT
+macro comments in config.h for details.
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 2004-11-03
+-------------------
+
+DLLs produced from this snapshot cannot be used with older applications without
+recompiling the application, due to a change to pthread_t to provide unique POSIX
+thread IDs.
+
+Although this snapshot passes the extended test suite, many of the changes are
+fairly major, and some applications may show different behaviour than previously,
+so adopt with care. Hopefully, any changed behaviour will be due to the library
+being better at it's job, not worse.
+
+Bug fixes
+---------
+
+* pthread_create() no longer accepts NULL as the thread reference arg.
+A segfault (memory access fault) will result, and no thread will be
+created.
+
+* pthread_barrier_wait() no longer acts as a cancelation point.
+
+* Fix potential race condition in pthread_once()
+- Tristan Savatier <tristan at mpegtv.com>
+
+* Changes to pthread_cond_destroy() exposed some coding weaknesses in several
+test suite mini-apps because pthread_cond_destroy() now returns EBUSY if the CV
+is still in use.
+
+New features
+------------
+
+* Added for compatibility:
+PTHREAD_RECURSIVE_MUTEX_INITIALIZER,
+PTHREAD_ERRORCHECK_MUTEX_INITIALIZER,
+PTHREAD_RECURSIVE_MUTEX_INITIALIZER_NP,
+PTHREAD_ERRORCHECK_MUTEX_INITIALIZER_NP
+
+* Initial support for Digital Mars compiler
+- Anuj Goyal <anuj.goyal at gmail.com>
+
+* Faster Mutexes. These have been been rewritten following a model provided by
+Alexander Terekhov that reduces kernel space checks, and eliminates some additional
+critical sections used to manage a race between timedlock expiration and unlock.
+Please be aware that the new mutexes do not enforce strict absolute FIFO scheduling
+of mutexes, however any out-of-order lock acquisition should be very rare.
+
+* Faster semaphores. Following a similar model to mutexes above, these have been
+rewritten to use preliminary users space checks.
+
+* sem_getvalue() now returns the number of waiters.
+
+* The POSIX thread ID now has much stronger uniqueness characteristics. The library
+garrantees not to reuse the same thread ID for at least 2^(wordsize) thread
+destruction/creation cycles.
+
+New tests
+---------
+
+* semaphore4.c: Tests cancelation of the new sem_wait().
+
+* semaphore4t.c: Likewise for sem_timedwait().
+
+* rwlock8.c: Tests and times the slow execution paths of r/w locks, and the CVs,
+mutexes, and semaphores that they're built on.
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 2004-05-16
+-------------------
+
+Attempt to add Watcom to the list of compilers that can build the library.
+This failed in the end due to it's non-thread-aware errno. The library
+builds but the test suite fails. See README.Watcom for more details.
+
+Bug fixes
+---------
+* Bug and memory leak in sem_init()
+- Alex Blanco <Alex.Blanco at motorola.com>
+
+* ptw32_getprocessors() now returns CPU count of 1 for WinCE.
+- James Ewing <james.ewing at sveasoft.com>
+
+* pthread_cond_wait() could be canceled at a point where it should not
+be cancelable. Fixed.
+- Alexander Terekhov <TEREKHOV at de.ibm.com>
+
+* sem_timedwait() had an incorrect timeout calculation.
+- Philippe Di Cristo <philipped at voicebox.com>
+
+* Fix a memory leak left behind after threads are destroyed.
+- P. van Bruggen <pietvb at newbridges.nl>
+
+New features
+------------
+* Ported to AMD64.
+- Makoto Kato <raven at oldskool.jp>
+
+* True pre-emptive asynchronous cancelation of threads. This is optional
+and requires that Panagiotis E. Hadjidoukas's QueueUserAPCEx package be
+installed. This package is included in the pthreads-win32 self-unpacking
+Zip archive starting from this snapshot. See the README.txt file inside
+the package for installation details.
+
+Note: If you don't use async cancelation in your application, or don't need
+to cancel threads that are blocked on system resources such as network I/O,
+then the default non-preemptive async cancelation is probably good enough.
+However, pthreads-win32 auto-detects the availability of these components
+at run-time, so you don't need to rebuild the library from source if you
+change your mind later.
+
+All of the advice available in books and elsewhere on the undesirability
+of using async cancelation in any application still stands, but this
+feature is a welcome addition with respect to the library's conformance to
+the POSIX standard.
+
+SNAPSHOT 2003-09-18
+-------------------
+
+Cleanup of thread priority management. In particular, setting of thread
+priority now attempts to map invalid Win32 values within the range returned
+by sched_get_priority_min/max() to useful values. See README.NONPORTABLE
+under "Thread priority".
+
+Bug fixes
+---------
+* pthread_getschedparam() now returns the priority given by the most recent
+call to pthread_setschedparam() or established by pthread_create(), as
+required by the standard. Previously, pthread_getschedparam() incorrectly
+returned the running thread priority at the time of the call, which may have
+been adjusted or temporarily promoted/demoted.
+
+* sched_get_priority_min() and sched_get_priority_max() now return -1 on error
+and set errno. Previously, they incorrectly returned the error value directly.
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 2003-09-04
+-------------------
+
+Bug fixes
+---------
+* ptw32_cancelableWait() now allows cancelation of waiting implicit POSIX
+threads.
+
+New test
+--------
+* cancel8.c tests cancelation of Win32 threads waiting at a POSIX cancelation
+point.
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 2003-09-03
+-------------------
+
+Bug fixes
+---------
+* pthread_self() would free the newly created implicit POSIX thread handle if
+DuplicateHandle failed instead of recycle it (very unlikely).
+
+* pthread_exit() was neither freeing nor recycling the POSIX thread struct
+for implicit POSIX threads.
+
+New feature - Cancelation of/by Win32 (non-POSIX) threads
+---------------------------------------------------------
+Since John Bossom's original implementation, the library has allowed non-POSIX
+initialised threads (Win32 threads) to call pthreads-win32 routines and
+therefore interact with POSIX threads. This is done by creating an on-the-fly
+POSIX thread ID for the Win32 thread that, once created, allows fully
+reciprical interaction. This did not extend to thread cancelation (async or
+deferred). Now it does.
+
+Any thread can be canceled by any other thread (Win32 or POSIX) if the former
+thread's POSIX pthread_t value is known. It's TSD destructors and POSIX
+cleanup handlers will be run before the thread exits with an exit code of
+PTHREAD_CANCELED (retrieved with GetExitCodeThread()).
+
+This allows a Win32 thread to, for example, call POSIX CV routines in the same way
+that POSIX threads would/should, with pthread_cond_wait() cancelability and
+cleanup handlers (pthread_cond_wait() is a POSIX cancelation point).
+
+By adding cancelation, Win32 threads should now be able to call all POSIX
+threads routines that make sense including semaphores, mutexes, condition
+variables, read/write locks, barriers, spinlocks, tsd, cleanup push/pop,
+cancelation, pthread_exit, scheduling, etc.
+
+Note that these on-the-fly 'implicit' POSIX thread IDs are initialised as detached
+(not joinable) with deferred cancelation type. The POSIX thread ID will be created
+automatically by any POSIX routines that need a POSIX handle (unless the routine
+needs a pthread_t as a parameter of course). A Win32 thread can discover it's own
+POSIX thread ID by calling pthread_self(), which will create the handle if
+necessary and return the pthread_t value.
+
+New tests
+---------
+Test the above new feature.
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 2003-08-19
+-------------------
+
+This snapshot fixes some accidental corruption to new test case sources.
+There are no changes to the library source code.
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 2003-08-15
+-------------------
+
+Bug fixes
+---------
+
+* pthread.dsp now uses correct compile flags (/MD).
+- Viv <vcotirlea@hotmail.com>
+
+* pthread_win32_process_detach_np() fixed memory leak.
+- Steven Reddie <Steven.Reddie@ca.com>
+
+* pthread_mutex_destroy() fixed incorrect return code.
+- Nicolas Barry <boozai@yahoo.com>
+
+* pthread_spin_destroy() fixed memory leak.
+- Piet van Bruggen <pietvb@newbridges.nl>
+
+* Various changes to tighten arg checking, and to work with later versions of
+MinGW32 and MsysDTK.
+
+* pthread_getschedparam() etc, fixed dangerous thread validity checking.
+- Nicolas Barry <boozai@yahoo.com>
+
+* POSIX thread handles are now reused and their memory is not freed on thread exit.
+This allows for stronger thread validity checking.
+
+New standard routine
+--------------------
+
+* pthread_kill() added to provide thread validity checking to applications.
+It does not accept any non zero values for the signal arg.
+
+New test cases
+--------------
+
+* New test cases to confirm validity checking, pthread_kill(), and thread reuse.
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 2003-05-10
+-------------------
+
+Bug fixes
+---------
+
+* pthread_mutex_trylock() now returns correct error values.
+pthread_mutex_destroy() will no longer destroy a recursively locked mutex.
+pthread_mutex_lock() is no longer inadvertantly behaving as a cancelation point.
+- Thomas Pfaff <tpfaff@gmx.net>
+
+* pthread_mutex_timedlock() no longer occasionally sets incorrect mutex
+ownership, causing deadlocks in some applications.
+- Robert Strycek <strycek@posam.sk> and Alexander Terekhov <TEREKHOV@de.ibm.com>
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 2002-11-04
+-------------------
+
+Bug fixes
+---------
+
+* sem_getvalue() now returns the correct value under Win NT and WinCE.
+- Rob Fanner <rfanner@stonethree.com>
+
+* sem_timedwait() now uses tighter checks for unreasonable
+abstime values - that would result in unexpected timeout values.
+
+* ptw32_cond_wait_cleanup() no longer mysteriously consumes
+CV signals but may produce more spurious wakeups. It is believed
+that the sem_timedwait() call is consuming a CV signal that it
+shouldn't.
+- Alexander Terekhov <TEREKHOV@de.ibm.com>
+
+* Fixed a memory leak in ptw32_threadDestroy() for implicit threads.
+
+* Fixed potential for deadlock in pthread_cond_destroy().
+A deadlock could occur for statically declared CVs (PTHREAD_COND_INITIALIZER),
+when one thread is attempting to destroy the condition variable while another
+is attempting to dynamically initialize it.
+- Michael Johnson <michaelj@maine.rr.com>
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 2002-03-02
+-------------------
+
+Cleanup code default style. (IMPORTANT)
+----------------------------------------------------------------------
+Previously, if not defined, the cleanup style was determined automatically
+from the compiler/language, and one of the following was defined accordingly:
+
+ __CLEANUP_SEH MSVC only
+ __CLEANUP_CXX C++, including MSVC++, GNU G++
+ __CLEANUP_C C, including GNU GCC, not MSVC
+
+These defines determine the style of cleanup (see pthread.h) and,
+most importantly, the way that cancelation and thread exit (via
+pthread_exit) is performed (see the routine ptw32_throw() in private.c).
+
+In short, the exceptions versions of the library throw an exception
+when a thread is canceled or exits (via pthread_exit()), which is
+caught by a handler in the thread startup routine, so that the
+the correct stack unwinding occurs regardless of where the thread
+is when it's canceled or exits via pthread_exit().
+
+In this and future snapshots, unless the build explicitly defines (e.g.
+via a compiler option) __CLEANUP_SEH, __CLEANUP_CXX, or __CLEANUP_C, then
+the build NOW always defaults to __CLEANUP_C style cleanup. This style
+uses setjmp/longjmp in the cancelation and pthread_exit implementations,
+and therefore won't do stack unwinding even when linked to applications
+that have it (e.g. C++ apps). This is for consistency with most
+current commercial Unix POSIX threads implementations. Compaq's TRU64
+may be an exception (no pun intended) and possible future trend.
+
+Although it was not clearly documented before, it is still necessary to
+build your application using the same __CLEANUP_* define as was
+used for the version of the library that you link with, so that the
+correct parts of pthread.h are included. That is, the possible
+defines require the following library versions:
+
+ __CLEANUP_SEH pthreadVSE.dll
+ __CLEANUP_CXX pthreadVCE.dll or pthreadGCE.dll
+ __CLEANUP_C pthreadVC.dll or pthreadGC.dll
+
+E.g. regardless of whether your app is C or C++, if you link with
+pthreadVC.lib or libpthreadGC.a, then you must define __CLEANUP_C.
+
+
+THE POINT OF ALL THIS IS: if you have not been defining one of these
+explicitly, then the defaults as described at the top of this
+section were being used.
+
+THIS NOW CHANGES, as has been explained above, but to try to make this
+clearer here's an example:
+
+If you were building your application with MSVC++ i.e. using C++
+exceptions and not explicitly defining one of __CLEANUP_*, then
+__CLEANUP_C++ was automatically defined for you in pthread.h.
+You should have been linking with pthreadVCE.dll, which does
+stack unwinding.
+
+If you now build your application as you had before, pthread.h will now
+automatically set __CLEANUP_C as the default style, and you will need to
+link with pthreadVC.dll. Stack unwinding will now NOT occur when a thread
+is canceled, or the thread calls pthread_exit().
+
+Your application will now most likely behave differently to previous
+versions, and in non-obvious ways. Most likely is that locally
+instantiated objects may not be destroyed or cleaned up after a thread
+is canceled.
+
+If you want the same behaviour as before, then you must now define
+__CLEANUP_C++ explicitly using a compiler option and link with
+pthreadVCE.dll as you did before.
+
+
+WHY ARE WE MAKING THE DEFAULT STYLE LESS EXCEPTION-FRIENDLY?
+Because no commercial Unix POSIX threads implementation allows you to
+choose to have stack unwinding. Therefore, providing it in pthread-win32
+as a default is dangerous. We still provide the choice but unless
+you consciously choose to do otherwise, your pthreads applications will
+now run or crash in similar ways irrespective of the threads platform
+you use. Or at least this is the hope.
+
+
+WHY NOT REMOVE THE EXCEPTIONS VERSIONS OF THE LIBRARY ALTOGETHER?
+There are a few reasons:
+- because there are well respected POSIX threads people who believe
+ that POSIX threads implementations should be exceptions aware and
+ do the expected thing in that context. (There are equally respected
+ people who believe it should not be easily accessible, if it's there
+ at all, for unconditional conformity to other implementations.)
+- because pthreads-win32 is one of the few implementations that has
+ the choice, perhaps the only freely available one, and so offers
+ a laboratory to people who may want to explore the effects;
+- although the code will always be around somewhere for anyone who
+ wants it, once it's removed from the current version it will not be
+ nearly as visible to people who may have a use for it.
+
+
+Source module splitting
+-----------------------
+In order to enable smaller image sizes to be generated
+for applications that link statically with the library,
+most routines have been separated out into individual
+source code files.
+
+This is being done in such a way as to be backward compatible.
+The old source files are reused to congregate the individual
+routine files into larger translation units (via a bunch of
+# includes) so that the compiler can still optimise wherever
+possible, e.g. through inlining, which can only be done
+within the same translation unit.
+
+It is also possible to build the entire library by compiling
+the single file named "pthread.c", which just #includes all
+the secondary congregation source files. The compiler
+may be able to use this to do more inlining of routines.
+
+Although the GNU compiler is able to produce libraries with
+the necessary separation (the -ffunction-segments switch),
+AFAIK, the MSVC and other compilers don't have this feature.
+
+Finally, since I use makefiles and command-line compilation,
+I don't know what havoc this reorganisation may wreak amongst
+IDE project file users. You should be able to continue
+using your existing project files without modification.
+
+
+New non-portable functions
+--------------------------
+pthread_num_processors_np():
+ Returns the number of processors in the system that are
+ available to the process, as determined from the processor
+ affinity mask.
+
+pthread_timechange_handler_np():
+ To improve tolerance against operator or time service initiated
+ system clock changes.
+
+ This routine can be called by an application when it
+ receives a WM_TIMECHANGE message from the system. At present
+ it broadcasts all condition variables so that waiting threads
+ can wake up and re-evaluate their conditions and restart
+ their timed waits if required.
+ - Suggested by Alexander Terekhov
+
+
+Platform dependence
+-------------------
+As Win95 doesn't provide one, the library now contains
+it's own InterlockedCompareExchange() routine, which is used
+whenever Windows doesn't provide it. InterlockedCompareExchange()
+is used to implement spinlocks and barriers, and also in mutexes.
+This routine relies on the CMPXCHG machine instruction which
+is not available on i386 CPUs. This library (from snapshot
+20010712 onwards) is therefore no longer supported on i386
+processor platforms.
+
+
+New standard routines
+---------------------
+For source code portability only - rwlocks cannot be process shared yet.
+
+ pthread_rwlockattr_init()
+ pthread_rwlockattr_destroy()
+ pthread_rwlockattr_setpshared()
+ pthread_rwlockattr_getpshared()
+
+As defined in the new POSIX standard, and the Single Unix Spec version 3:
+
+ sem_timedwait()
+ pthread_mutex_timedlock() - Alexander Terekhov and Thomas Pfaff
+ pthread_rwlock_timedrdlock() - adapted from pthread_rwlock_rdlock()
+ pthread_rwlock_timedwrlock() - adapted from pthread_rwlock_wrlock()
+
+
+pthread.h no longer includes windows.h
+--------------------------------------
+[Not yet for G++]
+
+This was done to prevent conflicts.
+
+HANDLE, DWORD, and NULL are temporarily defined within pthread.h if
+they are not already.
+
+
+pthread.h, sched.h and semaphore.h now use dllexport/dllimport
+--------------------------------------------------------------
+Not only to avoid the need for the pthread.def file, but to
+improve performance. Apparently, declaring functions with dllimport
+generates a direct call to the function and avoids the overhead
+of a stub function call.
+
+Bug fixes
+---------
+* Fixed potential NULL pointer dereferences in pthread_mutexattr_init,
+pthread_mutexattr_getpshared, pthread_barrierattr_init,
+pthread_barrierattr_getpshared, and pthread_condattr_getpshared.
+- Scott McCaskill <scott@magruder.org>
+
+* Removed potential race condition in pthread_mutex_trylock and
+pthread_mutex_lock;
+- Alexander Terekhov <TEREKHOV@de.ibm.com>
+
+* The behaviour of pthread_mutex_trylock in relation to
+recursive mutexes was inconsistent with commercial implementations.
+Trylock would return EBUSY if the lock was owned already by the
+calling thread regardless of mutex type. Trylock now increments the
+recursion count and returns 0 for RECURSIVE mutexes, and will
+return EDEADLK rather than EBUSY for ERRORCHECK mutexes. This is
+consistent with Solaris.
+- Thomas Pfaff <tpfaff@gmx.net>
+
+* Found a fix for the library and workaround for applications for
+the known bug #2, i.e. where __CLEANUP_CXX or __CLEANUP_SEH is defined.
+See the "Known Bugs in this snapshot" section below.
+
+This could be made transparent to applications by replacing the macros that
+define the current C++ and SEH versions of pthread_cleanup_push/pop
+with the C version, but AFAIK cleanup handlers would not then run in the
+correct sequence with destructors and exception cleanup handlers when
+an exception occurs.
+
+* Cancelation once started in a thread cannot now be inadvertantly
+double canceled. That is, once a thread begins it's cancelation run,
+cancelation is disabled and a subsequent cancel request will
+return an error (ESRCH).
+
+* errno: An incorrect compiler directive caused a local version
+of errno to be used instead of the Win32 errno. Both instances are
+thread-safe but applications checking errno after a pthreads-win32
+call would be wrong. Fixing this also fixed a bad compiler
+option in the testsuite (/MT should have been /MD) which is
+needed to link with the correct library MSVCRT.LIB.
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 2001-07-12
+-------------------
+
+To be added
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 2001-07-03
+-------------------
+
+To be added
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 2000-08-13
+-------------------
+
+New:
+- Renamed DLL and LIB files:
+ pthreadVSE.dll (MS VC++/Structured EH)
+ pthreadVSE.lib
+ pthreadVCE.dll (MS VC++/C++ EH)
+ pthreadVCE.lib
+ pthreadGCE.dll (GNU G++/C++ EH)
+ libpthreadw32.a
+
+ Both your application and the pthread dll should use the
+ same exception handling scheme.
+
+Bugs fixed:
+- MSVC++ C++ exception handling.
+
+Some new tests have been added.
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 2000-08-10
+-------------------
+
+New:
+- asynchronous cancelation on X86 (Jason Nye)
+- Makefile compatible with MS nmake to replace
+ buildlib.bat
+- GNUmakefile for Mingw32
+- tests/Makefile for MS nmake replaces runall.bat
+- tests/GNUmakefile for Mingw32
+
+Bugs fixed:
+- kernel32 load/free problem
+- attempt to hide internel exceptions from application
+ exception handlers (__try/__except and try/catch blocks)
+- Win32 thread handle leakage bug
+ (David Baggett/Paul Redondo/Eyal Lebedinsky)
+
+Some new tests have been added.
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 1999-11-02
+-------------------
+
+Bugs fixed:
+- ctime_r macro had an incorrect argument (Erik Hensema),
+- threads were not being created
+ PTHREAD_CANCEL_DEFERRED. This should have
+ had little effect as deferred is the only
+ supported type. (Ross Johnson).
+
+Some compatibility improvements added, eg.
+- pthread_setcancelstate accepts NULL pointer
+ for the previous value argument. Ditto for
+ pthread_setcanceltype. This is compatible
+ with Solaris but should not affect
+ standard applications (Erik Hensema)
+
+Some new tests have been added.
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 1999-10-17
+-------------------
+
+Bug fix - Cancelation of threads waiting on condition variables
+now works properly (Lorin Hochstein and Peter Slacik)
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 1999-08-12
+-------------------
+
+Fixed exception stack cleanup if calling pthread_exit()
+- (Lorin Hochstein and John Bossom).
+
+Fixed bugs in condition variables - (Peter Slacik):
+ - additional contention checks
+ - properly adjust number of waiting threads after timed
+ condvar timeout.
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 1999-05-30
+-------------------
+
+Some minor bugs have been fixed. See the ChangeLog file for details.
+
+Some more POSIX 1b functions are now included but ony return an
+error (ENOSYS) if called. They are:
+
+ sem_open
+ sem_close
+ sem_unlink
+ sem_getvalue
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 1999-04-07
+-------------------
+
+Some POSIX 1b functions which were internally supported are now
+available as exported functions:
+
+ sem_init
+ sem_destroy
+ sem_wait
+ sem_trywait
+ sem_post
+ sched_yield
+ sched_get_priority_min
+ sched_get_priority_max
+
+Some minor bugs have been fixed. See the ChangeLog file for details.
+
+
+SNAPSHOT 1999-03-16
+-------------------
+
+Initial release.
+
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