diff options
| author | rpj <rpj> | 2002-02-02 23:15:28 +0000 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | rpj <rpj> | 2002-02-02 23:15:28 +0000 | 
| commit | 4a72430d821b96add23846980d07f5a01059029d (patch) | |
| tree | 6601b116e591db28feaed15a92ae46bfed8197da /README.NONPORTABLE | |
| parent | 6a65a568fa4d9515265842c8bcf11a7449f3c325 (diff) | |
	* cancel.c: Rearranged some code and introduced checks
	to disable cancelation at the start of a thread's cancelation
	run to prevent double cancelation. The main problem
	arises if a thread is canceling and then receives a subsequent
	async cancel request.
	* private.c: Likewise.
	* condvar.c: Place pragmas around cleanup_push/pop to turn
	off inline optimisation (/Obn where n>0 - MSVC only). Various
	optimisation switches in MSVC turn this on, which interferes with
	the way that cleanup handlers are run in C++ EH and SEH
	code. Application code compiled with inline optimisation must
	also wrap cleanup_push/pop blocks with the pragmas, e.g.
	  #pragma inline_depth(0)
	  pthread_cleanup_push(...)
	    ...
	  pthread_cleanup_pop(...)
	  #pragma inline_depth(8)
	* rwlock.c: Likewise.
	* mutex.c: Remove attempts to inline some functions.
	* signal.c: Modify misleading comment.
tests/
	* mutex8: New test.
	* mutex8n: New test.
	* mutex8e: New test.
	* mutex8r: New test.
	* cancel6a: New test.
	* cancel6d: New test.
	* cleanup0.c: Add pragmas for inline optimisation control.
	* cleanup1.c: Add pragmas for inline optimisation control.
	* cleanup2.c: Add pragmas for inline optimisation control.
	* cleanup3.c: Add pragmas for inline optimisation control.
	* condvar7.c: Add pragmas for inline optimisation control.
	* condvar8.c: Add pragmas for inline optimisation control.
	* condvar9.c: Add pragmas for inline optimisation control.
Diffstat (limited to 'README.NONPORTABLE')
| -rw-r--r-- | README.NONPORTABLE | 6 | 
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
| diff --git a/README.NONPORTABLE b/README.NONPORTABLE index a4e21f3..b6e6768 100644 --- a/README.NONPORTABLE +++ b/README.NONPORTABLE @@ -65,9 +65,9 @@ int  pthread_num_processors_np          This routine (found on HPUX systems) returns the number of processors -        in the system. This implementations actually returns the number of -        processors available to the process, which can be a different (lower) -        value depending on the process's affinity mask. +        in the system. This implementation actually returns the number of +        processors available to the process, which can be a lower number +        than the system's number, depending on the process's affinity mask.  BOOL  pthread_win32_process_attach_np (void); | 
