From 879bb0613c03b10bdf91aa862c2463b7f9f99087 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: rpj Date: Tue, 2 Sep 2003 16:15:05 +0000 Subject: Added cancelation of/from non-POSIX threads; minor fixes; minor changes. --- NEWS | 42 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 42 insertions(+) (limited to 'NEWS') diff --git a/NEWS b/NEWS index b4846a4..b54defe 100644 --- a/NEWS +++ b/NEWS @@ -1,3 +1,45 @@ +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. + + SNAPSHOT 2003-08-19 ------------------- -- cgit v1.2.3