1:N threading
Daniel Eischen
eischen at pcnet1.pcnet.com
Thu Apr 3 15:22:25 PST 2003
On Thu, 3 Apr 2003, Terry Lambert wrote:
> Daniel Eischen wrote:
> > Libc_r will go bye-bye. The KSE library will give you 1:N
> > as long as you don't use pthread_setconcurrency() and don't
> > create any PTHREAD_SCOPE_PROCESS threads.
>
>
> I think that maybe you need to get over the "fear factor" here.
>
> Specifically, it's probably time to commit a "libkse", the same
> way that Jeff committed a "libthr", so that it doesn't directly
> replace "libc_r", and leave people hanging over a cliff if it
> has a bug.
There already is a "libkse" committed. It's in src/lib/libpthread.
It sorta works from what I understand (so far I've only
run my locally modified version).
My changes haven't been committed yet because I at least want
to get it to the point that it can run most of the test programs
(to be on-par with the current libpthread). David, Julian, and
myself are working out some issues with signals, but that isn't
currently hindering my progress.
I am getting closer to be able to run some of the more complicated
test programs.
> Better to take an approach that doesn't piss people off, but gets
> the code to a wider audience.
>
> Is this a possibility? The only thing that seems screwed up is
> the signals processing. Jeff's code panic's the system with a
> lock order reversal on exit processing, under some circumstances,
> but it's tolerated because it didn't outright replace "libc_r",
> and offer an alternative to "conservative" -CURRENT users.
The patches are available:
http://people.freebsd.org/~deischen/libpthread.diffs
FYI, since this is a new mailing list, the above changes
are meant to give libpthread M:N capability.
I don't need testers; I have enough bugs that I know about
to fix.
--
Dan Eischen
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