Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Linux In unix how we can test or check race condition in c program by using multi threads Post 302290949 by Franklin52 on Tuesday 24th of February 2009 10:34:45 AM
Old 02-24-2009
No duplicate or cross-posting, please read the rules.

Continue here:

In unix how we can test or check race condition in c program by using multi threads

Thread closed.
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

race condition with wait() function

Hi, I'm currently writing a bash script, that starts multiple threads: ____________________ #!/bin/bash loop=0 while((loop!=10)) do thread & ((loop++)) done #wait for all sub-processes (thread) to finish wait ___________________ Now I want to know, what happens, if a... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: tho99
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

In unix how we can test or check race condition in a c program by using multi threads

In unix how we can test or check race condition in any c program by using multi thread programming (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: afroze
1 Replies

3. Programming

In unix how we can test or check race condition in c program by using multi threads

In unix how we can test or check race condition in any c program by using multi thread programming (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: afroze
5 Replies

4. Programming

In unix how we can test or check race condition in a c program by using multi threads

In unix how we can test or check race condition in any c program by using multi thread programming (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: afroze
1 Replies

5. Programming

Race condition with PTY

I've been experimenting with pseudo-terminals and found something I don't quite understand. Writing an EOF character to the master end doesn't work quite as I expect. Once I've written any other data, the master pty seems to treat a single ^D as a seperator, i.e. writing "abcabc" would let cat do... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Corona688
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to check weather a string is like test* or test* ot *test* in if condition

How to check weather a string is like test* or test* ot *test* in if condition (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: johnjerome
5 Replies

7. Programming

problem about race condition

Hi all, i'm reading Andrew S.Tanenbaum's book --- Modern Operating System.At the part of discussing race condition.And the author gives a solution with using the TSL instruction,say that one process must call the enter_region function before entering the critical regions and call the leave_region... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: homeboy
0 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Shell script that check the argument passed to it and prints error if test condition is not met

I want to make a script that check for the argument passed to it and generates an error in case any character/string argument passed to it. I am using below code, but its not working. can anyone help. #!/bin/bash if ]; then echo 'An integer argument is passed to the script hence... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mukulverma2408
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

if condition to check the hostname (unix)

I want to know the if condition in checking the hostname in unix and then running a cron job (all in a single line) Thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: prash358
2 Replies
bench(1)						      General Commands Manual							  bench(1)

NAME
bench - http benchmark SYNOPSIS
bench [-n requests] [-c concurrency] [-t timeout] [-k] [-K count] [-C cookie-file] [http://]host[:port]/uri DESCRIPTION
bench is a HTTP benchmark program that can fetch the same URL over and over again, or fetch several URLs (coming in from stdin). If you specify a URL on the command line, this URL will be fetch many times (specify with -n, default: 10000) with several connections open in parallen (specify with -c, default: 10). You can specify a timeout (per request) in seconds with -t. The -k switch activates keep-alive mode. In keep-alive mode, the TCP connection is not closed between requests. You also have to specify how many HTTP requests can go over one TCP connection with -K. bench can also send one HTTP cookie per connection, as specified using a cookie file. The cookie file is read line by line, and each request gets the next line inserted into it. So each line should look something like this: Cookie: foo=bar If the end of the file is reached, bench restarts it at the beginning. AUTHOR
Initially written by Felix von Leitner <felix-gatling@fefe.de>. LICENSE
GPLv2 (see http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html) bench(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:44 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy