Dear Moderator
I am not able to post any new thread or post reply to mine old thread.
Kindly help as i am stuck on one problem and needed suggestion.
Regards
Jaydeep (1 Reply)
Parent Thread Of Child Thread
Suppose a process creates some threads say threadC and threadD.
Later on each of these threads create new child threads say threadC1, threadC2, threadC3 etc. So a tree of threads will get created.
Is there any way to find out the parent thread of one such... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I, have an output with 3 different values each below the other like:
# echo $bla
123
345
234
Each value is in one line and for the further processing I need every single value.
For example is there a way to grep line 2, like:
# echo $bla | grep --line 2
345
:)
Thank you in... (6 Replies)
PTHREAD_SUSPEND_NP(3) BSD Library Functions Manual PTHREAD_SUSPEND_NP(3)NAME
pthread_suspend_np, pthread_resume_np -- suspend/resume the given thread
LIBRARY
POSIX Threads Library (libpthread, -lpthread)
SYNOPSIS
#include <pthread.h>
int
pthread_suspend_np(pthread_t thread);
int
pthread_resume_np(pthread_t thread);
DESCRIPTION
The pthread_suspend_np() function suspends the thread given as argument. If thread is the currently running thread as returned by
pthread_self(3), the function fails and returns EDEADLK. Otherwise, it removes the named thread from the running queue, and adds it to the
suspended queue. The thread will remain blocked until pthread_resume_np() is called on it. In other words, pthread_resume_np() resumes the
thread given as argument, if it was suspended.
RETURN VALUES
Both functions return 0 on success and an error number indicating the reason for the failure.
COMPATIBILITY
These functions are non-standard extensions.
ERRORS
The pthread_suspend_np() function may fail if:
[EDEADLK] The thread requested to suspend was the currently running thread.
[ESRCH] The supplied thread was invalid.
The pthread_resume_np() function may fail if:
[ESRCH] The supplied thread was invalid.
NOTES
Some pthread_suspend_np() implementations may allow suspending the current thread. This is dangerous, because the semantics of the function
would then require the scheduler to schedule another thread, causing a thread context switch. Since that context switch can happen in a sig-
nal handler by someone calling pthread_suspend_np() in a signal handler, this is currently not allowed.
In pthread_resume_np() the NetBSD implementation does not check if the thread argument is not already suspended. Some implementations might
return an error condition if pthread_resume_np() is called on a non-suspended thread.
SEE ALSO pthread_attr_setcreatesuspend_np(3), pthread_self(3)BSD July 9, 2010 BSD