Fix Thread.pm
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / lib / Thread.pm
CommitLineData
43d3ddbe 1package Thread;
2
4038bebf 3use strict;
4
4cf4ea45 5our($VERSION, $ithreads, $othreads);
4038bebf 6
43d3ddbe 7BEGIN {
9d40afd1 8 $VERSION = '2.01';
43d3ddbe 9 use Config;
4038bebf 10 $ithreads = $Config{useithreads};
11 $othreads = $Config{use5005threads};
43d3ddbe 12}
13
14require Exporter;
15use XSLoader ();
4cf4ea45 16our(@ISA, @EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK);
43d3ddbe 17
18@ISA = qw(Exporter);
19
20BEGIN {
21 if ($ithreads) {
dfca11dd 22 @EXPORT = qw(cond_wait cond_broadcast cond_signal)
43d3ddbe 23 } elsif ($othreads) {
24 @EXPORT_OK = qw(cond_signal cond_broadcast cond_wait);
25 }
26 push @EXPORT_OK, qw(async yield);
27}
28
29=head1 NAME
30
3d1f1caf 31Thread - manipulate threads in Perl (for old code only)
43d3ddbe 32
33=head1 CAVEAT
34
35Perl has two thread models.
36
37In Perl 5.005 the thread model was that all data is implicitly shared
38and shared access to data has to be explicitly synchronized.
39This model is called "5005threads".
40
41In Perl 5.6 a new model was introduced in which all is was thread
42local and shared access to data has to be explicitly declared.
43This model is called "ithreads", for "interpreter threads".
44
45In Perl 5.6 the ithreads model was not available as a public API,
46only as an internal API that was available for extension writers,
47and to implement fork() emulation on Win32 platforms.
48
49In Perl 5.8 the ithreads model became available through the C<threads>
50module.
51
9d40afd1 52In Perl 5.10, the 5005threads model will be removed from the Perl interpreter.
53
43d3ddbe 54Neither model is configured by default into Perl (except, as mentioned
8a20485c 55above, in Win32 ithreads are always available.) You can see your
56Perl's threading configuration by running C<perl -V> and looking for
57the I<use...threads> variables, or inside script by C<use Config;>
58and testing for C<$Config{use5005threads}> and C<$Config{useithreads}>.
59
60For old code and interim backwards compatibility, the Thread module
61has been reworked to function as a frontend for both 5005threads and
62ithreads.
43d3ddbe 63
43d3ddbe 64Note that the compatibility is not complete: because the data sharing
65models are directly opposed, anything to do with data sharing has to
66be thought differently. With the ithreads you must explicitly share()
67variables between the threads.
68
8a20485c 69For new code the use of the C<Thread> module is discouraged and
3d1f1caf 70the direct use of the C<threads> and C<threads::shared> modules
8a20485c 71is encouraged instead.
72
43d3ddbe 73Finally, note that there are many known serious problems with the
745005threads, one of the least of which is that regular expression
75match variables like $1 are not threadsafe, that is, they easily get
76corrupted by competing threads. Other problems include more insidious
77data corruption and mysterious crashes. You are seriously urged to
78use ithreads instead.
79
80=head1 SYNOPSIS
81
9d40afd1 82 use Thread qw(:DEFAULT async yield);
43d3ddbe 83
84 my $t = Thread->new(\&start_sub, @start_args);
85
86 $result = $t->join;
9d40afd1 87 $result = $t->eval; # not available with ithreads
43d3ddbe 88 $t->detach;
89
90 if ($t->done) {
91 $t->join;
92 }
93
94 if($t->equal($another_thread)) {
9d40afd1 95 # ...
43d3ddbe 96 }
97
98 yield();
99
9d40afd1 100 my $tid = Thread->self->tid;
43d3ddbe 101
102 lock($scalar);
103 lock(@array);
104 lock(%hash);
105
9d40afd1 106 lock(\&sub); # not available with ithreads
43d3ddbe 107
9d40afd1 108 $flags = $t->flags; # not available with ithreads
43d3ddbe 109
9d40afd1 110 my @list = Thread->list;
43d3ddbe 111
112=head1 DESCRIPTION
113
114The C<Thread> module provides multithreading support for perl.
115
116=head1 FUNCTIONS
117
118=over 8
119
120=item $thread = Thread->new(\&start_sub)
121
122=item $thread = Thread->new(\&start_sub, LIST)
123
124C<new> starts a new thread of execution in the referenced subroutine. The
125optional list is passed as parameters to the subroutine. Execution
126continues in both the subroutine and the code after the C<new> call.
127
128C<Thread-&gt;new> returns a thread object representing the newly created
129thread.
130
131=item lock VARIABLE
132
dfca11dd 133C<lock> places a lock on a variable until the lock goes out of scope.
43d3ddbe 134
135If the variable is locked by another thread, the C<lock> call will
136block until it's available. C<lock> is recursive, so multiple calls
137to C<lock> are safe--the variable will remain locked until the
138outermost lock on the variable goes out of scope.
139
140Locks on variables only affect C<lock> calls--they do I<not> affect normal
141access to a variable. (Locks on subs are different, and covered in a bit.)
142If you really, I<really> want locks to block access, then go ahead and tie
143them to something and manage this yourself. This is done on purpose.
144While managing access to variables is a good thing, Perl doesn't force
145you out of its living room...
146
147If a container object, such as a hash or array, is locked, all the
148elements of that container are not locked. For example, if a thread
149does a C<lock @a>, any other thread doing a C<lock($a[12])> won't
150block.
151
152With 5005threads you may also C<lock> a sub, using C<lock &sub>.
153Any calls to that sub from another thread will block until the lock
9d40afd1 154is released. This behaviour is not equivalent to declaring the sub
155with the C<:locked> attribute (5005threads only). The C<:locked>
156attribute serializes
43d3ddbe 157access to a subroutine, but allows different threads non-simultaneous
158access. C<lock &sub>, on the other hand, will not allow I<any> other
159thread access for the duration of the lock.
160
161Finally, C<lock> will traverse up references exactly I<one> level.
162C<lock(\$a)> is equivalent to C<lock($a)>, while C<lock(\\$a)> is not.
163
164=item async BLOCK;
165
166C<async> creates a thread to execute the block immediately following
167it. This block is treated as an anonymous sub, and so must have a
168semi-colon after the closing brace. Like C<Thread-&gt;new>, C<async>
169returns a thread object.
170
171=item Thread->self
172
173The C<Thread-E<gt>self> function returns a thread object that represents
174the thread making the C<Thread-E<gt>self> call.
175
9d40afd1 176=item Thread->list
177
178Returns a list of all non-joined, non-detached Thread objects.
179
43d3ddbe 180=item cond_wait VARIABLE
181
182The C<cond_wait> function takes a B<locked> variable as
183a parameter, unlocks the variable, and blocks until another thread
184does a C<cond_signal> or C<cond_broadcast> for that same locked
185variable. The variable that C<cond_wait> blocked on is relocked
186after the C<cond_wait> is satisfied. If there are multiple threads
187C<cond_wait>ing on the same variable, all but one will reblock waiting
188to reaquire the lock on the variable. (So if you're only using
189C<cond_wait> for synchronization, give up the lock as soon as
190possible.)
191
192=item cond_signal VARIABLE
193
194The C<cond_signal> function takes a locked variable as a parameter and
195unblocks one thread that's C<cond_wait>ing on that variable. If more than
196one thread is blocked in a C<cond_wait> on that variable, only one (and
197which one is indeterminate) will be unblocked.
198
199If there are no threads blocked in a C<cond_wait> on the variable,
200the signal is discarded.
201
202=item cond_broadcast VARIABLE
203
204The C<cond_broadcast> function works similarly to C<cond_signal>.
205C<cond_broadcast>, though, will unblock B<all> the threads that are
206blocked in a C<cond_wait> on the locked variable, rather than only
207one.
208
209=item yield
210
211The C<yield> function allows another thread to take control of the
212CPU. The exact results are implementation-dependent.
213
214=back
215
216=head1 METHODS
217
218=over 8
219
220=item join
221
222C<join> waits for a thread to end and returns any values the thread
223exited with. C<join> will block until the thread has ended, though
224it won't block if the thread has already terminated.
225
226If the thread being C<join>ed C<die>d, the error it died with will
227be returned at this time. If you don't want the thread performing
228the C<join> to die as well, you should either wrap the C<join> in
229an C<eval> or use the C<eval> thread method instead of C<join>.
230
231=item eval
232
233The C<eval> method wraps an C<eval> around a C<join>, and so waits for
234a thread to exit, passing along any values the thread might have returned.
235Errors, of course, get placed into C<$@>. (Not available with ithreads.)
236
237=item detach
238
239C<detach> tells a thread that it is never going to be joined i.e.
240that all traces of its existence can be removed once it stops running.
241Errors in detached threads will not be visible anywhere - if you want
242to catch them, you should use $SIG{__DIE__} or something like that.
243
9d40afd1 244=item equal
43d3ddbe 245
246C<equal> tests whether two thread objects represent the same thread and
247returns true if they do.
248
249=item tid
250
251The C<tid> method returns the tid of a thread. The tid is
252a monotonically increasing integer assigned when a thread is
253created. The main thread of a program will have a tid of zero,
254while subsequent threads will have tids assigned starting with one.
255
256=item flags
257
258The C<flags> method returns the flags for the thread. This is the
259integer value corresponding to the internal flags for the thread,
260and the value may not be all that meaningful to you.
261(Not available with ithreads.)
262
263=item done
264
265The C<done> method returns true if the thread you're checking has
9d40afd1 266finished, and false otherwise.
43d3ddbe 267
268=back
269
270=head1 LIMITATIONS
271
272The sequence number used to assign tids is a simple integer, and no
273checking is done to make sure the tid isn't currently in use. If a
274program creates more than 2**32 - 1 threads in a single run, threads
275may be assigned duplicate tids. This limitation may be lifted in
276a future version of Perl.
277
278=head1 SEE ALSO
279
280L<threads::shared> (not available with 5005threads)
281
282L<attributes>, L<Thread::Queue>, L<Thread::Semaphore>,
283L<Thread::Specific> (not available with ithreads)
284
285=cut
286
287#
288# Methods
289#
290
291#
292# Exported functions
293#
294
295sub async (&) {
9d40afd1 296 return Thread->new(shift);
43d3ddbe 297}
298
299sub eval {
300 return eval { shift->join; };
301}
302
303sub unimplemented {
304 print $_[0], " unimplemented with ",
305 $Config{useithreads} ? "ithreads" : "5005threads", "\n";
43d3ddbe 306}
307
308sub unimplement {
9d40afd1 309 no strict 'refs';
310 no warnings 'redefine';
43d3ddbe 311 for my $m (@_) {
312 *{"Thread::$m"} = sub { unimplemented $m };
313 }
314}
315
316BEGIN {
317 if ($ithreads) {
733129fe 318 if ($othreads) {
319 require Carp;
320 Carp::croak("This Perl has both ithreads and 5005threads (serious malconfiguration)");
321 }
9d40afd1 322 no strict 'refs';
323 require threads;
e7b4e24c 324 for my $m (qw(new join detach yield self tid equal list)) {
43d3ddbe 325 *{"Thread::$m"} = \&{"threads::$m"};
326 }
9d40afd1 327 require threads::shared;
dfca11dd 328 for my $m (qw(cond_signal cond_broadcast cond_wait)) {
9d40afd1 329 *{"Thread::$m"} = \&{"threads::shared::$m"};
43d3ddbe 330 }
9d40afd1 331 *Thread::done = sub { return ! shift->threads::is_running(); };
332 unimplement(qw(eval flags));
43d3ddbe 333 } elsif ($othreads) {
334 XSLoader::load 'Thread';
43d3ddbe 335 } else {
336 require Carp;
733129fe 337 Carp::croak("This Perl has neither ithreads nor 5005threads");
43d3ddbe 338 }
339}
340
3411;