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1 package Thread; 2 3 use strict; 4 use warnings; 5 no warnings 'redefine'; 6 7 our $VERSION = '3.02'; 8 $VERSION = eval $VERSION; 9 10 BEGIN { 11 use Config; 12 if (! $Config{useithreads}) { 13 die("This Perl not built to support threads\n"); 14 } 15 } 16 17 use threads 'yield'; 18 use threads::shared; 19 20 require Exporter; 21 our @ISA = qw(Exporter threads); 22 our @EXPORT = qw(cond_wait cond_broadcast cond_signal); 23 our @EXPORT_OK = qw(async yield); 24 25 sub async (&;@) { return Thread->new(shift); } 26 27 sub done { return ! shift->is_running(); } 28 29 sub eval { die("'eval' not implemented with 'ithreads'\n"); }; 30 sub flags { die("'flags' not implemented with 'ithreads'\n"); }; 31 32 1; 33 34 __END__ 35 36 =head1 NAME 37 38 Thread - Manipulate threads in Perl (for old code only) 39 40 =head1 DEPRECATED 41 42 The C<Thread> module served as the frontend to the old-style thread model, 43 called I<5005threads>, that was introduced in release 5.005. That model was 44 deprecated, and has been removed in version 5.10. 45 46 For old code and interim backwards compatibility, the C<Thread> module has 47 been reworked to function as a frontend for the new interpreter threads 48 (I<ithreads>) model. However, some previous functionality is not available. 49 Further, the data sharing models between the two thread models are completely 50 different, and anything to do with data sharing has to be thought differently. 51 With I<ithreads>, you must explicitly C<share()> variables between the 52 threads. 53 54 You are strongly encouraged to migrate any existing threaded code to the new 55 model (i.e., use the C<threads> and C<threads::shared> modules) as soon as 56 possible. 57 58 =head1 HISTORY 59 60 In Perl 5.005, the thread model was that all data is implicitly shared, and 61 shared access to data has to be explicitly synchronized. This model is called 62 I<5005threads>. 63 64 In Perl 5.6, a new model was introduced in which all is was thread local and 65 shared access to data has to be explicitly declared. This model is called 66 I<ithreads>, for "interpreter threads". 67 68 In Perl 5.6, the I<ithreads> model was not available as a public API; only as 69 an internal API that was available for extension writers, and to implement 70 fork() emulation on Win32 platforms. 71 72 In Perl 5.8, the I<ithreads> model became available through the C<threads> 73 module, and the I<5005threads> model was deprecated. 74 75 In Perl 5.10, the I<5005threads> model was removed from the Perl interpreter. 76 77 =head1 SYNOPSIS 78 79 use Thread qw(:DEFAULT async yield); 80 81 my $t = Thread->new(\&start_sub, @start_args); 82 83 $result = $t->join; 84 $t->detach; 85 86 if ($t->done) { 87 $t->join; 88 } 89 90 if($t->equal($another_thread)) { 91 # ... 92 } 93 94 yield(); 95 96 my $tid = Thread->self->tid; 97 98 lock($scalar); 99 lock(@array); 100 lock(%hash); 101 102 my @list = Thread->list; 103 104 =head1 DESCRIPTION 105 106 The C<Thread> module provides multithreading support for Perl. 107 108 =head1 FUNCTIONS 109 110 =over 8 111 112 =item $thread = Thread->new(\&start_sub) 113 114 =item $thread = Thread->new(\&start_sub, LIST) 115 116 C<new> starts a new thread of execution in the referenced subroutine. The 117 optional list is passed as parameters to the subroutine. Execution 118 continues in both the subroutine and the code after the C<new> call. 119 120 C<Thread->new> returns a thread object representing the newly created 121 thread. 122 123 =item lock VARIABLE 124 125 C<lock> places a lock on a variable until the lock goes out of scope. 126 127 If the variable is locked by another thread, the C<lock> call will 128 block until it's available. C<lock> is recursive, so multiple calls 129 to C<lock> are safe--the variable will remain locked until the 130 outermost lock on the variable goes out of scope. 131 132 Locks on variables only affect C<lock> calls--they do I<not> affect normal 133 access to a variable. (Locks on subs are different, and covered in a bit.) 134 If you really, I<really> want locks to block access, then go ahead and tie 135 them to something and manage this yourself. This is done on purpose. 136 While managing access to variables is a good thing, Perl doesn't force 137 you out of its living room... 138 139 If a container object, such as a hash or array, is locked, all the 140 elements of that container are not locked. For example, if a thread 141 does a C<lock @a>, any other thread doing a C<lock($a[12])> won't 142 block. 143 144 Finally, C<lock> will traverse up references exactly I<one> level. 145 C<lock(\$a)> is equivalent to C<lock($a)>, while C<lock(\\$a)> is not. 146 147 =item async BLOCK; 148 149 C<async> creates a thread to execute the block immediately following 150 it. This block is treated as an anonymous sub, and so must have a 151 semi-colon after the closing brace. Like C<Thread->new>, C<async> 152 returns a thread object. 153 154 =item Thread->self 155 156 The C<Thread-E<gt>self> function returns a thread object that represents 157 the thread making the C<Thread-E<gt>self> call. 158 159 =item Thread->list 160 161 Returns a list of all non-joined, non-detached Thread objects. 162 163 =item cond_wait VARIABLE 164 165 The C<cond_wait> function takes a B<locked> variable as 166 a parameter, unlocks the variable, and blocks until another thread 167 does a C<cond_signal> or C<cond_broadcast> for that same locked 168 variable. The variable that C<cond_wait> blocked on is relocked 169 after the C<cond_wait> is satisfied. If there are multiple threads 170 C<cond_wait>ing on the same variable, all but one will reblock waiting 171 to reaquire the lock on the variable. (So if you're only using 172 C<cond_wait> for synchronization, give up the lock as soon as 173 possible.) 174 175 =item cond_signal VARIABLE 176 177 The C<cond_signal> function takes a locked variable as a parameter and 178 unblocks one thread that's C<cond_wait>ing on that variable. If more than 179 one thread is blocked in a C<cond_wait> on that variable, only one (and 180 which one is indeterminate) will be unblocked. 181 182 If there are no threads blocked in a C<cond_wait> on the variable, 183 the signal is discarded. 184 185 =item cond_broadcast VARIABLE 186 187 The C<cond_broadcast> function works similarly to C<cond_signal>. 188 C<cond_broadcast>, though, will unblock B<all> the threads that are 189 blocked in a C<cond_wait> on the locked variable, rather than only 190 one. 191 192 =item yield 193 194 The C<yield> function allows another thread to take control of the 195 CPU. The exact results are implementation-dependent. 196 197 =back 198 199 =head1 METHODS 200 201 =over 8 202 203 =item join 204 205 C<join> waits for a thread to end and returns any values the thread 206 exited with. C<join> will block until the thread has ended, though 207 it won't block if the thread has already terminated. 208 209 If the thread being C<join>ed C<die>d, the error it died with will 210 be returned at this time. If you don't want the thread performing 211 the C<join> to die as well, you should either wrap the C<join> in 212 an C<eval> or use the C<eval> thread method instead of C<join>. 213 214 =item detach 215 216 C<detach> tells a thread that it is never going to be joined i.e. 217 that all traces of its existence can be removed once it stops running. 218 Errors in detached threads will not be visible anywhere - if you want 219 to catch them, you should use $SIG{__DIE__} or something like that. 220 221 =item equal 222 223 C<equal> tests whether two thread objects represent the same thread and 224 returns true if they do. 225 226 =item tid 227 228 The C<tid> method returns the tid of a thread. The tid is 229 a monotonically increasing integer assigned when a thread is 230 created. The main thread of a program will have a tid of zero, 231 while subsequent threads will have tids assigned starting with one. 232 233 =item done 234 235 The C<done> method returns true if the thread you're checking has 236 finished, and false otherwise. 237 238 =back 239 240 =head1 DEFUNCT 241 242 The following were implemented with I<5005threads>, but are no longer 243 available with I<ithreads>. 244 245 =over 8 246 247 =item lock(\&sub) 248 249 With 5005threads, you could also C<lock> a sub such that any calls to that sub 250 from another thread would block until the lock was released. 251 252 Also, subroutines could be declared with the C<:locked> attribute which would 253 serialize access to the subroutine, but allowed different threads 254 non-simultaneous access. 255 256 =item eval 257 258 The C<eval> method wrapped an C<eval> around a C<join>, and so waited for a 259 thread to exit, passing along any values the thread might have returned and 260 placing any errors into C<$@>. 261 262 =item flags 263 264 The C<flags> method returned the flags for the thread - an integer value 265 corresponding to the internal flags for the thread. 266 267 =back 268 269 =head1 SEE ALSO 270 271 L<threads>, L<threads::shared>, L<Thread::Queue>, L<Thread::Semaphore> 272 273 =cut
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