/* Thread definitions
Copyright (C) 2012-2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GNU Emacs.
GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with GNU Emacs. If not, see . */
#ifndef THREAD_H
#define THREAD_H
#include "regex.h"
#ifdef WINDOWSNT
#include
#endif
#ifdef MSDOS
#include /* sigset_t */
#endif
#include "sysselect.h" /* FIXME */
#include "systime.h" /* FIXME */
#include "systhread.h"
struct thread_state
{
union vectorlike_header header;
/* The buffer in which the last search was performed, or
Qt if the last search was done in a string;
Qnil if no searching has been done yet. */
Lisp_Object m_last_thing_searched;
#define last_thing_searched (current_thread->m_last_thing_searched)
Lisp_Object m_saved_last_thing_searched;
#define saved_last_thing_searched (current_thread->m_saved_last_thing_searched)
/* The thread's name. */
Lisp_Object name;
/* The thread's function. */
Lisp_Object function;
/* If non-nil, this thread has been signaled. */
Lisp_Object error_symbol;
Lisp_Object error_data;
/* If we are waiting for some event, this holds the object we are
waiting on. */
Lisp_Object event_object;
/* m_stack_bottom must be the first non-Lisp field. */
/* An address near the bottom of the stack.
Tells GC how to save a copy of the stack. */
char *m_stack_bottom;
#define stack_bottom (current_thread->m_stack_bottom)
/* The address of an object near the C stack top, used to determine
which words need to be scanned by the garbage collector. This is
also used to detect heuristically whether segmentation violation
address indicates stack overflow, as opposed to some internal
error in Emacs. If the C function F calls G which calls H which
calls ... F, then at least one of the functions in the chain
should set this to the address of a local variable. */
void *stack_top;
struct catchtag *m_catchlist;
#define catchlist (current_thread->m_catchlist)
/* Chain of condition handlers currently in effect.
The elements of this chain are contained in the stack frames
of Fcondition_case and internal_condition_case.
When an error is signaled (by calling Fsignal),
this chain is searched for an element that applies. */
struct handler *m_handlerlist;
#define handlerlist (current_thread->m_handlerlist)
struct handler *m_handlerlist_sentinel;
#define handlerlist_sentinel (current_thread->m_handlerlist_sentinel)
/* Current number of specbindings allocated in specpdl. */
ptrdiff_t m_specpdl_size;
#define specpdl_size (current_thread->m_specpdl_size)
/* Pointer to beginning of specpdl. */
union specbinding *m_specpdl;
#define specpdl (current_thread->m_specpdl)
/* Pointer to first unused element in specpdl. */
union specbinding *m_specpdl_ptr;
#define specpdl_ptr (current_thread->m_specpdl_ptr)
/* Depth in Lisp evaluations and function calls. */
EMACS_INT m_lisp_eval_depth;
#define lisp_eval_depth (current_thread->m_lisp_eval_depth)
/* This points to the current buffer. */
struct buffer *m_current_buffer;
#define current_buffer (current_thread->m_current_buffer)
/* Every call to re_match, etc., must pass &search_regs as the regs
argument unless you can show it is unnecessary (i.e., if re_match
is certainly going to be called again before region-around-match
can be called).
Since the registers are now dynamically allocated, we need to make
sure not to refer to the Nth register before checking that it has
been allocated by checking search_regs.num_regs.
The regex code keeps track of whether it has allocated the search
buffer using bits in the re_pattern_buffer. This means that whenever
you compile a new pattern, it completely forgets whether it has
allocated any registers, and will allocate new registers the next
time you call a searching or matching function. Therefore, we need
to call re_set_registers after compiling a new pattern or after
setting the match registers, so that the regex functions will be
able to free or re-allocate it properly. */
struct re_registers m_search_regs;
#define search_regs (current_thread->m_search_regs)
/* If non-zero the match data have been saved in saved_search_regs
during the execution of a sentinel or filter. */
bool m_search_regs_saved;
#define search_regs_saved (current_thread->m_search_regs_saved)
struct re_registers m_saved_search_regs;
#define saved_search_regs (current_thread->m_saved_search_regs)
/* This is the string or buffer in which we
are matching. It is used for looking up syntax properties.
If the value is a Lisp string object, we are matching text in that
string; if it's nil, we are matching text in the current buffer; if
it's t, we are matching text in a C string. */
Lisp_Object m_re_match_object;
#define re_match_object (current_thread->m_re_match_object)
/* This member is different from waiting_for_input.
It is used to communicate to a lisp process-filter/sentinel (via the
function Fwaiting_for_user_input_p) whether Emacs was waiting
for user-input when that process-filter was called.
waiting_for_input cannot be used as that is by definition 0 when
lisp code is being evalled.
This is also used in record_asynch_buffer_change.
For that purpose, this must be 0
when not inside wait_reading_process_output. */
int m_waiting_for_user_input_p;
#define waiting_for_user_input_p (current_thread->m_waiting_for_user_input_p)
/* True while doing kbd input. */
bool m_waiting_for_input;
#define waiting_for_input (current_thread->m_waiting_for_input)
/* For longjmp to where kbd input is being done. This is per-thread
so that if more than one thread calls read_char, they don't
clobber each other's getcjmp, which will cause
quit_throw_to_read_char crash due to using a wrong stack. */
sys_jmp_buf m_getcjmp;
#define getcjmp (current_thread->m_getcjmp)
/* The OS identifier for this thread. */
sys_thread_t thread_id;
/* The condition variable for this thread. This is associated with
the global lock. This thread broadcasts to it when it exits. */
sys_cond_t thread_condvar;
/* This thread might be waiting for some condition. If so, this
points to the condition. If the thread is interrupted, the
interrupter should broadcast to this condition. */
sys_cond_t *wait_condvar;
/* This thread might have released the global lock. If so, this is
non-zero. When a thread runs outside thread_select with this
flag non-zero, it means it has been interrupted by SIGINT while
in thread_select, and didn't have a chance of acquiring the lock.
It must do so ASAP. */
int not_holding_lock;
/* Threads are kept on a linked list. */
struct thread_state *next_thread;
};
INLINE bool
THREADP (Lisp_Object a)
{
return PSEUDOVECTORP (a, PVEC_THREAD);
}
INLINE void
CHECK_THREAD (Lisp_Object x)
{
CHECK_TYPE (THREADP (x), Qthreadp, x);
}
INLINE struct thread_state *
XTHREAD (Lisp_Object a)
{
eassert (THREADP (a));
return XUNTAG (a, Lisp_Vectorlike);
}
/* A mutex in lisp is represented by a system condition variable.
The system mutex associated with this condition variable is the
global lock.
Using a condition variable lets us implement interruptibility for
lisp mutexes. */
typedef struct
{
/* The owning thread, or NULL if unlocked. */
struct thread_state *owner;
/* The lock count. */
unsigned int count;
/* The underlying system condition variable. */
sys_cond_t condition;
} lisp_mutex_t;
/* A mutex as a lisp object. */
struct Lisp_Mutex
{
union vectorlike_header header;
/* The name of the mutex, or nil. */
Lisp_Object name;
/* The lower-level mutex object. */
lisp_mutex_t mutex;
};
INLINE bool
MUTEXP (Lisp_Object a)
{
return PSEUDOVECTORP (a, PVEC_MUTEX);
}
INLINE void
CHECK_MUTEX (Lisp_Object x)
{
CHECK_TYPE (MUTEXP (x), Qmutexp, x);
}
INLINE struct Lisp_Mutex *
XMUTEX (Lisp_Object a)
{
eassert (MUTEXP (a));
return XUNTAG (a, Lisp_Vectorlike);
}
/* A condition variable as a lisp object. */
struct Lisp_CondVar
{
union vectorlike_header header;
/* The associated mutex. */
Lisp_Object mutex;
/* The name of the condition variable, or nil. */
Lisp_Object name;
/* The lower-level condition variable object. */
sys_cond_t cond;
};
INLINE bool
CONDVARP (Lisp_Object a)
{
return PSEUDOVECTORP (a, PVEC_CONDVAR);
}
INLINE void
CHECK_CONDVAR (Lisp_Object x)
{
CHECK_TYPE (CONDVARP (x), Qcondition_variable_p, x);
}
INLINE struct Lisp_CondVar *
XCONDVAR (Lisp_Object a)
{
eassert (CONDVARP (a));
return XUNTAG (a, Lisp_Vectorlike);
}
extern struct thread_state *current_thread;
extern void finalize_one_thread (struct thread_state *state);
extern void finalize_one_mutex (struct Lisp_Mutex *);
extern void finalize_one_condvar (struct Lisp_CondVar *);
extern void maybe_reacquire_global_lock (void);
extern void init_threads_once (void);
extern void init_threads (void);
extern void syms_of_threads (void);
extern bool main_thread_p (void *);
typedef int select_func (int, fd_set *, fd_set *, fd_set *,
const struct timespec *, const sigset_t *);
int thread_select (select_func *func, int max_fds, fd_set *rfds,
fd_set *wfds, fd_set *efds, struct timespec *timeout,
sigset_t *sigmask);
bool thread_check_current_buffer (struct buffer *);
#endif /* THREAD_H */