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//! Native threads.
//!
//! ## The threading model
//!
//! An executing Rust program consists of a collection of native OS threads,
//! each with their own stack and local state. Threads can be named, and
//! provide some built-in support for low-level synchronization.
//!
//! Communication between threads can be done through
//! [channels], Rust's message-passing types, along with [other forms of thread
//! synchronization](../../std/sync/index.html) and shared-memory data
//! structures. In particular, types that are guaranteed to be
//! threadsafe are easily shared between threads using the
//! atomically-reference-counted container, [`Arc`].
//!
//! Fatal logic errors in Rust cause *thread panic*, during which
//! a thread will unwind the stack, running destructors and freeing
//! owned resources. While not meant as a 'try/catch' mechanism, panics
//! in Rust can nonetheless be caught (unless compiling with `panic=abort`) with
//! [`catch_unwind`](../../std/panic/fn.catch_unwind.html) and recovered
//! from, or alternatively be resumed with
//! [`resume_unwind`](../../std/panic/fn.resume_unwind.html). If the panic
//! is not caught the thread will exit, but the panic may optionally be
//! detected from a different thread with [`join`]. If the main thread panics
//! without the panic being caught, the application will exit with a
//! non-zero exit code.
//!
//! When the main thread of a Rust program terminates, the entire program shuts
//! down, even if other threads are still running. However, this module provides
//! convenient facilities for automatically waiting for the termination of a
//! child thread (i.e., join).
//!
//! ## Spawning a thread
//!
//! A new thread can be spawned using the [`thread::spawn`][`spawn`] function:
//!
//! ```rust
//! use std::thread;
//!
//! thread::spawn(move || {
//! // some work here
//! });
//! ```
//!
//! In this example, the spawned thread is "detached" from the current
//! thread. This means that it can outlive its parent (the thread that spawned
//! it), unless this parent is the main thread.
//!
//! The parent thread can also wait on the completion of the child
//! thread; a call to [`spawn`] produces a [`JoinHandle`], which provides
//! a `join` method for waiting:
//!
//! ```rust
//! use std::thread;
//!
//! let child = thread::spawn(move || {
//! // some work here
//! });
//! // some work here
//! let res = child.join();
//! ```
//!
//! The [`join`] method returns a [`thread::Result`] containing [`Ok`] of the final
//! value produced by the child thread, or [`Err`] of the value given to
//! a call to [`panic!`] if the child panicked.
//!
//! ## Configuring threads
//!
//! A new thread can be configured before it is spawned via the [`Builder`] type,
//! which currently allows you to set the name and stack size for the child thread:
//!
//! ```rust
//! # #![allow(unused_must_use)]
//! use std::thread;
//!
//! thread::Builder::new().name("child1".to_string()).spawn(move || {
//! println!("Hello, world!");
//! });
//! ```
//!
//! ## The `Thread` type
//!
//! Threads are represented via the [`Thread`] type, which you can get in one of
//! two ways:
//!
//! * By spawning a new thread, e.g., using the [`thread::spawn`][`spawn`]
//! function, and calling [`thread`][`JoinHandle::thread`] on the [`JoinHandle`].
//! * By requesting the current thread, using the [`thread::current`] function.
//!
//! The [`thread::current`] function is available even for threads not spawned
//! by the APIs of this module.
//!
//! ## Thread-local storage
//!
//! This module also provides an implementation of thread-local storage for Rust
//! programs. Thread-local storage is a method of storing data into a global
//! variable that each thread in the program will have its own copy of.
//! Threads do not share this data, so accesses do not need to be synchronized.
//!
//! A thread-local key owns the value it contains and will destroy the value when the
//! thread exits. It is created with the [`thread_local!`] macro and can contain any
//! value that is `'static` (no borrowed pointers). It provides an accessor function,
//! [`with`], that yields a shared reference to the value to the specified
//! closure. Thread-local keys allow only shared access to values, as there would be no
//! way to guarantee uniqueness if mutable borrows were allowed. Most values
//! will want to make use of some form of **interior mutability** through the
//! [`Cell`] or [`RefCell`] types.
//!
//! ## Naming threads
//!
//! Threads are able to have associated names for identification purposes. By default, spawned
//! threads are unnamed. To specify a name for a thread, build the thread with [`Builder`] and pass
//! the desired thread name to [`Builder::name`]. To retrieve the thread name from within the
//! thread, use [`Thread::name`]. A couple examples of where the name of a thread gets used:
//!
//! * If a panic occurs in a named thread, the thread name will be printed in the panic message.
//! * The thread name is provided to the OS where applicable (e.g., `pthread_setname_np` in
//! unix-like platforms).
//!
//! ## Stack size
//!
//! The default stack size for spawned threads is 2 MiB, though this particular stack size is
//! subject to change in the future. There are two ways to manually specify the stack size for
//! spawned threads:
//!
//! * Build the thread with [`Builder`] and pass the desired stack size to [`Builder::stack_size`].
//! * Set the `RUST_MIN_STACK` environment variable to an integer representing the desired stack
//! size (in bytes). Note that setting [`Builder::stack_size`] will override this.
//!
//! Note that the stack size of the main thread is *not* determined by Rust.
//!
//! [channels]: ../../std/sync/mpsc/index.html
//! [`Arc`]: ../../std/sync/struct.Arc.html
//! [`spawn`]: ../../std/thread/fn.spawn.html
//! [`JoinHandle`]: ../../std/thread/struct.JoinHandle.html
//! [`JoinHandle::thread`]: ../../std/thread/struct.JoinHandle.html#method.thread
//! [`join`]: ../../std/thread/struct.JoinHandle.html#method.join
//! [`Result`]: ../../std/result/enum.Result.html
//! [`Ok`]: ../../std/result/enum.Result.html#variant.Ok
//! [`Err`]: ../../std/result/enum.Result.html#variant.Err
//! [`panic!`]: ../../std/macro.panic.html
//! [`Builder`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Builder.html
//! [`Builder::stack_size`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Builder.html#method.stack_size
//! [`Builder::name`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Builder.html#method.name
//! [`thread::current`]: ../../std/thread/fn.current.html
//! [`thread::Result`]: ../../std/thread/type.Result.html
//! [`Thread`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Thread.html
//! [`park`]: ../../std/thread/fn.park.html
//! [`unpark`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Thread.html#method.unpark
//! [`Thread::name`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Thread.html#method.name
//! [`thread::park_timeout`]: ../../std/thread/fn.park_timeout.html
//! [`Cell`]: ../cell/struct.Cell.html
//! [`RefCell`]: ../cell/struct.RefCell.html
//! [`thread_local!`]: ../macro.thread_local.html
//! [`with`]: struct.LocalKey.html#method.with
#![stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
use crate::any::Any;
use crate::cell::UnsafeCell;
use crate::ffi::{CStr, CString};
use crate::fmt;
use crate::io;
use crate::mem;
use crate::num::NonZeroU64;
use crate::panic;
use crate::panicking;
use crate::str;
use crate::sync::{Mutex, Condvar, Arc};
use crate::sync::atomic::AtomicUsize;
use crate::sync::atomic::Ordering::SeqCst;
use crate::sys::thread as imp;
use crate::sys_common::mutex;
use crate::sys_common::thread_info;
use crate::sys_common::thread;
use crate::sys_common::{AsInner, IntoInner};
use crate::time::Duration;
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Thread-local storage
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#[macro_use] mod local;
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub use self::local::{LocalKey, AccessError};
// The types used by the thread_local! macro to access TLS keys. Note that there
// are two types, the "OS" type and the "fast" type. The OS thread local key
// type is accessed via platform-specific API calls and is slow, while the fast
// key type is accessed via code generated via LLVM, where TLS keys are set up
// by the elf linker. Note that the OS TLS type is always available: on macOS
// the standard library is compiled with support for older platform versions
// where fast TLS was not available; end-user code is compiled with fast TLS
// where available, but both are needed.
#[unstable(feature = "libstd_thread_internals", issue = "0")]
#[cfg(all(target_arch = "wasm32", not(target_feature = "atomics")))]
#[doc(hidden)] pub use self::local::statik::Key as __StaticLocalKeyInner;
#[unstable(feature = "libstd_thread_internals", issue = "0")]
#[cfg(target_thread_local)]
#[doc(hidden)] pub use self::local::fast::Key as __FastLocalKeyInner;
#[unstable(feature = "libstd_thread_internals", issue = "0")]
#[doc(hidden)] pub use self::local::os::Key as __OsLocalKeyInner;
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Builder
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/// Thread factory, which can be used in order to configure the properties of
/// a new thread.
///
/// Methods can be chained on it in order to configure it.
///
/// The two configurations available are:
///
/// - [`name`]: specifies an [associated name for the thread][naming-threads]
/// - [`stack_size`]: specifies the [desired stack size for the thread][stack-size]
///
/// The [`spawn`] method will take ownership of the builder and create an
/// [`io::Result`] to the thread handle with the given configuration.
///
/// The [`thread::spawn`] free function uses a `Builder` with default
/// configuration and [`unwrap`]s its return value.
///
/// You may want to use [`spawn`] instead of [`thread::spawn`], when you want
/// to recover from a failure to launch a thread, indeed the free function will
/// panic where the `Builder` method will return a [`io::Result`].
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let builder = thread::Builder::new();
///
/// let handler = builder.spawn(|| {
/// // thread code
/// }).unwrap();
///
/// handler.join().unwrap();
/// ```
///
/// [`thread::spawn`]: ../../std/thread/fn.spawn.html
/// [`stack_size`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Builder.html#method.stack_size
/// [`name`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Builder.html#method.name
/// [`spawn`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Builder.html#method.spawn
/// [`io::Result`]: ../../std/io/type.Result.html
/// [`unwrap`]: ../../std/result/enum.Result.html#method.unwrap
/// [naming-threads]: ./index.html#naming-threads
/// [stack-size]: ./index.html#stack-size
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct Builder {
// A name for the thread-to-be, for identification in panic messages
name: Option<String>,
// The size of the stack for the spawned thread in bytes
stack_size: Option<usize>,
}
impl Builder {
/// Generates the base configuration for spawning a thread, from which
/// configuration methods can be chained.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let builder = thread::Builder::new()
/// .name("foo".into())
/// .stack_size(32 * 1024);
///
/// let handler = builder.spawn(|| {
/// // thread code
/// }).unwrap();
///
/// handler.join().unwrap();
/// ```
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub fn new() -> Builder {
Builder {
name: None,
stack_size: None,
}
}
/// Names the thread-to-be. Currently the name is used for identification
/// only in panic messages.
///
/// The name must not contain null bytes (`\0`).
///
/// For more information about named threads, see
/// [this module-level documentation][naming-threads].
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let builder = thread::Builder::new()
/// .name("foo".into());
///
/// let handler = builder.spawn(|| {
/// assert_eq!(thread::current().name(), Some("foo"))
/// }).unwrap();
///
/// handler.join().unwrap();
/// ```
///
/// [naming-threads]: ./index.html#naming-threads
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub fn name(mut self, name: String) -> Builder {
self.name = Some(name);
self
}
/// Sets the size of the stack (in bytes) for the new thread.
///
/// The actual stack size may be greater than this value if
/// the platform specifies a minimal stack size.
///
/// For more information about the stack size for threads, see
/// [this module-level documentation][stack-size].
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let builder = thread::Builder::new().stack_size(32 * 1024);
/// ```
///
/// [stack-size]: ./index.html#stack-size
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub fn stack_size(mut self, size: usize) -> Builder {
self.stack_size = Some(size);
self
}
/// Spawns a new thread by taking ownership of the `Builder`, and returns an
/// [`io::Result`] to its [`JoinHandle`].
///
/// The spawned thread may outlive the caller (unless the caller thread
/// is the main thread; the whole process is terminated when the main
/// thread finishes). The join handle can be used to block on
/// termination of the child thread, including recovering its panics.
///
/// For a more complete documentation see [`thread::spawn`][`spawn`].
///
/// # Errors
///
/// Unlike the [`spawn`] free function, this method yields an
/// [`io::Result`] to capture any failure to create the thread at
/// the OS level.
///
/// [`spawn`]: ../../std/thread/fn.spawn.html
/// [`io::Result`]: ../../std/io/type.Result.html
/// [`JoinHandle`]: ../../std/thread/struct.JoinHandle.html
///
/// # Panics
///
/// Panics if a thread name was set and it contained null bytes.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let builder = thread::Builder::new();
///
/// let handler = builder.spawn(|| {
/// // thread code
/// }).unwrap();
///
/// handler.join().unwrap();
/// ```
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub fn spawn<F, T>(self, f: F) -> io::Result<JoinHandle<T>> where
F: FnOnce() -> T, F: Send + 'static, T: Send + 'static
{
unsafe { self.spawn_unchecked(f) }
}
/// Spawns a new thread without any lifetime restrictions by taking ownership
/// of the `Builder`, and returns an [`io::Result`] to its [`JoinHandle`].
///
/// The spawned thread may outlive the caller (unless the caller thread
/// is the main thread; the whole process is terminated when the main
/// thread finishes). The join handle can be used to block on
/// termination of the child thread, including recovering its panics.
///
/// This method is identical to [`thread::Builder::spawn`][`Builder::spawn`],
/// except for the relaxed lifetime bounds, which render it unsafe.
/// For a more complete documentation see [`thread::spawn`][`spawn`].
///
/// # Errors
///
/// Unlike the [`spawn`] free function, this method yields an
/// [`io::Result`] to capture any failure to create the thread at
/// the OS level.
///
/// # Panics
///
/// Panics if a thread name was set and it contained null bytes.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// The caller has to ensure that no references in the supplied thread closure
/// or its return type can outlive the spawned thread's lifetime. This can be
/// guaranteed in two ways:
///
/// - ensure that [`join`][`JoinHandle::join`] is called before any referenced
/// data is dropped
/// - use only types with `'static` lifetime bounds, i.e., those with no or only
/// `'static` references (both [`thread::Builder::spawn`][`Builder::spawn`]
/// and [`thread::spawn`][`spawn`] enforce this property statically)
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// #![feature(thread_spawn_unchecked)]
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let builder = thread::Builder::new();
///
/// let x = 1;
/// let thread_x = &x;
///
/// let handler = unsafe {
/// builder.spawn_unchecked(move || {
/// println!("x = {}", *thread_x);
/// }).unwrap()
/// };
///
/// // caller has to ensure `join()` is called, otherwise
/// // it is possible to access freed memory if `x` gets
/// // dropped before the thread closure is executed!
/// handler.join().unwrap();
/// ```
///
/// [`spawn`]: ../../std/thread/fn.spawn.html
/// [`Builder::spawn`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Builder.html#method.spawn
/// [`io::Result`]: ../../std/io/type.Result.html
/// [`JoinHandle`]: ../../std/thread/struct.JoinHandle.html
/// [`JoinHandle::join`]: ../../std/thread/struct.JoinHandle.html#method.join
#[unstable(feature = "thread_spawn_unchecked", issue = "55132")]
pub unsafe fn spawn_unchecked<'a, F, T>(self, f: F) -> io::Result<JoinHandle<T>> where
F: FnOnce() -> T, F: Send + 'a, T: Send + 'a
{
let Builder { name, stack_size } = self;
let stack_size = stack_size.unwrap_or_else(thread::min_stack);
let my_thread = Thread::new(name);
let their_thread = my_thread.clone();
let my_packet : Arc<UnsafeCell<Option<Result<T>>>>
= Arc::new(UnsafeCell::new(None));
let their_packet = my_packet.clone();
let main = move || {
if let Some(name) = their_thread.cname() {
imp::Thread::set_name(name);
}
thread_info::set(imp::guard::current(), their_thread);
let try_result = panic::catch_unwind(panic::AssertUnwindSafe(|| {
crate::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_begin_short_backtrace(f)
}));
*their_packet.get() = Some(try_result);
};
Ok(JoinHandle(JoinInner {
// `imp::Thread::new` takes a closure with a `'static` lifetime, since it's passed
// through FFI or otherwise used with low-level threading primitives that have no
// notion of or way to enforce lifetimes.
//
// As mentioned in the `Safety` section of this function's documentation, the caller of
// this function needs to guarantee that the passed-in lifetime is sufficiently long
// for the lifetime of the thread.
//
// Similarly, the `sys` implementation must guarantee that no references to the closure
// exist after the thread has terminated, which is signaled by `Thread::join`
// returning.
native: Some(imp::Thread::new(
stack_size,
mem::transmute::<Box<dyn FnOnce() + 'a>, Box<dyn FnOnce() + 'static>>(Box::new(
main,
)),
)?),
thread: my_thread,
packet: Packet(my_packet),
}))
}
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Free functions
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/// Spawns a new thread, returning a [`JoinHandle`] for it.
///
/// The join handle will implicitly *detach* the child thread upon being
/// dropped. In this case, the child thread may outlive the parent (unless
/// the parent thread is the main thread; the whole process is terminated when
/// the main thread finishes). Additionally, the join handle provides a [`join`]
/// method that can be used to join the child thread. If the child thread
/// panics, [`join`] will return an [`Err`] containing the argument given to
/// [`panic`].
///
/// This will create a thread using default parameters of [`Builder`], if you
/// want to specify the stack size or the name of the thread, use this API
/// instead.
///
/// As you can see in the signature of `spawn` there are two constraints on
/// both the closure given to `spawn` and its return value, let's explain them:
///
/// - The `'static` constraint means that the closure and its return value
/// must have a lifetime of the whole program execution. The reason for this
/// is that threads can `detach` and outlive the lifetime they have been
/// created in.
/// Indeed if the thread, and by extension its return value, can outlive their
/// caller, we need to make sure that they will be valid afterwards, and since
/// we *can't* know when it will return we need to have them valid as long as
/// possible, that is until the end of the program, hence the `'static`
/// lifetime.
/// - The [`Send`] constraint is because the closure will need to be passed
/// *by value* from the thread where it is spawned to the new thread. Its
/// return value will need to be passed from the new thread to the thread
/// where it is `join`ed.
/// As a reminder, the [`Send`] marker trait expresses that it is safe to be
/// passed from thread to thread. [`Sync`] expresses that it is safe to have a
/// reference be passed from thread to thread.
///
/// # Panics
///
/// Panics if the OS fails to create a thread; use [`Builder::spawn`]
/// to recover from such errors.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// Creating a thread.
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let handler = thread::spawn(|| {
/// // thread code
/// });
///
/// handler.join().unwrap();
/// ```
///
/// As mentioned in the module documentation, threads are usually made to
/// communicate using [`channels`], here is how it usually looks.
///
/// This example also shows how to use `move`, in order to give ownership
/// of values to a thread.
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
/// use std::sync::mpsc::channel;
///
/// let (tx, rx) = channel();
///
/// let sender = thread::spawn(move || {
/// tx.send("Hello, thread".to_owned())
/// .expect("Unable to send on channel");
/// });
///
/// let receiver = thread::spawn(move || {
/// let value = rx.recv().expect("Unable to receive from channel");
/// println!("{}", value);
/// });
///
/// sender.join().expect("The sender thread has panicked");
/// receiver.join().expect("The receiver thread has panicked");
/// ```
///
/// A thread can also return a value through its [`JoinHandle`], you can use
/// this to make asynchronous computations (futures might be more appropriate
/// though).
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let computation = thread::spawn(|| {
/// // Some expensive computation.
/// 42
/// });
///
/// let result = computation.join().unwrap();
/// println!("{}", result);
/// ```
///
/// [`channels`]: ../../std/sync/mpsc/index.html
/// [`JoinHandle`]: ../../std/thread/struct.JoinHandle.html
/// [`join`]: ../../std/thread/struct.JoinHandle.html#method.join
/// [`Err`]: ../../std/result/enum.Result.html#variant.Err
/// [`panic`]: ../../std/macro.panic.html
/// [`Builder::spawn`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Builder.html#method.spawn
/// [`Builder`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Builder.html
/// [`Send`]: ../../std/marker/trait.Send.html
/// [`Sync`]: ../../std/marker/trait.Sync.html
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub fn spawn<F, T>(f: F) -> JoinHandle<T> where
F: FnOnce() -> T, F: Send + 'static, T: Send + 'static
{
Builder::new().spawn(f).expect("failed to spawn thread")
}
/// Gets a handle to the thread that invokes it.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// Getting a handle to the current thread with `thread::current()`:
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let handler = thread::Builder::new()
/// .name("named thread".into())
/// .spawn(|| {
/// let handle = thread::current();
/// assert_eq!(handle.name(), Some("named thread"));
/// })
/// .unwrap();
///
/// handler.join().unwrap();
/// ```
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub fn current() -> Thread {
thread_info::current_thread().expect("use of std::thread::current() is not \
possible after the thread's local \
data has been destroyed")
}
/// Cooperatively gives up a timeslice to the OS scheduler.
///
/// This is used when the programmer knows that the thread will have nothing
/// to do for some time, and thus avoid wasting computing time.
///
/// For example when polling on a resource, it is common to check that it is
/// available, and if not to yield in order to avoid busy waiting.
///
/// Thus the pattern of `yield`ing after a failed poll is rather common when
/// implementing low-level shared resources or synchronization primitives.
///
/// However programmers will usually prefer to use [`channel`]s, [`Condvar`]s,
/// [`Mutex`]es or [`join`] for their synchronization routines, as they avoid
/// thinking about thread scheduling.
///
/// Note that [`channel`]s for example are implemented using this primitive.
/// Indeed when you call `send` or `recv`, which are blocking, they will yield
/// if the channel is not available.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// thread::yield_now();
/// ```
///
/// [`channel`]: ../../std/sync/mpsc/index.html
/// [`spawn`]: ../../std/thread/fn.spawn.html
/// [`join`]: ../../std/thread/struct.JoinHandle.html#method.join
/// [`Mutex`]: ../../std/sync/struct.Mutex.html
/// [`Condvar`]: ../../std/sync/struct.Condvar.html
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub fn yield_now() {
imp::Thread::yield_now()
}
/// Determines whether the current thread is unwinding because of panic.
///
/// A common use of this feature is to poison shared resources when writing
/// unsafe code, by checking `panicking` when the `drop` is called.
///
/// This is usually not needed when writing safe code, as [`Mutex`es][Mutex]
/// already poison themselves when a thread panics while holding the lock.
///
/// This can also be used in multithreaded applications, in order to send a
/// message to other threads warning that a thread has panicked (e.g., for
/// monitoring purposes).
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```should_panic
/// use std::thread;
///
/// struct SomeStruct;
///
/// impl Drop for SomeStruct {
/// fn drop(&mut self) {
/// if thread::panicking() {
/// println!("dropped while unwinding");
/// } else {
/// println!("dropped while not unwinding");
/// }
/// }
/// }
///
/// {
/// print!("a: ");
/// let a = SomeStruct;
/// }
///
/// {
/// print!("b: ");
/// let b = SomeStruct;
/// panic!()
/// }
/// ```
///
/// [Mutex]: ../../std/sync/struct.Mutex.html
#[inline]
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub fn panicking() -> bool {
panicking::panicking()
}
/// Puts the current thread to sleep for at least the specified amount of time.
///
/// The thread may sleep longer than the duration specified due to scheduling
/// specifics or platform-dependent functionality. It will never sleep less.
///
/// # Platform-specific behavior
///
/// On Unix platforms, the underlying syscall may be interrupted by a
/// spurious wakeup or signal handler. To ensure the sleep occurs for at least
/// the specified duration, this function may invoke that system call multiple
/// times.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```no_run
/// use std::thread;
///
/// // Let's sleep for 2 seconds:
/// thread::sleep_ms(2000);
/// ```
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
#[rustc_deprecated(since = "1.6.0", reason = "replaced by `std::thread::sleep`")]
pub fn sleep_ms(ms: u32) {
sleep(Duration::from_millis(ms as u64))
}
/// Puts the current thread to sleep for at least the specified amount of time.
///
/// The thread may sleep longer than the duration specified due to scheduling
/// specifics or platform-dependent functionality. It will never sleep less.
///
/// # Platform-specific behavior
///
/// On Unix platforms, the underlying syscall may be interrupted by a
/// spurious wakeup or signal handler. To ensure the sleep occurs for at least
/// the specified duration, this function may invoke that system call multiple
/// times.
/// Platforms which do not support nanosecond precision for sleeping will
/// have `dur` rounded up to the nearest granularity of time they can sleep for.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```no_run
/// use std::{thread, time};
///
/// let ten_millis = time::Duration::from_millis(10);
/// let now = time::Instant::now();
///
/// thread::sleep(ten_millis);
///
/// assert!(now.elapsed() >= ten_millis);
/// ```
#[stable(feature = "thread_sleep", since = "1.4.0")]
pub fn sleep(dur: Duration) {
imp::Thread::sleep(dur)
}
// constants for park/unpark
const EMPTY: usize = 0;
const PARKED: usize = 1;
const NOTIFIED: usize = 2;
/// Blocks unless or until the current thread's token is made available.
///
/// A call to `park` does not guarantee that the thread will remain parked
/// forever, and callers should be prepared for this possibility.
///
/// # park and unpark
///
/// Every thread is equipped with some basic low-level blocking support, via the
/// [`thread::park`][`park`] function and [`thread::Thread::unpark`][`unpark`]
/// method. [`park`] blocks the current thread, which can then be resumed from
/// another thread by calling the [`unpark`] method on the blocked thread's
/// handle.
///
/// Conceptually, each [`Thread`] handle has an associated token, which is
/// initially not present:
///
/// * The [`thread::park`][`park`] function blocks the current thread unless or
/// until the token is available for its thread handle, at which point it
/// atomically consumes the token. It may also return *spuriously*, without
/// consuming the token. [`thread::park_timeout`] does the same, but allows
/// specifying a maximum time to block the thread for.
///
/// * The [`unpark`] method on a [`Thread`] atomically makes the token available
/// if it wasn't already. Because the token is initially absent, [`unpark`]
/// followed by [`park`] will result in the second call returning immediately.
///
/// In other words, each [`Thread`] acts a bit like a spinlock that can be
/// locked and unlocked using `park` and `unpark`.
///
/// Notice that being unblocked does not imply any synchronization with someone
/// that unparked this thread, it could also be spurious.
/// For example, it would be a valid, but inefficient, implementation to make both [`park`] and
/// [`unpark`] return immediately without doing anything.
///
/// The API is typically used by acquiring a handle to the current thread,
/// placing that handle in a shared data structure so that other threads can
/// find it, and then `park`ing in a loop. When some desired condition is met, another
/// thread calls [`unpark`] on the handle.
///
/// The motivation for this design is twofold:
///
/// * It avoids the need to allocate mutexes and condvars when building new
/// synchronization primitives; the threads already provide basic
/// blocking/signaling.
///
/// * It can be implemented very efficiently on many platforms.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
/// use std::sync::{Arc, atomic::{Ordering, AtomicBool}};
/// use std::time::Duration;
///
/// let flag = Arc::new(AtomicBool::new(false));
/// let flag2 = Arc::clone(&flag);
///
/// let parked_thread = thread::spawn(move || {
/// // We want to wait until the flag is set. We *could* just spin, but using
/// // park/unpark is more efficient.
/// while !flag2.load(Ordering::Acquire) {
/// println!("Parking thread");
/// thread::park();
/// // We *could* get here spuriously, i.e., way before the 10ms below are over!
/// // But that is no problem, we are in a loop until the flag is set anyway.
/// println!("Thread unparked");
/// }
/// println!("Flag received");
/// });
///
/// // Let some time pass for the thread to be spawned.
/// thread::sleep(Duration::from_millis(10));
///
/// // Set the flag, and let the thread wake up.
/// // There is no race condition here, if `unpark`
/// // happens first, `park` will return immediately.
/// // Hence there is no risk of a deadlock.
/// flag.store(true, Ordering::Release);
/// println!("Unpark the thread");
/// parked_thread.thread().unpark();
///
/// parked_thread.join().unwrap();
/// ```
///
/// [`Thread`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Thread.html
/// [`park`]: ../../std/thread/fn.park.html
/// [`unpark`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Thread.html#method.unpark
/// [`thread::park_timeout`]: ../../std/thread/fn.park_timeout.html
//
// The implementation currently uses the trivial strategy of a Mutex+Condvar
// with wakeup flag, which does not actually allow spurious wakeups. In the
// future, this will be implemented in a more efficient way, perhaps along the lines of
// http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~stefank/6989984.1/raw_files/new/src/os/linux/vm/os_linux.cpp
// or futuxes, and in either case may allow spurious wakeups.
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub fn park() {
let thread = current();
// If we were previously notified then we consume this notification and
// return quickly.
if thread.inner.state.compare_exchange(NOTIFIED, EMPTY, SeqCst, SeqCst).is_ok() {
return
}
// Otherwise we need to coordinate going to sleep
let mut m = thread.inner.lock.lock().unwrap();
match thread.inner.state.compare_exchange(EMPTY, PARKED, SeqCst, SeqCst) {
Ok(_) => {}
Err(NOTIFIED) => {
// We must read here, even though we know it will be `NOTIFIED`.
// This is because `unpark` may have been called again since we read
// `NOTIFIED` in the `compare_exchange` above. We must perform an
// acquire operation that synchronizes with that `unpark` to observe
// any writes it made before the call to unpark. To do that we must
// read from the write it made to `state`.
let old = thread.inner.state.swap(EMPTY, SeqCst);
assert_eq!(old, NOTIFIED, "park state changed unexpectedly");
return;
} // should consume this notification, so prohibit spurious wakeups in next park.
Err(_) => panic!("inconsistent park state"),
}
loop {
m = thread.inner.cvar.wait(m).unwrap();
match thread.inner.state.compare_exchange(NOTIFIED, EMPTY, SeqCst, SeqCst) {
Ok(_) => return, // got a notification
Err(_) => {} // spurious wakeup, go back to sleep
}
}
}
/// Use [`park_timeout`].
///
/// Blocks unless or until the current thread's token is made available or
/// the specified duration has been reached (may wake spuriously).
///
/// The semantics of this function are equivalent to [`park`] except
/// that the thread will be blocked for roughly no longer than `dur`. This
/// method should not be used for precise timing due to anomalies such as
/// preemption or platform differences that may not cause the maximum
/// amount of time waited to be precisely `ms` long.
///
/// See the [park documentation][`park`] for more detail.
///
/// [`park_timeout`]: fn.park_timeout.html
/// [`park`]: ../../std/thread/fn.park.html
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
#[rustc_deprecated(since = "1.6.0", reason = "replaced by `std::thread::park_timeout`")]
pub fn park_timeout_ms(ms: u32) {
park_timeout(Duration::from_millis(ms as u64))
}
/// Blocks unless or until the current thread's token is made available or
/// the specified duration has been reached (may wake spuriously).
///
/// The semantics of this function are equivalent to [`park`][park] except
/// that the thread will be blocked for roughly no longer than `dur`. This
/// method should not be used for precise timing due to anomalies such as
/// preemption or platform differences that may not cause the maximum
/// amount of time waited to be precisely `dur` long.
///
/// See the [park documentation][park] for more details.
///
/// # Platform-specific behavior
///
/// Platforms which do not support nanosecond precision for sleeping will have
/// `dur` rounded up to the nearest granularity of time they can sleep for.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// Waiting for the complete expiration of the timeout:
///
/// ```rust,no_run
/// use std::thread::park_timeout;
/// use std::time::{Instant, Duration};
///
/// let timeout = Duration::from_secs(2);
/// let beginning_park = Instant::now();
///
/// let mut timeout_remaining = timeout;
/// loop {
/// park_timeout(timeout_remaining);
/// let elapsed = beginning_park.elapsed();
/// if elapsed >= timeout {
/// break;
/// }
/// println!("restarting park_timeout after {:?}", elapsed);
/// timeout_remaining = timeout - elapsed;
/// }
/// ```
///
/// [park]: fn.park.html
#[stable(feature = "park_timeout", since = "1.4.0")]
pub fn park_timeout(dur: Duration) {
let thread = current();
// Like `park` above we have a fast path for an already-notified thread, and
// afterwards we start coordinating for a sleep.
// return quickly.
if thread.inner.state.compare_exchange(NOTIFIED, EMPTY, SeqCst, SeqCst).is_ok() {
return
}
let m = thread.inner.lock.lock().unwrap();
match thread.inner.state.compare_exchange(EMPTY, PARKED, SeqCst, SeqCst) {
Ok(_) => {}
Err(NOTIFIED) => {
// We must read again here, see `park`.
let old = thread.inner.state.swap(EMPTY, SeqCst);
assert_eq!(old, NOTIFIED, "park state changed unexpectedly");
return;
} // should consume this notification, so prohibit spurious wakeups in next park.
Err(_) => panic!("inconsistent park_timeout state"),
}
// Wait with a timeout, and if we spuriously wake up or otherwise wake up
// from a notification we just want to unconditionally set the state back to
// empty, either consuming a notification or un-flagging ourselves as
// parked.
let (_m, _result) = thread.inner.cvar.wait_timeout(m, dur).unwrap();
match thread.inner.state.swap(EMPTY, SeqCst) {
NOTIFIED => {} // got a notification, hurray!
PARKED => {} // no notification, alas
n => panic!("inconsistent park_timeout state: {}", n),
}
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// ThreadId
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/// A unique identifier for a running thread.
///
/// A `ThreadId` is an opaque object that has a unique value for each thread
/// that creates one. `ThreadId`s are not guaranteed to correspond to a thread's
/// system-designated identifier. A `ThreadId` can be retrieved from the [`id`]
/// method on a [`Thread`].
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let other_thread = thread::spawn(|| {
/// thread::current().id()
/// });
///
/// let other_thread_id = other_thread.join().unwrap();
/// assert!(thread::current().id() != other_thread_id);
/// ```
///
/// [`id`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Thread.html#method.id
/// [`Thread`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Thread.html
#[stable(feature = "thread_id", since = "1.19.0")]
#[derive(Eq, PartialEq, Clone, Copy, Hash, Debug)]
pub struct ThreadId(NonZeroU64);
impl ThreadId {
// Generate a new unique thread ID.
fn new() -> ThreadId {
// We never call `GUARD.init()`, so it is UB to attempt to
// acquire this mutex reentrantly!
static GUARD: mutex::Mutex = mutex::Mutex::new();
static mut COUNTER: u64 = 1;
unsafe {
let _guard = GUARD.lock();
// If we somehow use up all our bits, panic so that we're not
// covering up subtle bugs of IDs being reused.
if COUNTER == crate::u64::MAX {
panic!("failed to generate unique thread ID: bitspace exhausted");
}
let id = COUNTER;
COUNTER += 1;
ThreadId(NonZeroU64::new(id).unwrap())
}
}
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Thread
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/// The internal representation of a `Thread` handle
struct Inner {
name: Option<CString>, // Guaranteed to be UTF-8
id: ThreadId,
// state for thread park/unpark
state: AtomicUsize,
lock: Mutex<()>,
cvar: Condvar,
}
#[derive(Clone)]
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
/// A handle to a thread.
///
/// Threads are represented via the `Thread` type, which you can get in one of
/// two ways:
///
/// * By spawning a new thread, e.g., using the [`thread::spawn`][`spawn`]
/// function, and calling [`thread`][`JoinHandle::thread`] on the
/// [`JoinHandle`].
/// * By requesting the current thread, using the [`thread::current`] function.
///
/// The [`thread::current`] function is available even for threads not spawned
/// by the APIs of this module.
///
/// There is usually no need to create a `Thread` struct yourself, one
/// should instead use a function like `spawn` to create new threads, see the
/// docs of [`Builder`] and [`spawn`] for more details.
///
/// [`Builder`]: ../../std/thread/struct.Builder.html
/// [`JoinHandle::thread`]: ../../std/thread/struct.JoinHandle.html#method.thread
/// [`JoinHandle`]: ../../std/thread/struct.JoinHandle.html
/// [`thread::current`]: ../../std/thread/fn.current.html
/// [`spawn`]: ../../std/thread/fn.spawn.html
pub struct Thread {
inner: Arc<Inner>,
}
impl Thread {
// Used only internally to construct a thread object without spawning
// Panics if the name contains nuls.
pub(crate) fn new(name: Option<String>) -> Thread {
let cname = name.map(|n| {
CString::new(n).expect("thread name may not contain interior null bytes")
});
Thread {
inner: Arc::new(Inner {
name: cname,
id: ThreadId::new(),
state: AtomicUsize::new(EMPTY),
lock: Mutex::new(()),
cvar: Condvar::new(),
})
}
}
/// Atomically makes the handle's token available if it is not already.
///
/// Every thread is equipped with some basic low-level blocking support, via
/// the [`park`][park] function and the `unpark()` method. These can be
/// used as a more CPU-efficient implementation of a spinlock.
///
/// See the [park documentation][park] for more details.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
/// use std::time::Duration;
///
/// let parked_thread = thread::Builder::new()
/// .spawn(|| {
/// println!("Parking thread");
/// thread::park();
/// println!("Thread unparked");
/// })
/// .unwrap();
///
/// // Let some time pass for the thread to be spawned.
/// thread::sleep(Duration::from_millis(10));
///
/// println!("Unpark the thread");
/// parked_thread.thread().unpark();
///
/// parked_thread.join().unwrap();
/// ```
///
/// [park]: fn.park.html
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub fn unpark(&self) {
// To ensure the unparked thread will observe any writes we made
// before this call, we must perform a release operation that `park`
// can synchronize with. To do that we must write `NOTIFIED` even if
// `state` is already `NOTIFIED`. That is why this must be a swap
// rather than a compare-and-swap that returns if it reads `NOTIFIED`
// on failure.
match self.inner.state.swap(NOTIFIED, SeqCst) {
EMPTY => return, // no one was waiting
NOTIFIED => return, // already unparked
PARKED => {} // gotta go wake someone up
_ => panic!("inconsistent state in unpark"),
}
// There is a period between when the parked thread sets `state` to
// `PARKED` (or last checked `state` in the case of a spurious wake
// up) and when it actually waits on `cvar`. If we were to notify
// during this period it would be ignored and then when the parked
// thread went to sleep it would never wake up. Fortunately, it has
// `lock` locked at this stage so we can acquire `lock` to wait until
// it is ready to receive the notification.
//
// Releasing `lock` before the call to `notify_one` means that when the
// parked thread wakes it doesn't get woken only to have to wait for us
// to release `lock`.
drop(self.inner.lock.lock().unwrap());
self.inner.cvar.notify_one()
}
/// Gets the thread's unique identifier.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let other_thread = thread::spawn(|| {
/// thread::current().id()
/// });
///
/// let other_thread_id = other_thread.join().unwrap();
/// assert!(thread::current().id() != other_thread_id);
/// ```
#[stable(feature = "thread_id", since = "1.19.0")]
pub fn id(&self) -> ThreadId {
self.inner.id
}
/// Gets the thread's name.
///
/// For more information about named threads, see
/// [this module-level documentation][naming-threads].
///
/// # Examples
///
/// Threads by default have no name specified:
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let builder = thread::Builder::new();
///
/// let handler = builder.spawn(|| {
/// assert!(thread::current().name().is_none());
/// }).unwrap();
///
/// handler.join().unwrap();
/// ```
///
/// Thread with a specified name:
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let builder = thread::Builder::new()
/// .name("foo".into());
///
/// let handler = builder.spawn(|| {
/// assert_eq!(thread::current().name(), Some("foo"))
/// }).unwrap();
///
/// handler.join().unwrap();
/// ```
///
/// [naming-threads]: ./index.html#naming-threads
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub fn name(&self) -> Option<&str> {
self.cname().map(|s| unsafe { str::from_utf8_unchecked(s.to_bytes()) } )
}
fn cname(&self) -> Option<&CStr> {
self.inner.name.as_ref().map(|s| &**s)
}
}
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
impl fmt::Debug for Thread {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.debug_struct("Thread")
.field("id", &self.id())
.field("name", &self.name())
.finish()
}
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// JoinHandle
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/// A specialized [`Result`] type for threads.
///
/// Indicates the manner in which a thread exited.
///
/// The value contained in the `Result::Err` variant
/// is the value the thread panicked with;
/// that is, the argument the `panic!` macro was called with.
/// Unlike with normal errors, this value doesn't implement
/// the [`Error`](crate::error::Error) trait.
///
/// Thus, a sensible way to handle a thread panic is to either:
/// 1. `unwrap` the `Result<T>`, propagating the panic
/// 2. or in case the thread is intended to be a subsystem boundary
/// that is supposed to isolate system-level failures,
/// match on the `Err` variant and handle the panic in an appropriate way.
///
/// A thread that completes without panicking is considered to exit successfully.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```no_run
/// use std::thread;
/// use std::fs;
///
/// fn copy_in_thread() -> thread::Result<()> {
/// thread::spawn(move || { fs::copy("foo.txt", "bar.txt").unwrap(); }).join()
/// }
///
/// fn main() {
/// match copy_in_thread() {
/// Ok(_) => println!("this is fine"),
/// Err(_) => println!("thread panicked"),
/// }
/// }
/// ```
///
/// [`Result`]: ../../std/result/enum.Result.html
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub type Result<T> = crate::result::Result<T, Box<dyn Any + Send + 'static>>;
// This packet is used to communicate the return value between the child thread
// and the parent thread. Memory is shared through the `Arc` within and there's
// no need for a mutex here because synchronization happens with `join()` (the
// parent thread never reads this packet until the child has exited).
//
// This packet itself is then stored into a `JoinInner` which in turns is placed
// in `JoinHandle` and `JoinGuard`. Due to the usage of `UnsafeCell` we need to
// manually worry about impls like Send and Sync. The type `T` should
// already always be Send (otherwise the thread could not have been created) and
// this type is inherently Sync because no methods take &self. Regardless,
// however, we add inheriting impls for Send/Sync to this type to ensure it's
// Send/Sync and that future modifications will still appropriately classify it.
struct Packet<T>(Arc<UnsafeCell<Option<Result<T>>>>);
unsafe impl<T: Send> Send for Packet<T> {}
unsafe impl<T: Sync> Sync for Packet<T> {}
/// Inner representation for JoinHandle
struct JoinInner<T> {
native: Option<imp::Thread>,
thread: Thread,
packet: Packet<T>,
}
impl<T> JoinInner<T> {
fn join(&mut self) -> Result<T> {
self.native.take().unwrap().join();
unsafe {
(*self.packet.0.get()).take().unwrap()
}
}
}
/// An owned permission to join on a thread (block on its termination).
///
/// A `JoinHandle` *detaches* the associated thread when it is dropped, which
/// means that there is no longer any handle to thread and no way to `join`
/// on it.
///
/// Due to platform restrictions, it is not possible to [`Clone`] this
/// handle: the ability to join a thread is a uniquely-owned permission.
///
/// This `struct` is created by the [`thread::spawn`] function and the
/// [`thread::Builder::spawn`] method.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// Creation from [`thread::spawn`]:
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let join_handle: thread::JoinHandle<_> = thread::spawn(|| {
/// // some work here
/// });
/// ```
///
/// Creation from [`thread::Builder::spawn`]:
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let builder = thread::Builder::new();
///
/// let join_handle: thread::JoinHandle<_> = builder.spawn(|| {
/// // some work here
/// }).unwrap();
/// ```
///
/// Child being detached and outliving its parent:
///
/// ```no_run
/// use std::thread;
/// use std::time::Duration;
///
/// let original_thread = thread::spawn(|| {
/// let _detached_thread = thread::spawn(|| {
/// // Here we sleep to make sure that the first thread returns before.
/// thread::sleep(Duration::from_millis(10));
/// // This will be called, even though the JoinHandle is dropped.
/// println!("♫ Still alive ♫");
/// });
/// });
///
/// original_thread.join().expect("The thread being joined has panicked");
/// println!("Original thread is joined.");
///
/// // We make sure that the new thread has time to run, before the main
/// // thread returns.
///
/// thread::sleep(Duration::from_millis(1000));
/// ```
///
/// [`Clone`]: ../../std/clone/trait.Clone.html
/// [`thread::spawn`]: fn.spawn.html
/// [`thread::Builder::spawn`]: struct.Builder.html#method.spawn
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub struct JoinHandle<T>(JoinInner<T>);
#[stable(feature = "joinhandle_impl_send_sync", since = "1.29.0")]
unsafe impl<T> Send for JoinHandle<T> {}
#[stable(feature = "joinhandle_impl_send_sync", since = "1.29.0")]
unsafe impl<T> Sync for JoinHandle<T> {}
impl<T> JoinHandle<T> {
/// Extracts a handle to the underlying thread.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let builder = thread::Builder::new();
///
/// let join_handle: thread::JoinHandle<_> = builder.spawn(|| {
/// // some work here
/// }).unwrap();
///
/// let thread = join_handle.thread();
/// println!("thread id: {:?}", thread.id());
/// ```
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub fn thread(&self) -> &Thread {
&self.0.thread
}
/// Waits for the associated thread to finish.
///
/// In terms of [atomic memory orderings], the completion of the associated
/// thread synchronizes with this function returning. In other words, all
/// operations performed by that thread are ordered before all
/// operations that happen after `join` returns.
///
/// If the child thread panics, [`Err`] is returned with the parameter given
/// to [`panic`].
///
/// [`Err`]: ../../std/result/enum.Result.html#variant.Err
/// [`panic`]: ../../std/macro.panic.html
/// [atomic memory orderings]: ../../std/sync/atomic/index.html
///
/// # Panics
///
/// This function may panic on some platforms if a thread attempts to join
/// itself or otherwise may create a deadlock with joining threads.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::thread;
///
/// let builder = thread::Builder::new();
///
/// let join_handle: thread::JoinHandle<_> = builder.spawn(|| {
/// // some work here
/// }).unwrap();
/// join_handle.join().expect("Couldn't join on the associated thread");
/// ```
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub fn join(mut self) -> Result<T> {
self.0.join()
}
}
impl<T> AsInner<imp::Thread> for JoinHandle<T> {
fn as_inner(&self) -> &imp::Thread { self.0.native.as_ref().unwrap() }
}
impl<T> IntoInner<imp::Thread> for JoinHandle<T> {
fn into_inner(self) -> imp::Thread { self.0.native.unwrap() }
}
#[stable(feature = "std_debug", since = "1.16.0")]
impl<T> fmt::Debug for JoinHandle<T> {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.pad("JoinHandle { .. }")
}
}
fn _assert_sync_and_send() {
fn _assert_both<T: Send + Sync>() {}
_assert_both::<JoinHandle<()>>();
_assert_both::<Thread>();
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Tests
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#[cfg(all(test, not(target_os = "emscripten")))]
mod tests {
use super::Builder;
use crate::any::Any;
use crate::mem;
use crate::sync::mpsc::{channel, Sender};
use crate::result;
use crate::thread::{self, ThreadId};
use crate::time::Duration;
use crate::u32;
// !!! These tests are dangerous. If something is buggy, they will hang, !!!
// !!! instead of exiting cleanly. This might wedge the buildbots. !!!
#[test]
fn test_unnamed_thread() {
thread::spawn(move|| {
assert!(thread::current().name().is_none());
}).join().ok().expect("thread panicked");
}
#[test]
fn test_named_thread() {
Builder::new().name("ada lovelace".to_string()).spawn(move|| {
assert!(thread::current().name().unwrap() == "ada lovelace".to_string());
}).unwrap().join().unwrap();
}
#[test]
#[should_panic]
fn test_invalid_named_thread() {
let _ = Builder::new().name("ada l\0velace".to_string()).spawn(|| {});
}
#[test]
fn test_run_basic() {
let (tx, rx) = channel();
thread::spawn(move|| {
tx.send(()).unwrap();
});
rx.recv().unwrap();
}
#[test]
fn test_join_panic() {
match thread::spawn(move|| {
panic!()
}).join() {
result::Result::Err(_) => (),
result::Result::Ok(()) => panic!()
}
}
#[test]
fn test_spawn_sched() {
let (tx, rx) = channel();
fn f(i: i32, tx: Sender<()>) {
let tx = tx.clone();
thread::spawn(move|| {
if i == 0 {
tx.send(()).unwrap();
} else {
f(i - 1, tx);
}
});
}
f(10, tx);
rx.recv().unwrap();
}
#[test]
fn test_spawn_sched_childs_on_default_sched() {
let (tx, rx) = channel();
thread::spawn(move|| {
thread::spawn(move|| {
tx.send(()).unwrap();
});
});
rx.recv().unwrap();
}
fn avoid_copying_the_body<F>(spawnfn: F) where F: FnOnce(Box<dyn Fn() + Send>) {
let (tx, rx) = channel();
let x: Box<_> = box 1;
let x_in_parent = (&*x) as *const i32 as usize;
spawnfn(Box::new(move|| {
let x_in_child = (&*x) as *const i32 as usize;
tx.send(x_in_child).unwrap();
}));
let x_in_child = rx.recv().unwrap();
assert_eq!(x_in_parent, x_in_child);
}
#[test]
fn test_avoid_copying_the_body_spawn() {
avoid_copying_the_body(|v| {
thread::spawn(move || v());
});
}
#[test]
fn test_avoid_copying_the_body_thread_spawn() {
avoid_copying_the_body(|f| {
thread::spawn(move|| {
f();
});
})
}
#[test]
fn test_avoid_copying_the_body_join() {
avoid_copying_the_body(|f| {
let _ = thread::spawn(move|| {
f()
}).join();
})
}
#[test]
fn test_child_doesnt_ref_parent() {
// If the child refcounts the parent thread, this will stack overflow when
// climbing the thread tree to dereference each ancestor. (See #1789)
// (well, it would if the constant were 8000+ - I lowered it to be more
// valgrind-friendly. try this at home, instead..!)
const GENERATIONS: u32 = 16;
fn child_no(x: u32) -> Box<dyn Fn() + Send> {
return Box::new(move|| {
if x < GENERATIONS {
thread::spawn(move|| child_no(x+1)());
}
});
}
thread::spawn(|| child_no(0)());
}
#[test]
fn test_simple_newsched_spawn() {
thread::spawn(move || {});
}
#[test]
fn test_try_panic_message_static_str() {
match thread::spawn(move|| {
panic!("static string");
}).join() {
Err(e) => {
type T = &'static str;
assert!(e.is::<T>());
assert_eq!(*e.downcast::<T>().unwrap(), "static string");
}
Ok(()) => panic!()
}
}
#[test]
fn test_try_panic_message_owned_str() {
match thread::spawn(move|| {
panic!("owned string".to_string());
}).join() {
Err(e) => {
type T = String;
assert!(e.is::<T>());
assert_eq!(*e.downcast::<T>().unwrap(), "owned string".to_string());
}
Ok(()) => panic!()
}
}
#[test]
fn test_try_panic_message_any() {
match thread::spawn(move|| {
panic!(box 413u16 as Box<dyn Any + Send>);
}).join() {
Err(e) => {
type T = Box<dyn Any + Send>;
assert!(e.is::<T>());
let any = e.downcast::<T>().unwrap();
assert!(any.is::<u16>());
assert_eq!(*any.downcast::<u16>().unwrap(), 413);
}
Ok(()) => panic!()
}
}
#[test]
fn test_try_panic_message_unit_struct() {
struct Juju;
match thread::spawn(move|| {
panic!(Juju)
}).join() {
Err(ref e) if e.is::<Juju>() => {}
Err(_) | Ok(()) => panic!()
}
}
#[test]
fn test_park_timeout_unpark_before() {
for _ in 0..10 {
thread::current().unpark();
thread::park_timeout(Duration::from_millis(u32::MAX as u64));
}
}
#[test]
#[cfg_attr(target_env = "sgx", ignore)] // FIXME: https://github.com/fortanix/rust-sgx/issues/31
fn test_park_timeout_unpark_not_called() {
for _ in 0..10 {
thread::park_timeout(Duration::from_millis(10));
}
}
#[test]
#[cfg_attr(target_env = "sgx", ignore)] // FIXME: https://github.com/fortanix/rust-sgx/issues/31
fn test_park_timeout_unpark_called_other_thread() {
for _ in 0..10 {
let th = thread::current();
let _guard = thread::spawn(move || {
super::sleep(Duration::from_millis(50));
th.unpark();
});
thread::park_timeout(Duration::from_millis(u32::MAX as u64));
}
}
#[test]
#[cfg_attr(target_env = "sgx", ignore)] // FIXME: https://github.com/fortanix/rust-sgx/issues/31
fn sleep_ms_smoke() {
thread::sleep(Duration::from_millis(2));
}
#[test]
fn test_size_of_option_thread_id() {
assert_eq!(mem::size_of::<Option<ThreadId>>(), mem::size_of::<ThreadId>());
}
#[test]
fn test_thread_id_equal() {
assert!(thread::current().id() == thread::current().id());
}
#[test]
fn test_thread_id_not_equal() {
let spawned_id = thread::spawn(|| thread::current().id()).join().unwrap();
assert!(thread::current().id() != spawned_id);
}
// NOTE: the corresponding test for stderr is in ui/thread-stderr, due
// to the test harness apparently interfering with stderr configuration.
}