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  2. Spurious wakeup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spurious_wakeup

    In the Solaris implementation of condition variables, a spurious wakeup may occur without the condition being assigned if the process is signaled; the wait system call aborts and returns EINTR. [2] The Linux p-thread implementation of condition variables guarantees that it will not do that.

  3. pthreads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pthreads

    pthreads defines a set of C programming language types, functions and constants. It is implemented with a pthread.h header and a thread library. There are around 100 threads procedures, all prefixed pthread_ and they can be categorized into five groups: Thread management – creating, joining threads etc. Mutexes; Condition variables

  4. GNU Portable Threads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Portable_Threads

    GNU Pth uses an N:1 mapping to kernel-space threads, i.e., the scheduling is done completely by the GNU Pth library and the kernel itself is not aware of the N threads in user-space. Because of this there is no possibility to utilize SMP as kernel dispatching would be necessary.

  5. Thread-local storage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thread-local_storage

    In the Pthreads API, memory local to a thread is designated with the term Thread-specific data. The functions pthread_key_create and pthread_key_delete are used respectively to create and delete a key for thread-specific data. The type of the key is explicitly left opaque and is referred to as pthread_key_t. This key can be seen by all threads.

  6. Native POSIX Thread Library - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_POSIX_Thread_Library

    Like LinuxThreads, NPTL is a 1:1 threads library. Threads created by the library (via pthread_create ) correspond one-to-one with schedulable entities in the kernel ( processes , in the Linux case). [ 4 ] : 226 This is the simplest of the three threading models (1:1, N:1, and M:N).

  7. Event loop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event_loop

    The event loop almost always operates asynchronously with the message originator. When the event loop forms the central control flow construct of a program, as it often does, it may be termed the main loop or main event loop. This title is appropriate, because such an event loop is at the highest level of control within the program.

  8. Thread pool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thread_pool

    Often also called a replicated workers or worker-crew model, [1] a thread pool maintains multiple threads waiting for tasks to be allocated for concurrent execution by the supervising program. By maintaining a pool of threads, the model increases performance and avoids latency in execution due to frequent creation and destruction of threads for ...

  9. C POSIX library - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_POSIX_library

    The C POSIX library is a specification of a C standard library for POSIX systems. It was developed at the same time as the ANSI C standard. Some effort was made to make POSIX compatible with standard C; POSIX includes additional functions to those introduced in standard C.