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FUTEX(2)		   Linux Programmer's Manual		      FUTEX(2)

NAME
       futex - Fast Userspace Locking system call

SYNOPSIS
       #include <linux/futex.h>

       #include <sys/time.h>

       int futex(int *uaddr, int op, int val, const struct timespec *timeout,
		 int *uaddr2, int val3);

DESCRIPTION
       The  futex()  system call provides a method for a program to wait for a
       value at a given address to change, and a  method  to  wake  up	anyone
       waiting	on a particular address (while the addresses for the same mem‐
       ory in separate processes may not be equal, the kernel maps them inter‐
       nally  so the same memory mapped in different locations will correspond
       for futex() calls).  It is typically used to  implement	the  contended
       case of a lock in shared memory, as described in futex(7).

       When  a	futex(7)  operation did not finish uncontended in userspace, a
       call needs to be made to	 the  kernel  to  arbitrate.  Arbitration  can
       either mean putting the calling process to sleep or, conversely, waking
       a waiting process.

       Callers of this function are expected to adhere to the semantics as set
       out  in	futex(7).   As	these  semantics  involve writing non-portable
       assembly instructions, this in turn probably means that most users will
       in fact be library authors and not general application developers.

       The  uaddr  argument  needs to point to an aligned integer which stores
       the counter.  The operation to execute is passed via the op  parameter,
       along with a value val.

       Five operations are currently defined:

       FUTEX_WAIT
	      This  operation atomically verifies that the futex address uaddr
	      still contains the value val, and sleeps awaiting FUTEX_WAKE  on
	      this  futex  address.  If	 the timeout argument is non-NULL, its
	      contents describe the maximum duration of	 the  wait,  which  is
	      infinite otherwise. The arguments uaddr2 and val3 are ignored.

	      For  futex(7),  this  call is executed if decrementing the count
	      gave a negative value (indicating contention),  and  will	 sleep
	      until  another  process  releases	 the  futex  and  executes the
	      FUTEX_WAKE operation.

       FUTEX_WAKE
	      This operation wakes at most val processes waiting on this futex
	      address  (ie. inside FUTEX_WAIT).	 The arguments timeout, uaddr2
	      and val3 are ignored.

	      For futex(7), this is executed if incrementing the count	showed
	      that  there were waiters, once the futex value has been set to 1
	      (indicating that it is available).

       FUTEX_FD
	      To support asynchronous wakeups,	this  operation	 associates  a
	      file  descriptor	with  a	 futex.	 If another process executes a
	      FUTEX_WAKE, the process will receive the signal number that  was
	      passed in val.  The calling process must close the returned file
	      descriptor after use.  The arguments timeout,  uaddr2  and  val3
	      are ignored.

	      To  prevent race conditions, the caller should test if the futex
	      has been upped after FUTEX_FD returns.

       FUTEX_REQUEUE (since Linux 2.5.70)
	      This operation was introduced in order to	 avoid	a  "thundering
	      herd"  effect when FUTEX_WAKE is used and all processes woken up
	      need to acquire another futex. This call wakes up val processes,
	      and  requeues  all other waiters on the futex at address uaddr2.
	      The arguments timeout and val3 are ignored.

       FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE (since Linux 2.6.7)
	      There was a race	in  the	 intended  use	of  FUTEX_REQUEUE,  so
	      FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE	  was	introduced.   This   is	  similar   to
	      FUTEX_REQUEUE, but first checks whether the location uaddr still
	      contains	the  value val3.  If not, an error EAGAIN is returned.
	      The argument timeout is ignored.

RETURN VALUE
       Depending on which operation was executed, the returned value can  have
       differing meanings.

       FUTEX_WAIT
	      Returns 0 if the process was woken by a FUTEX_WAKE call. In case
	      of timeout, ETIMEDOUT is returned. If the futex was not equal to
	      the  expected  value, the operation returns EWOULDBLOCK. Signals
	      (or other spurious wakeups) cause FUTEX_WAIT to return EINTR.

       FUTEX_WAKE
	      Returns the number of processes woken up.

       FUTEX_FD
	      Returns the new file descriptor associated with the futex.

       FUTEX_REQUEUE
	      Returns the number of processes woken up.

       FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE
	      Returns the number of processes woken up.

ERRORS
       EACCES No read access to futex memory.

       EAGAIN FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE found an unexpected futex value.  (This proba‐
	      bly indicates a race; use the safe FUTEX_WAKE now.)

       EFAULT Error in getting timeout information from userspace.

       EINVAL An operation was not defined or error in page alignment.

       ENFILE The  system  limit  on  the  total number of open files has been
	      reached.

NOTES
       To reiterate, bare futexes are not intended as an easy to use  abstrac‐
       tion  for  end-users. Implementors are expected to be assembly literate
       and to have read the sources of the futex userspace library  referenced
       below.

VERSIONS
       Initial	futex  support	was  merged  in Linux 2.5.7 but with different
       semantics from what was described above. A 4-parameter system call with
       the  semantics  given  here  was	 introduced  in Linux 2.5.40. In Linux
       2.5.70 one parameter was added. In Linux 2.6.7 a	 sixth	parameter  was
       added — messy, especially on the s390 architecture.

CONFORMING TO
       This system call is Minux specific.

SEE ALSO
       futex(7), `Fuss, Futexes and Furwocks: Fast Userlevel Locking in Linux'
       (proceedings  of	 the  Ottawa  Linux  Symposium	2002),	futex  example
       library,	 futex-*.tar.bz2  <URL:ftp://ftp.nl.kernel.org:/pub/linux/ker‐
       nel/people/rusty/>.

Linux 2.6.7			  2004-10-07			      FUTEX(2)
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