VMS Help POSIX Threads, PTHREAD routines, pthread_cancel, Description *Conan The Librarian (sorry for the slow response - running on an old VAX) |
This routine sends a cancelation request to the specified target thread. A cancelation request is a mechanism by which a calling thread requests the target thread to terminate as quickly as possible. Issuing a cancelation request does not guarantee that the target thread will receive or handle the request. When the cancelation request is acted on, all active cleanup handler routines for the target thread are called. When the last cleanup handler returns, the thread-specific data destructor routines are called for each thread-specific data key with a destructor and for which the target thread has a non-NULL value. Finally, the target thread is terminated. Note that cancelation of the target thread runs asynchronously with respect to the calling thread's returning from pthread_ cancel(). The target thread's cancelability state and type determine when or if the cancelation takes place, as follows: 1. The target thread can delay cancelation during critical operations by setting its cancelability state to PTHREAD_ CANCEL_DISABLE. 2. Because of communication delays, the calling thread can only rely on the fact that a cancelation request will eventually become pending in the target thread (provided that the target thread does not terminate beforehand). 3. The calling thread has no guarantee that a pending cancelation request will be delivered because delivery is controlled by the target thread. When a cancelation request is delivered to a thread, termination processing is similar to that for pthread_exit(). For more information about thread termination, see the Thread Termination section of pthread_create(). This routine is preferred in implementing an Ada abort statement and any other language- or software-defined construct for requesting thread cancelation. The results of this routine are unpredictable if the value specified in thread refers to a thread that does not currently exist.
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