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Module Thread

Signature

include Core.Std.Thread
type t

The type of thread handles.

Thread creation and termination
val create : ('a -> 'b) -> 'a -> t

Thread.create funct arg creates a new thread of control, in which the function application funct arg is executed concurrently with the other threads of the program. The application of Thread.create returns the handle of the newly created thread. The new thread terminates when the application funct arg returns, either normally or by raising an uncaught exception. In the latter case, the exception is printed on standard error, but not propagated back to the parent thread. Similarly, the result of the application funct arg is discarded and not directly accessible to the parent thread.

val self : unit -> t

Return the thread currently executing.

val id : t -> int

Return the identifier of the given thread. A thread identifier is an integer that identifies uniquely the thread. It can be used to build data structures indexed by threads.

val exit : unit -> unit

Terminate prematurely the currently executing thread.

Terminate prematurely the thread whose handle is given. This functionality is available only with bytecode-level threads.

Suspending threads
val delay : float -> unit

delay d suspends the execution of the calling thread for d seconds. The other program threads continue to run during this time.

val join : t -> unit

join th suspends the execution of the calling thread until the thread th has terminated.

val wait_read : Unix.file_descr -> unit

See Thread.wait_write.

val wait_write : Unix.file_descr -> unit

Suspend the execution of the calling thread until at least one character is available for reading (Thread.wait_read) or one character can be written without blocking (wait_write) on the given Unix file descriptor.

val wait_timed_read : Unix.file_descr -> float -> bool

See Thread.wait_timed_write.

val wait_timed_write : Unix.file_descr -> float -> bool

Same as Thread.wait_read and Thread.wait_write, but wait for at most the amount of time given as second argument (in seconds). Return true if the file descriptor is ready for input/output and false if the timeout expired.

val yield : unit -> unit

Re-schedule the calling thread without suspending it. This function can be used to give scheduling hints, telling the scheduler that now is a good time to switch to other threads.

Management of signals

Signal handling follows the POSIX thread model: signals generated by a thread are delivered to that thread; signals generated externally are delivered to one of the threads that does not block it. Each thread possesses a set of blocked signals, which can be modified using Thread.sigmask. This set is inherited at thread creation time. Per-thread signal masks are supported only by the system thread library under Unix, but not under Win32, nor by the VM thread library.

sigmask cmd sigs changes the set of blocked signals for the calling thread. If cmd is `Set, blocked signals are set to those in the list sigs. If cmd is `Block, the signals in sigs are added to the set of blocked signals. If cmd is `Unblock, the signals in sigs are removed from the set of blocked signals. sigmask returns the set of previously blocked signals for the thread.

val wait_signal : Core.Signal.t list -> int

wait_signal sigs suspends the execution of the calling thread until the process receives one of the signals specified in the list sigs. It then returns the number of the signal received. Signal handlers attached to the signals in sigs will not be invoked. The signals sigs are expected to be blocked before calling wait_signal.

Jane Street extensions

val threads_have_been_created : unit -> bool

true iff Thread.create has ever been called, even if there is currently only one running thread.

val num_threads : unit -> int option

num_threads () attempts to return the number of currently running threads by parsing /proc. Since this is an operation frought with potential failure, we return an option in cases of failure

val block_forever : unit -> 'a

block_forever () will block the calling thread forever.

include Extended_thread
val safe_create : (unit -> unit) -> Core.Std.Thread.t

Behaves like Thread.create but exits the program if an exception trickles to the toplevel. This is generally a safer alternative.