NAME¶
co_create, co_call, co_resume, co_delete, co_exit_to, co_exit, co_current - C
coroutine management
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <pcl.h>
coroutine_t co_create(void *func, void *data, void *stack, int stacksize);
void co_delete(coroutine_t co);
void co_call(coroutine_t co);
void co_resume(void);
void co_exit_to(coroutine_t co);
void co_exit(void);
coroutine_t co_current(void);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
Portable Coroutine Library (PCL) implements the low level
functionality for coroutines. For a definition of the term
coroutine
see
The Art of Computer Programming by
Donald E. Knuth.
Coroutines are a very simple cooperative multitasking environment where the
switch from one task to another is done explicitly by a function call.
Coroutines are a lot faster than processes or threads switch, since there is
no OS kernel involvement for the operation. This document defines an API for
the low level handling of coroutines i.e. creating and deleting coroutines and
switching between them. Higher level functionality (scheduler, etc.) is not
covered.
Functions¶
The following functions are defined:
- coroutine_t co_create(void *func, void
*data, void *stack, int
stacksize);
-
This function creates a new coroutine. func is the entry point of the
coroutine. It will be called with one arg, a void *, which holds
the data passed through the data parameter. If func
terminates, the associated coroutine is deleted. stack is the base
of the stack this coroutine will use and stacksize its size in
bytes. You may pass a NULL pointer for stack in which case
the memory will be allocated by co_create itself. Both,
stack and stacksize are aligned to system requirements. A
stacksize of less then 4096 bytes will be rejected. You have to
make sure, that the stack is large enough for your coroutine and possible
signal handlers (see below). The stack will not grow! (Exception: the main
coroutine uses the standard system stack which may still grow) On success,
a handle (coroutine_t) for a new coroutine is returned, otherwise
NULL.
- void co_delete(coroutine_t co);
-
This function deletes the given coroutine co. If the stack for this
coroutine was allocated by co_create it will be freed. After a
coroutine handle was passed to co_delete it is invalid and may not
be used any more. It is invalid for a coroutine to delete itself with this
function.
- void co_call(coroutine_t co);
-
This function passes execution to the given coroutine co. The first
time the coroutine is executed, its entry point func is called, and
the data parameter used during the call to co_create is
passed to func. The current coroutine is suspended until another
one restarts it with a co_call or co_resume call. Calling
oneself returns immediately.
- void co_resume(void);
-
This function passes execution back to the coroutine which either initially
started this one or restarted it after a prior co_resume.
- void co_exit_to(coroutine_t co);
-
This function does the same a co_delete(co_current()) followed by a
co_call would do. That is, it deletes itself and then passes
execution to another coroutine co.
- void co_exit(void);
-
This function does the same a co_delete(co_current()) followed by a
co_resume would do. That is, it deletes itself and then passes
execution back to the coroutine which either initially started this one or
restarted it after a prior co_resume.
- coroutine_t co_current(void);
-
This function returns the currently running coroutine.
Notes¶
Some interactions with other parts of the system are covered here.
- Signals
- First, a signal handler is not defined to run in any specific coroutine.
The only way to leave the signal handler is by a return statement.
Second, the signal handler may run with the stack of any coroutine, even
with the stack of library internal coroutines which have an undefined
stack size (just enough to perform a kernel call). Using and alternate
stack for signal processing (see sigaltstack(2)) is recommended!
Conclusion: avoid signals like a plague. The only thing you may do reliable
is setting some global variables and return. Simple kernel calls may work
too, but nowadays it's pretty hairy to tell, which function really is a
kernel call. (Btw, all this applies to normal C programs, too. The
coroutines just add one more problem)
- setjmp/longjmp
- The use of setjmp(2)/longjmp(2) is limited to jumping inside
one coroutine. Never try to jump from one coroutine to another with
longjmp(2).
DIAGNOSTICS¶
Some fatal errors are caught by the library. If one occurs, a short message is
written to file descriptor 2 (stderr) and a segmentation violation is
generated.
- [PCL]: Cannot delete itself
- A coroutine has called co_delete with it's own handle.
- [PCL]: Resume to deleted coroutine
- A coroutine has deleted itself with co_exit or co_exit_to
and the coroutine that was activated by the exit tried a
co_resume.
- [PCL]: Stale coroutine called
- Someone tried to active a coroutine that has already been deleted. This
error is only detected, if the stack of the deleted coroutine is still
resident in memory.
- [PCL]: Context switch failed
- Low level error generated by the library in case a context switch between
two coroutines failes.
SEE ALSO¶
Original
coroutine library at
http://www.goron.de/~froese/coro/coro.html . GNU Pth library at
http://www.gnu.org/software/pth/ .
AUTHOR¶
Developed by Davide Libenzi <
davidel@xmailserver.org >. Ideas and
man page base source taken by the coroutine library developed by E. Toernig
<
froese@gmx.de >. Also some code and ideas comes from the GNU
Pth library available at
http://www.gnu.org/software/pth/ .
BUGS¶
There are no known bugs. But, this library is still in development even if it
results very stable and pretty much ready for production use.
Bug reports and comments to Davide Libenzi <
davidel@xmailserver.org
>.