NAME¶
pthread_cancel - send a cancellation request to a thread
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <pthread.h>
int pthread_cancel(pthread_t thread);
Compile and link with  -pthread.
DESCRIPTION¶
The 
pthread_cancel() function sends a cancellation request to the thread
  
thread. Whether and when the target thread reacts to the cancellation
  request depends on two attributes that are under the control of that thread:
  its cancelability 
state and 
type.
A thread's cancelability state, determined by 
pthread_setcancelstate(3),
  can be 
enabled (the default for new threads) or 
disabled. If a
  thread has disabled cancellation, then a cancellation request remains queued
  until the thread enables cancellation. If a thread has enabled cancellation,
  then its cancelability type determines when cancellation occurs.
A thread's cancellation type, determined by 
pthread_setcanceltype(3), may
  be either 
asynchronous or 
deferred (the default for new
  threads). Asynchronous cancelability means that the thread can be canceled at
  any time (usually immediately, but the system does not guarantee this).
  Deferred cancelability means that cancellation will be delayed until the
  thread next calls a function that is a 
cancellation point. A list of
  functions that are or may be cancellation points is provided in
  
pthreads(7).
When a cancellation requested is acted on, the following steps occur for
  
thread (in this order):
  - 1.
 
  - Cancellation clean-up handlers are popped (in the reverse of the order in
      which they were pushed) and called. (See
    pthread_cleanup_push(3).)
 
  - 2.
 
  - Thread-specific data destructors are called, in an unspecified order. (See
      pthread_key_create(3).)
 
  - 3.
 
  - The thread is terminated. (See pthread_exit(3).)
 
The above steps happen asynchronously with respect to the
  
pthread_cancel() call; the return status of 
pthread_cancel()
  merely informs the caller whether the cancellation request was successfully
  queued.
After a canceled thread has terminated, a join with that thread using
  
pthread_join(3) obtains 
PTHREAD_CANCELED as the thread's exit
  status. (Joining with a thread is the only way to know that cancellation has
  completed.)
RETURN VALUE¶
On success, 
pthread_cancel() returns 0; on error, it returns a nonzero
  error number.
ERRORS¶
  - ESRCH
 
  - No thread with the ID thread could be found.
 
POSIX.1-2001.
NOTES¶
On Linux, cancellation is implemented using signals. Under the NPTL threading
  implementation, the first real-time signal (i.e., signal 32) is used for this
  purpose. On LinuxThreads, the second real-time signal is used, if real-time
  signals are available, otherwise 
SIGUSR2 is used.
EXAMPLE¶
The program below creates a thread and then cancels it. The main thread joins
  with the canceled thread to check that its exit status was
  
PTHREAD_CANCELED. The following shell session shows what happens when
  we run the program:
$ ./a.out
thread_func(): started; cancellation disabled
main(): sending cancellation request
thread_func(): about to enable cancellation
main(): thread was canceled
Program source¶
#include <pthread.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#define handle_error_en(en, msg) \
        do { errno = en; perror(msg); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } while (0)
static void *
thread_func(void *ignored_argument)
{
    int s;
    /* Disable cancellation for a while, so that we don't
       immediately react to a cancellation request */
    s = pthread_setcancelstate(PTHREAD_CANCEL_DISABLE, NULL);
    if (s != 0)
        handle_error_en(s, "pthread_setcancelstate");
    printf("thread_func(): started; cancellation disabled\n");
    sleep(5);
    printf("thread_func(): about to enable cancellation\n");
    s = pthread_setcancelstate(PTHREAD_CANCEL_ENABLE, NULL);
    if (s != 0)
        handle_error_en(s, "pthread_setcancelstate");
    /* sleep() is a cancellation point */
    sleep(1000);        /* Should get canceled while we sleep */
    /* Should never get here */
    printf("thread_func(): not canceled!\n");
    return NULL;
}
int
main(void)
{
    pthread_t thr;
    void *res;
    int s;
    /* Start a thread and then send it a cancellation request */
    s = pthread_create(&thr, NULL, &thread_func, NULL);
    if (s != 0)
        handle_error_en(s, "pthread_create");
    sleep(2);           /* Give thread a chance to get started */
    printf("main(): sending cancellation request\n");
    s = pthread_cancel(thr);
    if (s != 0)
        handle_error_en(s, "pthread_cancel");
    /* Join with thread to see what its exit status was */
    s = pthread_join(thr, &res);
    if (s != 0)
        handle_error_en(s, "pthread_join");
    if (res == PTHREAD_CANCELED)
        printf("main(): thread was canceled\n");
    else
        printf("main(): thread wasn't canceled (shouldn't happen!)\n");
    exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
SEE ALSO¶
pthread_cleanup_push(3), 
pthread_create(3),
  
pthread_exit(3), 
pthread_join(3), 
pthread_key_create(3),
  
pthread_setcancelstate(3), 
pthread_setcanceltype(3),
  
pthread_testcancel(3), 
pthreads(7)
COLOPHON¶
This page is part of release 3.74 of the Linux 
man-pages project. A
  description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest
  version of this page, can be found at
  
http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.