table of contents
| SLEEP(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | SLEEP(9) | 
NAME¶
msleep, msleep_sbt,
  msleep_spin, msleep_spin_sbt,
  pause, pause_sbt,
  tsleep, tsleep_sbt,
  wakeup —
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
int
  
  msleep(void
    *chan, struct mtx
    *mtx, int priority,
    const char *wmesg,
    int timo);
int
  
  msleep_sbt(void
    *chan, struct mtx
    *mtx, int priority,
    const char *wmesg,
    sbintime_t sbt,
    sbintime_t pr,
    int flags);
int
  
  msleep_spin(void
    *chan, struct mtx
    *mtx, const char
    *wmesg, int
  timo);
int
  
  msleep_spin_sbt(void
    *chan, struct mtx
    *mtx, const char
    *wmesg, sbintime_t
    sbt, sbintime_t pr,
    int flags);
void
  
  pause(const
    char *wmesg, int
    timo);
void
  
  pause_sbt(const
    char *wmesg, sbintime_t
    sbt, sbintime_t pr,
    int flags);
int
  
  tsleep(void
    *chan, int
    priority, const char
    *wmesg, int
  timo);
int
  
  tsleep_sbt(void
    *chan, int
    priority, const char
    *wmesg, sbintime_t
    sbt, sbintime_t pr,
    int flags);
void
  
  wakeup(void
    *chan);
void
  
  wakeup_one(void
    *chan);
DESCRIPTION¶
The functionstsleep(),
  msleep(), msleep_spin(),
  pause(), wakeup(), and
  wakeup_one() handle event-based thread blocking. If a
  thread must wait for an external event, it is put to sleep by
  tsleep(), msleep(),
  msleep_spin(), or pause().
  Threads may also wait using one of the locking primitive sleep routines
  mtx_sleep(9), rw_sleep(9), or
  sx_sleep(9).
The parameter chan is an arbitrary address
    that uniquely identifies the event on which the thread is being put to
    sleep. All threads sleeping on a single chan are woken
    up later by wakeup(), often called from inside an
    interrupt routine, to indicate that the resource the thread was blocking on
    is available now.
The parameter priority specifies a new
    priority for the thread as well as some optional flags. If the new priority
    is not 0, then the thread will be made runnable with the specified
    priority when it resumes.
    PZERO should never be used, as it is for
    compatibility only. A new priority of 0 means to use the thread's current
    priority when it is made runnable again.
If priority includes the
    PCATCH flag, pending signals are allowed to
    interrupt the sleep, otherwise pending signals are ignored during the sleep.
    If PCATCH is set and a signal becomes pending,
    ERESTART is returned if the current system call
    should be restarted if possible, and EINTR is
    returned if the system call should be interrupted by the signal (return
    EINTR).
The parameter wmesg is a string describing the sleep condition for tools like ps(1). Due to the limited space of those programs to display arbitrary strings, this message should not be longer than 6 characters.
The parameter timo specifies a timeout for
    the sleep. If timo is not 0, then the thread will
    sleep for at most timo /
    hz seconds. If the timeout expires, then the sleep
    function will return EWOULDBLOCK.
msleep_sbt(),
    msleep_spin_sbt(),
    pause_sbt() and tsleep_sbt()
    functions take sbt parameter instead of
    timo. It allows the caller to specify relative or
    absolute wakeup time with higher resolution in form of
    sbintime_t. The parameter pr
    allows the caller to specify wanted absolute event precision. The parameter
    flags allows the caller to pass additional
    callout_reset_sbt() flags.
Several of the sleep functions including
    msleep(), msleep_spin(), and
    the locking primitive sleep routines specify an additional lock parameter.
    The lock will be released before sleeping and reacquired before the sleep
    routine returns. If priority includes the
    PDROP flag, then the lock will not be reacquired
    before returning. The lock is used to ensure that a condition can be checked
    atomically, and that the current thread can be suspended without missing a
    change to the condition, or an associated wakeup. In addition, all of the
    sleep routines will fully drop the Giant mutex (even
    if recursed) while the thread is suspended and will reacquire the
    Giant mutex before the function returns. Note that the
    Giant mutex may be specified as the lock to drop. In
    that case, however, the PDROP flag is not
  allowed.
To avoid lost wakeups, either a lock should be used to protect
    against races, or a timeout should be specified to place an upper bound on
    the delay due to a lost wakeup. As a result, the
    tsleep() function should only be invoked with a
    timeout of 0 when the Giant mutex is held.
The msleep() function requires that
    mtx reference a default, i.e. non-spin, mutex. Its use
    is deprecated in favor of mtx_sleep(9) which provides
    identical behavior.
The msleep_spin() function requires that
    mtx reference a spin mutex. The
    msleep_spin() function does not accept a
    priority parameter and thus does not support changing
    the current thread's priority, the PDROP flag, or
    catching signals via the PCATCH flag.
The pause() function is a wrapper around
    tsleep() that suspends execution of the current
    thread for the indicated timeout. The thread can not be awakened early by
    signals or calls to wakeup() or
    wakeup_one().
The wakeup_one() function makes the first
    thread in the queue that is sleeping on the parameter
    chan runnable. This reduces the load when a large
    number of threads are sleeping on the same address, but only one of them can
    actually do any useful work when made runnable.
Due to the way it works, the wakeup_one()
    function requires that only related threads sleep on a specific
    chan address. It is the programmer's responsibility to
    choose a unique chan value. The older
    wakeup() function did not require this, though it
    was never good practice for threads to share a chan
    value. When converting from wakeup() to
    wakeup_one(), pay particular attention to ensure
    that no other threads wait on the same chan.
RETURN VALUES¶
When awakened by a call towakeup() or
  wakeup_one(), if a signal is pending and
  PCATCH is specified, a non-zero error code is
  returned. If the thread is awakened by a call to
  wakeup() or wakeup_one(), the
  msleep(), msleep_spin(),
  tsleep(), and locking primitive sleep functions return
  0. Otherwise, a non-zero error code is returned.
ERRORS¶
msleep(), msleep_spin(),
  tsleep(), and the locking primitive sleep functions
  will fail if:
- [
EINTR] - The 
PCATCHflag was specified, a signal was caught, and the system call should be interrupted. - [
ERESTART] - The 
PCATCHflag was specified, a signal was caught, and the system call should be restarted. - [
EWOULDBLOCK] - A non-zero timeout was specified and the timeout expired.
 
SEE ALSO¶
ps(1), locking(9), malloc(9), mi_switch(9), mtx_sleep(9), rw_sleep(9), sx_sleep(9), timeout(9)HISTORY¶
The functionssleep() and
  wakeup() were present in
  Version 1 AT&T UNIX. They were probably
  also present in the preceding PDP-7 version of UNIX.
  They were the basic process synchronization model.
The tsleep() function appeared in
    4.4BSD and added the parameters
    wmesg and timo. The
    sleep() function was removed in
    FreeBSD 2.2. The
    wakeup_one() function appeared in
    FreeBSD 2.2. The msleep()
    function appeared in FreeBSD 5.0, and the
    msleep_spin() function appeared in
    FreeBSD 6.2. The pause()
    function appeared in FreeBSD 7.0.
AUTHORS¶
This manual page was written by Jörg Wunsch <joerg@FreeBSD.org>.| May 24, 2015 | Linux 4.9.0-9-amd64 |