0

The following loop is inside the main of the program. It accepts an incoming connection, and has a thread do work with it.

The problem is, as soon as any thread terminates, it terminates the entire program. Here's the code:

#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <netdb.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <pthread.h>
#define BUFLEN 1500
#define MAXCON 30

char *returnTimeDate(int inputchoice);
void readWriteToClient(int inputconnfd);

int main(){

    int backlog = 10;

    int fd;
    fd = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
    if (fd == -1) {
        // Error: unable to create socket
    }

    struct sockaddr_in cliaddr;
    socklen_t cliaddrlen = sizeof(cliaddr);

    struct sockaddr_in addr;
    addr.sin_addr.s_addr = INADDR_ANY;
    addr.sin_family = AF_INET;
    addr.sin_port = htons(5001);

    if (bind(fd, (struct sockaddr *) &addr, (socklen_t) sizeof(addr)) == -1) {
        fprintf(stderr,"Bind Didn't Work\n");
    }

    if (listen(fd, backlog) == -1) {
        fprintf(stderr,"Listen Didn't Work\n");
    }

    pthread_t *threadsArray = (pthread_t *)calloc(MAXCON, sizeof(pthread_t));
    pthread_t *threadPtr = threadsArray;

    int k;
    for(k = 0; k < MAXCON; k++){
        fprintf(stderr,"Make %d\n",k);
        int connfd;
        connfd = accept(fd, (struct sockaddr *) &cliaddr, &cliaddrlen);
        if (connfd == -1) {
            fprintf(stderr,"Accept Didn't Work\n");
        }
        fprintf(stderr,"Waited\n",k);
        pthread_create( &threadPtr, NULL, readWriteToClient, (void *)connfd);
        threadPtr++;
    }

    pthread_t *threadPtrJoin = threadsArray;

    for(k = 0; k < MAXCON; k++){
        fprintf(stderr,"Join %d\n",k);
        pthread_join( *threadPtrJoin, NULL);
        threadPtrJoin++;
    }

/*  readWriteToClient(connfd);*/

    close(fd);

    return 0;

}

void readWriteToClient(int inputconnfd){

    int connfd = inputconnfd;

    while(1){

        char *dateString = "DATE\r\n";
        char *timeString = "TIME\r\n";
        char *endString = "end";

        char *bufferTime = returnTimeDate(0);
        char *bufferDate = returnTimeDate(1);

        ssize_t i;
        ssize_t rcount;
        char buf[BUFLEN];
        char *toReturn = (char *)malloc(BUFLEN*sizeof(char));
        rcount = read(connfd, buf, BUFLEN);
        if((strcmp (buf, dateString)) == 0){
            strcpy(toReturn, bufferDate);
        }
        if((strcmp (buf, timeString)) == 0){
            strcpy(toReturn, bufferTime);
        }
        if((strcmp (buf, endString)) == 0){
            goto outside;
        }
        if (rcount == -1) {
            // Error has occurred
            printf("Error: rcount -1");
        }

/*      fprintf(stderr,"I have received = %s\n",buf);*/

        if (write(connfd, toReturn, BUFLEN) == -1) {
            fprintf(stderr,"I didn't write = %s\n",buf);    
        }
    }

    outside: return;

}

char *returnTimeDate(int inputchoice){

    time_t timer;
    char *bufferTimee = (char *)malloc(25*sizeof(char));
    char *bufferDatee = (char *)malloc(25*sizeof(char));
    struct tm* tm_info;
    time(&timer);
    tm_info = localtime(&timer);
    strftime(bufferTimee, 25, "%H:%M:%S\n\0", tm_info);
    strftime(bufferDatee, 25, "%d:%m:%Y\n\0", tm_info);

    if(inputchoice == 0){
        return bufferTimee;
    }else{
        return bufferDatee;
    }

}

Why is it doing this?

6
  • 1
    Have you made sure the code in the method executes? I've never seen a non-void * thread method
    – Tim
    Jan 23, 2013 at 18:08
  • Yeah, the thread works like a charm, just the main program ends. Out of curiosity though, what is the standard convention you referred to?
    – Geesh_SO
    Jan 23, 2013 at 18:10
  • 1
    What are you doing after creating the threads?
    – imreal
    Jan 23, 2013 at 18:11
  • @Geesh_SO The method declared as void * readWriteToClient(void * inputconnfd) and the call being pthread_create(&threadPtr, NULL, readWriteToClient, (void *)connfd);
    – Tim
    Jan 23, 2013 at 18:12
  • 1
    Are you joining any of these threads?
    – user7116
    Jan 23, 2013 at 18:28

2 Answers 2

4

There are a few things that are very wrong with your usage of pthreads.

First of all, I think you meant this:

int st = pthread_create(&threadPtr[k], NULL, readWriteToClient, (void *)connfd);
if (st != 0) {
    /* handle error */
}

Note the following:

  • We're storing the return value of pthread_create() in st and handling its error case.
  • We're passing &threadPtr[k] (of type pthread_t *), not &threadPtr (of type pthread_t **). This was likely the cause of your issue.

But one of the main issues I have with your code, is that you are invoking undefined behavior by passing readWriteToClient to pthread_create(). The pthread_create prototype is as follow:

int pthread_create(pthread_t *restrict,
                   const pthread_attr_t *restrict,
                   void *(*start_routine)(void*), 
                   void *restrict arg);

Even if you change &threadPtr to &threadPtr[k], you'd be calling it as follow:

int pthread_create(pthread_t *restrict,
                   const pthread_attr_t *restrict,
                   void (*start_routine)(int),      // oops!
                   void *restrict arg);

So, the pthread_create() accepts a pointer to a function of one type, but you're passing it a pointer to a function of another type (C11, 6.7.6.3/15, emphasis mine):

For two function types to be compatible, both shall specify compatible return types. Moreover, the parameter type lists, if both are present, shall agree in the number of parameters and in use of the ellipsis terminator; corresponding parameters shall have compatible types. [...]

The pointer to the function is implicitly converted, and your function is called anyway, but this is illegal, as per the standard (C11, 6.3.2.3/8, emphasis mine):

A pointer to a function of one type may be converted to a pointer to a function of another type and back again; the result shall compare equal to the original pointer. If a converted pointer is used to call a function whose type is not compatible with the referenced type, the behavior is undefined.

Since you are invoking undefined behavior, there's no telling how the code will behave after you do.

Also, keep in mind that converting an int to a void * and back is not guarantee to happen without loss of information (it's implementation-defined), so be careful with that.

There are a few other errors in your code that you should see if you compile with warnings enabled, something you should always do.

-1

I bet your compiler was yelding some warning about incompatible pointer type....

My suggestion is TO FIX EVERY WARNING during the compile phase.

If this was done, you'd notice that the parameter of the pthread function must be a pointer to void and not an int.

Plus, the latter function must return a pointer to void and not just void that can produce a big mess with the stack.

First, use an array of connection fds

int connfd[MAXCON];

then save the connfd in

connfd[k] = accept(fd, (struct sockaddr *) &cliaddr, &cliaddrlen);

then, change

pthread_create( threadPtr, NULL, readWriteToClient, connfd);

with

pthread_create( threadPtr, NULL, readWriteToClient, (void *) &connfd[k]);

and change

void readWriteToClient(int inputconnfd)

with

void *readWriteToClient(void *inputconnfd)

then assign it to the local variable with

int connfd = *((int *) inputconnfd);

let me know if it works

5
  • Why not int connfd = (int) inputconnfd;?
    – Tim
    Jan 23, 2013 at 18:45
  • because, according to my fixed version, inputconnfd now is a pointer to void Jan 23, 2013 at 18:48
  • 1
    -1 for wrong and dangerous advice. pthread_create( threadPtr, NULL, readWriteToClient, (void *) &connfd); is not valid (and if it were, the cast to (void *) would be unnecessary and redundant) unless you add strong synchronization to ensure that the new thread reads the value before it changes or goes out of scope. Passing connfd by value is preferable in most cases, but it needs to be cast to (void *). Jan 23, 2013 at 19:13
  • you're right about the pointer to connfd. I should have specified that connfd must be taken from an array of int. BUT also pass an int to a function expecting a pointer is WRONG! In my system for example, an int has size of 4 byte while a pointer is 8 byte! Jan 23, 2013 at 19:35
  • Fixed... now i don't see anything wrong with it. If you agree with me, please remove the -1 Jan 23, 2013 at 19:44

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