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I was wondering if I could make a recursive mutex type on my own with a PTHREAD_MUTEX_ERRORCHECK mutex, this is the result:

typedef struct {
    pthread_mutex_t mutex;
    uint32_t deadlocks;
    pthread_t owner;
    BOOL isLocked;
} pthread_recursivemutex_t;

int pthread_recursivemutex_init(pthread_recursivemutex_t *mutex)
{
    int ret;
    pthread_mutexattr_t attr;

    mutex->deadlocks = 0;

    ret = pthread_mutexattr_init(&attr);

    if (ret != 0) {
        return ret;
    }

    (void)pthread_mutexattr_settype(&attr, PTHREAD_MUTEX_ERRORCHECK);

    ret = pthread_mutex_init(&mutex->mutex, &attr);

    (void)pthread_mutexattr_destroy(&attr);

    mutex->isLocked = FALSE;

    return ret;
}

void pthread_recursivemutex_lock(pthread_recursivemutex_t *mutex)
{
    int ret;
    BOOL locked;

    locked = mutex->isLocked;
    __sync_synchronize();

    if (locked == TRUE) {
        if (pthread_equal(pthread_self(), mutex->owner) == 0) {
            return;
        }
    }       

    ret = pthread_mutex_lock(&mutex->mutex);

    if (ret == 0) {
        mutex->deadlocks = 0;
        __sync_synchronize();
        mutex->isLocked = TRUE;
    } else if (ret == EDEADLK) {
        mutex->deadlocks += 1;
    }
}

void pthread_recursivemutex_unlock(pthread_recursivemutex_t *mutex)
{
    if (mutex->deadlocks == 0) {
        (void)pthread_mutex_unlock(&mutex->mutex);
        __sync_synchronize();
        mutex->isLocked = FALSE;
    } else {
        mutex->deadlocks -= 1;
    }
}

void pthread_recursivemutex_destroy(pthread_recursivemutex_t *mutex)
{
    (void)pthread_mutex_destroy(&mutex->mutex);
}

I found out that this type of recursive mutex is a lot faster than a mutex with the PTHREAD_MUTEX_RECURSIVE attribute:

iterations               : 1000000

pthread_mutex_t          : 71757 μSeconds
pthread_recursivemutex_t : 48583 μSeconds

Test code (each called 1000000 times):

void mutex_test()
{
    pthread_mutex_lock(&recursiveMutex);
    pthread_mutex_lock(&recursiveMutex);
    pthread_mutex_unlock(&recursiveMutex);
    pthread_mutex_unlock(&recursiveMutex);
}

void recursivemutex_test()
{
    pthread_recursivemutex_lock(&myMutex);
    pthread_recursivemutex_lock(&myMutex);
    pthread_recursivemutex_unlock(&myMutex);
    pthread_recursivemutex_unlock(&myMutex);
}

pthread_recursivemutex_t is almost twice as fast as pthread_mutex_t ?! But both behave the same way...?

Is this solution above safe?

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1 Answer 1

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Your mutex won't work: you don't check which thread is acquiring the lock.

You allow multiple threads to lock the same mutex.

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  • Even with owner thread checking, recursivemutex is still faster. Why?
    – Marco
    Apr 13, 2014 at 12:59
  • Now it's slower... didn't see that coming.
    – Marco
    Apr 13, 2014 at 13:26
  • I would rephrase that: what is currently preventing them doing so? and... Have you tried it? Apr 13, 2014 at 14:12
  • Because a mutex can be aquired only by one thread all other threads will be blocked.
    – Marco
    Apr 16, 2014 at 19:22

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