Hi Sorry for posting a big dump of code but I'm very new at C code, Basically I'm doing an assignment for college and and I have to implement a "pthread_barrier", now I understand the concept of the barrier (or at least I think I do) But I am just not sure exactly where I should put it. The assignment states:

"Use pthread_barrier_init and pthread_barrier_wait to ensure that all producer/consumer threads begin producing/consuming at the same time."

This is the extra credit part of the assignment by the way

#include <pthread.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>

#define SIXTY_SECONDS 60000000
#define ONE_SECOND 1000000
#define RANGE 10
#define PERIOD 2

typedef struct {
  int *carpark;
  int capacity;
  int occupied;
  int nextin;
  int nextout;
  int cars_in;
  int cars_out;
  pthread_mutex_t lock;
  pthread_cond_t space;
  pthread_cond_t car;
  pthread_barrier_t bar;
} cp_t;

/* Our producer threads will each execute this function */
static void *
producer(void *cp_in)
{    
  cp_t *cp;
  unsigned int seed;
  /* Convert what was passed in to a pointer to a bounded buffer */
  cp = (cp_t *)cp_in;

    /* Loop */
    while (1) {
    /* Sleep for up to 1s */
    usleep(rand_r(&seed) % ONE_SECOND);
    /* Acquire the lock */
    pthread_mutex_lock(&cp->lock);
    /* While full wait until there is room available */
    while (cp->occupied == cp->capacity) {
      pthread_cond_wait(&cp->car, &cp->lock);
    }
    /* Insert an item */
    cp->carpark[cp->nextin] = rand_r(&seed) % RANGE;
    /* Increment counters */
    cp->occupied++;
    cp->nextin++;
    cp->nextin %= cp->capacity;
    cp->cars_in++;
    /* Someone may be waiting on data to become available */
    pthread_cond_signal(&cp->space);
    /* Release the lock */
    pthread_mutex_unlock(&cp->lock);
  }

  return ((void *)NULL);
}

/* Our consumer threads will each execute this function */
static void *
consumer(void *cp_in)
{

  cp_t *cp;
  unsigned int seed;
  /* Convert what was passed in to a pointer to a bounded buffer */
  cp = (cp_t *)cp_in;

  while (1) {
    /* Sleep for up to 1s */
    usleep(rand_r(&seed) % ONE_SECOND);
    /* Acquire the lock */
    pthread_mutex_lock(&cp->lock);
    /* While empty wait until there is data available */

    while (cp->occupied == 0) {
      pthread_cond_wait(&cp->space, &cp->lock);
    }

    /* Increment counters */
    cp->occupied--;
    cp->nextout++;
    cp->nextout %= cp->capacity;
    cp->cars_out++;
    /* Someone may be waiting on room to become available */
    pthread_cond_signal(&cp->car);
    /* Release the lock */
    pthread_mutex_unlock(&cp->lock);
  }

  return ((void *)NULL);
}

/* Our monitor thread will each execute this function */
static void *
monitor(void *cp_in)
{

  cp_t *cp;
  /* Convert what was passed in to a pointer to a bounded buffer */
  cp = (cp_t *)cp_in;

  while (1) {
    /* Pause */
    sleep(PERIOD);
    /* Acquire the lock */
    pthread_mutex_lock(&cp->lock);
    printf("Delta: %d\n", cp->cars_in - cp->cars_out);
    /* Release the lock */
    pthread_mutex_unlock(&cp->lock);
  }

  return ((void *)NULL);
}

/* Initialisation */
static int
init(cp_t *cp, int capacity)
{

  /* Set up the bounded buffer internals */
  cp->occupied = cp->nextin = cp->nextout = cp->cars_in = cp->cars_out = 0;
  cp->capacity = capacity;
  /* Initialise our data structure */
  cp->carpark = (int *)malloc(cp->capacity * sizeof (*cp->carpark));
  /* Check malloc succeeded */

  if (cp->carpark == NULL) {
    perror("malloc()");
    exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
  }

  /* Initialise lock and condition variables */
  pthread_mutex_init(&cp->lock, NULL);
  pthread_cond_init(&cp->space, NULL);
  pthread_cond_init(&cp->car, NULL);  
  /* Seed random number generator */
  srand((unsigned int)getpid());

  return (0);
}

int
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{

  pthread_t p, c, m;
  cp_t cp;
  /* Check usage */

  if (argc != 2) {
    printf("Usage: %s buffer_size\n", argv[0]);
    exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
  }

  /* Initialise */
  init(&cp, atoi(argv[1]));
  /* Create our threads */
  pthread_create(&p, NULL, producer, (void *)&cp);
  pthread_create(&p, NULL, producer, (void *)&cp);
  pthread_create(&c, NULL, consumer, (void *)&cp);
  pthread_create(&c, NULL, consumer, (void *)&cp);
  pthread_create(&m, NULL, monitor, (void *)&cp);
  /* Wait for our threads */
  pthread_join(p, NULL);
  pthread_join(p, NULL);
  pthread_join(c, NULL);
  pthread_join(c, NULL);
  pthread_join(m, NULL);

  return (0);
}
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6  
I fail to see how anyone can help you without just giving you the answer. As such, why should you earn extra credit for it? Can you tell us what you think? What you've tried? – Lasse V. Karlsen Aug 11 '11 at 20:58
I changed the title slightly, feel free to rollback if you don't agree. – cnicutar Aug 11 '11 at 21:06
Sorry for the late reply, had an exam that I was studying for and put this on the back burner! – Ian Aug 16 '11 at 1:21
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1 Answer

up vote 4 down vote accepted

I could probably give you the full answer but I am afraid of Lasse V. Karlsen. So I'll give you hints.

  • The barrier object bar is already accessible in your struct cp_t
  • Initialize it with pthread_barrier_init, like you initialized the mutexes. There is a correspondence between countand the number of actors.
  • Both the producers and consumers need to wait before starting to produce / consume. Get it ?
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As well you should be afraid! grrrr We moderators eat posts for breakfast around here. Kidding aside, I didn't want people to not answer his question, I was questioning the form of his question, where he had basically said "I can get extra credit if I answer this, but I don't know the answer, can you give it to me?". A better way would've been to explain what he thought, the reasoning behind that, and asking people to poke holes in his assumptions or results. But yeah, be afraid, be very afraid. :) – Lasse V. Karlsen Aug 12 '11 at 16:37
@Lasse V. Karlsen :-)) – cnicutar Aug 12 '11 at 16:38
Yes this did help a lot! I had an idea about how to use it but when I run the code it is indistinguishable from the terminal output if I am doing it correctly :S I think I have a better understanding of it now tho! I wont get a chance to try it until tomorrow but I will update the post with the new code at the bottom of the post when I get it working :) Thanks guys!! – Ian Aug 16 '11 at 1:26
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