9

I'm having a strange problem. I have the following code:

    dbg("condwait: timeout = %d, %d\n", 
        abs_timeout->tv_sec, abs_timeout->tv_nsec);
    ret = pthread_cond_timedwait( &q->q_cond, &q->q_mtx, abs_timeout );
    if (ret == ETIMEDOUT)
    {
      dbg("cond timed out\n");
      return -ETIMEDOUT;
    }

dbg calls gettimeofday before every line and prepends the line with the time. It results in the following output:

    7.991151: condwait: timeout = 5, 705032704
    7.991158: cond timed out

As you can see, only 7 microseconds passed in between the two debug lines, yet pthread_cond_timedwait returned ETIMEDOUT. How can this happen? I even tried setting the clock to something else when initializing the cond variable:

int ret;
ret = pthread_condattr_init(&attributes);
if (ret != 0) printf("CONDATTR INIT FAILED: %d\n", ret);
ret = pthread_condattr_setclock(&attributes, CLOCK_REALTIME);
if (ret != 0) printf("SETCLOCK FAILED: %d\n", ret);
ret = pthread_cond_init( &q->q_cond, &attributes );
if (ret != 0) printf("COND INIT FAILED: %d\n", ret);

(none of the error messages are printed out). I tried both CLOCK_REALTIME and CLOCK_MONOTONIC.

This code is part of a blocking queue. I need functionality such that if nothing gets put on this queue in 5 seconds, something else happens. The mutex and the cond are both initialized, as the blocking queue works fine if I don't use pthread_cond_timedwait.

4 Answers 4

16

pthread_cond_timedwait takes an absolute time, not a relative time. You need to make your wait time absolute by adding to the current time to your timeout value.

2
  • Oh got it. You can use pthread_get_expiration_np() to figure out what the abs time is.
    – Claudiu
    Mar 19, 2009 at 3:11
  • 4
    @Claudiu pthread_get_expiration_np() is not available on my GNU/Linux. Instead I had to: timeval now; gettimeofday(&now, NULL); long int abstime_ns_large = now.tv_usec*1000 + delay_ns; timespec abstime = { now.tv_sec + (abstime_ns_large / 1000000000), abstime_ns_large % 1000000000 }; where delay_ns is the desired delay in nanoseconds. Then use abstime in your pthread_cond_timedwait call.
    – cato_minor
    Dec 11, 2012 at 23:51
8

Overflow in timespec is usually the culprit for weird timeouts.
Check for EINVAL:

void timespec_add(struct timespec* a, struct timespec* b, struct timespec* out)
{
    time_t sec = a->tv_sec + b->tv_sec;
    long nsec = a->tv_nsec + b->tv_nsec;

    sec += nsec / 1000000000L;
    nsec = nsec % 1000000000L;

    out->tv_sec = sec;
    out->tv_nsec = nsec;
}
4

The condition variable can spuriously unblock. You need to check it in a loop and check the condition each time through. You'll probably need to update the timeout value too.

I found some documentation for pthread_cond_timedwait here.

When using condition variables there is always a Boolean predicate involving shared variables associated with each condition wait that is true if the thread should proceed. Spurious wakeups from the pthread_cond_timedwait() or pthread_cond_wait() functions may occur. Since the return from pthread_cond_timedwait() or pthread_cond_wait() does not imply anything about the value of this predicate, the predicate should be re-evaluated upon such return.

1

As already in other answers mentioned you have to use the absolute time. Since C11 you can use timespec_get().

struct timespec time;
timespec_get(&time, TIME_UTC);
time.tv_sec += 5;

pthread_cond_timedwait(&cond, &mutex, &time);

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