1

I have a simple test of cancellation of a pthread when assigning this function as a work function:

static void * thread_start(void *arg)
{
    printf("New thread started\n");
    pthread_cleanup_push(cleanup_handler, NULL);
    pthread_cancel(pthread_self());
    pthread_testcancel();           /* A cancellation point */
    return NULL;
}

The cleanup_handler:

static void cleanup_handler(void *arg)
{
    printf("Called clean-up handler\n");
}

But I get compiler error of some irrelevant syntax error (missing '}' somewhere else). On the other hand, if I add pthread_cleanup_pop(1) like this:

static void * thread_start(void *arg)
{
    printf("New thread started\n");
    pthread_cleanup_push(cleanup_handler, NULL);
    pthread_cancel(pthread_self());
    pthread_testcancel();           /* A cancellation point */
    pthread_cleanup_pop(1);  //added this
    return NULL;
}

it compiles and run as expected (pthread_cleanup_pop(1) is not run). The cleanup_handler is executed and thread returns PTHREAD_CANCLED.

It is completely irrelevant to have pthread_cleanup_pop(1) in the end, since all cleanup handlers should always run when a thread is about to be terminated. I don't even care if they are run without my cancellation.

What is wrong?

SOLVED

0

1 Answer 1

1

Looking at the man

POSIX.1 permits pthread_cleanup_push() and pthread_cleanup_pop() to be implemented as macros that expand to text containing '{' and '}', respectively. For this reason, the caller must ensure that calls to these functions are paired within the same function, and at the same lexical nesting level. (In other words, a clean-up handler is established only during the execution of a specified section of code.)

Emphasis mine

1
  • Yes, thats it, thanks! Now everything makes sense. Sep 15, 2016 at 13:53

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.