8

I have written a small class for synchronizing threads of both Linux (actually Android) and Windows.

Here is the Win32 implementation of my interface :

    class SyncObjectWin32 : public SyncObject
    {
    private:

        const HANDLE m_hEvent;

    public:

        SyncObjectWin32()
          : m_hEvent( ::CreateEvent( NULL, FALSE, FALSE ) )
        {
            if( NULL == m_hEvent )
                throw core::Exception( "sys::SyncObjectWin32::SyncObjectWin32() - Failed to create event." );
        }

        ~SyncObjectWin32()
        {
            ::CloseHandle( m_hEvent );
        }

        void WaitForSignal()
        {
            ::WaitForSingleObject( m_hEvent );
        }

        void Signal()
        {
            ::SetEvent( m_hEvent );
        }
    };

The problem is that i'm not sure what would be the POSIX equivalent. So far i've written the following class, based on this SO question, but since the answer is incomplete i'm not sure about how to finish my class :

    class SyncObjectPosix
    {
    private:

        pthread_mutex_t m_oMutex;

    public:

        SyncObjectPosix()
        {
            pthread_mutex_lock( m_oMutex );                 // lock mutex
            bool & signalled = find_signal( condition );  // find predicate
            signalled = true;                          // set predicate
            pthread_mutex_unlock( m_oMutex );               // unlock mutex
            pthread_cond_signal( condition );            // signal condition variable
        }

        ~SyncObjectPosix()
        {

        }

        void WaitForSignal()
        {
            pthread_mutex_lock(mutex);                         // lock mutex
            bool & signalled = find_signal( condition );          // find predicate
            while (!signalled)
            {
              pthread_cond_timedwait(condition, m_oMutex, timeout);
            }
            signalled = false;                                 // reset predicate
            pthread_mutex_unlock( m_oMutex );                       // unlock mutex
        }

        void Signal()
        {

        }
    };
11
  • The code you have in the constructor looks like it should be in Signal().
    – caf
    Commented Oct 13, 2015 at 9:11
  • Ok thank you. Do you know what would be the type of the "condition" ? Also how could i do an unlimited wait ? And how fast is this ? Because if pthread_cond_timedwait waits, let's say, 1 second, then in some cases there will be a 1 second delay.
    – Virus721
    Commented Oct 13, 2015 at 9:21
  • There is no equivalent. A similar facility is POSIX condition variables. You need to read all the man pages in the pthread_cond_* series, and then read a tutorial or two on how to actually use them. Commented Oct 13, 2015 at 9:27
  • 1
    The semantics of Windows and POSIX synchronization methods differ, so the cross-platform equivalent depends on how you're using one or the other. From the way you're using SetEvent() and WaitForSingleObject(), a semaphore would also work. See man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/sem_post.3.html and man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/sem_wait.3.html There's some good example code on the sem_wait() man page. Commented Oct 13, 2015 at 9:40
  • @AndrewHenle Thanks for your help. I will have a look. I also found a detailed to document about POSIX threads here (in french) : univ-orleans.fr/lifo/Members/Sylvain.Jubertie/enseignement/… If it doesn't give me what I need i'll have a look to the semaphore things.
    – Virus721
    Commented Oct 13, 2015 at 9:43

5 Answers 5

17

The POSIX equivalent for what you described is POSIX condition variables. Note that condition variable must always be used in pair with a POSIX mutex, but quite frequently several condition variables use the same mutex, so if you aren't going to use the mutex exclusively for the condition variable, you shouldn't place it in the class. The mappings by meaning in your case between Win32 and POSIX API should be:

CreateEvent -> pthread_cond_init

CloseHandle -> pthread_cond_destroy

WaitForSingleObject -> pthread_cond_wait or pthread_cond_timedwait

SetEvent -> pthread_cond_signal or pthread_cond_broadcast

Fortunately, there is a lot of documentation regarding this, though I recommend the fundamental Programming POSIX Threads.

4
  • Thanks for your answer. Will have a look at this.
    – Virus721
    Commented Oct 13, 2015 at 10:00
  • 3
    No, posix condition variables are not a drop-in replacement for signals. Which is a pity.
    – SergeyA
    Commented Oct 13, 2015 at 13:39
  • @SergeyA I didn't mean that those are equal. But the condition variables fit the situation.
    – tonso
    Commented Oct 13, 2015 at 14:17
  • 3
    pthread (and C++11) condition_variables are painfully different from Windows signals, especially the manual reset events, which don't need mutexes to work.
    – lornova
    Commented Mar 29, 2017 at 7:11
17

Check also eventfd. It seems to be almost equivalent of CreateEvent if you need just one consumer and one producer.

CreateEvent --> eventfd

CloseHandle --> close

SetEvent --> write

WaitForSingleObject --> read

WaitForMultipleObjects --> select and read corresponding fd

Some more reading http://www.sourcexr.com/articles/2013/10/26/lightweight-inter-process-signaling-with-eventfd

6
  • 1
    Yes, this is Linux specific and I don't know, if it is supported by Android, but there is chance it can be.
    – j123b567
    Commented Oct 13, 2015 at 9:31
  • 1
    Here is interresting reading about performance of eventfd and pthread_cond system issues.apache.org/jira/browse/TS-2137 It seems that eventfd is 5-times faster.
    – j123b567
    Commented Oct 13, 2015 at 12:44
  • 1
    This is correct answer, the only problem is, it is not Posix. But Posix simply does not have signals.
    – SergeyA
    Commented Oct 13, 2015 at 13:40
  • 1
    @j123b567, no suprises here.
    – SergeyA
    Commented Oct 13, 2015 at 13:41
  • 1
    This should be the correct answer, at least for those using Linux. Thank you!
    – Nautilus
    Commented Aug 14, 2017 at 17:26
8

The pthreads equivalent of your code is:

class SyncObjectPosix
{
private:

    bool signalled;
    pthread_mutex_t mutex;
    pthread_cond_t cond;

public:

    SyncObjectPosix()
    {
        signalled = false;
        pthread_mutex_init(&mutex, NULL);
        pthread_cond_init(&cond, NULL);
    }

    ~SyncObjectPosix()
    {
        pthread_mutex_destroy(&mutex);
        pthread_cond_destroy(&cond);
    }

    void WaitForSignal()
    {
        pthread_mutex_lock(&mutex);
        while (!signalled)
        {
            pthread_cond_wait(&cond, &mutex);
        }
        signalled = false;
        pthread_mutex_unlock(&mutex);
    }

    void Signal()
    {
        pthread_mutex_lock(&mutex);
        signalled = true;
        pthread_mutex_unlock(&mutex);
        pthread_cond_signal(&cond);
    }
};
4

Our open-source pevents library is an implementation of just that for all platforms. It's a very small (single-file) bit of C++ code that you can just add to your existing project and get access to the Windows event api built on top of pthreads synchronization primitives.

The most important tidbit is that it includes WaitForMultipleObjects support.

https://github.com/neosmart/pevents

1
  • This is a very simple solution and works great!
    – BenHero
    Commented Sep 1, 2021 at 9:04
2

as Win32's CreateEvent use file-path like key to indent the event, I don't think all this answer is good.

check the UNIX:System V IPC

int project_id = 1;
std::string path = "[path]";

//CreateEvent
key_t ipc_key = ftok(path.c_str(),project_id);
int event_id = msgget(ipc_key , IPC_CREAT);

//OpenEvent
key_t ipc_key = ftok(path.c_str(),project_id);
int event_id = msgget(ipc_key , 0);

//SetEvent
std::string send_message = "trump 2024|America first|life equally matter|build the #$% wall"; //

msgsnd(event_id, send_message.c_str(), send_message.size(), IPC_NOWAIT); //NO Block
msgsnd(event_id, send_message.c_str(), send_message.size(), 0); //Block

//WaitForSingleObject
std::string receive_message;
receive_message.resize(128);

msgrcv(event_id , &receive_message[0], receive_message.size(), 0,0);

//CloseHandle
msgctl(event_id , IPC_RMID,NULL);

Be ware even there might be some function got more speed per call, but function base on file description does not go with inter-process as CreateEvent Did.

Using IPC event message queue might solve most of the request,but it does not provide timeout ability, which might cause some problem when some time you don't want to complete freeze your process/thread.

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