For glibc <= 2.23, it looks like the generic definition of malloc's mutex_lock
macro uses an int
as a mutex. 1
means in use, and 0
means free.
It defines this generic set of macros:
typedef int mutex_t
# define mutex_init(m) (*(m) = 0)
# define mutex_lock(m) ({ *(m) = 1; 0; })
# define mutex_trylock(m) (*(m) ? 1 : ((*(m) = 1), 0))
# define mutex_unlock(m) (*(m) = 0)
For mutex_lock(m)
, what purpose does 0;
serve?
0
on success?0;
is a statement with no side effects though. It doesn't set a return value.0;
was not there, the return value would have been 1. Thanks!