Re: Creating threads in C vs C++

From:
James Kanze <james.kanze@gmail.com>
Newsgroups:
comp.lang.c++
Date:
Sat, 9 Jan 2010 15:01:30 -0800 (PST)
Message-ID:
<3debf105-da0f-4293-99a6-631fff545ae5@a15g2000yqm.googlegroups.com>
On Jan 9, 7:08 pm, Rolf Magnus <ramag...@t-online.de> wrote:

James Kanze wrote:

You actually often need a double conversion when calling
pthread_create (and other, similar functions). Basically,
if you convert to void*, the only legal conversion is back
to the type you converted. And in the simplest case, you
will have just constructed a derived class (and have a
pointer to it), but will cast back to the base class, in
order to call a virtual function. So you need to ensure
that the pointer you convert to void* is a pointer to the
base class, not to the derived class.


The typical implementation that I know is based roughly on
something like that:

class Thread
{
public:
    // ...
    void run()
    {
        // ...
        pthread_create(&tid, 0, thread_helper, this);
    }
private:
    virtual void doit() = 0;

    pthread_t* tid;
};

extern "C"
void* thread_helper(void* arg)
{
    static_cast<Thread*>(arg)->doit();
    return arg;
}

Then you derive from Thread and implement the doit() function.
Doesn't get much simpler than that, and you get a conversion
from a Thread* to void* and back to Thread*.


That works. I'm not sure if it's really what I would consider
good design (although to be frank, I'm not sure what is good
design where threads are concerned); some would say that the
thread and the code it executes are logically two different
things. But just about anything which wraps the thread in a
class, and doesn't use templates, will do the trick. The
problem occurs either when calling pthread_create directly, or
when the thread class is a template (since the thread_helper
above can't be a template, so the template has to wrap in a
class using virtual functions)

BTW: When implementing something like that, I noticed that C++
lacks a way of defining functions with internal C linkage. I'd
usually make a function like thread_helper static (or, if it
were a C++ function, put it in an unnamed namespace), but I
have to make the linkage extern to make it a C function, and
there is no such thing as static "C" or extern "C" static.


I wouldn't swear to it, but I think:

    extern "C" {
    static void*
    thread_helper(void* user_pointer)
    {
        static_cast< thread* >( user_pointer )->run();
        return user_pointer;
    }
    }

would do the trick.

--
James Kanze

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