Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | #ifndef _LINUX_KTHREAD_H |
| 2 | #define _LINUX_KTHREAD_H |
| 3 | /* Simple interface for creating and stopping kernel threads without mess. */ |
| 4 | #include <linux/err.h> |
| 5 | #include <linux/sched.h> |
| 6 | |
| 7 | /** |
| 8 | * kthread_create: create a kthread. |
| 9 | * @threadfn: the function to run until signal_pending(current). |
| 10 | * @data: data ptr for @threadfn. |
| 11 | * @namefmt: printf-style name for the thread. |
| 12 | * |
| 13 | * Description: This helper function creates and names a kernel |
| 14 | * thread. The thread will be stopped: use wake_up_process() to start |
| 15 | * it. See also kthread_run(), kthread_create_on_cpu(). |
| 16 | * |
| 17 | * When woken, the thread will run @threadfn() with @data as its |
| 18 | * argument. @threadfn can either call do_exit() directly if it is a |
| 19 | * standalone thread for which noone will call kthread_stop(), or |
| 20 | * return when 'kthread_should_stop()' is true (which means |
| 21 | * kthread_stop() has been called). The return value should be zero |
| 22 | * or a negative error number: it will be passed to kthread_stop(). |
| 23 | * |
| 24 | * Returns a task_struct or ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM). |
| 25 | */ |
| 26 | struct task_struct *kthread_create(int (*threadfn)(void *data), |
| 27 | void *data, |
| 28 | const char namefmt[], ...); |
| 29 | |
| 30 | /** |
| 31 | * kthread_run: create and wake a thread. |
| 32 | * @threadfn: the function to run until signal_pending(current). |
| 33 | * @data: data ptr for @threadfn. |
| 34 | * @namefmt: printf-style name for the thread. |
| 35 | * |
| 36 | * Description: Convenient wrapper for kthread_create() followed by |
| 37 | * wake_up_process(). Returns the kthread, or ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM). */ |
| 38 | #define kthread_run(threadfn, data, namefmt, ...) \ |
| 39 | ({ \ |
| 40 | struct task_struct *__k \ |
| 41 | = kthread_create(threadfn, data, namefmt, ## __VA_ARGS__); \ |
| 42 | if (!IS_ERR(__k)) \ |
| 43 | wake_up_process(__k); \ |
| 44 | __k; \ |
| 45 | }) |
| 46 | |
| 47 | /** |
| 48 | * kthread_bind: bind a just-created kthread to a cpu. |
| 49 | * @k: thread created by kthread_create(). |
| 50 | * @cpu: cpu (might not be online, must be possible) for @k to run on. |
| 51 | * |
| 52 | * Description: This function is equivalent to set_cpus_allowed(), |
| 53 | * except that @cpu doesn't need to be online, and the thread must be |
| 54 | * stopped (ie. just returned from kthread_create(). |
| 55 | */ |
| 56 | void kthread_bind(struct task_struct *k, unsigned int cpu); |
| 57 | |
| 58 | /** |
| 59 | * kthread_stop: stop a thread created by kthread_create(). |
| 60 | * @k: thread created by kthread_create(). |
| 61 | * |
| 62 | * Sets kthread_should_stop() for @k to return true, wakes it, and |
| 63 | * waits for it to exit. Your threadfn() must not call do_exit() |
| 64 | * itself if you use this function! This can also be called after |
| 65 | * kthread_create() instead of calling wake_up_process(): the thread |
| 66 | * will exit without calling threadfn(). |
| 67 | * |
| 68 | * Returns the result of threadfn(), or -EINTR if wake_up_process() |
| 69 | * was never called. */ |
| 70 | int kthread_stop(struct task_struct *k); |
| 71 | |
| 72 | /** |
Alan Stern | 61e1a9e | 2005-10-30 15:01:40 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 73 | * kthread_stop_sem: stop a thread created by kthread_create(). |
| 74 | * @k: thread created by kthread_create(). |
| 75 | * @s: semaphore that @k waits on while idle. |
| 76 | * |
| 77 | * Does essentially the same thing as kthread_stop() above, but wakes |
| 78 | * @k by calling up(@s). |
| 79 | * |
| 80 | * Returns the result of threadfn(), or -EINTR if wake_up_process() |
| 81 | * was never called. */ |
| 82 | int kthread_stop_sem(struct task_struct *k, struct semaphore *s); |
| 83 | |
| 84 | /** |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 85 | * kthread_should_stop: should this kthread return now? |
| 86 | * |
| 87 | * When someone calls kthread_stop on your kthread, it will be woken |
| 88 | * and this will return true. You should then return, and your return |
| 89 | * value will be passed through to kthread_stop(). |
| 90 | */ |
| 91 | int kthread_should_stop(void); |
| 92 | |
| 93 | #endif /* _LINUX_KTHREAD_H */ |