| #include "stdio_impl.h" |
| #include "pthread_impl.h" |
| |
| int __lockfile(FILE *f) |
| { |
| int owner, tid = __pthread_self()->tid; |
| if (f->lock == tid) |
| return 0; |
| while ((owner = a_cas(&f->lock, 0, tid))) |
| __wait(&f->lock, &f->waiters, owner, 1); |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| void __unlockfile(FILE *f) |
| { |
| a_store(&f->lock, 0); |
| |
| /* The following read is technically invalid under situations |
| * of self-synchronized destruction. Another thread may have |
| * called fclose as soon as the above store has completed. |
| * Nonetheless, since FILE objects always live in memory |
| * obtained by malloc from the heap, it's safe to assume |
| * the dereferences below will not fault. In the worst case, |
| * a spurious syscall will be made. If the implementation of |
| * malloc changes, this assumption needs revisiting. */ |
| |
| if (f->waiters) __wake(&f->lock, 1, 1); |
| } |