blob: 0882b03a16fd9a4887c8ef1de043daaddea5c11a [file] [log] [blame]
/* This program checks that Helgrind reports the five degenerate
uses of the barrier functions shown. */
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <pthread.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <string.h>
void* child1 ( void* arg )
{
pthread_barrier_wait( (pthread_barrier_t*)arg );
return NULL;
}
void *sleep1 ( void* arg )
{
/* Long sleep, we hope to never trigger. */
sleep (10);
pthread_barrier_wait ( (pthread_barrier_t*)arg );
return NULL;
}
void *exit1 ( void* arg )
{
/* Sleep a bit, then exit, we are done. */
sleep (1);
exit (0);
return NULL;
}
int main ( void )
{
pthread_barrier_t *bar1, *bar2, *bar3, *bar4, *bar5;
/* int r; unused since pthread_cancel are commented out */
pthread_t thr1, thr2, slp1, slp2, ext1;
/* initialise a barrier with a zero count */
fprintf(stderr, "\ninitialise a barrier with zero count\n");
bar1 = malloc(sizeof(pthread_barrier_t));
pthread_barrier_init(bar1, NULL, 0);
/* initialise a barrier twice */
fprintf(stderr, "\ninitialise a barrier twice\n");
bar2 = malloc(sizeof(pthread_barrier_t));
pthread_barrier_init(bar2, NULL, 1);
pthread_barrier_init(bar2, NULL, 1);
/* initialise a barrier which has threads waiting on it.
This isn't too simple. */
fprintf(stderr, "\ninitialise a barrier which has threads waiting on it\n");
bar3 = malloc(sizeof(pthread_barrier_t));
pthread_barrier_init(bar3, NULL, 2);
/* create a thread, whose purpose is to "unblock" the barrier after
some sleeping in case it keeps being blocked. */
pthread_create(&slp1, NULL, sleep1, (void*)bar3);
/* create a thread, whose only purpose is to block on the barrier */
pthread_create(&thr1, NULL, child1, (void*)bar3);
/* guarantee that it gets there first */
sleep(1);
/* and now reinitialise */
pthread_barrier_init(bar3, NULL, 3);
/* destroy a barrier that has threads waiting at it */
fprintf(stderr, "\ndestroy a barrier that has waiting threads\n");
/* once again, create a thread, whose only purpose is to block. */
bar4 = malloc(sizeof(pthread_barrier_t));
pthread_barrier_init(bar4, NULL, 2);
/* create a thread, whose purpose is to "unblock" the barrier after
some sleeping in case it keeps being blocked. We hope it isn't
needed, but if it is, because pthread_barier_destroy hangs
and we will get an extra warning about the barrier being already
destroyed. */
pthread_create(&slp2, NULL, sleep1, (void*)bar4);
/* create a thread, whose only purpose is to block on the barrier */
pthread_create(&thr2, NULL, child1, (void*)bar4);
/* guarantee that it gets there first */
sleep(1);
/* and now destroy */
pthread_barrier_destroy(bar4);
pthread_cancel(slp2);
/* destroy a barrier that was never initialised. This is a bit
tricky, in that we have to fill the barrier with bytes which
ensure that the pthread_barrier_destroy call doesn't crash for
some reason. One-fill seems to work ok on amd64-linux (glibc
2.8). */
fprintf(stderr, "\ndestroy a barrier that was never initialised\n");
/* Create a thread that just exits the process after some sleep.
We are really done at this point, even if we hang. */
pthread_create(&ext1, NULL, exit1, NULL);
bar5 = malloc(sizeof(pthread_barrier_t));
assert(bar5);
memset(bar5, 1, sizeof(*bar5));
pthread_barrier_destroy(bar5);
/* now we need to clean up the mess .. But skip canceling threads. */
/* r= pthread_cancel(thr1); assert(!r); // drd doesn't like it. Just exit.
r= pthread_cancel(thr2); assert(!r); */
free(bar1); free(bar2); free(bar3); free(bar4); free(bar5);
/* Use exit, we want to kill any "sleeper threads". */
exit (0);
}