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Threading utilities: object oriented (read/write) locking and more.

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threadsafe submodule

This repository is a git submodule providing C++ utilities for larger projects, including:

  • threadsafe::Unlocked<T, policy::P> : template class to construct a T / mutex pair with locking policy P.
  • ReadWrite, Primitive, OneThread : Locking policies.
  • AccessConst and Access : Obtain read/write access to Primitive or OneThread locked objects.
  • ConstReadAccess, ReadAccess and WriteAccess : Obtain access to ReadWrite protected objects.
  • AIReadWriteMutex : A mutex class that provides read/write locking.
  • UnlockedBase : A base class pointer to an Unlocked object that can be used in the same way.
  • Several utilities like is_single_threaded.

The root project should be using cmake cwm4 and libcwd.

Example

For example, to create an object of type Foo that has read/write protection, one could do:

using namespace threadsafe;
using foo_t = Unlocked<Foo, policy::ReadWrite<AIReadWriteMutex>>;

// Create an object Foo, AIReadWriteMutex pair. Foo will be inaccessible.
foo_t foo;

// A function that gets an already read-locked foo passed, created from a const foo_t.
void f(foo_t::crat const& foo_cr) { foo_cr->const_member(); }

// A function that gets a non-const foo_t passed and write locks it to get write access.
void g(foo_t& foo)
{
  foo_t::wat foo_w(foo);        // Obtain lock.
  foo_w->write_access();
  f(foo_w);                     // Being write locked is OK to pass too.
}                               // Release lock.

// A function that gets a read-locked foo passed but needs write access.
void h(foo_t::rat& foo_r)
{
  // The next line might throw, see below. Normally it would just
  // block until all other threads released their read-locks.
  foo_t::wat foo_w(foo_r);      // Convert read to write lock without releasing the lock.
  foo_w->write_access();
}

// A function that takes a read-lock most of the time
// but needs to call h() at the end.
void v(foo_t& foo)
{
  for(;;) {
    try {
      foo_t::rat foo_r(foo);
      // Stuff here during which we cannot release the read lock.
      h(foo_r); // Throws if some other thread is also trying to get a read-->write lock.
    } catch(std::exception const&) {
      foo.rd2wryield();
      continue;
    }
    break;
  }
}

Checking out a project that uses the threadsafe submodule.

To clone a project example-project that uses threadsafe simply run:

git clone --recursive <URL-to-project>/example-project.git
cd example-project
AUTOGEN_CMAKE_ONLY=1 ./autogen.sh

The --recursive is optional because ./autogen.sh will fix it when you forgot it.

When using GNU autotools you should of course not set AUTOGEN_CMAKE_ONLY. Also, you probably want to use --enable-mainainer-mode as option to the generated configure script.

In order to use cmake configure as usual, for example to build with 16 cores a debug build:

mkdir build_debug
cmake -S . -B build_debug -DCMAKE_MESSAGE_LOG_LEVEL=DEBUG -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug -DCMAKE_VERBOSE_MAKEFILE=ON -DEnableDebugGlobal:BOOL=OFF
cmake --build build_debug --config Debug --parallel 16

Or to make a release build:

mkdir build_release
cmake -S . -B build_release -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
cmake --build build_release --config Release --parallel 16

Adding the threadsafe submodule to a project

To add this submodule to a project, that project should already be set up to use utils.

Then simply execute the following in a directory of that project where you want to have the threadsafe subdirectory (the root of the project is recommended as that is the only thing I've tested so far):

git submodule add https://github.com/CarloWood/threadsafe.git

This should clone threadsafe into the subdirectory threadsafe, or if you already cloned it there, it should add it.

Checkout threadsafe-testsuite for an example of a project that uses this submodule.