Command Section

THR_NEW(2)                FreeBSD System Calls Manual               THR_NEW(2)

NAME
     thr_new - create new thread of execution

LIBRARY
     Standard C Library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS
     #include <sys/thr.h>

     int
     thr_new(struct thr_param *param, int param_size);

DESCRIPTION
     This function is intended for implementing threading.  Normal
     applications should call pthread_create(3) instead.

     The thr_new() system call creates a new kernel-scheduled thread of
     execution in the context of the current process.  The newly created
     thread shares all attributes of the process with the existing kernel-
     scheduled threads in the process, but has private processor execution
     state.  The machine context for the new thread is copied from the
     creating thread's context, including coprocessor state.  FPU state and
     specific machine registers are excluded from the copy.  These are set
     according to ABI requirements and syscall parameters.  The FPU state for
     the new thread is reinitialized to clean.

     The param structure supplies parameters affecting the thread creation.
     The structure is defined in the <sys/thr.h> header as follows

     struct thr_param {
         void          (*start_func)(void *);)(void *);
         void          *arg;
         char          *stack_base;
         size_t        stack_size;
         char          *tls_base;
         size_t        tls_size;
         long          *child_tid;
         long          *parent_tid;
         int           flags;
         struct rtprio *rtp;
     };
     and contains the following fields:

     start_func      Pointer to the thread entry function.  The kernel
                     arranges for the new thread to start executing the
                     function upon the first return to userspace.

     arg             Opaque argument supplied to the entry function.

     stack_base      Stack base address.  The stack must be allocated by the
                     caller.  On some architectures, the ABI might require
                     that the system put information on the stack to ensure
                     the execution environment for start_func.

     stack_size      Stack size.

     tls_base        TLS base address.  The value of TLS base is loaded into
                     the ABI-defined machine register in the new thread
                     context.

     tls_size        TLS size.

     child_tid       Address to store the new thread identifier, for the
                     child's use.

     parent_tid      Address to store the new thread identifier, for the
                     parent's use.

                     Both child_tid and parent_tid are provided, with the
                     intent that child_tid is used by the new thread to get
                     its thread identifier without issuing the thr_self(2)
                     syscall, while parent_tid is used by the thread creator.
                     The latter is separate from child_tid because the new
                     thread might exit and free its thread data before the
                     parent has a chance to execute far enough to access it.

     flags           Thread creation flags.  The flags member may specify the
                     following flags:

                     THR_SUSPENDED         Create the new thread in the
                                           suspended state.  The flag is not
                                           currently implemented.

                     THR_SYSTEM_SCOPE      Create the system scope thread.
                                           The flag is not currently
                                           implemented.

     rtp             Real-time scheduling priority for the new thread.  May be
                     NULL to inherit the priority from the creating thread.

     The param_size argument should be set to the size of the param structure.

     After the first successful creation of an additional thread, the process
     is marked by the kernel as multi-threaded.  In particular, the
     P_HADTHREADS flag is set in the process' p_flag (visible in the ps(1)
     output), and several operations are executed in multi-threaded mode.  For
     instance, the execve(2) system call terminates all threads but the
     calling one on successful execution.

RETURN VALUES
     If successful, thr_new() will return zero, otherwise -1 is returned, and
     errno is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS
     The thr_new() operation returns the following errors:

     [EFAULT]           The memory pointed to by the param argument is not
                        valid.

     [EFAULT]           The memory pointed to by the param structure
                        child_tid, parent_tid or rtp arguments is not valid.

     [EFAULT]           The specified stack base is invalid, or the kernel was
                        unable to put required initial data on the stack.

     [EINVAL]           The param_size argument specifies a negative value, or
                        the value is greater than the largest struct param
                        size the kernel can interpret.

     [EINVAL]           The rtp member is not NULL and specifies invalid
                        scheduling parameters.

     [EINVAL]           The specified TLS base is invalid.

     [EPERM]            The caller does not have permission to set the
                        scheduling parameters or scheduling policy.

     [EPROCLIM]         Creation of the new thread would exceed the RACCT_NTHR
                        limit, see racct(2).

     [EPROCLIM]         Creation of the new thread would exceed the
                        kern.threads.max_threads_per_proc sysctl(2) limit.

     [ENOMEM]           There was not enough kernel memory to allocate the new
                        thread structures.

SEE ALSO
     ps(1), _umtx_op(2), execve(2), racct(2), thr_exit(2), thr_kill(2),
     thr_kill2(2), thr_self(2), thr_set_name(2), pthread_create(3)

STANDARDS
     The thr_new() system call is non-standard and is used by the 1:1
     Threading Library (libthr, -lthr) to implement IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
     ("POSIX.1") pthread(3) functionality.

HISTORY
     The thr_new() system call first appeared in FreeBSD 5.2.

FreeBSD 13.1-RELEASE-p6           May 5, 2020          FreeBSD 13.1-RELEASE-p6

Command Section

man2web Home...