Copyright | (c) The University of Glasgow 1994-2002 |
---|---|
License | see libraries/base/LICENSE |
Maintainer | [email protected] |
Stability | internal |
Portability | non-portable (GHC extensions) |
Safe Haskell | Unsafe |
Language | Haskell2010 |
Basic concurrency stuff.
A ThreadId
is an abstract type representing a handle to a thread. ThreadId
is an instance of Eq
, Ord
and Show
, where the Ord
instance implements an arbitrary total ordering over ThreadId
s. The Show
instance lets you convert an arbitrary-valued ThreadId
to string form; showing a ThreadId
value is occasionally useful when debugging or diagnosing the behaviour of a concurrent program.
Note: in GHC, if you have a ThreadId
, you essentially have a pointer to the thread itself. This means the thread itself can't be garbage collected until you drop the ThreadId
. This misfeature will hopefully be corrected at a later date.
forkIO :: IO () -> IO ThreadId Source
Creates a new thread to run the IO
computation passed as the first argument, and returns the ThreadId
of the newly created thread.
The new thread will be a lightweight, unbound thread. Foreign calls made by this thread are not guaranteed to be made by any particular OS thread; if you need foreign calls to be made by a particular OS thread, then use forkOS
instead.
The new thread inherits the masked state of the parent (see mask
).
The newly created thread has an exception handler that discards the exceptions BlockedIndefinitelyOnMVar
, BlockedIndefinitelyOnSTM
, and ThreadKilled
, and passes all other exceptions to the uncaught exception handler.
forkIOWithUnmask :: ((forall a. IO a -> IO a) -> IO ()) -> IO ThreadId Source
Like forkIO
, but the child thread is passed a function that can be used to unmask asynchronous exceptions. This function is typically used in the following way
... mask_ $ forkIOWithUnmask $ \unmask -> catch (unmask ...) handler
so that the exception handler in the child thread is established with asynchronous exceptions masked, meanwhile the main body of the child thread is executed in the unmasked state.
Note that the unmask function passed to the child thread should only be used in that thread; the behaviour is undefined if it is invoked in a different thread.
Since: 4.4.0.0
forkOn :: Int -> IO () -> IO ThreadId Source
Like forkIO
, but lets you specify on which capability the thread should run. Unlike a forkIO
thread, a thread created by forkOn
will stay on the same capability for its entire lifetime (forkIO
threads can migrate between capabilities according to the scheduling policy). forkOn
is useful for overriding the scheduling policy when you know in advance how best to distribute the threads.
The Int
argument specifies a capability number (see getNumCapabilities
). Typically capabilities correspond to physical processors, but the exact behaviour is implementation-dependent. The value passed to forkOn
is interpreted modulo the total number of capabilities as returned by getNumCapabilities
.
GHC note: the number of capabilities is specified by the +RTS -N
option when the program is started. Capabilities can be fixed to actual processor cores with +RTS -qa
if the underlying operating system supports that, although in practice this is usually unnecessary (and may actually degrade performance in some cases - experimentation is recommended).
Since: 4.4.0.0
forkOnWithUnmask :: Int -> ((forall a. IO a -> IO a) -> IO ()) -> IO ThreadId Source
Like forkIOWithUnmask
, but the child thread is pinned to the given CPU, as with forkOn
.
Since: 4.4.0.0
the value passed to the +RTS -N
flag. This is the number of Haskell threads that can run truly simultaneously at any given time, and is typically set to the number of physical processor cores on the machine.
Strictly speaking it is better to use getNumCapabilities
, because the number of capabilities might vary at runtime.
getNumCapabilities :: IO Int Source
Returns the number of Haskell threads that can run truly simultaneously (on separate physical processors) at any given time. To change this value, use setNumCapabilities
.
Since: 4.4.0.0
setNumCapabilities :: Int -> IO () Source
Set the number of Haskell threads that can run truly simultaneously (on separate physical processors) at any given time. The number passed to forkOn
is interpreted modulo this value. The initial value is given by the +RTS -N
runtime flag.
This is also the number of threads that will participate in parallel garbage collection. It is strongly recommended that the number of capabilities is not set larger than the number of physical processor cores, and it may often be beneficial to leave one or more cores free to avoid contention with other processes in the machine.
Since: 4.5.0.0
getNumProcessors :: IO Int Source
Returns the number of CPUs that the machine has
Since: 4.5.0.0
Returns the number of sparks currently in the local spark pool
childHandler :: SomeException -> IO () Source
myThreadId :: IO ThreadId Source
Returns the ThreadId
of the calling thread (GHC only).
killThread :: ThreadId -> IO () Source
killThread
raises the ThreadKilled
exception in the given thread (GHC only).
killThread tid = throwTo tid ThreadKilled
throwTo :: Exception e => ThreadId -> e -> IO () Source
throwTo
raises an arbitrary exception in the target thread (GHC only).
Exception delivery synchronizes between the source and target thread: throwTo
does not return until the exception has been raised in the target thread. The calling thread can thus be certain that the target thread has received the exception. Exception delivery is also atomic with respect to other exceptions. Atomicity is a useful property to have when dealing with race conditions: e.g. if there are two threads that can kill each other, it is guaranteed that only one of the threads will get to kill the other.
Whatever work the target thread was doing when the exception was raised is not lost: the computation is suspended until required by another thread.
If the target thread is currently making a foreign call, then the exception will not be raised (and hence throwTo
will not return) until the call has completed. This is the case regardless of whether the call is inside a mask
or not. However, in GHC a foreign call can be annotated as interruptible
, in which case a throwTo
will cause the RTS to attempt to cause the call to return; see the GHC documentation for more details.
Important note: the behaviour of throwTo
differs from that described in the paper "Asynchronous exceptions in Haskell" (http://research.microsoft.com/~simonpj/Papers/asynch-exns.htm). In the paper, throwTo
is non-blocking; but the library implementation adopts a more synchronous design in which throwTo
does not return until the exception is received by the target thread. The trade-off is discussed in Section 9 of the paper. Like any blocking operation, throwTo
is therefore interruptible (see Section 5.3 of the paper). Unlike other interruptible operations, however, throwTo
is always interruptible, even if it does not actually block.
There is no guarantee that the exception will be delivered promptly, although the runtime will endeavour to ensure that arbitrary delays don't occur. In GHC, an exception can only be raised when a thread reaches a safe point, where a safe point is where memory allocation occurs. Some loops do not perform any memory allocation inside the loop and therefore cannot be interrupted by a throwTo
.
If the target of throwTo
is the calling thread, then the behaviour is the same as throwIO
, except that the exception is thrown as an asynchronous exception. This means that if there is an enclosing pure computation, which would be the case if the current IO operation is inside unsafePerformIO
or unsafeInterleaveIO
, that computation is not permanently replaced by the exception, but is suspended as if it had received an asynchronous exception.
Note that if throwTo
is called with the current thread as the target, the exception will be thrown even if the thread is currently inside mask
or uninterruptibleMask
.
par :: a -> b -> b infixr 0 Source
pseq :: a -> b -> b infixr 0 Source
Internal function used by the RTS to run sparks.
The yield
action allows (forces, in a co-operative multitasking implementation) a context-switch to any other currently runnable threads (if any), and is occasionally useful when implementing concurrency abstractions.
labelThread :: ThreadId -> String -> IO () Source
labelThread
stores a string as identifier for this thread if you built a RTS with debugging support. This identifier will be used in the debugging output to make distinction of different threads easier (otherwise you only have the thread state object's address in the heap).
Other applications like the graphical Concurrent Haskell Debugger (http://www.informatik.uni-kiel.de/~fhu/chd/) may choose to overload labelThread
for their purposes as well.
mkWeakThreadId :: ThreadId -> IO (Weak ThreadId) Source
make a weak pointer to a ThreadId
. It can be important to do this if you want to hold a reference to a ThreadId
while still allowing the thread to receive the BlockedIndefinitely
family of exceptions (e.g. BlockedIndefinitelyOnMVar
). Holding a normal ThreadId
reference will prevent the delivery of BlockedIndefinitely
exceptions because the reference could be used as the target of throwTo
at any time, which would unblock the thread.
Holding a Weak ThreadId
, on the other hand, will not prevent the thread from receiving BlockedIndefinitely
exceptions. It is still possible to throw an exception to a Weak ThreadId
, but the caller must use deRefWeak
first to determine whether the thread still exists.
Since: 4.6.0.0
data ThreadStatus Source
The current status of a thread
ThreadRunning | the thread is currently runnable or running |
ThreadFinished | the thread has finished |
ThreadBlocked BlockReason | the thread is blocked on some resource |
ThreadDied | the thread received an uncaught exception |
data BlockReason Source
BlockedOnMVar | blocked on |
BlockedOnBlackHole | blocked on a computation in progress by another thread |
BlockedOnException | blocked in |
BlockedOnSTM | blocked in |
BlockedOnForeignCall | currently in a foreign call |
BlockedOnOther | blocked on some other resource. Without |
threadStatus :: ThreadId -> IO ThreadStatus Source
threadCapability :: ThreadId -> IO (Int, Bool) Source
returns the number of the capability on which the thread is currently running, and a boolean indicating whether the thread is locked to that capability or not. A thread is locked to a capability if it was created with forkOn
.
Since: 4.4.0.0
newStablePtrPrimMVar :: MVar () -> IO (StablePtr PrimMVar) Source
Make a StablePtr that can be passed to the C function hs_try_putmvar()
. The RTS wants a StablePtr
to the underlying MVar#
, but a StablePtr#
can only refer to lifted types, so we have to cheat by coercing.
threadDelay :: Int -> IO () Source
Suspends the current thread for a given number of microseconds (GHC only).
There is no guarantee that the thread will be rescheduled promptly when the delay has expired, but the thread will never continue to run earlier than specified.
registerDelay :: Int -> IO (TVar Bool) Source
Set the value of returned TVar to True after a given number of microseconds. The caveats associated with threadDelay also apply.
threadWaitRead :: Fd -> IO () Source
Block the current thread until data is available to read on the given file descriptor (GHC only).
This will throw an IOError
if the file descriptor was closed while this thread was blocked. To safely close a file descriptor that has been used with threadWaitRead
, use closeFdWith
.
threadWaitWrite :: Fd -> IO () Source
Block the current thread until data can be written to the given file descriptor (GHC only).
This will throw an IOError
if the file descriptor was closed while this thread was blocked. To safely close a file descriptor that has been used with threadWaitWrite
, use closeFdWith
.
threadWaitReadSTM :: Fd -> IO (STM (), IO ()) Source
Returns an STM action that can be used to wait for data to read from a file descriptor. The second returned value is an IO action that can be used to deregister interest in the file descriptor.
threadWaitWriteSTM :: Fd -> IO (STM (), IO ()) Source
Returns an STM action that can be used to wait until data can be written to a file descriptor. The second returned value is an IO action that can be used to deregister interest in the file descriptor.
:: (Fd -> IO ()) | Low-level action that performs the real close. |
-> Fd | File descriptor to close. |
-> IO () |
Close a file descriptor in a concurrency-safe way (GHC only). If you are using threadWaitRead
or threadWaitWrite
to perform blocking I/O, you must use this function to close file descriptors, or blocked threads may not be woken.
Any threads that are blocked on the file descriptor via threadWaitRead
or threadWaitWrite
will be unblocked by having IO exceptions thrown.
setAllocationCounter :: Int64 -> IO () Source
Every thread has an allocation counter that tracks how much memory has been allocated by the thread. The counter is initialized to zero, and setAllocationCounter
sets the current value. The allocation counter counts *down*, so in the absence of a call to setAllocationCounter
its value is the negation of the number of bytes of memory allocated by the thread.
There are two things that you can do with this counter:
getAllocationCounter
.enableAllocationLimit
.Allocation accounting is accurate only to about 4Kbytes.
Since: 4.8.0.0
getAllocationCounter :: IO Int64 Source
Return the current value of the allocation counter for the current thread.
Since: 4.8.0.0
enableAllocationLimit :: IO () Source
Enables the allocation counter to be treated as a limit for the current thread. When the allocation limit is enabled, if the allocation counter counts down below zero, the thread will be sent the AllocationLimitExceeded
asynchronous exception. When this happens, the counter is reinitialised (by default to 100K, but tunable with the +RTS -xq
option) so that it can handle the exception and perform any necessary clean up. If it exhausts this additional allowance, another AllocationLimitExceeded
exception is sent, and so forth. Like other asynchronous exceptions, the AllocationLimitExceeded
exception is deferred while the thread is inside mask
or an exception handler in catch
.
Note that memory allocation is unrelated to live memory, also known as heap residency. A thread can allocate a large amount of memory and retain anything between none and all of it. It is better to think of the allocation limit as a limit on CPU time, rather than a limit on memory.
Compared to using timeouts, allocation limits don't count time spent blocked or in foreign calls.
Since: 4.8.0.0
disableAllocationLimit :: IO () Source
Disable allocation limit processing for the current thread.
Since: 4.8.0.0
A monad supporting atomic memory transactions.
Monad STM | Since: 4.3.0.0 |
Functor STM | Since: 4.3.0.0 |
Applicative STM | Since: 4.8.0.0 |
MonadPlus STM | Since: 4.3.0.0 |
Alternative STM | Since: 4.8.0.0 |
atomically :: STM a -> IO a Source
Perform a series of STM actions atomically.
You cannot use atomically
inside an unsafePerformIO
or unsafeInterleaveIO
. Any attempt to do so will result in a runtime error. (Reason: allowing this would effectively allow a transaction inside a transaction, depending on exactly when the thunk is evaluated.)
However, see newTVarIO
, which can be called inside unsafePerformIO
, and which allows top-level TVars to be allocated.
Retry execution of the current memory transaction because it has seen values in TVars which mean that it should not continue (e.g. the TVars represent a shared buffer that is now empty). The implementation may block the thread until one of the TVars that it has read from has been udpated. (GHC only)
orElse :: STM a -> STM a -> STM a Source
Compose two alternative STM actions (GHC only). If the first action completes without retrying then it forms the result of the orElse. Otherwise, if the first action retries, then the second action is tried in its place. If both actions retry then the orElse as a whole retries.
throwSTM :: Exception e => e -> STM a Source
A variant of throw
that can only be used within the STM
monad.
Throwing an exception in STM
aborts the transaction and propagates the exception.
Although throwSTM
has a type that is an instance of the type of throw
, the two functions are subtly different:
throw e `seq` x ===> throw e throwSTM e `seq` x ===> x
The first example will cause the exception e
to be raised, whereas the second one won't. In fact, throwSTM
will only cause an exception to be raised when it is used within the STM
monad. The throwSTM
variant should be used in preference to throw
to raise an exception within the STM
monad because it guarantees ordering with respect to other STM
operations, whereas throw
does not.
catchSTM :: Exception e => STM a -> (e -> STM a) -> STM a Source
Exception handling within STM actions.
alwaysSucceeds :: STM a -> STM () Source
alwaysSucceeds adds a new invariant that must be true when passed to alwaysSucceeds, at the end of the current transaction, and at the end of every subsequent transaction. If it fails at any of those points then the transaction violating it is aborted and the exception raised by the invariant is propagated.
always :: STM Bool -> STM () Source
always is a variant of alwaysSucceeds in which the invariant is expressed as an STM Bool action that must return True. Returning False or raising an exception are both treated as invariant failures.
Shared memory locations that support atomic memory transactions.
newTVar :: a -> STM (TVar a) Source
Create a new TVar holding a value supplied
newTVarIO :: a -> IO (TVar a) Source
IO
version of newTVar
. This is useful for creating top-level TVar
s using unsafePerformIO
, because using atomically
inside unsafePerformIO
isn't possible.
readTVar :: TVar a -> STM a Source
Return the current value stored in a TVar
readTVarIO :: TVar a -> IO a Source
Return the current value stored in a TVar. This is equivalent to
readTVarIO = atomically . readTVar
but works much faster, because it doesn't perform a complete transaction, it just reads the current value of the TVar
.
writeTVar :: TVar a -> a -> STM () Source
Write the supplied value into a TVar
unsafeIOToSTM :: IO a -> STM a Source
Unsafely performs IO in the STM monad. Beware: this is a highly dangerous thing to do.
unsafeIOToSTM
, so make sure you don't acquire any resources that need releasing (exception handlers are ignored when aborting the transaction). That includes doing any IO using Handles, for example. Getting this wrong will probably lead to random deadlocks.unsafeIOToSTM
can expose it.withMVar :: MVar a -> (a -> IO b) -> IO b Source
type HandlerFun = ForeignPtr Word8 -> IO () Source
setHandler :: Signal -> Maybe (HandlerFun, Dynamic) -> IO (Maybe (HandlerFun, Dynamic)) Source
runHandlers :: ForeignPtr Word8 -> Signal -> IO () Source
ensureIOManagerIsRunning :: IO () Source
ioManagerCapabilitiesChanged :: IO () Source
setUncaughtExceptionHandler :: (SomeException -> IO ()) -> IO () Source
getUncaughtExceptionHandler :: IO (SomeException -> IO ()) Source
reportError :: SomeException -> IO () Source
reportStackOverflow :: IO () Source
reportHeapOverflow :: IO () Source
© The University of Glasgow and others
Licensed under a BSD-style license (see top of the page).
https://downloads.haskell.org/~ghc/8.2.1/docs/html/libraries/base-4.10.0.0/GHC-Conc.html