]> git.ipfire.org Git - thirdparty/man-pages.git/blame - man2/futex.2
futex.2: RETURN VALUE: add FUTEX_WAKE_OP
[thirdparty/man-pages.git] / man2 / futex.2
CommitLineData
8f0aff2a 1.\" Page by b.hubert
1abce893
MK
2.\" and Copyright (C) 2015, Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
3.\" and Copyright (C) 2015, Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpages@gmail.com>
2297bf0e 4.\"
2e46a6e7 5.\" %%%LICENSE_START(FREELY_REDISTRIBUTABLE)
8f0aff2a 6.\" may be freely modified and distributed
8ff7380d 7.\" %%%LICENSE_END
fea681da
MK
8.\"
9.\" Niki A. Rahimi (LTC Security Development, narahimi@us.ibm.com)
10.\" added ERRORS section.
11.\"
12.\" Modified 2004-06-17 mtk
13.\" Modified 2004-10-07 aeb, added FUTEX_REQUEUE, FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE
14.\"
4f58b197
MK
15.\" 2.6.31 adds FUTEX_WAIT_REQUEUE_PI, FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE_PI
16.\" commit 52400ba946759af28442dee6265c5c0180ac7122
17.\" Author: Darren Hart <dvhltc@us.ibm.com>
18.\" Date: Fri Apr 3 13:40:49 2009 -0700
19.\"
20.\" commit ba9c22f2c01cf5c88beed5a6b9e07d42e10bd358
21.\" Author: Darren Hart <dvhltc@us.ibm.com>
22.\" Date: Mon Apr 20 22:22:22 2009 -0700
23.\"
24.\" See Documentation/futex-requeue-pi.txt
34f7665a 25.\"
3d155313 26.TH FUTEX 2 2014-05-21 "Linux" "Linux Programmer's Manual"
fea681da 27.SH NAME
ce154705 28futex \- fast user-space locking
fea681da 29.SH SYNOPSIS
9d9dc1e8 30.nf
fea681da
MK
31.sp
32.B "#include <linux/futex.h>"
fea681da
MK
33.B "#include <sys/time.h>"
34.sp
d33602c4
MK
35.BI "int futex(int *" uaddr ", int " futex_op ", int " val ,
36.BI " const struct timespec *" timeout ,
9d9dc1e8 37.BI " int *" uaddr2 ", int " val3 );
fea681da 38.\" int *? void *? u32 *?
9d9dc1e8 39.fi
409f08b0 40
b939d6e4
MK
41.IR Note :
42There is no glibc wrapper for this system call; see NOTES.
47297adb 43.SH DESCRIPTION
fea681da
MK
44.PP
45The
e511ffb6 46.BR futex ()
fea681da
MK
47system call provides a method for
48a program to wait for a value at a given address to change, and a
49method to wake up anyone waiting on a particular address (while the
50addresses for the same memory in separate processes may not be
51equal, the kernel maps them internally so the same memory mapped in
52different locations will correspond for
e511ffb6 53.BR futex ()
c13182ef 54calls).
fd3fa7ef 55This system call is typically used to
fea681da
MK
56implement the contended case of a lock in shared memory, as
57described in
a8bda636 58.BR futex (7).
fea681da 59.PP
f388ba70
MK
60When a futex operation did not finish uncontended in user space, a
61.BR futex ()
62call needs to be made to the kernel to arbitrate.
c13182ef 63Arbitration can either mean putting the calling
fea681da
MK
64process to sleep or, conversely, waking a waiting process.
65.PP
f388ba70
MK
66Callers of
67.BR futex ()
68are expected to adhere to the semantics described in
a8bda636 69.BR futex (7).
fea681da 70As these
d603cc27 71semantics involve writing nonportable assembly instructions, this in turn
fea681da
MK
72probably means that most users will in fact be library authors and not
73general application developers.
74.PP
75The
76.I uaddr
f388ba70
MK
77argument points to an integer which stores the counter (futex).
78On all platforms, futexes are four-byte integers that
79must be aligned on a four-byte boundary.
80The operation to perform on the futex is specified in the
81.I futex_op
82argument;
83.IR val
84is a value whose meaning and purpose depends on
85.IR futex_op .
36ab2074
MK
86
87The remaining arguments
88.RI ( timeout ,
89.IR uaddr2 ,
90and
91.IR val3 )
92are required only for certain of the futex operations described below.
93Where one of these arguments is not required, it is ignored.
94For several blocking operations, the
95.I timeout
96argument is a pointer to a
97.IR timespec
98structure that specifies a timeout for the operation.
99However, notwithstanding the prototype shown above, for some operations,
100this argument is instead a four-byte integer whose meaning
101is determined by the operation.
102Where it is required,
103.IR uaddr2
104is a pointer to a second futex that is employed by the operation.
105The interpretation of the final integer argument,
106.IR val3 ,
107depends on the operation.
108
6be4bad7 109The
d33602c4 110.I futex_op
6be4bad7
MK
111argument consists of two parts:
112a command that specifies the operation to be performed,
113bit-wise ORed with zero or or more options that
114modify the behaviour of the operation.
fc30eb79 115The options that may be included in
d33602c4 116.I futex_op
fc30eb79
TG
117are as follows:
118.TP
119.BR FUTEX_PRIVATE_FLAG " (since Linux 2.6.22)"
120.\" commit 34f01cc1f512fa783302982776895c73714ebbc2
121This option bit can be employed with all futex operations.
122It tells the kernel that the futex is process private and not shared
123with another process.
124This allows the kernel to choose the fast path for validating
125the user-space address and avoids expensive VMA lookups,
126taking reference counts on file backing store, and so on.
ae2c1774
MK
127
128As a convenience,
129.IR <linux/futex.h>
130defines a set of constants with the suffix
131.BR _PRIVATE
132that are equivalents of all of the operations listed below,
dcdfde26 133.\" except the obsolete FUTEX_FD, for which the "private" flag was
ae2c1774
MK
134.\" meaningless
135but with the
136.BR FUTEX_PRIVATE_FLAG
137ORed into the constant value.
138Thus, there are
139.BR FUTEX_WAIT_PRIVATE ,
140.BR FUTEX_WAKE_PRIVATE ,
141and so on.
2e98bbc2
TG
142.TP
143.BR FUTEX_CLOCK_REALTIME " (since Linux 2.6.28)"
144.\" commit 1acdac104668a0834cfa267de9946fac7764d486
4a7e5b05 145This option bit can be employed only with the
2e98bbc2
TG
146.BR FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET
147and
148.BR FUTEX_WAIT_REQUEUE_PI
149operations (described below).
150
f2103b26
MK
151If this option is set, the kernel treats
152.I timeout
153as an absolute time based on
2e98bbc2
TG
154.BR CLOCK_REALTIME .
155
f2103b26
MK
156If this option is not set, the kernel treats
157.I timeout
158as relative time,
1c952cf5
MK
159.\" FIXME I added CLOCK_MONOTONIC here. Is it correct?
160measured against the
161.BR CLOCK_MONOTONIC
162clock.
6be4bad7
MK
163.PP
164The operation specified in
d33602c4 165.I futex_op
6be4bad7 166is one of the following:
fea681da 167.TP
81c9d87e
MK
168.BR FUTEX_WAIT " (since Linux 2.6.0)"
169.\" Strictly speaking, since some time in 2.5.x
f065673c
MK
170This operation tests that the value at the
171location pointed to by the futex address
fea681da
MK
172.I uaddr
173still contains the value
174.IR val ,
f065673c 175and then sleeps awaiting
682edefb 176.B FUTEX_WAKE
f065673c
MK
177on the futex address.
178The test and sleep steps are performed atomically.
179If the futex value does not match
180.IR val ,
4710334a 181then the call fails immediately with the error
f065673c
MK
182.BR EWOULDBLOCK .
183.\" FIXME I added the following sentence. Please confirm that it is correct.
184The purpose of the test step is to detect races where
185another process changes that value of the futex between
186the time it was last checked and the time of the
187.BR FUTEX_WAIT
63d3f911 188operation.
1909e523 189
c13182ef 190If the
fea681da 191.I timeout
1c952cf5
MK
192argument is non-NULL, its contents specify a relative timeout for the wait
193.\" FIXME I added CLOCK_MONOTONIC here. Is it correct?
194measured according to the
195.BR CLOCK_MONOTONIC
196clock.
82a6092b
MK
197(This interval will be rounded up to the system clock granularity,
198and kernel scheduling delays mean that the
199blocking interval may overrun by a small amount.)
200If
201.I timeout
202is NULL, the call blocks indefinitely.
4798a7f3 203
c13182ef 204The arguments
fea681da
MK
205.I uaddr2
206and
207.I val3
208are ignored.
209
210For
a8bda636 211.BR futex (7),
fea681da
MK
212this call is executed if decrementing the count gave a negative value
213(indicating contention), and will sleep until another process releases
682edefb
MK
214the futex and executes the
215.B FUTEX_WAKE
216operation.
fea681da 217.TP
81c9d87e
MK
218.BR FUTEX_WAKE " (since Linux 2.6.0)"
219.\" Strictly speaking, since Linux 2.5.x
f065673c
MK
220This operation wakes at most
221.I val
222processes waiting (i.e., inside
223.BR FUTEX_WAIT )
224on the futex at the address
225.IR uaddr .
226Most commonly,
227.I val
228is specified as either 1 (wake up a single waiter) or
229.BR INT_MAX
230(wake up all waiters).
730bfbda
MK
231.\" FIXME Please confirm that the following is correct:
232No guarantee is provided about which waiters are awoken
233(e.g., a waiter with a higher scheduling priority is not guaranteed
234to be awoken in preference to a waiter with a lower priority).
4798a7f3 235
fea681da
MK
236The arguments
237.IR timeout ,
238.I uaddr2
239and
240.I val3
241are ignored.
242
243For
a8bda636 244.BR futex (7),
fea681da
MK
245this is executed if incrementing
246the count showed that there were waiters, once the futex value has been set
247to 1 (indicating that it is available).
a7c2bf45
MK
248.TP
249.BR FUTEX_FD " (from Linux 2.6.0 up to and including Linux 2.6.25)"
250.\" Strictly speaking, from Linux 2.5.x to 2.6.25
251This operation creates a file descriptor that is associated with the futex at
252.IR uaddr .
253.\" , suitable for .BR poll (2).
254The calling process must close the returned file descriptor after use.
255When another process performs a
256.BR FUTEX_WAKE
257on the futex, the file descriptor indicates as being readable with
258.BR select (2),
259.BR poll (2),
260and
261.BR epoll (7)
262
263The file descriptor can be used to obtain asynchronous notifications:
264if
265.I val
266is nonzero, then when another process executes a
267.BR FUTEX_WAKE ,
268the caller will receive the signal number that was passed in
269.IR val .
270
271The arguments
272.IR timeout ,
273.I uaddr2
274and
275.I val3
276are ignored.
277
278To prevent race conditions, the caller should test if the futex has
279been upped after
280.B FUTEX_FD
281returns.
282
283Because it was inherently racy,
284.B FUTEX_FD
285has been removed
286.\" commit 82af7aca56c67061420d618cc5a30f0fd4106b80
287from Linux 2.6.26 onward.
288.TP
289.BR FUTEX_REQUEUE " (since Linux 2.6.0)"
290.\" Strictly speaking: from Linux 2.5.70
291.\"
292.\" FIXME I added this warning. Okay?
293.IR "Avoid using this operation" .
294It is broken (unavoidably racy) for its intended purpose.
295Use
296.BR FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE
297instead.
298
299This operation performs the same task as
300.BR FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE ,
301except that no check is made using the value in
302.IR val3 .
303(The argument
304.I val3
305is ignored.)
306.TP
307.BR FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE " (since Linux 2.6.7)"
308This operation was added as a replacement for the earlier
309.BR FUTEX_REQUEUE ,
310because that operation was racy for its intended use.
311
312As with
313.BR FUTEX_REQUEUE ,
314the
315.BR FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE
316operation is used to avoid a "thundering herd" effect when
317.B FUTEX_WAKE
318is used and all processes woken up need to acquire another futex.
319It differs from
320.BR FUTEX_REQUEUE
321in that it first checks whether the location
322.I uaddr
323still contains the value
324.IR val3 .
325If not, the operation fails with the error
326.BR EAGAIN .
327.\" FIXME I added the following sentence on rational for FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE.
328.\" Is it correct? SHould it be expanded?
329This additional feature of
330.BR FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE
331can be used by the caller to (atomically) detect changes
332in the value of the target futex at
333.IR uaddr2 .
334
335The operation wakes up a maximum of
336.I val
337waiters that are waiting on the futex at
338.IR uaddr .
339If there are more than
340.I val
341waiters, then the remaining waiters are removed
342from the wait queue of the source futex at
343.I uaddr
344and added to the wait queue of the target futex at
345.IR uaddr2 .
346The
347.I timeout
348argument is (ab)used to specify a cap on the number of waiters
349that are requeued to the futex at
350.IR uaddr2 ;
351the kernel casts the
352.I timeout
353value to
354.IR u32 .
355
356.\" FIXME Please review the following new paragraph to see if it is
357.\" accurate.
358Typical values to specify for
359.I val
360are 0 or or 1.
361(Specifying
362.BR INT_MAX
363is not useful, because it would make the
364.BR FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE
365operation equivalent to
366.BR FUTEX_WAKE .)
367The cap value specified via the (abused)
368.I timeout
369argument is typically either 1 or
370.BR INT_MAX .
371(Specifying the argument as 0 is not useful, because it would make the
372.BR FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE
373operation equivalent to
374.BR FUTEX_WAIT .)
6bac3b85
MK
375.\"
376.\" FIXME I added some FUTEX_WAKE_OP text, and I'd be happy if someone
377.\" checked it.
fea681da 378.TP
d67e21f5
MK
379.BR FUTEX_WAKE_OP " (since Linux 2.6.14)"
380.\" commit 4732efbeb997189d9f9b04708dc26bf8613ed721
6bac3b85
MK
381.\" Author: Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
382.\" Date: Tue Sep 6 15:16:25 2005 -0700
383This operation was added to support some user-space use cases
384where more than one futex must be handled at the same time.
385The most notable example is the implementation of
386.BR pthread_cond_signal (3),
387which requires operations on two futexes,
388the one used to implement the mutex and the one used in the implementation
389of the wait queue associated with the condition variable.
390.BR FUTEX_WAKE_OP
391allows such cases to be implemented without leading to
392high rates of contention and context switching.
393
394The
395.BR FUTEX_WAIT_OP
396operation is equivalent to atomically executing the following code:
397
398.in +4n
399.nf
400int oldval = *(int *) uaddr2;
401*(int *) uaddr2 = oldval \fIop\fP \fIoparg\fP;
402futex(uaddr, FUTEX_WAKE, val, 0, 0, 0);
403if (oldval \fIcmp\fP \fIcmparg\fP)
404 futex(uaddr2, FUTEX_WAKE, nr_wake2, 0, 0, 0);
405.fi
406.in
407
408In other words,
409.BR FUTEX_WAIT_OP
410does the following:
411.RS
412.IP * 3
413saves the original value of the futex at
414.IR uaddr2 ;
415.IP *
416performs an operation to modify the value of the futex at
417.IR uaddr2 ;
418.IP *
419wakes up a maximum of
420.I val
421waiters on the futex
422.IR uaddr ;
423and
424.IP *
425dependent on the results of a test of the original value of the futex at
426.IR uaddr2 ,
427wakes up a maximum of
428.I nr_wake2
429waiters on the futex
430.IR uaddr2 .
431.RE
432.IP
433The
434.I nr_wake2
435value is actually the
436.BR futex ()
437.I timeout
438argument (ab)used to specify how many of the waiters on the futex at
439.IR uaddr2
440are to be woken up;
441the kernel casts the
442.I timeout
443value to
444.IR u32 .
445
446The operation and comparison that are to be performed are encoded
447in the bits of the argument
448.IR val3 .
449Pictorially, the encoding is:
450
451.in +4n
452.nf
453 +-----+-----+---------------+---------------+
454 | op | cmp | oparg | cmparg |
455 +-----+-----+---------------+---------------+
456# of bits: 4 4 12 12
457
458.fi
459.in
460
461Expressed in code, the encoding is:
462
463.in +4n
464.nf
465#define FUTEX_OP(op, oparg, cmp, cmparg) \\
466 (((op & 0xf) << 28) | \\
467 ((cmp & 0xf) << 24) | \\
468 ((oparg & 0xfff) << 12) | \\
469 (cmparg & 0xfff))
470.fi
471.in
472
473In the above,
474.I op
475and
476.I cmp
477are each one of the codes listed below.
478The
479.I oparg
480and
481.I cmparg
482components are literal numeric values, except as noted below.
483
484The
485.I op
486component has one of the following values:
487
488.in +4n
489.nf
490FUTEX_OP_SET 0 /* uaddr2 = oparg; */
491FUTEX_OP_ADD 1 /* uaddr2 += oparg; */
492FUTEX_OP_OR 2 /* uaddr2 |= oparg; */
493FUTEX_OP_ANDN 3 /* uaddr2 &= ~oparg; */
494FUTEX_OP_XOR 4 /* uaddr2 ^= oparg; */
495.fi
496.in
497
498In addition, bit-wise ORing the following value into
499.I op
500causes
501.IR "(1\ <<\ oparg)"
502to be used as the operand:
503
504.in +4n
505.nf
506FUTEX_OP_ARG_SHIFT 8 /* Use (1 << oparg) as operand */
507.fi
508.in
509
510The
511.I cmp
512field is one of the following:
513
514.in +4n
515.nf
516FUTEX_OP_CMP_EQ 0 /* if (oldval == cmparg) wake */
517FUTEX_OP_CMP_NE 1 /* if (oldval != cmparg) wake */
518FUTEX_OP_CMP_LT 2 /* if (oldval < cmparg) wake */
519FUTEX_OP_CMP_LE 3 /* if (oldval <= cmparg) wake */
520FUTEX_OP_CMP_GT 4 /* if (oldval > cmparg) wake */
521FUTEX_OP_CMP_GE 5 /* if (oldval >= cmparg) wake */
522.fi
523.in
524
525The return value of
526.BR FUTEX_WAKE_OP
527is the sum of the number of waiters woken on the futex
528.IR uaddr
529plus the number of waiters woken on the futex
530.IR uaddr2 .
d67e21f5 531.TP
79c9b436
TG
532.BR FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET " (since Linux 2.6.25)"
533.\" commit cd689985cf49f6ff5c8eddc48d98b9d581d9475d
fd9e59d4 534This operation is like
79c9b436
TG
535.BR FUTEX_WAIT
536except that
537.I val3
538is used to provide a 32-bit bitset to the kernel.
539This bitset is stored in the kernel-internal state of the waiter.
540See the description of
541.BR FUTEX_WAKE_BITSET
542for further details.
543
fd9e59d4
MK
544The
545.BR FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET
546also interprets the
547.I timeout
548argument differently from
549.BR FUTEX_WAIT .
550See the discussion of
551.BR FUTEX_CLOCK_REALTIME ,
552above.
553
79c9b436
TG
554The
555.I uaddr2
556argument is ignored.
557.TP
d67e21f5
MK
558.BR FUTEX_WAKE_BITSET " (since Linux 2.6.25)"
559.\" commit cd689985cf49f6ff5c8eddc48d98b9d581d9475d
55cc422d
TG
560This operation is the same as
561.BR FUTEX_WAKE
562except that the
563.I val3
564argument is used to provide a 32-bit bitset to the kernel.
98d769c0
MK
565This bitset is used to select which waiters should be woken up.
566The selection is done by a bit-wise AND of the "wake" bitset
567(i.e., the value in
568.IR val3 )
569and the bitset which is stored in the kernel-internal
09cb4ce7 570state of the waiter (the "wait" bitset that is set using
98d769c0
MK
571.BR FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET ).
572All of the waiters for which the result of the AND is nonzero are woken up;
573the remaining waiters are left sleeping.
574
e9d4496b
MK
575.\" FIXME please review this paragraph that I added
576The effect of
577.BR FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET
578and
579.BR FUTEX_WAKE_BITSET
580is to allow selective wake-ups among multiple waiters that are waiting
581on the same futex;
582since a futex has a size of 32 bits,
583these operations provide 32 wakeup "channels".
584(The
585.BR FUTEX_WAIT
586and
587.BR FUTEX_WAKE
588operations correspond to
589.BR FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET
590and
591.BR FUTEX_WAKE_BITSET
592operations where the bitsets are all ones.)
09cb4ce7 593Note, however, that using this bitset multiplexing feature on a
e9d4496b
MK
594futex is less efficient than simply using multiple futexes,
595because employing bitset multiplexing requires the kernel
596to check all waiters on a futex,
597including those that are not interested in being woken up
598(i.e., they do not have the relevant bit set in their "wait" bitset).
599.\" According to http://locklessinc.com/articles/futex_cheat_sheet/:
600.\"
601.\" "The original reason for the addition of these extensions
602.\" was to improve the performance of pthread read-write locks
603.\" in glibc. However, the pthreads library no longer uses the
604.\" same locking algorithm, and these extensions are not used
605.\" without the bitset parameter being all ones.
606.\"
607.\" The page goes on to note that the FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET operation
608.\" is nevertheless used (with a bitset of all ones) in order to
609.\" obtain the absolute timeout functionality that is useful
610.\" for efficiently implementing Pthreads APIs (which use absolute
611.\" timeouts); FUTEX_WAIT provides only relative timeouts.
612
98d769c0
MK
613The
614.I uaddr2
615and
616.I timeout
617arguments are ignored.
d67e21f5
MK
618.TP
619.BR FUTEX_LOCK_PI " (since Linux 2.6.18)"
620.\" commit c87e2837be82df479a6bae9f155c43516d2feebc
6b060884 621.\"
dd218aaa
MK
622.\" FIXME Employs 'timeout' argument, with absolute time value on
623.\" CLOCK_REALTIME clock; 'timeout' can be NULL
6b060884 624.\"
e0547e70
TG
625This operation reads from the futex address provided by the
626.I uaddr
627argument, which contains the namespace-specific thread ID (TID)
67259526
MK
628.\" FIXME In the preceding line, what does "namespace-specific" mean?
629.\" That is, what kind of namespace are we talking about?
e0547e70
TG
630of the lock owner.
631If the TID is 0, then the kernel tries to set the waiter's TID atomically.
632If the TID is nonzero or the take over fails,
633the kernel sets atomically the
634.B FUTEX_WAITERS
635bit, which signals the owner that it cannot unlock the futex in
636user space atomically by transitioning from TID to 0.
637After that, the kernel tries to find the task which is
638associated with the owner TID, creates or reuses kernel state on behalf
639of the owner and attaches the waiter to it.
67259526
MK
640.\" FIXME In the next line, what type of "priority" are we talking about?
641.\" Realtime priorities for SCHED_FIFO and SCHED_RR?
642.\" Or something else?
e0547e70
TG
643The enqueing of the waiter is in descending priority order if more
644than one waiter exists.
67259526 645.\" FIXME What does "bandwidth" refer to in the next line?
e0547e70 646The owner inherits either the priority or the bandwidth of the waiter.
67259526
MK
647.\" FIXME In the preceding line, what determines whether the
648.\" owner inherits the priority versus the bandwidth?
e0547e70
TG
649This inheritance follows the lock chain in the case of
650nested locking and performs deadlock detection.
651
652The
653.I timeout
654.\" FIXME Is this true??????????????????????
655argument is handled as described in
656.BR FUTEX_WAIT .
657
a449c634 658The
e0547e70
TG
659.IR uaddr2 ,
660.IR val ,
661and
662.IR val3
a449c634 663arguments are ignored.
fedaeaf3 664.\" FIXME
a9dcb4d1
MK
665.\" tglx noted the following "ERROR" case for FUTEX_LOCK_PI and
666.\" FUTEX_TRYLOCK_PI
667.\" > [EOWNERDIED] The owner of the futex died and the kernel made the
668.\" > caller the new owner. The kernel sets the FUTEX_OWNER_DIED bit
669.\" > in the futex userspace value. Caller is responsible for cleanup
fedaeaf3 670.\"
a9dcb4d1 671.\" However, there is no such thing as an EOWNERDIED error. I had a look
fedaeaf3
MK
672.\" through the kernel source for the FUTEX_OWNER_DIED cases and didn't
673.\" see an obvious error associated with them. Can you clarify? (I think
674.\" the point is that this condition, which is described in
675.\" Documentation/robust-futexes.txt, is not an error as such. However,
676.\" I'm not yet sure of how to describe it in the man page.)
d67e21f5 677.TP
12fdbe23 678.BR FUTEX_TRYLOCK_PI " (since Linux 2.6.18)"
d67e21f5 679.\" commit c87e2837be82df479a6bae9f155c43516d2feebc
12fdbe23
MK
680This operation tries to acquire the futex at
681.IR uaddr .
682It deals with the
683situation where the TID value at
684.I uaddr
685is 0, but the
686.B FUTEX_HAS_WAITER
687bit is set.
688User space cannot handle this race free.
d67e21f5 689.TP
12fdbe23 690.BR FUTEX_UNLOCK_PI " (since Linux 2.6.18)"
d67e21f5 691.\" commit c87e2837be82df479a6bae9f155c43516d2feebc
ecae2099
TG
692This operation wakes the top priority waiter which is waiting in
693.B FUTEX_LOCK_PI
694on the futex address provided by the
695.I uaddr
696argument.
697
698This is called when the user space value at
699.I uaddr
700cannot be changed atomically from a TID (of the owner) to 0.
701
702The
703.IR uaddr2 ,
704.IR val ,
705.IR timeout ,
706and
707.IR val3
708are ignored.
d67e21f5 709.TP
d67e21f5
MK
710.BR FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE_PI " (since Linux 2.6.31)"
711.\" commit 52400ba946759af28442dee6265c5c0180ac7122
712.\" FIXME to complete
713[As yet undocumented]
714.TP
715.BR FUTEX_WAIT_REQUEUE_PI " (since Linux 2.6.31)"
716.\" commit 52400ba946759af28442dee6265c5c0180ac7122
717.\" FIXME to complete
dd218aaa
MK
718.\"
719.\" FIXME Employs 'timeout' argument, supports FUTEX_CLOCK_REALTIME
720.\" 'timeout' can be NULL
721.\"
d67e21f5 722[As yet undocumented]
47297adb 723.SH RETURN VALUE
fea681da 724.PP
6f147f79 725In the event of an error, all operations return \-1 and set
e808bba0 726.I errno
6f147f79 727to indicate the cause of the error.
e808bba0
MK
728The return value on success depends on the operation,
729as described in the following list:
fea681da
MK
730.TP
731.B FUTEX_WAIT
682edefb
MK
732Returns 0 if the process was woken by a
733.B FUTEX_WAKE
7446a837
MK
734or
735.B FUTEX_WAKE_BITSET
682edefb 736call.
fea681da
MK
737.TP
738.B FUTEX_WAKE
739Returns the number of processes woken up.
740.TP
741.B FUTEX_FD
742Returns the new file descriptor associated with the futex.
743.TP
744.B FUTEX_REQUEUE
745Returns the number of processes woken up.
746.TP
747.B FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE
3dfcc11d
MK
748Returns the total number of processes woken up or requeued to the futex at
749.IR uaddr2 .
750If this value is greater than
751.IR val ,
752then difference is the number of waiters requeued to the futex at
753.IR uaddr2 .
519f2c3d
MK
754.\"
755.\" FIXME Add success returns for other operations
dcad19c0
MK
756.TP
757.B FUTEX_WAKE_OP
a8b5b324
MK
758.\" FIXME Is the following correct?
759Returns the total number of waiters that were woken up.
760This is the sum of the woken waiters on the two futexes at
761.I uaddr
762and
763.IR uaddr2 .
dcad19c0
MK
764.TP
765.B FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET
7bcc5351
MK
766.\" FIXME Is the following correct?
767Returns 0 if the process was woken by a
768.B FUTEX_WAKE
769or
770.B FUTEX_WAKE_BITSET
771call.
dcad19c0
MK
772.TP
773.B FUTEX_WAKE_BITSET
b884566b
MK
774.\" FIXME Is the following correct?
775Returns the number of processes woken up.
dcad19c0
MK
776.TP
777.B FUTEX_LOCK_PI
bf02a260
MK
778.\" FIXME Is the following correct?
779Returns 0 if the futex was successfully locked.
dcad19c0
MK
780.TP
781.B FUTEX_TRYLOCK_PI
5c716eef
MK
782.\" FIXME Is the following correct?
783Returns 0 if the futex was successfully locked.
dcad19c0
MK
784.TP
785.B FUTEX_UNLOCK_PI
52bb928f
MK
786.\" FIXME Is the following correct?
787Returns 0 if the futex was successfully unlocked.
dcad19c0
MK
788.TP
789.B FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE_PI
dddd395a
MK
790.\" FIXME Is the following correct?
791Returns the total number of processes woken up or requeued to the futex at
792.IR uaddr2 .
793If this value is greater than
794.IR val ,
795then difference is the number of waiters requeued to the futex at
796.IR uaddr2 .
dcad19c0
MK
797.TP
798.B FUTEX_WAIT_REQUEUE_PI
22c15de9
MK
799.\" FIXME Is the following correct?
800Returns 0 if the caller was successfully requeued to the futex at
801.IR uaddr2 .
fea681da
MK
802.SH ERRORS
803.TP
804.B EACCES
805No read access to futex memory.
806.TP
807.B EAGAIN
682edefb 808.B FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE
e808bba0 809detected that the value pointed to by
9f6c40c0
МК
810.I uaddr
811is not equal to the expected value
812.IR val3 .
fd1dc4c2 813.\" FIXME: Is the following sentence correct?
fea681da 814(This probably indicates a race;
682edefb
MK
815use the safe
816.B FUTEX_WAKE
817now.)
fea681da 818.TP
5662f56a
MK
819.BR EAGAIN
820.RB ( FUTEX_LOCK_PI ,
821.BR FUTEX_TRYLOCK_PI )
822The futex owner thread ID is about to exit,
823but has not yet handled the internal state cleanup.
824Try again.
61f8c1d1
MK
825.\"
826.\" FIXME Is there not also an EAGAIN error case on 'uaddr2' for
827.\" FUTEX_REQUEUE and FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE via
828.\" futex_requeue() ==> futex_proxy_trylock_atomic() ==>
829.\" futex_lock_pi_atomic() ==> attach_to_pi_owner() ==> EAGAIN?
5662f56a 830.TP
7a39e745
MK
831.BR EDEADLK
832.RB ( FUTEX_LOCK_PI ,
833.BR FUTEX_TRYLOCK_PI )
834The futex at
835.I uaddr
836is already locked by the caller.
d08ce5dd
MK
837.\"
838.\" FIXME Is there not also an EDEADLK error case on 'uaddr2' for
839.\" FUTEX_REQUEUE and FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE via
840.\" futex_requeue() ==> futex_proxy_trylock_atomic() ==>
841.\" futex_lock_pi_atomic() ==> attach_to_pi_owner() ==> EDEADLK?
7a39e745 842.TP
fea681da 843.B EFAULT
1ea901e8
MK
844A required pointer argument (i.e.,
845.IR uaddr ,
846.IR uaddr2 ,
847or
848.IR timeout )
496df304 849did not point to a valid user-space address.
fea681da 850.TP
9f6c40c0 851.B EINTR
e808bba0 852A
9f6c40c0 853.B FUTEX_WAIT
2674f781
MK
854or
855.B FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET
e808bba0
MK
856operation was interrupted by a signal (see
857.BR signal (7))
858or a spurious wakeup.
9f6c40c0 859.TP
fea681da 860.B EINVAL
180f97b7
MK
861The operation in
862.IR futex_op
863is one of those that employs a timeout, but the supplied
fb2f4c27
MK
864.I timeout
865argument was invalid
866.RI ( tv_sec
867was less than zero, or
868.IR tv_nsec
869was not less than 1000,000,000).
870.TP
871.B EINVAL
0c74df0b
MK
872The operation specified in
873.BR futex_op
874employs one or both of the pointers
51ee94be 875.I uaddr
a1f47699 876and
0c74df0b
MK
877.IR uaddr2 ,
878but one of these does not point to a valid object\(emthat is,
879the address is not four-byte-aligned.
51ee94be
MK
880.TP
881.B EINVAL
bae14b6c 882.RB ( FUTEX_WAKE ,
5447735d 883.BR FUTEX_WAKE_OP ,
98d769c0 884.BR FUTEX_WAKE_BITSET ,
e169277f
MK
885.BR FUTEX_REQUEUE ,
886.BR FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE )
496df304 887The kernel detected an inconsistency between the user-space state at
9534086b
TG
888.I uaddr
889and the kernel state\(emthat is, it detected a waiter which waits in
5447735d
MK
890.BR FUTEX_LOCK_PI
891on
892.IR uaddr .
9534086b
TG
893.TP
894.B EINVAL
55cc422d
TG
895.RB ( FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET ,
896.BR FUTEX_WAKE_BITSET )
79c9b436
TG
897The bitset supplied in
898.IR val3
899is zero.
900.TP
901.B EINVAL
add875c0
MK
902.RB ( FUTEX_REQUEUE )
903.\" FIXME tglx suggested adding this, but does this error really
904.\" occur for FUTEX_REQUEUE?
905.I uaddr
906equals
907.IR uaddr2
908(i.e., an attempt was made to requeue to the same futex).
909.TP
ff597681
MK
910.BR EINVAL
911.RB ( FUTEX_FD )
912The signal number supplied in
913.I val
914is invalid.
915.TP
6bac3b85 916.B EINVAL
a218ef20 917.RB ( FUTEX_LOCK_PI ,
ce022f18
MK
918.BR FUTEX_TRYLOCK_PI ,
919.BR FUTEX_UNLOCK_PI )
a218ef20
MK
920The kernel detected an inconsistency between the user-space state at
921.I uaddr
922and the kernel state.
ce022f18
MK
923This indicates either state corruption
924.\" FIXME tglx did not mention the "state corruption" for FUTEX_UNLOCK_PI.
925.\" Does that case also apply for FUTEX_UNLOCK_PI?
926or that the kernel found a waiter on
a218ef20
MK
927.I uaddr
928which is waiting via
929.BR FUTEX_WAIT
930or
931.BR FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET .
932.TP
933.B EINVAL
4832b48a 934Invalid argument.
fea681da 935.TP
a449c634
MK
936.BR ENOMEM
937.RB ( FUTEX_LOCK_PI ,
938.BR FUTEX_TRYLOCK_PI )
939The kernel could not allocate memory to hold state information.
940.TP
fea681da 941.B ENFILE
ff597681 942.RB ( FUTEX_FD )
fea681da 943The system limit on the total number of open files has been reached.
4701fc28
MK
944.TP
945.B ENOSYS
946Invalid operation specified in
d33602c4 947.IR futex_op .
9f6c40c0 948.TP
4a7e5b05
MK
949.B ENOSYS
950The
951.BR FUTEX_CLOCK_REALTIME
952option was specified in
1afcee7c 953.IR futex_op ,
4a7e5b05
MK
954but the accompanying operation was neither
955.BR FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET
956nor
957.BR FUTEX_WAIT_REQUEUE_PI .
958.TP
a9dcb4d1
MK
959.BR ENOSYS
960.RB ( FUTEX_LOCK_PI ,
f2424fae
MK
961.BR FUTEX_TRYLOCK_PI ,
962.BR FUTEX_UNLOCK_PI )
a9dcb4d1
MK
963A run-time check determined that the operation not available.
964.BR FUTEX_LOCK_PI
965and
966.BR FUTEX_TRYLOCK_PI
967are not implemented on all architectures and
968not supported on some CPU variants.
969.TP
c7589177
MK
970.BR EPERM
971.RB ( FUTEX_LOCK_PI ,
972.BR FUTEX_TRYLOCK_PI )
973The caller is not allowed to attach itself to the futex.
974(This may be caused by a state corruption in user space.)
61f8c1d1
MK
975.\"
976.\" FIXME Is there not also an EPERM error case on 'uaddr2' for
977.\" FUTEX_REQUEUE and FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE via
978.\" futex_requeue() ==> futex_proxy_trylock_atomic() ==>
979.\" futex_lock_pi_atomic() ==> attach_to_pi_owner() ==> EPERM?
c7589177 980.TP
76f347ba
MK
981.BR EPERM
982.BR FUTEX_UNLOCK_PI
983The caller does not own the futex.
984.TP
0b0e4934
MK
985.BR ESRCH
986.RB ( FUTEX_LOCK_PI ,
987.BR FUTEX_TRYLOCK_PI )
988.\" FIXME I reworded the following sentence a bit differently from
989.\" tglx's formulation. Is it okay?
990The thread ID in the futex at
991.I uaddr
992does not exist.
61f8c1d1
MK
993.\"
994.\" FIXME Is there not also an ESRCH error case on 'uaddr2' for
995.\" FUTEX_REQUEUE and FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE via
996.\" futex_requeue() ==> futex_proxy_trylock_atomic() ==>
997.\" futex_lock_pi_atomic() ==> attach_to_pi_owner() ==> ESRCH?
0b0e4934 998.TP
9f6c40c0 999.B ETIMEDOUT
4d85047f
MK
1000The operation in
1001.IR futex_op
1002employed the timeout specified in
1003.IR timeout ,
1004and the timeout expired before the operation completed.
9f6c40c0
МК
1005.TP
1006.B EWOULDBLOCK
0582b19d
MK
1007.RB ( FUTEX_WAIT )
1008The value pointed to by
9f6c40c0
МК
1009.I uaddr
1010was not equal to the expected value
1011.I val
e808bba0 1012at the time of the call.
47297adb 1013.SH VERSIONS
a1d5f77c 1014.PP
81c9d87e
MK
1015Futexes were first made available in a stable kernel release
1016with Linux 2.6.0.
1017
a1d5f77c
MK
1018Initial futex support was merged in Linux 2.5.7 but with different semantics
1019from what was described above.
52dee70e 1020A four-argument system call with the semantics
fd3fa7ef 1021described in this page was introduced in Linux 2.5.40.
11b520ed 1022In Linux 2.5.70, one argument
a1d5f77c 1023was added.
11b520ed 1024In Linux 2.6.7, a sixth argument was added\(emmessy, especially
a1d5f77c 1025on the s390 architecture.
47297adb 1026.SH CONFORMING TO
8382f16d 1027This system call is Linux-specific.
47297adb 1028.SH NOTES
fea681da 1029.PP
fcdad7d6 1030To reiterate, bare futexes are not intended as an easy-to-use abstraction
c13182ef 1031for end-users.
fcdad7d6 1032(There is no wrapper function for this system call in glibc.)
c13182ef 1033Implementors are expected to be assembly literate and to have
7fac88a9 1034read the sources of the futex user-space library referenced below.
d282bb24 1035.\" .SH AUTHORS
fea681da
MK
1036.\" .PP
1037.\" Futexes were designed and worked on by
1038.\" Hubertus Franke (IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center),
1039.\" Matthew Kirkwood, Ingo Molnar (Red Hat)
1040.\" and Rusty Russell (IBM Linux Technology Center).
1041.\" This page written by bert hubert.
47297adb 1042.SH SEE ALSO
9913033c 1043.BR get_robust_list (2),
d806bc05 1044.BR restart_syscall (2),
14d8dd3b 1045.BR futex (7)
fea681da 1046.PP
43b99089
MK
1047The kernel source files
1048.IR Documentation/pi-futex.txt
1049and
1050.IR Documentation/futex-requeue-pi.txt .
1051.PP
52087dd3 1052\fIFuss, Futexes and Furwocks: Fast Userlevel Locking in Linux\fP
9b936e9e
MK
1053(proceedings of the Ottawa Linux Symposium 2002), online at
1054.br
608bf950
SK
1055.UR http://kernel.org\:/doc\:/ols\:/2002\:/ols2002-pages-479-495.pdf
1056.UE
f42eb21b
MK
1057
1058\fIFutexes Are Tricky\fP (updated in 2011), Ulrich Drepper
1059.UR http://www.akkadia.org/drepper/futex.pdf
1060.UE
9b936e9e
MK
1061.PP
1062Futex example library, futex-*.tar.bz2 at
1063.br
a605264d 1064.UR ftp://ftp.kernel.org\:/pub\:/linux\:/kernel\:/people\:/rusty/
608bf950 1065.UE
34f14794
MK
1066.\"
1067.\" FIXME Are there any other resources that should be listed
1068.\" in the SEE ALSO section?