setcontext, getcontext, getcontextx(3) | get and set user thread context |
getcontext, getcontextx, setcontext(3) | get and set user thread context |
getcontextx, getcontext, setcontext(3) | get and set user thread context |
GETCONTEXT(3) | MidnightBSD Library Functions Manual | GETCONTEXT(3) |
getcontext
,
getcontextx
, setcontext
— get and set user thread context
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
#include
<ucontext.h>
int
getcontext
(ucontext_t
*ucp);
ucontext_t *
getcontextx
(void);
int
setcontext
(const
ucontext_t *ucp);
The
getcontext
()
function saves the current thread's execution context in the structure
pointed to by ucp. This saved context may then later
be restored by calling setcontext
().
The
getcontextx
()
function saves the current execution context in the newly allocated
structure ucontext_t, which is returned on success. If
architecture defines additional CPU states that can be stored in extended
blocks referenced from the ucontext_t, the memory for
them may be allocated and their context also stored. Memory returned by
getcontextx
() function shall be freed using
free
(3).
The
setcontext
()
function makes a previously saved thread context the current thread context,
i.e., the current context is lost and setcontext
()
does not return. Instead, execution continues in the context specified by
ucp, which must have been previously initialized by a
call to getcontext
(),
makecontext(3), or
by being passed as an argument to a signal handler (see
sigaction(2)).
If ucp was initialized by
getcontext
(),
then execution continues as if the original
getcontext
() call had just returned (again).
If ucp was initialized by
makecontext(3),
execution continues with the invocation of the function specified to
makecontext(3). When
that function returns, ucp->uc_link determines what
happens next: if ucp->uc_link is
NULL
, the process exits; otherwise,
setcontext
(ucp->uc_link)
is implicitly invoked.
If ucp was initialized by the invocation of a signal handler, execution continues at the point the thread was interrupted by the signal.
If successful, getcontext
() returns zero
and setcontext
() does not return; otherwise -1 is
returned. The getcontextx
() returns pointer to the
allocated and initialized context on success, and NULL
on failure.
No errors are defined for getcontext
() or
setcontext
(). The
getcontextx
() may return the following errors in
errno:
ENOMEM
]March 13, 2013 | midnightbsd-3.1 |