dolphin/Source/Core/Common/Src/Thread.h

197 lines
3.8 KiB
C++

// Copyright (C) 2003 Dolphin Project.
// This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
// it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
// the Free Software Foundation, version 2.0.
// This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
// but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
// GNU General Public License 2.0 for more details.
// A copy of the GPL 2.0 should have been included with the program.
// If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/
// Official SVN repository and contact information can be found at
// http://code.google.com/p/dolphin-emu/
#ifndef _THREAD_H_
#define _THREAD_H_
#ifdef _WIN32
#if defined(_MSC_VER) && defined(_MT)
// When linking with LIBCMT (the multithreaded C library), Microsoft recommends
// using _beginthreadex instead of CreateThread.
#define USE_BEGINTHREADEX
#endif
#include <windows.h>
#ifdef USE_BEGINTHREADEX
#define THREAD_RETURN unsigned __stdcall
#else
#define THREAD_RETURN DWORD WINAPI
#endif
#else
#include <xmmintrin.h>
#define THREAD_RETURN void*
#include <unistd.h>
#ifdef _POSIX_THREADS
#include <pthread.h>
#elif GEKKO
#include <ogc/lwp_threads.h>
#else
#error unsupported platform (no pthreads?)
#endif
#endif
// Don't include common.h here as it will break LogManager
#include "CommonTypes.h"
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
// This may not be defined outside _WIN32
#ifndef _WIN32
#ifndef INFINITE
#define INFINITE 0xffffffff
#endif
#endif
namespace Common
{
class CriticalSection
{
#ifdef _WIN32
CRITICAL_SECTION section;
#else
#ifdef _POSIX_THREADS
pthread_mutex_t mutex;
#endif
#endif
public:
CriticalSection(int spincount = 1000);
~CriticalSection();
void Enter();
bool TryEnter();
void Leave();
};
#ifdef _WIN32
#ifdef USE_BEGINTHREADEX
typedef unsigned (__stdcall *ThreadFunc)(void* arg);
#else
typedef DWORD (WINAPI *ThreadFunc)(void* arg);
#endif
#else
typedef void* (*ThreadFunc)(void* arg);
#endif
class Thread
{
public:
Thread(ThreadFunc entry, void* arg);
~Thread();
void SetAffinity(int mask);
static void SetCurrentThreadAffinity(int mask);
static int CurrentId();
#ifdef _WIN32
void SetPriority(int priority);
DWORD WaitForDeath(const int iWait = INFINITE);
#else
void WaitForDeath();
#endif
private:
#ifdef _WIN32
HANDLE m_hThread;
#ifdef USE_BEGINTHREADEX
unsigned m_threadId;
#else
DWORD m_threadId;
#endif
#else
#ifdef _POSIX_THREADS
pthread_t thread_id;
#endif
#endif
};
class Event
{
public:
Event();
void Init();
void Shutdown();
void Set();
void Wait();
#ifdef _WIN32
void MsgWait();
#else
void MsgWait() {Wait();}
#endif
private:
#ifdef _WIN32
HANDLE m_hEvent;
/* If we have waited more than five seconds we can be pretty sure that the thread is deadlocked.
So then we can just as well continue and hope for the best. I could try several times that
this works after a five second timeout (with works meaning that the game stopped and I could
start another game without any noticable problems). But several times it failed to, and ended
with a crash. But it's better than an infinite deadlock. */
static const int THREAD_WAIT_TIMEOUT = 5000; // INFINITE or 5000 for example
#else
bool is_set_;
#ifdef _POSIX_THREADS
pthread_cond_t event_;
pthread_mutex_t mutex_;
#endif
#endif
};
void InitThreading();
void SleepCurrentThread(int ms);
// YieldCPU: Use this function during a spin-wait to make the current thread
// relax while another thread is working. This may be more efficient than using
// events because event functions use kernel calls.
inline void YieldCPU()
{
#ifdef _WIN32
YieldProcessor();
#elif defined(_M_IX86) || defined(_M_X64)
_mm_pause();
#endif
}
void SetCurrentThreadName(const char *name);
} // namespace Common
#endif // _THREAD_H_