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/*
* The MIT License
*
* Copyright (C) 2016 Alexander Saprykin <saprykin.spb@gmail.com>
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
* a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
* 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
* without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
* distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
* permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
* the following conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
* included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
* EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
* IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
* CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
* TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
* SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
*/
/**
* @file prwlock.h
* @brief Read-write lock
* @author Alexander Saprykin
*
* A read-write lock is a synchronization primitive which allows access to a
* critical section to not only the one thread, but instead it splits all
* threads into the two groups:
* - reader threads which perform only the reading operations without any shared
* data modifications;
* - writer threads which may perform the shared data modifitcations as well as
* its reading.
*
* When there are only the reader threads inside a critical section it is called
* a shared lock - actually you do not need any locking mechanism and all the
* threads share the lock. In this situation an arbitrary number of reader
* threads can perform shared data reading.
*
* The situation changes when a writer thread requests access to the same
* critical section. It will wait until all the current readers finish
* executing the critical section before acquiring the lock in exclusive manner:
* no one else can access the critical section until the writer finishes with
* it. Even another writer thread will have to wait for the lock to be released
* by the first writer before entering the critical section.
*
* To prevent writer startvation usually writers are in favor over readers,
* which is actually implementation dependent, though most operating systems try
* to follow this rule.
*
* A read-write lock is usually used when the writing operations are not
* performed too frequently, or when the number of reader threads is a way more
* than writer ones.
*
* A reader enters a critical section with p_rwlock_reader_lock() or
* p_rwlock_reader_trylock() and exits with p_rwlock_reader_unlock().
*
* A writer enters the critical section with p_rwlock_writer_lock() or
* p_rwlock_writer_trylock() and exits with p_rwlock_writer_unlock().
*/
#if !defined (PLIBSYS_H_INSIDE) && !defined (PLIBSYS_COMPILATION)
# error "Header files shouldn't be included directly, consider using <plibsys.h> instead."
#endif
#ifndef PLIBSYS_HEADER_PRWLOCK_H
#define PLIBSYS_HEADER_PRWLOCK_H
#include <pmacros.h>
#include <ptypes.h>
P_BEGIN_DECLS
/** Read-write lock opaque data structure. */
typedef struct PRWLock_ PRWLock;
/**
* @brief Creates a new #PRWLock object.
* @return Pointer to a newly created #PRWLock object.
* @since 0.0.1
*/
P_LIB_API PRWLock * p_rwlock_new (void);
/**
* @brief Locks a read-write lock for reading.
* @param lock #PRWLock to lock.
* @return TRUE in case of success, FALSE otherwise.
* @since 0.0.1
* @warning Do not lock a read-write lock recursively - it may lead to an
* application deadlock (implementation dependent).
*
* Forces the calling thread to sleep until the @a lock becomes available for
* locking.
*/
P_LIB_API pboolean p_rwlock_reader_lock (PRWLock *lock);
/**
* @brief Tries to lock a read-write lock for reading immediately.
* @param lock #PRWLock to lock.
* @return TRUE in case of success, FALSE otherwise.
* @since 0.0.1
* @warning Do not lock a read-write lock recursively - it may lead to an
* application deadlock (implementation dependent).
*
* Tries to lock the @a lock and returns immediately if it is not available for
* locking.
*/
P_LIB_API pboolean p_rwlock_reader_trylock (PRWLock *lock);
/**
* @brief Releases a locked for reading read-write lock.
* @param lock #PRWLock to release.
* @return TRUE in case of success, FALSE otherwise.
* @since 0.0.1
* @warning Do not use this function on non-locked read-write locks - behavior
* may be unpredictable.
* @warning Do not use this function to unlock a read-write lock which was
* locked for writing.
*
* If the @a lock was previously locked for reading then it becomes unlocked.
*
* It's implementation dependent whether only the same thread can lock and
* unlock the same read-write lock.
*/
P_LIB_API pboolean p_rwlock_reader_unlock (PRWLock *lock);
/**
* @brief Locks a read-write lock for writing.
* @param lock #PRWLock to lock.
* @return TRUE in case of success, FALSE otherwise.
* @since 0.0.1
* @warning Do not lock a read-write lock recursively - it may lead to an
* application deadlock (implementation dependent).
*
* Forces the calling thread to sleep until the @a lock becomes available for
* locking.
*/
P_LIB_API pboolean p_rwlock_writer_lock (PRWLock *lock);
/**
* @brief Tries to lock a read-write lock immediately.
* @param lock #PRWLock to lock.
* @return TRUE in case of success, FALSE otherwise.
* @since 0.0.1
* @warning Do not lock a read-write lock recursively - it may lead to an
* application deadlock (implementation dependent).
*
* Tries to lock the @a lock and returns immediately if it is not available for
* locking.
*/
P_LIB_API pboolean p_rwlock_writer_trylock (PRWLock *lock);
/**
* @brief Releases a locked for writing read-write lock.
* @param lock #PRWLock to release.
* @return TRUE in case of success, FALSE otherwise.
* @since 0.0.1
* @warning Do not use this function on non-locked read-write locks - behavior
* may be unpredictable.
* @warning Do not use this function to unlock a read-write lock which was
* locked for reading.
*
* If the @a lock was previously locked for writing then it becomes unlocked.
*
* It's implementation dependent whether only the same thread can lock and
* unlock the same read-write lock.
*/
P_LIB_API pboolean p_rwlock_writer_unlock (PRWLock *lock);
/**
* @brief Frees a #PRWLock object.
* @param lock #PRWLock to free.
* @since 0.0.1
* @warning It doesn't unlock the @a lock before freeing memory, so you should
* do it manually.
*/
P_LIB_API void p_rwlock_free (PRWLock *lock);
P_END_DECLS
#endif /* PLIBSYS_HEADER_PRWLOCK_H */
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