Warning: This is the manual of the legacy Guile 2.2 series. You may want to read the manual of the current stable series instead.
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Threads created by SRFI-18 differ in two ways from threads created by
Guile’s built-in thread functions. First, a thread created by SRFI-18
make-thread
begins in a blocked state and will not start
execution until thread-start!
is called on it. Second, SRFI-18
threads are constructed with a top-level exception handler that
captures any exceptions that are thrown on thread exit.
SRFI-18 threads are disjoint from Guile’s primitive threads. See Threads, for more on Guile’s primitive facility.
Returns the thread that called this function. This is the same
procedure as the same-named built-in procedure current-thread
(see Threads).
Returns #t
if obj is a thread, #f
otherwise. This
is the same procedure as the same-named built-in procedure
thread?
(see Threads).
Call thunk
in a new thread and with a new dynamic state,
returning the new thread and optionally assigning it the object name
name, which may be any Scheme object.
Note that the name make-thread
conflicts with the
(ice-9 threads)
function make-thread
. Applications
wanting to use both of these functions will need to refer to them by
different names.
Returns the name assigned to thread at the time of its creation,
or #f
if it was not given a name.
Get or set the “object-specific” property of thread. In
Guile’s implementation of SRFI-18, this value is stored as an object
property, and will be #f
if not set.
Unblocks thread and allows it to begin execution if it has not done so already.
If one or more threads are waiting to execute, calling
thread-yield!
forces an immediate context switch to one of them.
Otherwise, thread-yield!
has no effect. thread-yield!
behaves identically to the Guile built-in function yield
.
The current thread waits until the point specified by the time object
timeout is reached (see SRFI-18 Time). This blocks the
thread only if timeout represents a point in the future. it is
an error for timeout to be #f
.
Causes an abnormal termination of thread. If thread is
not already terminated, all mutexes owned by thread become
unlocked/abandoned. If thread is the current thread,
thread-terminate!
does not return. Otherwise
thread-terminate!
returns an unspecified value; the termination
of thread will occur before thread-terminate!
returns.
Subsequent attempts to join on thread will cause a “terminated
thread exception” to be raised.
thread-terminate!
is compatible with the thread cancellation
procedures in the core threads API (see Threads) in that if a
cleanup handler has been installed for the target thread, it will be
called before the thread exits and its return value (or exception, if
any) will be stored for later retrieval via a call to
thread-join!
.
Wait for thread to terminate and return its exit value. When a
time value timeout is given, it specifies a point in time where
the waiting should be aborted. When the waiting is aborted,
timeout-val is returned if it is specified; otherwise, a
join-timeout-exception
exception is raised
(see SRFI-18 Exceptions). Exceptions may also be raised if the
thread was terminated by a call to thread-terminate!
(terminated-thread-exception
will be raised) or if the thread
exited by raising an exception that was handled by the top-level
exception handler (uncaught-exception
will be raised; the
original exception can be retrieved using
uncaught-exception-reason
).
Next: SRFI-18 Mutexes, Up: SRFI-18 [Contents][Index]