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thr_kill — send signal to thread

Description

The thr_kill() and thr_kill2() system calls allow sending a signal, specified by the sig argument, to some threads in a process. For the thr_kill() function, signalled threads are always limited to the current process. For the thr_kill2() function, the pid argument specifies the process with threads to be signalled. The id argument specifies which threads get the signal. If id is equal to -1, all threads in the specified process are signalled. Otherwise, only the thread with the thread identifier equal to the argument is signalled. The sig argument defines the delivered signal. It must be a valid signal number or zero. In the latter case no signal is actually sent, and the call is used to verify the liveness of the thread. The signal is delivered with siginfo si_code set to SI_LWP.

Errors

The thr_kill() and thr_kill2() operations return the following errors: [EINVAL] The sig argument is not zero and does not specify valid signal. [ESRCH] The specified process or thread was not found. Additionally, the thr_kill2() may return the following errors: [EPERM] The current process does not have sufficient privilege to check existence or send a signal to the specified process.

Library

Standard C Library (libc, -lc)

Name

thr_kill — send signal to thread

Return Values

If successful, thr_kill() and thr_kill2() will return zero, otherwise -1 is returned, and errno is set to indicate the error.

See Also

kill(2), thr_exit(2), thr_new(2), thr_self(2), thr_set_name(2), _umtx_op(2), pthread_kill(3), signal(3)

Standards

The thr_kill() and thr_kill2() system calls are non-standard and are used by the 1:1 Threading Library (libthr, -lthr) to implement IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (“POSIX.1”) pthread(3) functionality. Debian June 1, 2016 THR_kill(2)

Synopsis

#include<sys/thr.h>intthr_kill(longid, intsig); intthr_kill2(pid_tpid, longid, intsig);

See Also