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FUTEX(2)                                                                                 FUTEX(2)



NAME
       futex - Fast Userspace Locking system call

SYNOPSIS
       #include <linux/futex.h>

       #include <sys/time.h>

       int sys_futex (void *futex, int op, int val, const struct timespec *timeout);

DESCRIPTION
       The  sys_futex  system call provides a method for a program to wait for a value at a given
       address to change, and a method to wake up anyone waiting on a particular  address  (while
       the  addresses for the same memory in separate processes may not be equal, the kernel maps
       them internally so the same memory mapped  in  different  locations  will  correspond  for
       sys_futex  calls).   It  is  typically  used  to implement the contended case of a lock in
       shared memory, as described in futex(4).

       When a futex(4) operation did not finish uncontended in userspace, a call needs to be made
       to  the  kernel  to  arbitrate. Arbitration can either mean putting the calling process to
       sleep or, conversely, waking a waiting process.

       Callers of this function are expected to adhere to the semantics as set out  in  futex(4).
       As these semantics involve writing non-portable assembly instructions, this in turn proba-
       bly means that most users will in fact be library  authors  and  not  general  application
       developers.

       The  futex  argument  needs  to point to an aligned integer which stores the counter.  The
       operation to execute is passed via the op parameter, along with a value val.

       Three operations are currently defined:

       FUTEX_WAIT
              This operation atomically verifies that the futex address still contains the  value
              given,  and sleeps awaiting FUTEX_WAKE on this futex address.  If the timeout argu-
              ment is non-NULL, its contents describe the maximum duration of the wait, which  is
              infinite  otherwise.  For futex(4), this call is executed if decrementing the count
              gave a negative value (indicating contention), and will sleep until another process
              releases the futex and executes the FUTEX_WAKE operation.

       FUTEX_WAKE
              This  operation  wakes  at  most  val  processes waiting on this futex address (ie.
              inside FUTEX_WAIT).  For futex(4), this  is  executed  if  incrementing  the  count
              showed  that there were waiters, once the futex value has been set to 1 (indicating
              that it is available).

       FUTEX_FD
              To support asynchronous wakeups, this operation associates a file descriptor with a
              futex.  If another process executes a FUTEX_WAKE, the process will receive the sig-
              nal number that was passed in val. The calling process must close the returned file
              descriptor after use.

              To  prevent  race  conditions,  the  caller should test if the futex has been upped
              after FUTEX_FD returns.

RETURN VALUE
       Depending on which operation was executed, the returned value can have differing meanings.

       FUTEX_WAIT
              Returns  0  if  the  process  was  woken  by a FUTEX_WAKE call. In case of timeout,
              ETIMEDOUT is returned. If the futex was not equal to the expected value, the opera-
              tion  returns  EWOULDBLOCK. Signals (or other spurious wakeups) cause FUTEX_WAIT to
              return EINTR.

       FUTEX_WAKE
              Returns the number of processes woken up.

       FUTEX_FD
              Returns the new file descriptor associated with the futex.

ERRORS
       EFAULT Error in getting timeout information from userspace.

       EINVAL An operation was not defined or error in page alignment.

NOTES
       To reiterate, bare futexes are not intended as an easy to use abstraction  for  end-users.
       Implementors  are  expected  to  be  assembly literate and to have read the sources of the
       futex userspace library referenced below.

AUTHORS
       Futexes were designed and worked on by Hubertus Franke (IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Cen-
       ter), Matthew Kirkwood, Ingo Molnar (Red Hat) and Rusty Russell (IBM Linux Technology Cen-
       ter).  This page written by bert hubert.

VERSIONS
       Initial futex support was merged in Linux 2.5.7 but with different  semantics  from  those
       described above.  Current semantics are available from Linux 2.5.40 onwards.

SEE ALSO
       futex(4),  ‘Fuss,  Futexes  and Furwocks: Fast Userlevel Locking in Linux’ (proceedings of
       the   Ottawa   Linux   Symposium   2002),   futex   example    library,    futex-*.tar.bz2
       <URL:ftp://ftp.nl.kernel.org:/pub/linux/kernel/people/rusty/>.



                                         31 December 2002                                FUTEX(2)

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