PTHREAD_KEY_CREATE(3) | Library Functions Manual | PTHREAD_KEY_CREATE(3) |
pthread_key_create
—
thread-specific data key creation
#include
<pthread.h>
int
pthread_key_create
(pthread_key_t
*key, void
(*destructor)(void *));
The
pthread_key_create
()
function creates a thread-specific data key visible to all threads in the
process. Key values provided by pthread_key_create
()
are opaque objects used to locate thread-specific data. Although the same
key value may be used by different threads, the values bound to the key by
pthread_setspecific
()
are maintained on a per-thread basis and persist for the life of the calling
thread.
Upon key creation, the value NULL is associated with the new key in all active threads. Upon thread creation, the value NULL is associated with all defined keys in the new thread.
An optional destructor function may be associated with each key value. At thread exit, if a key value has a non-NULL destructor pointer, and the thread has a non-NULL value associated with the key, the function pointed to is called with the current associated value as its sole argument. The order of destructor calls is unspecified if more than one destructor exists for a thread when it exits.
If, after all the destructors have been called for all non-NULL values with associated destructors, there are still some non-NULL values with associated destructors, then the process is repeated. If, after at least [PTHREAD_DESTRUCTOR_ITERATIONS] iterations of destructor calls for outstanding non-NULL values, there are still some non-NULL values with associated destructors, the implementation stops calling destructors.
If successful, the pthread_key_create
()
function will store the newly created key value at the location specified by
key and returns zero. Otherwise an error number will
be returned to indicate the error.
The pthread_key_create
() function will
fail if:
pthread_getspecific(3), pthread_key_delete(3), pthread_setspecific(3)
The pthread_key_create
() function conforms
to ISO/IEC 9945-1:1996
(“POSIX.1”).
April 4, 1996 | macOS 15.2 |