Atomic operations

Basic atomic integer and pointer operations. The following functions can be used to atomically access integers and pointers. They are implemented as inline assembler function on most platforms and use slower fall-backs otherwise. Using them can sometimes save you from using a performance-expensive pthread_mutex to protect the integer or pointer.The most important usage is reference counting. Using qb_atomic_int_inc() and qb_atomic_int_dec_and_test() makes reference counting a very fast operation.You must not directly read integers or pointers concurrently accessed by multiple threads, but use the atomic accessor functions instead. That is, always use qb_atomic_int_get() and qb_atomic_pointer_get() for read outs. They provide the necessary synchonization mechanisms like memory barriers to access memory locations concurrently.If you are using those functions for anything apart from simple reference counting, you should really be aware of the implications of doing that. There are literally thousands of ways to shoot yourself in the foot. So if in doubt, use a pthread_mutex. If you don't know, what memory barriers are, do not use anything but qb_atomic_int_inc() and qb_atomic_int_dec_and_test().It is not safe to set an integer or pointer just by assigning to it, when it is concurrently accessed by other threads with the following functions. Use qb_atomic_int_compare_and_exchange() or qb_atomic_pointer_compare_and_exchange() respectively.

See also:
qbatomic.h
 All Data Structures Files Functions Variables Typedefs Enumerations Enumerator Defines

Generated on 18 Mar 2016 for libqb by  doxygen 1.6.1