| WORKQUEUE(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | WORKQUEUE(9) |
workqueue — simple
do-it-in-thread-context framework
#include
<sys/workqueue.h>
int
workqueue_create(struct
workqueue **wqp, const
char *name, void
(*func)(struct work *, void *),
void *arg,
pri_t prio,
int ipl,
int flags);
void
workqueue_enqueue(struct
workqueue *wq, struct
work *wk, struct cpu_info
*ci);
void
workqueue_wait(struct
workqueue *wq, struct
work *wk);
void
workqueue_destroy(struct
workqueue *wq);
The workqueue utility routines are
provided to defer work which is needed to be processed in a thread
context.
workqueue_create()
creates a workqueue. It takes the following arguments:
WQ_FPUWQ_MPSAFEWQ_PERCPUworkqueue_enqueue()
enqueues the work wk into the workqueue
wq.
If the WQ_PERCPU flag was set on workqueue
creation, the ci argument may be used to specify the
CPU on which the work should be enqueued. Also it may be
NULL, then work will be enqueued on the current CPU.
If WQ_PERCPU flag was not set,
ci must be NULL.
The enqueued work will be processed in a thread context. A work
must not be enqueued again until the callback is called by the
workqueue framework.
workqueue_wait()
waits for a specified work wk on the workqueue
wq to finish. The caller must ensure that
wk will not be enqueued to the workqueue again until
after workqueue_wait() returns.
workqueue_destroy()
destroys a workqueue and frees associated resources. The caller should
ensure that the workqueue has no work enqueued beforehand.
workqueue_create() returns 0 on success.
Otherwise, it returns an
errno(2).
The workqueue subsystem is implemented
within the file sys/kern/subr_workqueue.c.
| December 28, 2017 | NetBSD 11.0 |