NAME¶
tkill, tgkill - send a signal to a thread
SYNOPSIS¶
int tkill(int tid, int sig);
int tgkill(int tgid, int tid, int sig);
Note: There are no glibc wrappers for these system calls; see NOTES.
DESCRIPTION¶
tgkill() sends the signal
sig to the thread with the thread ID
tid in the thread group
tgid. (By contrast,
kill(2) can
be used to send a signal only to a process (i.e., thread group) as a whole,
and the signal will be delivered to an arbitrary thread within that process.)
tkill() is an obsolete predecessor to
tgkill(). It allows only the
target thread ID to be specified, which may result in the wrong thread being
signaled if a thread terminates and its thread ID is recycled. Avoid using
this system call.
If
tgid is specified as -1,
tgkill() is equivalent to
tkill().
These are the raw system call interfaces, meant for internal thread library use.
RETURN VALUE¶
On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned, and
errno is set
appropriately.
ERRORS¶
- EINVAL
- An invalid thread ID, thread group ID, or signal was specified.
- EPERM
- Permission denied. For the required permissions, see kill(2).
- ESRCH
- No process with the specified thread ID (and thread group ID) exists.
VERSIONS¶
tkill() is supported since Linux 2.4.19 / 2.5.4.
tgkill() was
added in Linux 2.5.75.
tkill() and
tgkill() are Linux-specific and should not be used in
programs that are intended to be portable.
NOTES¶
See the description of
CLONE_THREAD in
clone(2) for an explanation
of thread groups.
Glibc does not provide wrappers for these system calls; call them using
syscall(2).
SEE ALSO¶
clone(2),
gettid(2),
kill(2),
rt_sigqueueinfo(2)
COLOPHON¶
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man-pages project. A
description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest
version of this page, can be found at
http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.