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THR_SELF(2) System Calls Manual THR_SELF(2)

NAME

thr_selfreturn thread identifier for the calling thread

LIBRARY

Standard C Library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS

#include <sys/thr.h>

int
thr_self(long *id);

DESCRIPTION

The () system call stores the system-wide thread identifier for the current kernel-scheduled thread in the variable pointed by the argument id.

The thread identifier is an integer in the range from PID_MAX + 2 (10002) to INT_MAX. The thread identifier is guaranteed to be unique at any given time, for each running thread in the system. After the thread exits, the identifier may be reused.

RETURN VALUES

If successful, thr_self() will return zero, otherwise -1 is returned, and errno is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS

The thr_self() operation may return the following errors:

[]
The memory pointed to by the id argument is not valid.

SEE ALSO

thr_exit(2), thr_kill(2), thr_kill2(2), thr_new(2), thr_set_name(2), _umtx_op(2), pthread_getthreadid_np(3), pthread_self(3)

STANDARDS

The thr_self() system call is non-standard and is used by 1:1 Threading Library (libthr, -lthr) to implement IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (“POSIX.1”) pthread(3) functionality.

June 1, 2016 Debian