5a537261a6
In my example case, there are 2 threads - one is a worker thread created by OpenThreads::Thread. The other thread is the main thread i.e. the thread that is intrinsically created when you execute the application. The crucial problem is that for the main thread, OpenThreads::Thread::CurrentThread() will return null. I'll demonstrate this by breaking ReentrantMutex::lock() into sub-statements: 1.) if (_threadHoldingMutex==OpenThreads::Thread::CurrentThread()) 2.) if (_lockCount>0){ 3.) OpenThreads::ScopedLock<OpenThreads::Mutex> lock(_lockCountMutex); ++_lockCount; return 0; 4.) int result = Mutex::lock(); if (result==0) { OpenThreads::ScopedLock<OpenThreads::Mutex> lock(_lockCountMutex); 5.) _threadHoldingMutex = OpenThreads::Thread::CurrentThread(); _lockCount = 1; return result; An error will occur in the following case: 1) The worker thread calls lock(), it gets to the start of statement 5. 2) The main thread calls lock(). Statement 1 is evaluated as true as _threadHoldingMutex is null, and OpenThreads::Thread::CurrentThread() returns null. 3) The worker thread executes statement 5. 4) The main thread executes statement 2 and evaluates it as true, because the worker thread has set _lockCount to 1. The main thread executes statement 3, and now can access the mutexed-data at the same time as the worker thread! The simple solution to this is to always protect access to _lockCount and _threadHoldingMutex using _lockCountMutex. I have done this in the file I am submitting." |
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Atomic | ||
Barrier | ||
Block | ||
Condition | ||
Exports | ||
Mutex | ||
ReadWriteMutex | ||
ReentrantMutex | ||
ScopedLock | ||
Thread | ||
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