| _UMTX_OP(2) | System Calls Manual | _UMTX_OP(2) |
_umtx_op —
interface for implementation of userspace threading
synchronization primitives
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
#include
<sys/types.h>
#include <sys/umtx.h>
int
_umtx_op(void
*obj, int op,
u_long val,
void *uaddr,
void *uaddr2);
The
_umtx_op()
system call provides kernel support for userspace implementation of the
threading synchronization primitives. The 1:1 Threading
Library (libthr, -lthr) uses the syscall to implement
IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (“POSIX.1”)
pthread locks, like mutexes, condition variables and so on.
The operations, performed by the
_umtx_op() syscall, operate on userspace objects
which are described by the following structures. Reserved fields and
paddings are omitted. All objects require ABI-mandated alignment, but this
is not currently enforced consistently on all architectures.
The following flags are defined for flag fields of all structures:
USYNC_PROCESS_SHAREDSee the SLEEP QUEUES subsection below for more details on sleep queues.
struct umutex {
volatile lwpid_t m_owner;
uint32_t m_flags;
uint32_t m_ceilings[2];
uintptr_t m_rb_lnk;
};
The m_owner field is the actual lock.
It contains either the thread identifier of the lock owner in the locked
state, or zero when the lock is unowned. The highest bit set indicates
that there is contention on the lock. The constants are defined for
special values:
UMUTEX_UNOWNEDUMUTEX_CONTESTEDUMUTEX_RB_OWNERDEADUMUTEX_RB_NOTRECOVThe m_flags field may contain the
following umutex-specific flags, in addition to the common flags:
UMUTEX_PRIO_INHERITUMUTEX_PRIO_PROTECTUMUTEX_ROBUSTUMUTEX_NONCONSISTENTIn the manual page, mutexes not having
UMUTEX_PRIO_INHERIT and
UMUTEX_PRIO_PROTECT flags set, are called normal
mutexes. Each type of mutex (normal, priority-inherited, and
priority-protected) has a separate sleep queue associated with the given
key.
For priority protected mutexes, the
m_ceilings array contains priority ceiling
values. The m_ceilings[0] is the ceiling value
for the mutex, as specified by IEEE Std 1003.1-2008
(“POSIX.1”) for the Priority
Protected mutex protocol. The m_ceilings[1]
is used only for the unlock of a priority protected mutex, when unlock
is done in an order other than the reversed lock order. In this case,
m_ceilings[1] must contain the ceiling value for
the last locked priority protected mutex, for proper priority
reassignment. If, instead, the unlocking mutex was the last priority
propagated mutex locked by the thread,
m_ceilings[1] should contain -1. This is
required because kernel does not maintain the ordered lock list.
struct ucond {
volatile uint32_t c_has_waiters;
uint32_t c_flags;
uint32_t c_clockid;
};
A non-zero c_has_waiters value
indicates that there are in-kernel waiters for the condition, executing
the UMTX_OP_CV_WAIT request.
The c_flags field contains flags. Only
the common flags (USYNC_PROCESS_SHARED) are
defined for ucond.
The c_clockid member provides the
clock identifier to use for timeout, when the
UMTX_OP_CV_WAIT request has both the
CVWAIT_CLOCKID flag and the timeout specified.
Valid clock identifiers are a subset of those for
clock_gettime(2):
struct urwlock {
volatile int32_t rw_state;
uint32_t rw_flags;
uint32_t rw_blocked_readers;
uint32_t rw_blocked_writers;
};
The rw_state field is the actual lock.
It contains both the flags and counter of the read locks which were
granted. Names of the rw_state bits are
following:
URWLOCK_WRITE_OWNERURWLOCK_WRITE_WAITERSURWLOCK_READ_WAITERSURWLOCK_READER_COUNT(c)At any given time there may be only one thread to which the
writer lock is granted on the struct rwlock, and
no threads are granted read lock. Or, at the given time, up to
URWLOCK_MAX_READERS threads may be granted the
read lock simultaneously, but write lock is not granted to any
thread.
The following flags for the rw_flags
member of struct urwlock are defined, in addition
to the common flags:
URWLOCK_PREFER_READERurwlock is already read-locked, even in
presence of unsatisfied write lock requests. By default, if there is a
write lock waiter, further read requests are not granted, to prevent
unfair write lock waiter starvation.The rw_blocked_readers and
rw_blocked_writers members contain the count of
threads which are sleeping in kernel, waiting for the associated request
type to be granted. The fields are used by kernel to update the
URWLOCK_READ_WAITERS and
URWLOCK_WRITE_WAITERS flags of the
rw_state lock after requesting thread was woken
up.
struct _usem2 {
volatile uint32_t _count;
uint32_t _flags;
};
The _count word represents a counting
semaphore. A non-zero value indicates an unlocked (posted) semaphore,
while zero represents the locked state. The maximal supported semaphore
count is USEM_MAX_COUNT.
The _count word, besides the counter
of posts (unlocks), also contains the
USEM_HAS_WAITERS bit, which indicates that
locked semaphore has waiting threads.
The USEM_COUNT() macro, applied to the
_count word, returns the current semaphore
counter, which is the number of posts issued on the semaphore.
The following bits for the _flags
member of struct _usem2 are defined, in addition
to the common flags:
USEM_NAMEDstruct _umtx_time {
struct timespec _timeout;
uint32_t _flags;
uint32_t _clockid;
};
Several
_umtx_op()
operations allow the blocking time to be limited, failing the request if
it cannot be satisfied in the specified time period. The timeout is
specified by passing either the address of struct
timespec, or its extended variant, struct
_umtx_time, as the uaddr2 argument of
_umtx_op(). They are distinguished by the
uaddr value, which must be equal to the size of
the structure pointed to by uaddr2, casted to
uintptr_t.
The _timeout member specifies the time
when the timeout should occur. Legal values for clock identifier
_clockid are shared with the
clock_id argument to the
clock_gettime(2) function, and use the same underlying
clocks. The specified clock is used to obtain the current time value.
Interval counting is always performed by the monotonic wall clock.
The _flags argument allows the
following flags to further define the timeout behaviour:
UMTX_ABSTIME_timeout value is the absolute time. The
thread will be unblocked and the request failed when specified clock
value is equal or exceeds the _timeout.
If the flag is absent, the timeout value is relative, that is the amount of time, measured by the monotonic wall clock from the moment of the request start.
When a locking request cannot be immediately satisfied, the thread
is typically put to sleep, which is a non-runnable state
terminated by the
wake
operation. Lock operations include a
try variant
which returns an error rather than sleeping if the lock cannot be obtained.
Also,
_umtx_op()
provides requests which explicitly put the thread to sleep.
Wakes need to know which threads to make runnable,
so sleeping threads are grouped into containers called sleep
queues. A sleep queue is identified by a key, which for
_umtx_op()
is defined as the physical address of some variable. Note that the
physical
address is used, which means that same variable mapped multiple times will
give one key value. This mechanism enables the construction of
process-shared
locks.
A related attribute of the key is shareability. Some requests
always interpret keys as private for the current process, creating sleep
queues with the scope of the current process even if the memory is shared.
Others either select the shareability automatically from the mapping
attributes, or take additional input as the
USYNC_PROCESS_SHARED common flag. This is done as
optimization, allowing the lock scope to be limited regardless of the kind
of backing memory.
Only the address of the start byte of the variable specified as key is important for determining corresponding sleep queue. The size of the variable does not matter, so, for example, sleep on the same address interpeted as uint32_t and long on a little-endian 64-bit platform would collide.
The last attribute of the key is the object type. The sleep queue to which a sleeping thread is assigned is an individual one for simple wait requests, mutexes, rwlocks, condvars and other primitives, even when the physical address of the key is same.
When waking up a limited number of threads from a given sleep queue, the highest priority threads that have been blocked for the longest on the queue are selected.
The
robust
umutexes are provided as a substrate for a userspace library to
implement POSIX robust mutexes. A robust umutex must have the
UMUTEX_ROBUST flag set.
On thread termination, the kernel walks two lists of mutexes. The
two lists head addresses must be provided by a prior call to
UMTX_OP_ROBUST_LISTS request. The lists are
singly-linked. The link to next element is provided by the
m_rb_lnk member of the struct
umutex.
Robust list processing is aborted if the kernel finds a mutex with any of the following conditions:
UMUTEX_ROBUST flag is not setrobust_inactive member of the
struct umtx_robust_lists_params, registered for the
current threadEvery mutex in both lists is unlocked as if the
UMTX_OP_MUTEX_UNLOCK request is performed on it, but
instead of the UMUTEX_UNOWNED value, the
m_owner field is written with the
UMUTEX_RB_OWNERDEAD value. When a mutex in the
UMUTEX_RB_OWNERDEAD state is locked by kernel due to
the UMTX_OP_MUTEX_TRYLOCK and
UMTX_OP_MUTEX_LOCK requests, the lock is granted and
EOWNERDEAD error is returned.
Also, the kernel handles the
UMUTEX_RB_NOTRECOV value of the
m_owner field specially, always returning the
ENOTRECOVERABLE error for lock attempts, without
granting the lock.
The following operations, requested by the op argument to the function, are implemented:
UMTX_OP_WAIT*obj.The current value of the variable pointed to by the obj argument is compared with the val. If they are equal, the requesting thread is put to interruptible sleep until woken up or the optionally specified timeout expires.
The comparison and sleep are atomic. In other words, if
another thread writes a new value to *obj and
then issues UMTX_OP_WAKE, the request is
guaranteed to not miss the wakeup, which might otherwise happen between
comparison and blocking.
The physical address of memory where the *obj variable is located, is used as a key to index sleeping threads.
The read of the current value of the
*obj variable is not guarded by barriers. In
particular, it is the user's duty to ensure the lock acquire and release
memory semantics, if the UMTX_OP_WAIT and
UMTX_OP_WAKE requests are used as a substrate
for implementing a simple lock.
The request is not restartable. An unblocked signal delivered
during the wait always results in sleep interruption and
EINTR error.
Optionally, a timeout for the request may be specified.
UMTX_OP_WAKEUMTX_OP_WAIT. The arguments for the request are:
INT_MAX to wake up all waiters.UMTX_OP_MUTEX_TRYLOCKOperates same as the
UMTX_OP_MUTEX_LOCK request, but returns
EBUSY instead of sleeping if the lock cannot be
obtained immediately.
UMTX_OP_MUTEX_LOCKLocking is performed by writing the current thread id into the
m_owner word of the struct
umutex. The write is atomic, preserves the
UMUTEX_CONTESTED contention indicator, and
provides the acquire barrier for lock entrance semantic.
If the lock cannot be obtained immediately because another
thread owns the lock, the current thread is put to sleep, with
UMUTEX_CONTESTED bit set before. Upon wake up,
the lock conditions are re-tested.
The request adheres to the priority protection or inheritance
protocol of the mutex, specified by the
UMUTEX_PRIO_PROTECT or
UMUTEX_PRIO_INHERIT flag, respectively.
Optionally, a timeout for the request may be specified.
A request with a timeout specified is not restartable. An
unblocked signal delivered during the wait always results in sleep
interruption and EINTR error. A request without
timeout specified is always restarted after return from a signal
handler.
UMTX_OP_MUTEX_UNLOCKUnlocks the mutex, by writing
UMUTEX_UNOWNED (zero) value into
m_owner word of the struct
umutex. The write is done with a release barrier, to provide lock
leave semantic.
If there are threads sleeping in the sleep queue associated
with the umutex, one thread is woken up. If more than one thread sleeps
in the sleep queue, the UMUTEX_CONTESTED bit is
set together with the write of the
UMUTEX_UNOWNED value into
m_owner.
The request adheres to the priority protection or inheritance
protocol of the mutex, specified by the
UMUTEX_PRIO_PROTECT or
UMUTEX_PRIO_INHERIT flag, respectively. See
description of the m_ceilings member of the
struct umutex structure for additional details of
the request operation on the priority protected protocol mutex.
UMTX_OP_SET_CEILINGNULL and the update was successful, the
previous ceiling value is written to the location pointed to by
uaddr.The request locks the umutex pointed to by the
obj parameter, waiting for the lock if not
immediately available. After the lock is obtained, the new ceiling value
val is written to the
m_ceilings[0] member of the
struct umutex, after which the umutex is
unlocked.
The locking does not adhere to the priority protect protocol, to conform to the POSIX requirements for the pthread_mutex_setprioceiling(3) interface.
UMTX_OP_CV_WAITThe request must be issued by the thread owning the mutex
pointed to by the uaddr argument. The
c_hash_waiters member of the
struct ucond, pointed to by the
obj argument, is set to an arbitrary non-zero
value, after which the uaddr mutex is unlocked
(following the appropriate protocol), and the current thread is put to
sleep on the sleep queue keyed by the obj
argument. The operations are performed atomically. It is guaranteed to
not miss a wakeup from UMTX_OP_CV_SIGNAL or
UMTX_OP_CV_BROADCAST sent between mutex unlock
and putting the current thread on the sleep queue.
Upon wakeup, if the timeout expired and no other threads are
sleeping in the same sleep queue, the
c_hash_waiters member is cleared. After wakeup,
the uaddr umutex is not relocked.
The following flags are defined:
CVWAIT_ABSTIMECVWAIT_CLOCKIDOptionally, a timeout for the request may be specified. Unlike
other requests, the timeout value is specified directly by a
struct timespec, pointed to by the
uaddr2 argument. If the
CVWAIT_CLOCKID flag is provided, the timeout
uses the clock from the c_clockid member of the
struct ucond, pointed to by
obj argument. Otherwise,
CLOCK_REALTIME is used, regardless of the clock
identifier possibly specified in the struct
_umtx_time. If the CVWAIT_ABSTIME flag is
supplied, the timeout specifies absolute time value, otherwise it
denotes a relative time interval.
The request is not restartable. An unblocked signal delivered
during the wait always results in sleep interruption and
EINTR error.
UMTX_OP_CV_SIGNALThe request wakes up at most one thread sleeping on the sleep
queue keyed by the obj argument. If the woken up
thread was the last on the sleep queue, the
c_has_waiters member of the
struct ucond is cleared.
UMTX_OP_CV_BROADCASTThe request wakes up all threads sleeping on the sleep queue
keyed by the obj argument. The
c_has_waiters member of the
struct ucond is cleared.
UMTX_OP_WAIT_UINTUMTX_OP_WAIT, but the type of the variable
pointed to by obj is u_int (a
32-bit integer).UMTX_OP_RW_RDLOCKThe request obtains the read lock on the specified
struct rwlock by incrementing the count of readers
in the rw_state word of the structure. If the
URWLOCK_WRITE_OWNER bit is set in the word
rw_state, the lock was granted to a writer which
has not yet relinquished its ownership. In this case the current thread
is put to sleep until it makes sense to retry.
If the URWLOCK_PREFER_READER flag is
set either in the rw_flags word of the
structure, or in the val argument of the request,
the presence of the threads trying to obtain the write lock on the same
structure does not prevent the current thread from trying to obtain the
read lock. Otherwise, if the flag is not set, and the
URWLOCK_WRITE_WAITERS flag is set in
rw_state, the current thread does not attempt to
obtain read-lock. Instead it sets the
URWLOCK_READ_WAITERS in the
rw_state word and puts itself to sleep on
corresponding sleep queue. Upon wakeup, the locking conditions are
re-evaluated.
Optionally, a timeout for the request may be specified.
The request is not restartable. An unblocked signal delivered
during the wait always results in sleep interruption and
EINTR error.
UMTX_OP_RW_WRLOCKThe request obtains a write lock on the specified
struct rwlock, by setting the
URWLOCK_WRITE_OWNER bit in the
rw_state word of the structure. If there is
already a write lock owner, as indicated by the
URWLOCK_WRITE_OWNER bit being set, or there are
read lock owners, as indicated by the read-lock counter, the current
thread does not attempt to obtain the write-lock. Instead it sets the
URWLOCK_WRITE_WAITERS in the
rw_state word and puts itself to sleep on
corresponding sleep queue. Upon wakeup, the locking conditions are
re-evaluated.
Optionally, a timeout for the request may be specified.
The request is not restartable. An unblocked signal delivered
during the wait always results in sleep interruption and
EINTR error.
UMTX_OP_RW_UNLOCKThe unlock type (read or write) is determined by the current lock state. Note that the struct rwlock does not save information about the identity of the thread which acquired the lock.
If there are pending writers after the unlock, and the
URWLOCK_PREFER_READER flag is not set in the
rw_flags member of the
*obj structure, one writer is woken up, selected
as described in the SLEEP QUEUES
subsection. If the URWLOCK_PREFER_READER flag is
set, a pending writer is woken up only if there is no pending
readers.
If there are no pending writers, or, in the case that the
URWLOCK_PREFER_READER flag is set, then all
pending readers are woken up by unlock.
UMTX_OP_WAIT_UINT_PRIVATEUMTX_OP_WAIT_UINT, but unconditionally
select the process-private sleep queue.UMTX_OP_WAKE_PRIVATEUMTX_OP_WAKE, but unconditionally select
the process-private sleep queue.UMTX_OP_MUTEX_WAITSimilarly to the UMTX_OP_MUTEX_LOCK,
put the requesting thread to sleep if the mutex lock cannot be obtained
immediately. The UMUTEX_CONTESTED bit is set in
the m_owner word of the mutex to indicate that
there is a waiter, before the thread is added to the sleep queue. Unlike
the UMTX_OP_MUTEX_LOCK request, the lock is not
obtained.
The operation is not implemented for priority protected and priority inherited protocol mutexes.
Optionally, a timeout for the request may be specified.
A request with a timeout specified is not restartable. An
unblocked signal delivered during the wait always results in sleep
interruption and EINTR error. A request without
a timeout automatically restarts if the signal disposition requested
restart via the SA_RESTART flag in
struct sigaction member
sa_flags.
UMTX_OP_NWAKE_PRIVATEFor each element in the array pointed to by obj, wakes up all threads waiting on the private sleep queue with the key being the byte addressed by the array element.
UMTX_OP_MUTEX_WAKEIf the m_owner word of the mutex
pointed to by the obj argument indicates unowned
mutex, which has its contention indicator bit
UMUTEX_CONTESTED set, clear the bit and wake up
one waiter in the sleep queue associated with the byte addressed by the
obj, if any. Only normal mutexes are supported by
the request. The sleep queue is always one for a normal mutex type.
This request is deprecated in favor of
UMTX_OP_MUTEX_WAKE2 since mutexes using it
cannot synchronize their own destruction. That is, the
m_owner word has already been set to
UMUTEX_UNOWNED when this request is made, so
that another thread can lock, unlock and destroy the mutex (if no other
thread uses the mutex afterwards). Clearing the
UMUTEX_CONTESTED bit may then modify freed
memory.
UMTX_OP_MUTEX_WAKE2The request does not read the m_flags
member of the struct umutex; instead, the
val argument supplies flag information, in
particular, to determine the sleep queue where the waiters are found for
wake up.
If the mutex is unowned, one waiter is woken up.
If the mutex memory cannot be accessed, all waiters are woken up.
If there is more than one waiter on the sleep queue, or there
is only one waiter but the mutex is owned by a thread, the
UMUTEX_CONTESTED bit is set in the
m_owner word of the struct
umutex.
UMTX_OP_SEM2_WAITPut the requesting thread onto a sleep queue if the semaphore
counter is zero. If the thread is put to sleep, the
USEM_HAS_WAITERS bit is set in the
_count word to indicate waiters. The function
returns either due to _count indicating the
semaphore is available (non-zero count due to post), or due to a wakeup.
The return does not guarantee that the semaphore is available, nor does
it consume the semaphore lock on successful return.
Optionally, a timeout for the request may be specified.
A request with non-absolute timeout value is not restartable.
An unblocked signal delivered during such wait results in sleep
interruption and EINTR error.
UMTX_OP_SEM2_WAKEThe request wakes up one waiter for the semaphore lock. The
function does not increment the semaphore lock count. If the
USEM_HAS_WAITERS bit was set in the
_count word, and the last sleeping thread was
woken up, the bit is cleared.
UMTX_OP_SHMlibthr.
The val argument specifies the
sub-request of the UMTX_OP_SHM request:
UMTX_SHM_CREATUMTX_SHM_LOOKUPUMTX_SHM_CREATE request, but if there
is no shared memory object associated with the specified key
uaddr, an error is returned, and no new object
is created.UMTX_SHM_DESTROYUMTX_SHM_ALIVEUMTX_SHM_LOOKUP request. It is cheaper when
only the liveness of the associated object is asked for, since no file
descriptor is installed in the process fd table on success.The uaddr argument specifies the virtual address, which backing physical memory byte identity is used as a key for the anonymous shared object creation or lookup.
UMTX_OP_ROBUST_LISTSThe structure is defined as
struct umtx_robust_lists_params {
uintptr_t robust_list_offset;
uintptr_t robust_priv_list_offset;
uintptr_t robust_inact_offset;
};
The robust_list_offset member contains
address of the first element in the list of locked robust shared
mutexes. The robust_priv_list_offset member
contains address of the first element in the list of locked robust
private mutexes. The private and shared robust locked lists are split to
allow fast termination of the shared list on fork, in the child.
The robust_inact_offset contains a
pointer to the mutex which might be locked in nearby future, or might
have been just unlocked. It is typically set by the lock or unlock mutex
implementation code around the whole operation, since lists can be only
changed race-free when the thread owns the mutex. The kernel inspects
the robust_inact_offset in addition to walking
the shared and private lists. Also, the mutex pointed to by
robust_inact_offset is handled more loosely at
the thread termination time, than other mutexes on the list. That mutex
is allowed to be not owned by the current thread, in which case list
processing is continued. See
ROBUST UMUTEXES subsection for
details.
If successful, all requests, except
UMTX_SHM_CREAT and
UMTX_SHM_LOOKUP sub-requests of the
UMTX_OP_SHM request, will return zero. The
UMTX_SHM_CREAT and
UMTX_SHM_LOOKUP return a shared memory file
descriptor on success. On error -1 is returned, and the
errno variable is set to indicate the error.
The _umtx_op() operations can fail with
the following errors:
EFAULT]EINVAL]c_clockid member of struct
ucond, is invalid.EINVAL]m_flags
member of struct umutex, is invalid.EINVAL]m_owner member of the struct
umutex has changed the lock owner thread identifier during
unlock.EINVAL]timeout.tv_sec or
timeout.tv_nsec member of struct
_umtx_time is less than zero, or
timeout.tv_nsec is greater than 1000000000.EINVAL]EINVAL]UMTX_OP_SHM request specifies invalid
operation.EINVAL]UMTX_OP_SET_CEILING request specifies non
priority protected mutex.EINVAL]UMTX_OP_SET_CEILING
request, or one or more of the values read from the
m_ceilings array during lock or unlock operations,
is greater than RTP_PRIO_MAX.EPERM]EOWNERDEAD]m_owner field was set to the
UMUTEX_RB_OWNERDEAD value, indicating terminated
robust mutex. The lock was granted to the caller, so this error in fact
indicates success with additional conditions.ENOTRECOVERABLE]m_owner
field is equal to the UMUTEX_RB_NOTRECOV value,
indicating abandoned robust mutex after termination. The lock was not
granted to the caller.ENOTTY]UMTX_SHM_ALIVE sub-request of
UMTX_OP_SHM request, was destroyed.ESRCH]UMTX_SHM_LOOKUP,
UMTX_SHM_DESTROY, and
UMTX_SHM_ALIVE sub-requests of the
UMTX_OP_SHM request, there is no shared memory
object associated with the provided key.ENOMEM]UMTX_SHM_CREAT sub-request of the
UMTX_OP_SHM request cannot be satisfied, because
allocation of the shared memory object would exceed the
RLIMIT_UMTXP resource limit, see
setrlimit(2).EAGAIN]URWLOCK_MAX_READERS) were already granted
ownership of the given struct rwlock for read.EBUSY]ETIMEDOUT]EINTR]ERESTART]clock_gettime(2), mmap(2), setrlimit(2), shm_open(2), sigaction(2), thr_exit(2), thr_kill(2), thr_kill2(2), thr_new(2), thr_self(2), thr_set_name(2), signal(3)
The _umtx_op() system call is non-standard
and is used by the 1:1 Threading Library (libthr,
-lthr) to implement IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
(“POSIX.1”) pthread(3)
functionality.
A window between a unlocking robust mutex and resetting the
pointer in the robust_inact_offset member of the
registered struct umtx_robust_lists_params allows
another thread to destroy the mutex, thus making the kernel inspect freed or
reused memory. The libthr implementation is only
vulnerable to this race when operating on a shared mutex. A possible fix for
the current implementation is to strengthen the checks for shared mutexes
before terminating them, in particular, verifying that the mutex memory is
mapped from a shared memory object allocated by the
UMTX_OP_SHM request. This is not done because it is
believed that the race is adequately covered by other consistency checks,
while adding the check would prevent alternative implementations of
libpthread.
| November 13, 2017 | Debian |