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I want to suspend pthreads but apparently, there is no such function as pthread_suspend. I read somewhere about suspending pthreads using mutexes and conditions and used it as following:

#include <pthread.h>

class PThread {
public:
pthread_t myPthread;
pthread_mutex_t m_SuspendMutex;
pthread_cond_t m_ResumeCond;

void start() {
pthread_create(&myPthread, NULL, threadRun, (void*)this );
}

Thread() { }

void suspendMe() {
pthread_cond_wait(&m_ResumeCond,&m_SuspendMutex);
}

void resume() {
pthread_cond_signal(&m_ResumeCond);
}
};

but I don't understand why we need both mutex and condition to suspend and resume a pthread. Is it possible to suspend and resume it without using conditions?

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Your code is not correct - the pthread_cond_wait() requires that the mutex be locked already when you call it:

void suspendMe()
{
    pthread_mutex_lock(&m_SuspendMutex);
    pthread_cond_wait(&m_ResumeCond, &m_SuspendMutex);
    pthread_mutex_unlock(&m_SuspendMutex);
}

However, this is still wrong. A thread can wake up from pthread_cond_wait() at any name, not necessarily only when it is signalled. This means that you need to pair pthread_cond_wait() with some shared state that encodes the condition that the thread is really waiting for - in the simplest case, you can just use a flag variable. pthread_cond_signal() is used to tell the thread that it should wake and re-check the shared state. Applying this to your implementation:

class PThread {
    public:

    pthread_t myPthread;
    bool suspended;
    pthread_mutex_t m_SuspendMutex;
    pthread_cond_t m_ResumeCond;

    void start() {
        suspended = false;
        pthread_create(&myPthread, NULL, threadRun, (void*)this );
    }

    Thread() { }

    void suspendMe() {
        pthread_mutex_lock(&m_SuspendMutex);
        suspended = true;
        do {
            pthread_cond_wait(&m_ResumeCond, &m_SuspendMutex);
        } while (suspended);
        pthread_mutex_unlock(&m_SuspendMutex);
    }

    void resume() {
        /* The shared state 'suspended' must be updated with the mutex held. */
        pthread_mutex_lock(&m_SuspendMutex);
        suspended = false;
        pthread_cond_signal(&m_ResumeCond);
        pthread_mutex_unlock(&m_SuspendMutex);
    }
};

The reason the mutex is provided is to protect the shared state and avoid race conditions - the pthread_cond_wait() function actually performs an atomic-unlock-and-wait when it waits, which allows a "missed wakeup" to be avoided. For example in this code, the mutex prevents suspended from changing to false in between the suspended = true; and pthread_cond_wait() lines.


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