Sets the calling thread's cancelability state.
1 – C Binding
#include <pthread.h> int pthread_setcancelstate ( int state, int *oldstate );
2 – Arguments
state State of general cancelability to set for the calling thread. The following are valid cancel state values: PTHREAD_CANCEL_ENABLE PTHREAD_CANCEL_DISABLE oldstate Previous cancelability state for the calling thread.
3 – Description
This routine sets the calling thread's cancelability state and returns the calling thread's previous cancelability state in oldstate. When cancelability state is set to PTHREAD_CANCEL_DISABLE, a cancelation request cannot be delivered to the thread, even if a cancelable routine is called or asynchronous cancelability type is enabled. When a thread is created, its default cancelability state is PTHREAD_CANCEL_ENABLE. Possible Problems When Disabling Cancelability The most important use of thread cancelation is to ensure that indefinite wait operations are terminated. For example, a thread that waits on some network connection, which can possibly take days to respond (or might never respond), should be made cancelable. When a thread's cancelability is disabled, no routine in that thread is cancelable. As a result, the user is unable to cancel the operation performed by that thread. When disabling cancelability, be sure that no long waits can occur or that it is necessary for other reasons to defer cancelation requests around that particular region of code.
4 – Return Values
On successful completion, this routine returns the calling thread's previous cancelability state in the location specified by the oldstate argument. If an error condition occurs, this routine returns an integer value indicating the type of error. Possible return values are as follows: Return Description 0 Successful completion. [EINVAL] The specified state is not PTHREAD_CANCEL_ENABLE or PTHREAD_CANCEL_DISABLE.
5 – Associated Routines
pthread_cancel() pthread_setcanceltype() pthread_testcancel()