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- package sync
- import "core:sys/darwin"
- import "core:c"
- // The Darwin docs say it best:
- // A semaphore is much like a lock, except that a finite number of threads can hold it simultaneously.
- // Semaphores can be thought of as being much like piles of tokens; multiple threads can take these tokens,
- // but when there are none left, a thread must wait until another thread returns one.
- Semaphore :: struct #align 16 {
- handle: darwin.semaphore_t,
- }
- // TODO(tetra): Only marked with alignment because we cannot mark distinct integers with alignments.
- // See core/sys/unix/pthread_linux.odin/pthread_t.
- semaphore_init :: proc(s: ^Semaphore, initial_count := 0) {
- ct := darwin.mach_task_self();
- res := darwin.semaphore_create(ct, &s.handle, 0, c.int(initial_count));
- assert(res == 0);
- }
- semaphore_destroy :: proc(s: ^Semaphore) {
- ct := darwin.mach_task_self();
- res := darwin.semaphore_destroy(ct, s.handle);
- assert(res == 0);
- s.handle = {};
- }
- semaphore_post :: proc(s: ^Semaphore, count := 1) {
- // NOTE: SPEED: If there's one syscall to do this, we should use it instead of the loop.
- for in 0..count-1 {
- res := darwin.semaphore_signal(s.handle);
- assert(res == 0);
- }
- }
- semaphore_wait_for :: proc(s: ^Semaphore) {
- res := darwin.semaphore_wait(s.handle);
- assert(res == 0);
- }
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