Searched hist:167789 (Results 1 - 3 of 3) sorted by relevance
/freebsd-10-stable/share/man/man9/ | ||
H A D | condvar.9 | diff 167789 Wed Mar 21 20:22:13 MDT 2007 jhb Rename the cv_*wait*() functions to _cv_*wait*() and change their second argument from a mutex to a lock_object. Add cv_*wait*() wrapper macros that accept either a mutex, rwlock, or sx lock as the second argument and convert it to a lock_object and then call _cv_*wait*(). Basically, the visible difference is that you can now use rwlocks and sx locks with condition variables using the same API as with mutexes. |
/freebsd-10-stable/sys/sys/ | ||
H A D | condvar.h | diff 167789 Wed Mar 21 20:22:13 MDT 2007 jhb Rename the cv_*wait*() functions to _cv_*wait*() and change their second argument from a mutex to a lock_object. Add cv_*wait*() wrapper macros that accept either a mutex, rwlock, or sx lock as the second argument and convert it to a lock_object and then call _cv_*wait*(). Basically, the visible difference is that you can now use rwlocks and sx locks with condition variables using the same API as with mutexes. |
/freebsd-10-stable/sys/kern/ | ||
H A D | kern_condvar.c | diff 167789 Wed Mar 21 20:22:13 MDT 2007 jhb Rename the cv_*wait*() functions to _cv_*wait*() and change their second argument from a mutex to a lock_object. Add cv_*wait*() wrapper macros that accept either a mutex, rwlock, or sx lock as the second argument and convert it to a lock_object and then call _cv_*wait*(). Basically, the visible difference is that you can now use rwlocks and sx locks with condition variables using the same API as with mutexes. |
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