*** UNIX MANUAL PAGE BROWSER ***

A Nergahak database for man pages research.

Navigation

Directory Browser

1Browse 4.4BSD4.4BSD
1Browse Digital UNIXDigital UNIX 4.0e
1Browse FreeBSDFreeBSD 14.3
1Browse MINIXMINIX 3.4.0rc6-d5e4fc0
1Browse NetBSDNetBSD 10.1
1Browse OpenBSDOpenBSD 7.7
1Browse UNIX v7Version 7 UNIX
1Browse UNIX v10Version 10 UNIX

Manual Page Search

Manual Page Result

0 Command: curlwp | Section: 9 | Source: NetBSD | File: curlwp.9
CURPROC(9) FreeBSD Kernel Developer's Manual CURPROC(9) NAME curproc, curcpu, curlwp - current process, processor, and LWP SYNOPSIS #include <sys/proc.h> struct cpu_info * curcpu(void); struct proc *curproc; struct lwp *curlwp; DESCRIPTION The following macros retrieve the current CPU, process, and thread (lightweight process, or LWP), respectively: curcpu() Returns a pointer to the struct cpu_info structure representing the CPU that the code calling it is running on. The value of curcpu() is unstable and may be stale as soon as it is read unless the caller prevents preemption by raising the IPL (spl(9), mutex(9)), by disabling preemption (kpreempt_disable(9)), or by binding the thread to its CPU (curlwp_bind(9)). curproc Yields a pointer to the struct proc structure representing the currently running process. The value of curproc is stable and does not change during execution except in machine-dependent logic to perform context switches, so it works like a global constant, not like a stateful procedure. curlwp Yields a pointer to the struct lwp structure representing the currently running thread. The value of curlwp is stable and does not change during execution except in machine-dependent logic to perform context switches, so it works like a global constant, not like a stateful procedure. SOURCE REFERENCES The curcpu() macro is defined in the machine-independent machine/cpu.h. The curproc macro is defined in sys/lwp.h. The curlwp macro has a machine-independent definition in sys/lwp.h, but it may be overridden by machine/cpu.h, and must be overridden on architectures supporting multiprocessing and kernel preemption. SEE ALSO cpu_number(9), proc_find(9) FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8 July 1, 2010 FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8

Navigation Options