Curator InterProcessMutex vs InterProcessSemaphoreMutex - apache-zookeeper

What's the difference between InterProcessMutex vs InterProcessSemaphoreMutex? The docs say InterProcessSemaphoreMutex is the same InterProcessMutex except it's not reentrant. But I don't know what reentrant means.

I'm the main author of Apache Curator. Irrespective of what the docs may or may not say I'd like, for the record, to give the exact use cases for each of the two classes.
InterProcessMutex
InterProcessMutex should be used when you need to be able to lock in a re-entrant manner. This means that a given thread is said to "own" the lock once acquired and can lock it again if needed. This is useful if the thread passes the lock object around to other methods that need not be concerned if the lock has been acquired or not. Note that this also means that only the owning thread can release the lock. Here's an example:
InterProcessMutex lock = new InterProcessMutex(...);
if ( !lock.acquire(...) ) ... // if acquire failed: throw, return, etc
try {
doWork(lock); // doWork() can safely call lock.acquire() again on the lock
} finally {
lock.release();
}
Once acquired, if the lock is released in a different thread than the one used to acquire the lock IllegalMonitorStateException is thrown.
InterProcessSemaphoreMutex
InterProcessSemaphoreMutex is a relaxed version of a lock that does not make note of the thread that acquired it. It has simpler semantics. Each InterProcessSemaphoreMutex instance can be acquired exactly once and must be balanced by a release (in any thread). i.e.
InterProcessSemaphoreMutex lock = new InterProcessSemaphoreMutex(...);
lock.acquire();
lock.acquire(); // this will block forever
I hope this helps. If the docs need clarification we'd appreciate a Pull Request with improvements.

In this context, reentrancy means that a thread can call acquire on the same lock more than once and not block when calling it the second or third time. It must balance all acquires with the same number of releases, however. This StackOverflow post talks more about re-entrant locks:
What is the Re-entrant lock and concept in general?
Specific to Curator, here is what the documentation has to say about the different locks:
Shared Re-entrant lock aka InterProcessMutex:
public void acquire()
Acquire the mutex - blocking until it's
available. Note: the same thread can call acquire re-entrantly. Each
call to acquire must be balanced by a call to release()
Shared lock (non-reentrant) aka InterProcessSemaphoreMutex:
public void acquire()
Acquire the mutex - blocking until it's available. Must be balanced by a call to release().
In the following example, if lock were a reentrant lock, then the code below would run to completion and work normally. If lock were not a reentrant lock, the thread would deadlock while calling the second lock.acquire():
lock.acquire();
lock.acquire();
doWork();
lock.release();
lock.release();
Reentrant locks tend to be a little more costly in implementation, but easier to use.
The above pattern happens frequently when you have multiple public methods into your API that must lock, but your implementation has public methods calling other public methods. You can avoid this by having your public methods do locking and only locking, and then call a private method that assumes it is always executed under the lock; then your private methods can call other private methods without needing to acquire the lock more than once.
Edit to address #Randgalt's comments:
Curator's InterProcessMutex requires that the same thread that acquires the lock release it. InterProcessSemaphoreMutex does not. Maybe you misread what I wrote? Maybe I wasn't clear? Don't know. Anyway, this is the case.
This is patently false; neither lock allows you to release it from a thread other than the thread that acquired the lock. Furthermore, this still has nothing to do with the question of "what is re-entrancy" in this context - and in this context, re-entrancy is whether or not you can call acquire on the same lock more than once on the same thread.
InterProcessMutex.release():
public void release()
Perform one release of the mutex if the calling thread is the same thread that acquired it. If the thread had made multiple calls to acquire, the mutex will still be held when this method returns.
InterProcessSemaphoreMutex.release():
public void release()
Perform one release of the mutex if the calling thread is the same thread that acquired it.
Emphasis added. Neither lock allows you to unlock it from any thread other than the thread that owns the lock - and this makes sense, because both locks are mutexes, and that is one of the properties of a mutex.

Related

Does an actor guarantee the same execution thread?

I'm working with sqlite so I need to guarantee the thread my calls execute on, but I don't want to use the main thread. I could subclass Thread, however that introduces a host of issues trying to create async methods and executing blocks of code in the thread's main loop.
If instead I used an actor instead of a Thread subclass, will all the work within that actor be guaranteed to be on the same thread? I don't see that defined anywhere in the documentation so I'm guessing no.
You asked:
Does an actor guarantee the same execution thread?
No, it does not. (Neither does GCD serial queue, for that matter.)
But SQLite does not care from which thread you call it. It only cares that you don't call it from different threads simultaneously.
So, you do not have to ”to guarantee the thread my calls execute on“, but merely ensure that you don't have two threads interacting with the same connection at the same time. This is precisely the assurance that actor-isolated functions provide.
So, do not worry about what thread the actor happens to use. Only make sure you don't have simultaneous access from multiple threads at the same time.

In pthread_cond_wait() , why it unlock the mutex when it makes caller sleep?

I am currently learning OS with Operating Systems : Three Easy Pieces
And it introduces pthread_cond_wait() function, which makes caller of it sleep.
And It said, it unlock the mutex right after it is called and then makes caller sleep.
I have no idea why it unlock the mutex after it is called. Why is that?
Please help me understand for this reason.
Thank you.
If it left the mutex locked while the caller slept, then no other thread would be able to acquire the mutex until after pthread_cond_wait() returned and the caller woke up and explicitly unlocked the mutex. That behavior would be difficult to work with, since if the mutex is also being used to serialize access to some data, then no other thread would be able to safely read or write that data while the first thread was asleep (since if it did so without locking the mutex, that would introduce a race condition, and if it tried to lock the mutex, the program would deadlock).
A thread calls pthread_cond_wait() when needs to wait for the value of some shared state to change. That shared state must be protected by a mutex, and pthread_cond_wait() must unlock the mutex so another thread has the opportunity to acquire the mutex and modify the shared state - otherwise, you would have a deadlock.
The thread must hold the mutex when it calls pthread_cond_wait(), because otherwise another thread would have the opportunity to acquire the mutex and change the shared state before the waiting thread sleeps - this is a "missed wakeup".

CoreData: would it be safe using NSConfinementConcurrencyType and dispatch all operations using this context on a serial dispatch queue?

Literally, this concurrency type requires an specific thread, but using a serial queue would be more easy, but is it safe to use the context with a NSConfinementConcurrencyType concurrency type on a serial dispatch queue?
As long as you're sure you only use that queue with the context, yes, that's completely fine.
Core Data doesn't care about the thread so much as it cares about concurrent access. If you serialize access, you're safe, however you choose to do it. You could use NSRecursiveLock or semaphores or whatever works for you.
Note that the newer concurrency models are queue based. NSPrivateQueueConcurrencyType does not guarantee that operations are always performed on the same thread, even when you use performBlock:. They happen on a private queue and might run on different threads at different times. If you can manage your queue and your access well enough to do this yourself, it's reasonable to do so.
No, having a serial queue does not guarantee the operations will execute on the same thread:
The Concurrency Programming Guide specifies
Serial queues (also known as private dispatch queues) execute one task
at a time in the order in which they are added to the queue. The
currently executing task runs on a distinct thread (which can vary
from task to task) that is managed by the dispatch queue. Serial
queues are often used to synchronize access to a specific resource.
Why don't you just use the NSPrivateQueueConcurrencyType? It will make your code cleaner and thread safe. You just need to call -performBlock: or -performBlockAndWait: when accessing the context from somewhere other than the block that initialized the context.

How can/In what cases can a mutex be locked multiple times in the same thread?

I do not understand the use of a mutex if it can be recursively locked by a thread. Why would anyone want to recursively lock the mutex ? In what cases will they use this ?
I do not understand the use of a mutex
if it can be recursively locked by a
thread.
A mutex is used to provide mutually exclusive access to a resource. In other words, only one thread (or "agent") should be able to access a resource at a time. Therefore, if a thread has taken a mutex, then it already has exclusive access to the resource, so there is no harm in allowing it to take the mutex again.
A recursive mutex is still useful since it still provides the semantics of exclusive access. While Thread 1 can take a mutex it already has, Thread 2 is still prevented from taking the mutex and accessing the resource at the same time as Thread 1.
Why would anyone want to recursively
lock the mutex ?
For convenience: if my thread accesses a resource in a few different classes, each of them can acquire and release the mutex independently and in a nested manner without having to worry about each other. This could be seen as laziness or poor design, but this is an advantage over non-recursive mutexes that cause deadlock when a thread tries to take a mutex it already owns.
It seems you're asking for a possible use case for a reentrant lock. One would be in the case of using a callback to something. You might have a method which locks an object, and then calls something else, providing a callback with access to this object. If another method is called on this object it might also want to obtain the lock. It's perfectly safe for them both to have the lock, there's no way both can be operating concurrently, they're in the same thread.

Difference between binary semaphore and mutex

Is there any difference between a binary semaphore and mutex or are they essentially the same?
They are NOT the same thing. They are used for different purposes!
While both types of semaphores have a full/empty state and use the same API, their usage is very different.
Mutual Exclusion Semaphores
Mutual Exclusion semaphores are used to protect shared resources (data structure, file, etc..).
A Mutex semaphore is "owned" by the task that takes it. If Task B attempts to semGive a mutex currently held by Task A, Task B's call will return an error and fail.
Mutexes always use the following sequence:
- SemTake
- Critical Section
- SemGive
Here is a simple example:
Thread A Thread B
Take Mutex
access data
... Take Mutex <== Will block
...
Give Mutex access data <== Unblocks
...
Give Mutex
Binary Semaphore
Binary Semaphore address a totally different question:
Task B is pended waiting for something to happen (a sensor being tripped for example).
Sensor Trips and an Interrupt Service Routine runs. It needs to notify a task of the trip.
Task B should run and take appropriate actions for the sensor trip. Then go back to waiting.
Task A Task B
... Take BinSemaphore <== wait for something
Do Something Noteworthy
Give BinSemaphore do something <== unblocks
Note that with a binary semaphore, it is OK for B to take the semaphore and A to give it.
Again, a binary semaphore is NOT protecting a resource from access. The act of Giving and Taking a semaphore are fundamentally decoupled.
It typically makes little sense for the same task to so a give and a take on the same binary semaphore.
A mutex can be released only by the thread that had acquired it.
A binary semaphore can be signaled by any thread (or process).
so semaphores are more suitable for some synchronization problems like producer-consumer.
On Windows, binary semaphores are more like event objects than mutexes.
The Toilet example is an enjoyable analogy:
Mutex:
Is a key to a toilet. One person can
have the key - occupy the toilet - at
the time. When finished, the person
gives (frees) the key to the next
person in the queue.
Officially: "Mutexes are typically
used to serialise access to a section
of re-entrant code that cannot be
executed concurrently by more than one
thread. A mutex object only allows one
thread into a controlled section,
forcing other threads which attempt to
gain access to that section to wait
until the first thread has exited from
that section." Ref: Symbian Developer
Library
(A mutex is really a semaphore with
value 1.)
Semaphore:
Is the number of free identical toilet
keys. Example, say we have four
toilets with identical locks and keys.
The semaphore count - the count of
keys - is set to 4 at beginning (all
four toilets are free), then the count
value is decremented as people are
coming in. If all toilets are full,
ie. there are no free keys left, the
semaphore count is 0. Now, when eq.
one person leaves the toilet,
semaphore is increased to 1 (one free
key), and given to the next person in
the queue.
Officially: "A semaphore restricts the
number of simultaneous users of a
shared resource up to a maximum
number. Threads can request access to
the resource (decrementing the
semaphore), and can signal that they
have finished using the resource
(incrementing the semaphore)." Ref:
Symbian Developer Library
Nice articles on the topic:
MUTEX VS. SEMAPHORES – PART 1: SEMAPHORES
MUTEX VS. SEMAPHORES – PART 2: THE MUTEX
MUTEX VS. SEMAPHORES – PART 3 (FINAL PART): MUTUAL EXCLUSION PROBLEMS
From part 2:
The mutex is similar to the principles
of the binary semaphore with one
significant difference: the principle
of ownership. Ownership is the simple
concept that when a task locks
(acquires) a mutex only it can unlock
(release) it. If a task tries to
unlock a mutex it hasn’t locked (thus
doesn’t own) then an error condition
is encountered and, most importantly,
the mutex is not unlocked. If the
mutual exclusion object doesn't have
ownership then, irrelevant of what it
is called, it is not a mutex.
Since none of the above answer clears the confusion, here is one which cleared my confusion.
Strictly speaking, a mutex is a locking mechanism used to
synchronize access to a resource. Only one task (can be a thread or
process based on OS abstraction) can acquire the mutex. It means there
will be ownership associated with mutex, and only the owner can
release the lock (mutex).
Semaphore is signaling mechanism (“I am done, you can carry on” kind of signal). For example, if you are listening songs (assume it as
one task) on your mobile and at the same time your friend called you,
an interrupt will be triggered upon which an interrupt service routine
(ISR) will signal the call processing task to wakeup.
Source: http://www.geeksforgeeks.org/mutex-vs-semaphore/
Their synchronization semantics are very different:
mutexes allow serialization of access to a given resource i.e. multiple threads wait for a lock, one at a time and as previously said, the thread owns the lock until it is done: only this particular thread can unlock it.
a binary semaphore is a counter with value 0 and 1: a task blocking on it until any task does a sem_post. The semaphore advertises that a resource is available, and it provides the mechanism to wait until it is signaled as being available.
As such one can see a mutex as a token passed from task to tasks and a semaphore as traffic red-light (it signals someone that it can proceed).
At a theoretical level, they are no different semantically. You can implement a mutex using semaphores or vice versa (see here for an example). In practice, the implementations are different and they offer slightly different services.
The practical difference (in terms of the system services surrounding them) is that the implementation of a mutex is aimed at being a more lightweight synchronisation mechanism. In oracle-speak, mutexes are known as latches and semaphores are known as waits.
At the lowest level, they use some sort of atomic test and set mechanism. This reads the current value of a memory location, computes some sort of conditional and writes out a value at that location in a single instruction that cannot be interrupted. This means that you can acquire a mutex and test to see if anyone else had it before you.
A typical mutex implementation has a process or thread executing the test-and-set instruction and evaluating whether anything else had set the mutex. A key point here is that there is no interaction with the scheduler, so we have no idea (and don't care) who has set the lock. Then we either give up our time slice and attempt it again when the task is re-scheduled or execute a spin-lock. A spin lock is an algorithm like:
Count down from 5000:
i. Execute the test-and-set instruction
ii. If the mutex is clear, we have acquired it in the previous instruction
so we can exit the loop
iii. When we get to zero, give up our time slice.
When we have finished executing our protected code (known as a critical section) we just set the mutex value to zero or whatever means 'clear.' If multiple tasks are attempting to acquire the mutex then the next task that happens to be scheduled after the mutex is released will get access to the resource. Typically you would use mutexes to control a synchronised resource where exclusive access is only needed for very short periods of time, normally to make an update to a shared data structure.
A semaphore is a synchronised data structure (typically using a mutex) that has a count and some system call wrappers that interact with the scheduler in a bit more depth than the mutex libraries would. Semaphores are incremented and decremented and used to block tasks until something else is ready. See Producer/Consumer Problem for a simple example of this. Semaphores are initialised to some value - a binary semaphore is just a special case where the semaphore is initialised to 1. Posting to a semaphore has the effect of waking up a waiting process.
A basic semaphore algorithm looks like:
(somewhere in the program startup)
Initialise the semaphore to its start-up value.
Acquiring a semaphore
i. (synchronised) Attempt to decrement the semaphore value
ii. If the value would be less than zero, put the task on the tail of the list of tasks waiting on the semaphore and give up the time slice.
Posting a semaphore
i. (synchronised) Increment the semaphore value
ii. If the value is greater or equal to the amount requested in the post at the front of the queue, take that task off the queue and make it runnable.
iii. Repeat (ii) for all tasks until the posted value is exhausted or there are no more tasks waiting.
In the case of a binary semaphore the main practical difference between the two is the nature of the system services surrounding the actual data structure.
EDIT: As evan has rightly pointed out, spinlocks will slow down a single processor machine. You would only use a spinlock on a multi-processor box because on a single processor the process holding the mutex will never reset it while another task is running. Spinlocks are only useful on multi-processor architectures.
Though mutex & semaphores are used as synchronization primitives ,there is a big difference between them.
In the case of mutex, only the thread that locked or acquired the mutex can unlock it.
In the case of a semaphore, a thread waiting on a semaphore can be signaled by a different thread.
Some operating system supports using mutex & semaphores between process. Typically usage is creating in shared memory.
Mutex: Suppose we have critical section thread T1 wants to access it then it follows below steps.
T1:
Lock
Use Critical Section
Unlock
Binary semaphore: It works based on signaling wait and signal.
wait(s) decrease "s" value by one usually "s" value is initialize with value "1",
signal(s) increases "s" value by one. if "s" value is 1 means no one is using critical section, when value is 0 means critical section is in use.
suppose thread T2 is using critical section then it follows below steps.
T2 :
wait(s)//initially s value is one after calling wait it's value decreased by one i.e 0
Use critical section
signal(s) // now s value is increased and it become 1
Main difference between Mutex and Binary semaphore is in Mutext if thread lock the critical section then it has to unlock critical section no other thread can unlock it, but in case of Binary semaphore if one thread locks critical section using wait(s) function then value of s become "0" and no one can access it until value of "s" become 1 but suppose some other thread calls signal(s) then value of "s" become 1 and it allows other function to use critical section.
hence in Binary semaphore thread doesn't have ownership.
On Windows, there are two differences between mutexes and binary semaphores:
A mutex can only be released by the thread which has ownership, i.e. the thread which previously called the Wait function, (or which took ownership when creating it). A semaphore can be released by any thread.
A thread can call a wait function repeatedly on a mutex without blocking. However, if you call a wait function twice on a binary semaphore without releasing the semaphore in between, the thread will block.
Myth:
Couple of article says that "binary semaphore and mutex are same" or "Semaphore with value 1 is mutex" but the basic difference is Mutex can be released only by thread that had acquired it, while you can signal semaphore from any other thread
Key Points:
•A thread can acquire more than one lock (Mutex).
•A mutex can be locked more than once only if its a recursive mutex, here lock and unlock for mutex should be same
•If a thread which had already locked a mutex, tries to lock the mutex again, it will enter into the waiting list of that mutex, which results in deadlock.
•Binary semaphore and mutex are similar but not same.
•Mutex is costly operation due to protection protocols associated with it.
•Main aim of mutex is achieve atomic access or lock on resource
Mutex are used for " Locking Mechanisms ". one process at a time can use a shared resource
whereas
Semaphores are used for " Signaling Mechanisms "
like "I am done , now can continue"
You obviously use mutex to lock a data in one thread getting accessed by another thread at the same time. Assume that you have just called lock() and in the process of accessing data. This means that you don’t expect any other thread (or another instance of the same thread-code) to access the same data locked by the same mutex. That is, if it is the same thread-code getting executed on a different thread instance, hits the lock, then the lock() should block the control flow there. This applies to a thread that uses a different thread-code, which is also accessing the same data and which is also locked by the same mutex. In this case, you are still in the process of accessing the data and you may take, say, another 15 secs to reach the mutex unlock (so that the other thread that is getting blocked in mutex lock would unblock and would allow the control to access the data). Do you at any cost allow yet another thread to just unlock the same mutex, and in turn, allow the thread that is already waiting (blocking) in the mutex lock to unblock and access the data? Hope you got what I am saying here?
As per, agreed upon universal definition!,
with “mutex” this can’t happen. No other thread can unlock the lock
in your thread
with “binary-semaphore” this can happen. Any other thread can unlock
the lock in your thread
So, if you are very particular about using binary-semaphore instead of mutex, then you should be very careful in “scoping” the locks and unlocks. I mean that every control-flow that hits every lock should hit an unlock call, also there shouldn’t be any “first unlock”, rather it should be always “first lock”.
A Mutex controls access to a single shared resource. It provides operations to acquire() access to that resource and release() it when done.
A Semaphore controls access to a shared pool of resources. It provides operations to Wait() until one of the resources in the pool becomes available, and Signal() when it is given back to the pool.
When number of resources a Semaphore protects is greater than 1, it is called a Counting Semaphore. When it controls one resource, it is called a Boolean Semaphore. A boolean semaphore is equivalent to a mutex.
Thus a Semaphore is a higher level abstraction than Mutex. A Mutex can be implemented using a Semaphore but not the other way around.
Modified question is - What's the difference between A mutex and a "binary" semaphore in "Linux"?
Ans: Following are the differences –
i) Scope – The scope of mutex is within a process address space which has created it and is used for synchronization of threads. Whereas semaphore can be used across process space and hence it can be used for interprocess synchronization.
ii) Mutex is lightweight and faster than semaphore. Futex is even faster.
iii) Mutex can be acquired by same thread successfully multiple times with condition that it should release it same number of times. Other thread trying to acquire will block. Whereas in case of semaphore if same process tries to acquire it again it blocks as it can be acquired only once.
Diff between Binary Semaphore and Mutex:
OWNERSHIP:
Semaphores can be signalled (posted) even from a non current owner. It means you can simply post from any other thread, though you are not the owner.
Semaphore is a public property in process, It can be simply posted by a non owner thread.
Please Mark this difference in BOLD letters, it mean a lot.
Mutex work on blocking critical region, But Semaphore work on count.
http://www.geeksforgeeks.org/archives/9102 discusses in details.
Mutex is locking mechanism used to synchronize access to a resource.
Semaphore is signaling mechanism.
Its up to to programmer if he/she wants to use binary semaphore in place of mutex.
Apart from the fact that mutexes have an owner, the two objects may be optimized for different usage. Mutexes are designed to be held only for a short time; violating this can cause poor performance and unfair scheduling. For example, a running thread may be permitted to acquire a mutex, even though another thread is already blocked on it. Semaphores may provide more fairness, or fairness can be forced using several condition variables.
In windows the difference is as below.
MUTEX: process which successfully executes wait has to execute a signal and vice versa. BINARY SEMAPHORES: Different processes can execute wait or signal operation on a semaphore.
While a binary semaphore may be used as a mutex, a mutex is a more specific use-case, in that only the process that locked the mutex is supposed to unlock it. This ownership constraint makes it possible to provide protection against:
Accidental release
Recursive Deadlock
Task Death Deadlock
These constraints are not always present because they degrade the speed. During the development of your code, you can enable these checks temporarily.
e.g. you can enable Error check attribute in your mutex. Error checking mutexes return EDEADLK if you try to lock the same one twice and EPERM if you unlock a mutex that isn't yours.
pthread_mutex_t mutex;
pthread_mutexattr_t attr;
pthread_mutexattr_init (&attr);
pthread_mutexattr_settype (&attr, PTHREAD_MUTEX_ERRORCHECK_NP);
pthread_mutex_init (&mutex, &attr);
Once initialised we can place these checks in our code like this:
if(pthread_mutex_unlock(&mutex)==EPERM)
printf("Unlock failed:Mutex not owned by this thread\n");
The concept was clear to me after going over above posts. But there were some lingering questions. So, I wrote this small piece of code.
When we try to give a semaphore without taking it, it goes through. But, when you try to give a mutex without taking it, it fails. I tested this on a Windows platform. Enable USE_MUTEX to run the same code using a MUTEX.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <windows.h>
#define xUSE_MUTEX 1
#define MAX_SEM_COUNT 1
DWORD WINAPI Thread_no_1( LPVOID lpParam );
DWORD WINAPI Thread_no_2( LPVOID lpParam );
HANDLE Handle_Of_Thread_1 = 0;
HANDLE Handle_Of_Thread_2 = 0;
int Data_Of_Thread_1 = 1;
int Data_Of_Thread_2 = 2;
HANDLE ghMutex = NULL;
HANDLE ghSemaphore = NULL;
int main(void)
{
#ifdef USE_MUTEX
ghMutex = CreateMutex( NULL, FALSE, NULL);
if (ghMutex == NULL)
{
printf("CreateMutex error: %d\n", GetLastError());
return 1;
}
#else
// Create a semaphore with initial and max counts of MAX_SEM_COUNT
ghSemaphore = CreateSemaphore(NULL,MAX_SEM_COUNT,MAX_SEM_COUNT,NULL);
if (ghSemaphore == NULL)
{
printf("CreateSemaphore error: %d\n", GetLastError());
return 1;
}
#endif
// Create thread 1.
Handle_Of_Thread_1 = CreateThread( NULL, 0,Thread_no_1, &Data_Of_Thread_1, 0, NULL);
if ( Handle_Of_Thread_1 == NULL)
{
printf("Create first thread problem \n");
return 1;
}
/* sleep for 5 seconds **/
Sleep(5 * 1000);
/*Create thread 2 */
Handle_Of_Thread_2 = CreateThread( NULL, 0,Thread_no_2, &Data_Of_Thread_2, 0, NULL);
if ( Handle_Of_Thread_2 == NULL)
{
printf("Create second thread problem \n");
return 1;
}
// Sleep for 20 seconds
Sleep(20 * 1000);
printf("Out of the program \n");
return 0;
}
int my_critical_section_code(HANDLE thread_handle)
{
#ifdef USE_MUTEX
if(thread_handle == Handle_Of_Thread_1)
{
/* get the lock */
WaitForSingleObject(ghMutex, INFINITE);
printf("Thread 1 holding the mutex \n");
}
#else
/* get the semaphore */
if(thread_handle == Handle_Of_Thread_1)
{
WaitForSingleObject(ghSemaphore, INFINITE);
printf("Thread 1 holding semaphore \n");
}
#endif
if(thread_handle == Handle_Of_Thread_1)
{
/* sleep for 10 seconds */
Sleep(10 * 1000);
#ifdef USE_MUTEX
printf("Thread 1 about to release mutex \n");
#else
printf("Thread 1 about to release semaphore \n");
#endif
}
else
{
/* sleep for 3 secconds */
Sleep(3 * 1000);
}
#ifdef USE_MUTEX
/* release the lock*/
if(!ReleaseMutex(ghMutex))
{
printf("Release Mutex error in thread %d: error # %d\n", (thread_handle == Handle_Of_Thread_1 ? 1:2),GetLastError());
}
#else
if (!ReleaseSemaphore(ghSemaphore,1,NULL) )
{
printf("ReleaseSemaphore error in thread %d: error # %d\n",(thread_handle == Handle_Of_Thread_1 ? 1:2), GetLastError());
}
#endif
return 0;
}
DWORD WINAPI Thread_no_1( LPVOID lpParam )
{
my_critical_section_code(Handle_Of_Thread_1);
return 0;
}
DWORD WINAPI Thread_no_2( LPVOID lpParam )
{
my_critical_section_code(Handle_Of_Thread_2);
return 0;
}
The very fact that semaphore lets you signal "it is done using a resource", even though it never owned the resource, makes me think there is a very loose coupling between owning and signaling in the case of semaphores.
Best Solution
The only difference is
1.Mutex -> lock and unlock are under the ownership of a thread that locks the mutex.
2.Semaphore -> No ownership i.e; if one thread calls semwait(s) any other thread can call sempost(s) to remove the lock.
Mutex is used to protect the sensitive code and data, semaphore is used to synchronization.You also can have practical use with protect the sensitive code, but there might be a risk that release the protection by the other thread by operation V.So The main difference between bi-semaphore and mutex is the ownership.For instance by toilet , Mutex is like that one can enter the toilet and lock the door, no one else can enter until the man get out, bi-semaphore is like that one can enter the toilet and lock the door, but someone else could enter by asking the administrator to open the door, it's ridiculous.
I think most of the answers here were confusing especially those saying that mutex can be released only by the process that holds it but semaphore can be signaled by ay process. The above line is kind of vague in terms of semaphore. To understand we should know that there are two kinds of semaphore one is called counting semaphore and the other is called a binary semaphore. In counting semaphore handles access to n number of resources where n can be defined before the use. Each semaphore has a count variable, which keeps the count of the number of resources in use, initially, it is set to n. Each process that wishes to uses a resource performs a wait() operation on the semaphore (thereby decrementing the count). When a process releases a resource, it performs a release() operation (incrementing the count). When the count becomes 0, all the resources are being used. After that, the process waits until the count becomes more than 0. Now here is the catch only the process that holds the resource can increase the count no other process can increase the count only the processes holding a resource can increase the count and the process waiting for the semaphore again checks and when it sees the resource available it decreases the count again. So in terms of binary semaphore, only the process holding the semaphore can increase the count, and count remains zero until it stops using the semaphore and increases the count and other process gets the chance to access the semaphore.
The main difference between binary semaphore and mutex is that semaphore is a signaling mechanism and mutex is a locking mechanism, but binary semaphore seems to function like mutex that creates confusion, but both are different concepts suitable for a different kinds of work.
The answer may depend on the target OS. For example, at least one RTOS implementation I'm familiar with will allow multiple sequential "get" operations against a single OS mutex, so long as they're all from within the same thread context. The multiple gets must be replaced by an equal number of puts before another thread will be allowed to get the mutex. This differs from binary semaphores, for which only a single get is allowed at a time, regardless of thread contexts.
The idea behind this type of mutex is that you protect an object by only allowing a single context to modify the data at a time. Even if the thread gets the mutex and then calls a function that further modifies the object (and gets/puts the protector mutex around its own operations), the operations should still be safe because they're all happening under a single thread.
{
mutexGet(); // Other threads can no longer get the mutex.
// Make changes to the protected object.
// ...
objectModify(); // Also gets/puts the mutex. Only allowed from this thread context.
// Make more changes to the protected object.
// ...
mutexPut(); // Finally allows other threads to get the mutex.
}
Of course, when using this feature, you must be certain that all accesses within a single thread really are safe!
I'm not sure how common this approach is, or whether it applies outside of the systems with which I'm familiar. For an example of this kind of mutex, see the ThreadX RTOS.
Mutexes have ownership, unlike semaphores. Although any thread, within the scope of a mutex, can get an unlocked mutex and lock access to the same critical section of code,only the thread that locked a mutex should unlock it.
As many folks here have mentioned, a mutex is used to protect a critical piece of code (AKA critical section.) You will acquire the mutex (lock), enter critical section, and release mutex (unlock) all in the same thread.
While using a semaphore, you can make a thread wait on a semaphore (say thread A), until another thread (say thread B)completes whatever task, and then sets the Semaphore for thread A to stop the wait, and continue its task.
MUTEX
Until recently, the only sleeping lock in the kernel was the semaphore. Most users of semaphores instantiated a semaphore with a count of one and treated them as a mutual exclusion lock—a sleeping version of the spin-lock. Unfortunately, semaphores are rather generic and do not impose any usage constraints. This makes them useful for managing exclusive access in obscure situations, such as complicated dances between the kernel and userspace. But it also means that simpler locking is harder to do, and the lack of enforced rules makes any sort of automated debugging or constraint enforcement impossible. Seeking a simpler sleeping lock, the kernel developers introduced the mutex.Yes, as you are now accustomed to, that is a confusing name. Let’s clarify.The term “mutex” is a generic name to refer to any sleeping lock that enforces mutual exclusion, such as a semaphore with a usage count of one. In recent Linux kernels, the proper noun “mutex” is now also a specific type of sleeping lock that implements mutual exclusion.That is, a mutex is a mutex.
The simplicity and efficiency of the mutex come from the additional constraints it imposes on its users over and above what the semaphore requires. Unlike a semaphore, which implements the most basic of behaviour in accordance with Dijkstra’s original design, the mutex has a stricter, narrower use case:
n Only one task can hold the mutex at a time. That is, the usage count on a mutex is always one.
Whoever locked a mutex must unlock it. That is, you cannot lock a mutex in one
context and then unlock it in another. This means that the mutex isn’t suitable for more complicated synchronizations between kernel and user-space. Most use cases,
however, cleanly lock and unlock from the same context.
Recursive locks and unlocks are not allowed. That is, you cannot recursively acquire the same mutex, and you cannot unlock an unlocked mutex.
A process cannot exit while holding a mutex.
A mutex cannot be acquired by an interrupt handler or bottom half, even with
mutex_trylock().
A mutex can be managed only via the official API: It must be initialized via the methods described in this section and cannot be copied, hand initialized, or reinitialized.
[1] Linux Kernel Development, Third Edition Robert Love
Mutex and binary semaphore are both of the same usage, but in reality, they are different.
In case of mutex, only the thread which have locked it can unlock it. If any other thread comes to lock it, it will wait.
In case of semaphone, that's not the case. Semaphore is not tied up with a particular thread ID.