Commit graph

8 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ralf S. Engelschall
a496bb3a68 upgrade to GNU Pth (Portable Threads), version 2.0.0 2003-02-17 11:15:32 +00:00
Ralf S. Engelschall
46490f4de0 Upgrade to GNU Portable Threads (Pth), version 1.4.0 2001-03-25 14:12:16 +00:00
Ralf S. Engelschall
c9674ef11b Upgrade GNU Portable Threads (Pth) from version 1.2.2 to 1.3.0,
the new release version in the now stable Pth 1.3 series.
2000-02-19 17:14:03 +00:00
Ralf S. Engelschall
59c6829f22 Upgrade to GNU Portable Threads (Pth), version 1.2.2 2000-01-08 15:17:25 +00:00
Ralf S. Engelschall
5a9ba1016a Puhh.... after five months of hard development we've approached
GNU Portable Threads (Pth), release version 1.0.0 :-)
1999-07-16 15:11:46 +00:00
Ralf S. Engelschall
7f017c3780 Update new PTH port after repository copy from old NPS port. 1999-07-05 06:33:44 +00:00
Ralf S. Engelschall
e384d63a99 Upgrade to NPS 0.9.16 1999-06-09 07:00:46 +00:00
Ralf S. Engelschall
48e1819573 Import of NPS, a non-preeemtive thread scheduling library.
NPS is a POSIX/ANSI-C based library for Unix platforms which
provides non-preemtive scheduling for multiple threads of execution
("multi-threading") inside server applications. All threads run in the
same address space of the server application, but each thread has it's
own individual run-time stack and program-counter.

The thread scheduling itself is done in a cooperative way, i.e. the
threads are managed by a priority- and event-based non-preemtive
scheduler. The intention is that this way one can achieve better
portability and run-time performance than with preemtive scheduling.
The event facility allows threads to wait until various types of
events occur, including pending I/O on filedescriptors, elapsed
timers, pending I/O on message ports, thread and process termination,
and even customized callback functions.

More details:
http://www.engelschall.com/sw/nps/
 ftp://ftp.engelschall.com/sw/nps/
1999-05-23 14:54:10 +00:00