src/win32/thread.h


Log

Author Commit Date CI Message
Edward Thomson abb04caa 2018-02-01T15:55:48 consistent header guards use consistent names for the #include / #define header guard pattern.
Patrick Steinhardt 0c7f49dd 2017-06-30T13:39:01 Make sure to always include "common.h" first Next to including several files, our "common.h" header also declares various macros which are then used throughout the project. As such, we have to make sure to always include this file first in all implementation files. Otherwise, we might encounter problems or even silent behavioural differences due to macros or defines not being defined as they should be. So in fact, our header and implementation files should make sure to always include "common.h" first. This commit does so by establishing a common include pattern. Header files inside of "src" will now always include "common.h" as its first other file, separated by a newline from all the other includes to make it stand out as special. There are two cases for the implementation files. If they do have a matching header file, they will always include this one first, leading to "common.h" being transitively included as first file. If they do not have a matching header file, they instead include "common.h" as first file themselves. This fixes the outlined problems and will become our standard practice for header and source files inside of the "src/" from now on.
Edward Thomson 82f15896 2016-11-18T07:19:22 threads: introduce `git_thread_exit` Introduce `git_thread_exit`, which will allow threads to terminate at an arbitrary time, returning a `void *`. On Windows, this means that we need to store the current `git_thread` in TLS, so that we can set its `return` value when terminating. We cannot simply use `ExitThread`, since Win32 returns `DWORD`s from threads; we return `void *`.
Patrick Steinhardt aab266c9 2016-06-20T20:07:33 threads: add platform-independent thread initialization function
Patrick Steinhardt 8aaa9fb6 2016-06-20T18:21:42 win32: rename pthread.{c,h} to thread.{c,h} The old pthread-file did re-implement the pthreads API with exact symbol matching. As the thread-abstraction has now been split up between Unix- and Windows-specific files within the `git_` namespace to avoid symbol-clashes between libgit2 and pthreads, the rewritten wrappers have nothing to do with pthreads anymore. Rename the Windows-specific pthread-files to honor this change.