From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: "Gardian, Milan" To: Ye Liu , pthreads-win32@sourceware.cygnus.com, pthreads-win32-info@sourceware.cygnus.com Subject: RE: Using a class method as starting routine. Date: Wed, 01 Aug 2001 01:39:00 -0000 Message-id: <4052AC502903D411AD1200508B2C0C1001F7EDFC@EXCHANGE> X-SW-Source: 2001/msg00083.html Hi Ye, pthread gurus, > A rather dump question: how to use a class method as a > starting routine of pthread_create(). I agree with what John Bossom already wrote -> the Java-like approach is simple and powerful. First, you should create a new abstract class that will take care of the nasty details of delegation (alias proxying), e.g.: //runnable.h //---------- #include #include extern "C" void *runnable_exec_redirector(void *arg); class Runnable { //Public interface public: bool start_thread(); bool join_thread(void ** ret_value = 0); Runnable() : _id_valid(false) {}; virtual ~Runnable() { assert( !_id_valid ); }; //Methods that must be overriden in a subclass protected: virtual void *run() = 0; //allow this function to access class details and run method friend void *runnable_exec_redirector(void *arg); //Attributes, available to subclasses protected: bool _id_valid; pthread_t _thread_id; }; //----------(eof) //runnable.cpp //---------- #include "runnable.h" bool Runnable::start_thread() { if (!_id_valid) { if (0 == pthread_create( &_thread_id, 0, runnable_exec_redirector, static_cast(this) )) { _id_valid = true; } } return _id_valid; } bool Runnable::join_thread(void ** ret_value) { bool ret = false; if (_id_valid) { pthread_join(_thread_id, ret_value); _id_valid = false; ret = true; } return ret; } extern "C" void *runnable_exec_redirector(void *arg) { assert (arg != 0); Runnable *obj = static_cast(arg); assert (obj != 0); return obj ? obj->run() : 0; } //----------(eof) You can now reuse this code in as many thread classes as you want (of course you can refine the above code to support re-entrancy and zillion other features, this is just a skeleton). Let's take a look at an example: //test.cpp //---------- #include #include "runnable.h" class MyThread : public Runnable { private: virtual void *run() { std::cout << "I am thread " << _thread_id << " running in context of object " << this << std::endl; return 0; } }; int main() { MyThread t; std::cout << "Thread object " << &t << std::endl; t.start_thread(); t.join_thread(); return 0; } //----------(eof) As you can see, all you have to do in your "thread" class (MyThread in the example above) is to (usually publicly) derive from "Runnable" -> i.e. make your class runnable ;). This gives your class instant access to the Runnable public methods (start_thread, join_thread and whatever you can think of). The only other think you need to do is to define & implement the 'run' pure virtual method (otherwise you would not be able to create instances of your class :) ). You can think of the 'run' method as the starting routine for the created thread, and it is instance method, not a static method (and that's what you wanted). Of course, your question was how to use instance method DIRECTLY in pthread_create -> it is NOT possible (search through history of news://comp.programming.threads for detailed explanation). But this simple 'proxy' strategy is at least as good as the direct usage (in my opinion even better). If you have any further questions/problems, let me know. Hope this helps, Milan. PS: The above code was successfully tried in "VC++6, SP4" (alias "Microsoft (R) 32-bit C/C++ Optimizing Compiler Version 12.00.8804") and "gcc version 2.95.3-5 (cygwin special)".