On Tue, 2013-01-15 at 14:29 -0800, Alfred Perlstein wrote: > On 1/15/13 1:43 PM, Konstantin Belousov wrote: > > On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 04:35:14PM -0500, Trent Nelson wrote: > >> > >> Luckily it's for an open source project (Python), so recompilation > >> isn't a big deal. (I also check the intrinsic result versus the > >> syscall result during startup to verify the same ID is returned, > >> falling back to the syscall by default.) > > For you, may be. For your users, it definitely will be a problem. > > And worse, the problem will be blamed on the operating system and not > > to the broken application. > > > Anything we can do to avoid this would be best. > > The reason is that we are still dealing with an "optimization" that perl > did, it reached inside of the opaque struct FILE to "do nasty things". > Now it is very difficult for us to fix "struct FILE". > > We are still paying for this years later. > > Any way we can make this a supported interface? > > -Alfred
Re-reading the original question, I've got to ask why pthread_self() isn't the right answer? The requirement wasn't "I need to know what the OS calls me" it was "I need a unique ID per thread within a process." -- Ian _______________________________________________ freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-hackers-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"