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osCreateThread
osDestroyThread
Format
#include <ultra64.h>
void osCreateThread(OSThread *t, OSId id, void (*entry)(void *),
void *arg, void *sp, OSPri pri);
void osDestroyThread(OSThread *t));
What These Functions Do
The osCreateThread and osDestroyThread functions register and unregister a schedulable object.
Threads are the basic schedulable unit of the Nintendo 64 operating
system. The OSThread data structure stores the context of the thread and
acts as a handle by which the thread may be referenced by thread
manipulation routines.
The osCreateThread routine initializes the given thread pointed to by the t argument and puts the thread on an active queue so that it becomes known to the Nintendo 64 debugger (gvd). Threads are initialized in the stopped state. The thread will eventually be placed on the run queue by calling the osStartThread routine.
The id argument is assigned to the thread by the application and is used solely by the debugger user
interface to provide a more convenient handle to the thread than the
thread structure address.
The procedure specified by the entry argument is jumped to when the thread is started, and this procedure is passed the single
argument specified by the arg argument.
Similarly, the stack is initialized to the location pointed to by the sp argument. Note that stacks
grow backwards (towards smaller addresses) with the MIPS compiler tools.
The memory region assigned to the stack must be of least size
OS_MIN_STACKSIZE in bytes. The maximum size of the stack must be the sum
of the stack frame sizes of its maximum procedure call depth plus 16.
Stacks must also be 64-bit aligned, so they should be declared as 'long
long int' and type-casted when passed to this function. Use the stacktool program to help compute stack sizes.
The pri argument specifies a nondegradable priority value that must range from OS_PRIORITY_IDLE (0) to OS_PRIORITY_APPMAX (127). In addition, to
enable all interrupts, this routine also specifies the floating point
control/status register to (1) flush denormalized numbers to zero and to
(2) signal invalid operation exception to catch generation of Not a
Numbers (NaNs). For more information, refer to the Floating-Point
Operations and Exceptions sections in the R4300 User's Manual.
The osDestroyThread routine removes the given thread pointed to by the t argument from the active queue as well as any other queue the thread may be on. More
specifically, after you call osDestroyThread if the thread was on the run queue, it is no longer runnable. If the thread was blocked on a message queue, it can no longer send or receive a message. If the argument is NULL, the dispatcher is called and the invoking (running) thread is not returned to the run queue. Unexpected results will occur if a destroyed thread is ever placed back on the run queue.
See Also
osGetThreadId
osGetThreadPri
osStartThread
osStopThread
osYieldThread
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Nintendo® Confidential
Warning: all information in this document is confidential and covered by a non-disclosure agreement. You are responsible for keeping this information confidential and protected. Nintendo will vigorously enforce this responsibility.
Copyright © 1998
Nintendo of America Inc. All rights reserved Nintendo and N64 are registered trademarks of Nintendo
Last updated January 1998
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