29. Multi-threaded testing

29.1. Introduction

.intro: This is the design of the multi-threaded testing module in the Memory Pool System.

.readership: Any MPS developer.

.overview: The MPS is designed to work in a multi-threaded environment (see design.mps.thread-safety) and this needs to be tested on all supported platforms. The multi-threaded testing module provides an interface for creating and joining threads, so that multi-threaded test cases are portable to all platforms on which the MPS runs.

29.2. Requirements

.req.create: The module must provide an interface for creating threads and running code in them. (Because there is no such interface in the Standard C Library.)

.req.join: The module must provide an interface for joining a running thread: that is, waiting for the thread to finish and collecting a result. (Because we want to be able to test that the MPS behaves correctly when interacting with a finished thread.)

.req.portable: The module must be easily portable to all the platforms on which the MPS runs.

.req.usable: The module must be simple to use, not requiring elaborate setup or tear-down or error handling. (Because we want test cases to be easy to write.)

29.3. Implementation

.impl.posix: To meet .req.portable and .req.usable, the module presents an interface that is essentially identical to the POSIX Threads interface [pthreads], except for the names. On POSIX platforms the implementation is trivial; on Windows it is necessary to translate the concepts back and forth.

.impl.storage: To meet .req.usable, the module defines the testthr_t type in the header testthr.h (even though this requires an #if), so that test cases can easily declare variables and allocate storage for thread identifiers.

.impl.error: To meet .req.usable, the module does not propagate error codes, but calls error() from the test library if anything goes wrong. There is thus no need for the test cases to check result codes.

29.4. Interface

testthr_t

The type of thread identifiers.

void *(*testthr_routine_t)(void *)

The type of a function that can be called when a thread is created.

void testthr_create(testthr_t *thread_o, testthr_routine_t start, void *arg)

Create a thread. Store the identifier of the newly created thread in *thread_o, and call start(), passing arg as the single parameter.

void testthr_join(testthr_t *thread, void **result_o)

Wait for a thread to complete. Suspend execution of the calling thread until the target thread terminates (if necessary), and if result_o is non-NULL, update *result_o with the return value of the thread’s start() function.

29.5. References

pthreads

The Open Group; “The Single UNIX Specification, Version 2—Threads”; <http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7990989775/xsh/threads.html>