tss_delete
Defined in header
<threads.h>
|
||
void
tss_delete
(
tss_t
tss_id
)
;
|
(since C11) | |
Destroys the thread-specific storage identified by
tss_id
.
The destructor, if one was registered by
tss_create
, is not called (they are only called at thread exit, either by
thrd_exit
or by returning from the thread function), it is the responsibility of the programmer to ensure that every thread that is aware of
tss_id
performed all necessary cleanup, before the call to
tss_delete
is made.
If
tss_delete
is called while another thread is executing destructors for
tss_id
, it's unspecified whether this changes the number of invocations to the associated destructor.
If
tss_delete
is called while the calling thread is executing destructors, then the destructor associated with
tss_id
will not be executed again on this thread.
Parameters
tss_id | - | thread-specific storage key previously returned by tss_create and not yet deleted by tss_delete |
Return value
(none)
Notes
The POSIX equivalent of this function is
pthread_key_delete
.
The reason
tss_delete
never calls destructors is that the destructors (called at thread exit) are normally intended to be executed by the same thread that originally set the value (via
tss_set
) that the destructor will be dealing with, and may even rely on the values of that or other thread-specific data as seen by that thread. The thread executing
tss_delete
has no access to other threads' TSS. Even if it were possible to call the destructor for each thread's own value associated with
tss_id
,
tss_delete
would have to synchronize with every thread if only to examine whether the value of this TSS in that thread is null (destructors are only called against non-null values).
Example
This section is incomplete
Reason: no example |
References
- C17 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2018):
-
- 7.26.6.2 The tss_delete function (p: 282)
- C11 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2011):
-
- 7.26.6.2 The tss_delete function (p: 386)