blob: 5b4081a82a0f03e75f5ac3dec2168c256a1cf8f7 [file] [log] [blame]
/*
* kmp_wrapper_getpid.h -- getpid() declaration.
*/
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
// This file is dual licensed under the MIT and the University of Illinois Open
// Source Licenses. See LICENSE.txt for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#ifndef KMP_WRAPPER_GETPID_H
#define KMP_WRAPPER_GETPID_H
#if KMP_OS_UNIX
// On Unix-like systems (Linux* OS and OS X*) getpid() is declared in standard
// headers.
#include <sys/syscall.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#if KMP_OS_DARWIN
// OS X
#define __kmp_gettid() syscall(SYS_thread_selfid)
#elif defined(SYS_gettid)
// Hopefully other Unix systems define SYS_gettid syscall for getting os thread
// id
#define __kmp_gettid() syscall(SYS_gettid)
#else
#warning No gettid found, use getpid instead
#define __kmp_gettid() getpid()
#endif
#elif KMP_OS_WINDOWS
// On Windows* OS _getpid() returns int (not pid_t) and is declared in
// "process.h".
#include <process.h>
// Let us simulate Unix.
typedef int pid_t;
#define getpid _getpid
#define __kmp_gettid() GetCurrentThreadId()
#else
#error Unknown or unsupported OS.
#endif
/* TODO: All the libomp source code uses pid_t type for storing the result of
getpid(), it is good. But often it printed as "%d", that is not good, because
it ignores pid_t definition (may pid_t be longer that int?). It seems all pid
prints should be rewritten as:
printf( "%" KMP_UINT64_SPEC, (kmp_uint64) pid );
or (at least) as
printf( "%" KMP_UINT32_SPEC, (kmp_uint32) pid );
(kmp_uint32, kmp_uint64, KMP_UINT64_SPEC, and KMP_UNIT32_SPEC are defined in
"kmp_os.h".) */
#endif // KMP_WRAPPER_GETPID_H
// end of file //