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https://github.com/gpg/npth

The New Pth library. NOTE: Maintainers are not tracking this mirror. Do not make pull requests here, nor comment any commits, submit them usual way to bug tracker (https://www.gnupg.org/documentation/bts.html) or to the mailing list (https://www.gnupg.org/documentation/mailing-lists.html).
https://github.com/gpg/npth

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The New Pth library. NOTE: Maintainers are not tracking this mirror. Do not make pull requests here, nor comment any commits, submit them usual way to bug tracker (https://www.gnupg.org/documentation/bts.html) or to the mailing list (https://www.gnupg.org/documentation/mailing-lists.html).

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README

        

nPth - The New GNU Portable Threads Library

* Overview

This is a library to provide the GNU Pth API and thus a
non-preemptive threads implementation.

In contrast to GNU Pth is is based on the system's standard threads
implementation. This allows the use of libraries which are not
compatible to GNU Pth. Experience with a Windows Pth emulation
showed that this is a solid way to provide a co-routine based
framework.

See the file AUTHORS for contact and copyright information.

* License

nPth is released under the LGPLv2+ license.

* Porting hints

Documentation is currently missing. If you are using GNU Pth you
should be able to understand the API. Given that GNU Pth is rarely
used, we hestitate to spend work on a migration guide. If you have
questions, please ask on gnupg-devel. Here are some hints:

- Pth mutexes are recursive, that is they will not block if called
by the same thread. In contrast, nPth mutexes are not recursive;
it is best to change your code to avoid recursive use of mutexes.
nPth uses non-recursive mutexes for performance reasons.