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CPU_SET(3)                    Linux Programmer's Manual                    CPU_SET(3)

NAME         top

       CPU_SET,  CPU_CLR,  CPU_ISSET,  CPU_ZERO, CPU_COUNT, CPU_AND, CPU_OR, CPU_XOR,
       CPU_EQUAL,  CPU_ALLOC,   CPU_ALLOC_SIZE,   CPU_FREE,   CPU_SET_S,   CPU_CLR_S,
       CPU_ISSET_S,   CPU_ZERO_S,   CPU_COUNT_S,   CPU_AND_S,   CPU_OR_S,  CPU_XOR_S,
       CPU_EQUAL_S - macros for manipulating CPU sets

SYNOPSIS         top

       #define _GNU_SOURCE             /* See feature_test_macros(7) */
       #include <sched.h>

       void CPU_ZERO(cpu_set_t *set);

       void CPU_SET(int cpu, cpu_set_t *set);
       void CPU_CLR(int cpu, cpu_set_t *set);
       int  CPU_ISSET(int cpu, cpu_set_t *set);

       int  CPU_COUNT(cpu_set_t *set);

       void CPU_AND(cpu_set_t *destset,
                    cpu_set_t *srcset1, cpu_set_t *srcset2);
       void CPU_OR(cpu_set_t *destset,
                    cpu_set_t *srcset1, cpu_set_t *srcset2);
       void CPU_XOR(cpu_set_t *destset,
                    cpu_set_t *srcset1, cpu_set_t *srcset2);

       int  CPU_EQUAL(cpu_set_t *set1, cpu_set_t *set2);

       cpu_set_t *CPU_ALLOC(int num_cpus);
       void CPU_FREE(cpu_set_t *set);
       size_t CPU_ALLOC_SIZE(int num_cpus);

       void CPU_ZERO_S(size_t setsize, cpu_set_t *set);

       void CPU_SET_S(int cpu, size_t setsize, cpu_set_t *set);
       void CPU_CLR_S(int cpu, size_t setsize, cpu_set_t *set);
       int  CPU_ISSET_S(int cpu, size_t setsize, cpu_set_t *set);

       int  CPU_COUNT_S(size_t setsize, cpu_set_t *set);

       void CPU_AND_S(size_t setsize, cpu_set_t *destset,
                    cpu_set_t *srcset1, cpu_set_t *srcset2);
       void CPU_OR_S(size_t setsize, cpu_set_t *destset,
                    cpu_set_t *srcset1, cpu_set_t *srcset2);
       void CPU_XOR_S(size_t setsize, cpu_set_t *destset,
                    cpu_set_t *srcset1, cpu_set_t *srcset2);

       int  CPU_EQUAL_S(size_t setsize, cpu_set_t *set1, cpu_set_t *set2);

DESCRIPTION         top

       The cpu_set_t data structure represents a set of CPUs.  CPU sets are used by
       sched_setaffinity(2) and similar interfaces.

       The cpu_set_t data type is implemented as a bitset.  However, the data
       structure treated as considered opaque: all manipulation of CPU sets should be
       done via the macros described in this page.

       The following macros are provided to operate on the CPU set set:

       CPU_ZERO()       Clears set, so that it contains no CPUs.

       CPU_SET()        Add CPU cpu to set.

       CPU_CLR()        Remove CPU cpu from set.

       CPU_ISSET()      Test to see if CPU cpu is a member of set.

       CPU_COUNT()      Return the number of CPUs in set.

       Where a cpu argument is specified, it should not produce side effects, since
       the above macros may evaluate the argument more than once.

       The first available CPU on the system corresponds to a cpu value of 0, the
       next CPU corresponds to a cpu value of 1, and so on.  The constant CPU_SETSIZE
       (currently 1024) specifies a value one greater than the maximum CPU number
       that can be stored in cpu_set_t.

       The following macros perform logical operations on CPU sets:

       CPU_AND()        Store the intersection of the sets srcset1 and srcset2 in
                        destset (which may be one of the source sets).

       CPU_OR()         Store the union of the sets srcset1 and srcset2 in destset
                        (which may be one of the source sets).

       CPU_XOR()        Store the XOR of the sets srcset1 and srcset2 in destset
                        (which may be one of the source sets).  The XOR means the set
                        of CPUs that are in either srcset1 or srcset2, but not both.

       CPU_EQUAL()      Test whether two CPU set contain exactly the same CPUs.

Dynamically sized CPU sets

       Because some applications may require the ability to dynamically size CPU sets
       (e.g., to allocate sets larger than that defined by the standard cpu_set_t
       data type), glibc nowadays provides a set of macros to support this.

       The following macros are used to allocate and deallocate CPU sets:

       CPU_ALLOC()      Allocate a CPU set large enough to hold CPUs in the range 0
                        to num_cpus-1.

       CPU_ALLOC_SIZE() Return the size in bytes of the CPU set that would be needed
                        to hold CPUs in the range 0 to num_cpus-1.  This macro
                        provides the value that can be used for the setsize argument
                        in the CPU_*_S() macros described below.

       CPU_FREE()       Free a CPU set previously allocated by CPU_ALLOC().

       The macros whose names end with "_S" are the analogs of the similarly named
       macros without the suffix.  These macros perform the same tasks as their
       analogs, but operate on the dynamically allocated CPU set(s) whose size is
       setsize bytes.

RETURN VALUE         top

       CPU_ISSET() and CPU_ISSET_S() return nonzero if cpu is in set; otherwise, it
       returns 0.

       CPU_COUNT() and CPU_COUNT_S() return the number of CPUs in set.

       CPU_EQUAL() and CPU_EQUAL_S() return nonzero if the two CPU sets are equal;
       otherwise it returns 0.

       CPU_ALLOC() returns a pointer on success, or NULL on failure.  (Errors are as
       for malloc(3).)

       CPU_ALLOC_SIZE() returns the number of bytes required to store a CPU set of
       the specified cardinality.

       The other functions do not return a value.

VERSIONS         top

       The CPU_ZERO(), CPU_SET(), CPU_CLR(), and CPU_ISSET() macros were added in
       glibc 2.3.3.

       CPU_COUNT() first appeared in glibc 2.6.

       CPU_AND(), CPU_OR(), CPU_XOR(), CPU_EQUAL(), CPU_ALLOC(), CPU_ALLOC_SIZE(),
       CPU_FREE(), CPU_ZERO_S(), CPU_SET_S(), CPU_CLR_S(), CPU_ISSET_S(),
       CPU_AND_S(), CPU_OR_S(), CPU_XOR_S(), and CPU_EQUAL_S() first appeared in
       glibc 2.7.

CONFORMING TO         top

       These interfaces are Linux-specific.

NOTES         top

       To duplicate a CPU set, use memcpy(3).

       Since CPU sets are bitsets allocated in units of long words, the actual number
       of CPUs in a dynamically allocated CPU set will be rounded up to the next
       multiple of sizeof(unsigned long).  An application should consider the
       contents of these extra bits to be undefined.

       Notwithstanding the similarity in the names, note that the constant
       CPU_SETSIZE indicates the number of CPUs in the cpu_set_t data type (thus, it
       is effectively a count of bits in the bitset), while the setsize argument of
       the CPU_*_S() macros is a size in bytes.

       The data types for arguments and return values shown in the SYNOPSIS are hints
       what about is expected in each case.  However, since these interfaces are
       implemented as macros, the compiler won't necessarily catch all type errors if
       you violate the suggestions.

EXAMPLE         top

       The following program demonstrates the use of some of the macros used for
       dynamically allocated CPU sets.

       #define _GNU_SOURCE
       #include <sched.h>
       #include <stdlib.h>
       #include <unistd.h>
       #include <stdio.h>
       #include <assert.h>

       int
       main(int argc, char *argv[])
       {
           cpu_set_t *cpusetp;
           size_t size;
           int num_cpus, cpu;

           if (argc < 2) {
               fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s <num-cpus>\n", argv[0]);
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           num_cpus = atoi(argv[1]);

           cpusetp = CPU_ALLOC(num_cpus);
           if (cpusetp == NULL) {
               perror("CPU_ALLOC");
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           size = CPU_ALLOC_SIZE(num_cpus);

           CPU_ZERO_S(size, cpusetp);
           for (cpu = 0; cpu < num_cpus; cpu += 2)
               CPU_SET_S(cpu, size, cpusetp);

           printf("CPU_COUNT() of set:    %d\n", CPU_COUNT_S(size, cpusetp));

           CPU_FREE(cpusetp);
           exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
       }

BUGS         top

       On 32-bit platforms with glibc 2.8 and earlier, CPU_ALLOC() allocates twice as
       much space as is required, and CPU_ALLOC_SIZE() returns a value twice as large
       as it should.  This bug should not affect the semantics of a program, but does
       result in wasted memory and less efficient operation of the macros that
       operate on dynamically allocated CPU sets.  These bugs are fixed in glibc 2.9.

SEE ALSO         top

       sched_setaffinity(2), pthread_attr_setaffinity_np(3),
       pthread_setaffinity_np(3), cpuset(7)

COLOPHON         top

       This page is part of release 3.32 of the Linux man-pages project.  A
       description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found
       at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.

Linux                                 2010-09-10                           CPU_SET(3)

HTML rendering created 2010-12-03 by Michael Kerrisk, author of The Linux Programming Interface

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