Class Thread
In: vm.c
Parent: Object

Methods

[]   []=   abort_on_exception   abort_on_exception   abort_on_exception=   abort_on_exception=   alive?   current   exit   exit   fork   group   inspect   join   key?   keys   kill   kill   list   pass   priority   priority=   raise   run   safe_level   start   status   stop   stop?   terminate   value   wakeup  

Public Class methods

Returns the status of the global ``abort on exception’’ condition. The default is false. When set to true, or if the global $DEBUG flag is true (perhaps because the command line option -d was specified) all threads will abort (the process will exit(0)) if an exception is raised in any thread. See also Thread::abort_on_exception=.

When set to true, all threads will abort if an exception is raised. Returns the new state.

   Thread.abort_on_exception = true
   t1 = Thread.new do
     puts  "In new thread"
     raise "Exception from thread"
   end
   sleep(1)
   puts "not reached"

produces:

   In new thread
   prog.rb:4: Exception from thread (RuntimeError)
    from prog.rb:2:in `initialize'
    from prog.rb:2:in `new'
    from prog.rb:2

Returns the currently executing thread.

   Thread.current   #=> #<Thread:0x401bdf4c run>

Terminates the currently running thread and schedules another thread to be run. If this thread is already marked to be killed, exit returns the Thread. If this is the main thread, or the last thread, exit the process.

Basically the same as Thread::new. However, if class Thread is subclassed, then calling start in that subclass will not invoke the subclass‘s initialize method.

Causes the given thread to exit (see Thread::exit).

   count = 0
   a = Thread.new { loop { count += 1 } }
   sleep(0.1)       #=> 0
   Thread.kill(a)   #=> #<Thread:0x401b3d30 dead>
   count            #=> 93947
   a.alive?         #=> false

Returns an array of Thread objects for all threads that are either runnable or stopped.

   Thread.new { sleep(200) }
   Thread.new { 1000000.times {|i| i*i } }
   Thread.new { Thread.stop }
   Thread.list.each {|t| p t}

produces:

   #<Thread:0x401b3e84 sleep>
   #<Thread:0x401b3f38 run>
   #<Thread:0x401b3fb0 sleep>
   #<Thread:0x401bdf4c run>

Invokes the thread scheduler to pass execution to another thread.

   a = Thread.new { print "a"; Thread.pass;
                    print "b"; Thread.pass;
                    print "c" }
   b = Thread.new { print "x"; Thread.pass;
                    print "y"; Thread.pass;
                    print "z" }
   a.join
   b.join

produces:

   axbycz

Basically the same as Thread::new. However, if class Thread is subclassed, then calling start in that subclass will not invoke the subclass‘s initialize method.

Stops execution of the current thread, putting it into a ``sleep’’ state, and schedules execution of another thread.

   a = Thread.new { print "a"; Thread.stop; print "c" }
   Thread.pass
   print "b"
   a.run
   a.join

produces:

   abc

Public Instance methods

Attribute Reference—Returns the value of a thread-local variable, using either a symbol or a string name. If the specified variable does not exist, returns nil.

   a = Thread.new { Thread.current["name"] = "A"; Thread.stop }
   b = Thread.new { Thread.current[:name]  = "B"; Thread.stop }
   c = Thread.new { Thread.current["name"] = "C"; Thread.stop }
   Thread.list.each {|x| puts "#{x.inspect}: #{x[:name]}" }

produces:

   #<Thread:0x401b3b3c sleep>: C
   #<Thread:0x401b3bc8 sleep>: B
   #<Thread:0x401b3c68 sleep>: A
   #<Thread:0x401bdf4c run>:

Attribute Assignment—Sets or creates the value of a thread-local variable, using either a symbol or a string. See also Thread#[].

Returns the status of the thread-local ``abort on exception’’ condition for thr. The default is false. See also Thread::abort_on_exception=.

When set to true, causes all threads (including the main program) to abort if an exception is raised in thr. The process will effectively exit(0).

Returns true if thr is running or sleeping.

   thr = Thread.new { }
   thr.join                #=> #<Thread:0x401b3fb0 dead>
   Thread.current.alive?   #=> true
   thr.alive?              #=> false

Terminates thr and schedules another thread to be run. If this thread is already marked to be killed, exit returns the Thread. If this is the main thread, or the last thread, exits the process.

Returns the ThreadGroup which contains thr, or nil if the thread is not a member of any group.

   Thread.main.group   #=> #<ThreadGroup:0x4029d914>

Dump the name, id, and status of thr to a string.

The calling thread will suspend execution and run thr. Does not return until thr exits or until limit seconds have passed. If the time limit expires, nil will be returned, otherwise thr is returned.

Any threads not joined will be killed when the main program exits. If thr had previously raised an exception and the abort_on_exception and $DEBUG flags are not set (so the exception has not yet been processed) it will be processed at this time.

   a = Thread.new { print "a"; sleep(10); print "b"; print "c" }
   x = Thread.new { print "x"; Thread.pass; print "y"; print "z" }
   x.join # Let x thread finish, a will be killed on exit.

produces:

   axyz

The following example illustrates the limit parameter.

   y = Thread.new { 4.times { sleep 0.1; puts 'tick... ' }}
   puts "Waiting" until y.join(0.15)

produces:

   tick...
   Waiting
   tick...
   Waitingtick...

   tick...

Returns true if the given string (or symbol) exists as a thread-local variable.

   me = Thread.current
   me[:oliver] = "a"
   me.key?(:oliver)    #=> true
   me.key?(:stanley)   #=> false

Returns an an array of the names of the thread-local variables (as Symbols).

   thr = Thread.new do
     Thread.current[:cat] = 'meow'
     Thread.current["dog"] = 'woof'
   end
   thr.join   #=> #<Thread:0x401b3f10 dead>
   thr.keys   #=> [:dog, :cat]

Terminates thr and schedules another thread to be run. If this thread is already marked to be killed, exit returns the Thread. If this is the main thread, or the last thread, exits the process.

Returns the priority of thr. Default is inherited from the current thread which creating the new thread, or zero for the initial main thread; higher-priority threads will run before lower-priority threads.

   Thread.current.priority   #=> 0

Sets the priority of thr to integer. Higher-priority threads will run before lower-priority threads.

   count1 = count2 = 0
   a = Thread.new do
         loop { count1 += 1 }
       end
   a.priority = -1

   b = Thread.new do
         loop { count2 += 1 }
       end
   b.priority = -2
   sleep 1   #=> 1
   count1    #=> 622504
   count2    #=> 5832

Raises an exception (see Kernel::raise) from thr. The caller does not have to be thr.

   Thread.abort_on_exception = true
   a = Thread.new { sleep(200) }
   a.raise("Gotcha")

produces:

   prog.rb:3: Gotcha (RuntimeError)
    from prog.rb:2:in `initialize'
    from prog.rb:2:in `new'
    from prog.rb:2

Wakes up thr, making it eligible for scheduling.

   a = Thread.new { puts "a"; Thread.stop; puts "c" }
   Thread.pass
   puts "Got here"
   a.run
   a.join

produces:

   a
   Got here
   c

Returns the safe level in effect for thr. Setting thread-local safe levels can help when implementing sandboxes which run insecure code.

   thr = Thread.new { $SAFE = 3; sleep }
   Thread.current.safe_level   #=> 0
   thr.safe_level              #=> 3

Returns the status of thr: ``sleep’’ if thr is sleeping or waiting on I/O, ``run’’ if thr is executing, ``aborting’’ if thr is aborting, false if thr terminated normally, and nil if thr terminated with an exception.

   a = Thread.new { raise("die now") }
   b = Thread.new { Thread.stop }
   c = Thread.new { Thread.exit }
   d = Thread.new { sleep }
   d.kill                  #=> #<Thread:0x401b3678 aborting>
   a.status                #=> nil
   b.status                #=> "sleep"
   c.status                #=> false
   d.status                #=> "aborting"
   Thread.current.status   #=> "run"

Returns true if thr is dead or sleeping.

   a = Thread.new { Thread.stop }
   b = Thread.current
   a.stop?   #=> true
   b.stop?   #=> false

Terminates thr and schedules another thread to be run. If this thread is already marked to be killed, exit returns the Thread. If this is the main thread, or the last thread, exits the process.

Waits for thr to complete (via Thread#join) and returns its value.

   a = Thread.new { 2 + 2 }
   a.value   #=> 4

Marks thr as eligible for scheduling (it may still remain blocked on I/O, however). Does not invoke the scheduler (see Thread#run).

   c = Thread.new { Thread.stop; puts "hey!" }
   c.wakeup

produces:

   hey!

[Validate]

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