#include <pthread.h> int pthread_attr_setstack(pthread_attr_t *attr, void stackaddr[.stacksize], size_t stacksize); int pthread_attr_getstack(const pthread_attr_t *restrict attr, void **restrict stackaddr, size_t *restrict stacksize);
Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):
pthread_attr_getstack(), pthread_attr_setstack():
_POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 200112L
stackaddr should point to the lowest addressable byte of a buffer of stacksize bytes that was allocated by the caller. The pages of the allocated buffer should be both readable and writable.
The pthread_attr_getstack() function returns the stack address and stack size attributes of the thread attributes object referred to by attr in the buffers pointed to by stackaddr and stacksize, respectively.
POSIX.1 also documents an EACCES error if the stack area described by stackaddr and stacksize is not both readable and writable by the caller.
Interface | Attribute | Value |
pthread_attr_setstack(), pthread_attr_getstack() | Thread safety | MT-Safe |
When an application employs pthread_attr_setstack(), it takes over the responsibility of allocating the stack. Any guard size value that was set using pthread_attr_setguardsize(3) is ignored. If deemed necessary, it is the application's responsibility to allocate a guard area (one or more pages protected against reading and writing) to handle the possibility of stack overflow.
The address specified in stackaddr should be suitably aligned: for full portability, align it on a page boundary (sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE)). posix_memalign(3) may be useful for allocation. Probably, stacksize should also be a multiple of the system page size.
If attr is used to create multiple threads, then the caller must change the stack address attribute between calls to pthread_create(3); otherwise, the threads will attempt to use the same memory area for their stacks, and chaos will ensue.