7. Task Manager¶
7.1. Introduction¶
The task manager provides a comprehensive set of directives to create, delete, and administer tasks. The directives provided by the task manager are:
rtems_task_create - Create a task
rtems_task_ident - Get ID of a task
rtems_task_self - Obtain ID of caller
rtems_task_start - Start a task
rtems_task_restart - Restart a task
rtems_task_delete - Delete a task
rtems_task_exit - Delete the calling task
rtems_task_suspend - Suspend a task
rtems_task_resume - Resume a task
rtems_task_is_suspended - Determine if a task is suspended
rtems_task_set_priority - Set task priority
rtems_task_get_priority - Get task priority
rtems_task_mode - Change current task’s mode
rtems_task_wake_after - Wake up after interval
rtems_task_wake_when - Wake up when specified
rtems_task_get_scheduler - Get scheduler of a task
rtems_task_set_scheduler - Set scheduler of a task
rtems_task_get_affinity - Get task processor affinity
rtems_task_set_affinity - Set task processor affinity
rtems_task_iterate - Iterate Over Tasks
7.2. Background¶
7.2.1. Task Definition¶
Many definitions of a task have been proposed in computer literature. Unfortunately, none of these definitions encompasses all facets of the concept in a manner which is operating system independent. Several of the more common definitions are provided to enable each user to select a definition which best matches their own experience and understanding of the task concept:
a “dispatchable” unit.
an entity to which the processor is allocated.
an atomic unit of a real-time, multiprocessor system.
single threads of execution which concurrently compete for resources.
a sequence of closely related computations which can execute concurrently with other computational sequences.
From RTEMS’ perspective, a task is the smallest thread of execution which can compete on its own for system resources. A task is manifested by the existence of a task control block (TCB).
7.2.2. Task Control Block¶
The Task Control Block (TCB) is an RTEMS defined data structure which contains all the information that is pertinent to the execution of a task. During system initialization, RTEMS reserves a TCB for each task configured. A TCB is allocated upon creation of the task and is returned to the TCB free list upon deletion of the task.
The TCB’s elements are modified as a result of system calls made by the application in response to external and internal stimuli. TCBs are the only RTEMS internal data structure that can be accessed by an application via user extension routines. The TCB contains a task’s name, ID, current priority, current and starting states, execution mode, TCB user extension pointer, scheduling control structures, as well as data required by a blocked task.
A task’s context is stored in the TCB when a task switch occurs. When the task regains control of the processor, its context is restored from the TCB. When a task is restarted, the initial state of the task is restored from the starting context area in the task’s TCB.
7.2.3. Task Memory¶
The system uses two separate memory areas to manage a task. One memory area is the Task Control Block. The other memory area is allocated from the stack space or provided by the user and contains
the task stack,
the thread-local storage (TLS), and
an optional architecture-specific floating-point context.
The size of the thread-local storage is determined at link time. A user-provided task stack must take the size of the thread-local storage into account.
On architectures with a dedicated floating-point context, the application configuration assumes that every task is a floating-point task, but whether or not a task is actually floating-point is determined at runtime during task creation (see Floating Point Considerations). In highly memory constrained systems this potential overestimate of the task stack space can be mitigated through the CONFIGURE_MINIMUM_TASK_STACK_SIZE configuration option and aligned task stack sizes for the tasks. A user-provided task stack must take the potential floating-point context into account.
7.2.4. Task Name¶
By default, the task name is defined by the task object name given to rtems_task_create(). The task name can be obtained with the pthread_getname_np() function. Optionally, a new task name may be set with the pthread_setname_np() function. The maximum size of a task name is defined by the application configuration option CONFIGURE_MAXIMUM_THREAD_NAME_SIZE.
7.2.5. Task States¶
A task may exist in one of the following five states:
executing - Currently scheduled to the CPU
ready - May be scheduled to the CPU
blocked - Unable to be scheduled to the CPU
dormant - Created task that is not started
non-existent - Uncreated or deleted task
An active task may occupy the executing, ready, blocked or dormant state, otherwise the task is considered non-existent. One or more tasks may be active in the system simultaneously. Multiple tasks communicate, synchronize, and compete for system resources with each other via system calls. The multiple tasks appear to execute in parallel, but actually each is dispatched to the CPU for periods of time determined by the RTEMS scheduling algorithm. The scheduling of a task is based on its current state and priority.
7.2.6. Task Priority¶
A task’s priority determines its importance in relation to the other tasks
executing on the same processor. RTEMS supports 255 levels of priority ranging
from 1 to 255. The data type rtems_task_priority
is used to store task
priorities.
Tasks of numerically smaller priority values are more important tasks than tasks of numerically larger priority values. For example, a task at priority level 5 is of higher privilege than a task at priority level 10. There is no limit to the number of tasks assigned to the same priority.
Each task has a priority associated with it at all times. The initial value of this priority is assigned at task creation time. The priority of a task may be changed at any subsequent time.
Priorities are used by the scheduler to determine which ready task will be allowed to execute. In general, the higher the logical priority of a task, the more likely it is to receive processor execution time.
7.2.7. Task Mode¶
A task’s execution mode is a combination of the following four components:
preemption
ASR processing
timeslicing
interrupt level
It is used to modify RTEMS’ scheduling process and to alter the execution
environment of the task. The data type rtems_task_mode
is used to manage
the task execution mode.
The preemption component allows a task to determine when control of the
processor is relinquished. If preemption is disabled (RTEMS_NO_PREEMPT
),
the task will retain control of the processor as long as it is in the executing
state - even if a higher priority task is made ready. If preemption is enabled
(RTEMS_PREEMPT
) and a higher priority task is made ready, then the
processor will be taken away from the current task immediately and given to the
higher priority task.
The timeslicing component is used by the RTEMS scheduler to determine how the
processor is allocated to tasks of equal priority. If timeslicing is enabled
(RTEMS_TIMESLICE
), then RTEMS will limit the amount of time the task can
execute before the processor is allocated to another ready task of equal
priority. The length of the timeslice is application dependent and specified in
the Configuration Table. If timeslicing is disabled (RTEMS_NO_TIMESLICE
),
then the task will be allowed to execute until a task of higher priority is
made ready. If RTEMS_NO_PREEMPT
is selected, then the timeslicing component
is ignored by the scheduler.
The asynchronous signal processing component is used to determine when received
signals are to be processed by the task. If signal processing is enabled
(RTEMS_ASR
), then signals sent to the task will be processed the next time
the task executes. If signal processing is disabled (RTEMS_NO_ASR
), then
all signals received by the task will remain posted until signal processing is
enabled. This component affects only tasks which have established a routine to
process asynchronous signals.
The interrupt level component is used to determine which interrupts will be
enabled when the task is executing. RTEMS_INTERRUPT_LEVEL(n)
specifies that
the task will execute at interrupt level n.
|
enable preemption (default) |
|
disable preemption |
|
disable timeslicing (default) |
|
enable timeslicing |
|
enable ASR processing (default) |
|
disable ASR processing |
|
enable all interrupts (default) |
|
execute at interrupt level n |
The set of default modes may be selected by specifying the
RTEMS_DEFAULT_MODES
constant.
7.2.8. Accessing Task Arguments¶
All RTEMS tasks are invoked with a single argument which is specified when they are started or restarted. The argument is commonly used to communicate startup information to the task. The simplest manner in which to define a task which accesses it argument is:
rtems_task user_task(
rtems_task_argument argument
);
Application tasks requiring more information may view this single argument as an index into an array of parameter blocks.
7.2.9. Floating Point Considerations¶
Please consult the RTEMS CPU Architecture Supplement if this section is relevant on your architecture. On some architectures the floating-point context is contained in the normal task context and this section does not apply.
Creating a task with the RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
attribute flag results in
additional memory being allocated for the task to store the state of the numeric
coprocessor during task switches. This additional memory is not allocated
for RTEMS_NO_FLOATING_POINT
tasks. Saving and restoring the context of a
RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
task takes longer than that of a
RTEMS_NO_FLOATING_POINT
task because of the relatively large amount of time
required for the numeric coprocessor to save or restore its computational state.
Since RTEMS was designed specifically for embedded military applications which
are floating point intensive, the executive is optimized to avoid unnecessarily
saving and restoring the state of the numeric coprocessor. In uniprocessor
configurations, the state of the numeric coprocessor is only saved when a
RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
task is dispatched and that task was not the last task
to utilize the coprocessor. In a uniprocessor system with only one
RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
task, the state of the numeric coprocessor will never
be saved or restored.
Although the overhead imposed by RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
tasks is minimal,
some applications may wish to completely avoid the overhead associated with
RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
tasks and still utilize a numeric coprocessor. By
preventing a task from being preempted while performing a sequence of floating
point operations, a RTEMS_NO_FLOATING_POINT
task can utilize the numeric
coprocessor without incurring the overhead of a RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
context switch. This approach also avoids the allocation of a floating point
context area. However, if this approach is taken by the application designer,
no tasks should be created as RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
tasks. Otherwise, the
floating point context will not be correctly maintained because RTEMS assumes
that the state of the numeric coprocessor will not be altered by
RTEMS_NO_FLOATING_POINT
tasks. Some architectures with a dedicated
floating-point context raise a processor exception if a task with
RTEMS_NO_FLOATING_POINT
issues a floating-point instruction, so this
approach may not work at all.
If the supported processor type does not have hardware floating capabilities or
a standard numeric coprocessor, RTEMS will not provide built-in support for
hardware floating point on that processor. In this case, all tasks are
considered RTEMS_NO_FLOATING_POINT
whether created as
RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
or RTEMS_NO_FLOATING_POINT
tasks. A floating
point emulation software library must be utilized for floating point
operations.
On some processors, it is possible to disable the floating point unit
dynamically. If this capability is supported by the target processor, then
RTEMS will utilize this capability to enable the floating point unit only for
tasks which are created with the RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
attribute. The
consequence of a RTEMS_NO_FLOATING_POINT
task attempting to access the
floating point unit is CPU dependent but will generally result in an exception
condition.
7.2.10. Building a Task Attribute Set¶
In general, an attribute set is built by a bitwise OR of the desired components. The set of valid task attribute components is listed below:
|
does not use coprocessor (default) |
|
uses numeric coprocessor |
|
local task (default) |
|
global task |
Attribute values are specifically designed to be mutually exclusive, therefore
bitwise OR and addition operations are equivalent as long as each attribute
appears exactly once in the component list. A component listed as a default is
not required to appear in the component list, although it is a good programming
practice to specify default components. If all defaults are desired, then
RTEMS_DEFAULT_ATTRIBUTES
should be used.
This example demonstrates the attribute_set parameter needed to create a local
task which utilizes the numeric coprocessor. The attribute_set parameter could
be RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
or RTEMS_LOCAL | RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
. The
attribute_set parameter can be set to RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
because
RTEMS_LOCAL
is the default for all created tasks. If the task were global
and used the numeric coprocessor, then the attribute_set parameter would be
RTEMS_GLOBAL | RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
.
7.2.11. Building a Mode and Mask¶
In general, a mode and its corresponding mask is built by a bitwise OR of the desired components. The set of valid mode constants and each mode’s corresponding mask constant is listed below:
|
is masked by |
|
is masked by |
|
is masked by |
|
is masked by |
|
is masked by |
|
is masked by |
|
is masked by |
|
is masked by |
Mode values are specifically designed to be mutually exclusive, therefore
bitwise OR and addition operations are equivalent as long as each mode appears
exactly once in the component list. A mode component listed as a default is
not required to appear in the mode component list, although it is a good
programming practice to specify default components. If all defaults are
desired, the mode RTEMS_DEFAULT_MODES
and the mask RTEMS_ALL_MODE_MASKS
should be used.
The following example demonstrates the mode and mask parameters used with the
rtems_task_mode
directive to place a task at interrupt level 3 and make it
non-preemptible. The mode should be set to RTEMS_INTERRUPT_LEVEL(3) |
RTEMS_NO_PREEMPT
to indicate the desired preemption mode and interrupt level,
while the mask parameter should be set to RTEMS_INTERRUPT_MASK |
RTEMS_NO_PREEMPT_MASK
to indicate that the calling task’s interrupt level and
preemption mode are being altered.
7.3. Operations¶
7.3.1. Creating Tasks¶
The rtems_task_create
directive creates a task by allocating a task control
block, assigning the task a user-specified name, allocating it a stack and
floating point context area, setting a user-specified initial priority, setting
a user-specified initial mode, and assigning it a task ID. Newly created tasks
are initially placed in the dormant state. All RTEMS tasks execute in the most
privileged mode of the processor.
7.3.2. Obtaining Task IDs¶
When a task is created, RTEMS generates a unique task ID and assigns it to the
created task until it is deleted. The task ID may be obtained by either of two
methods. First, as the result of an invocation of the rtems_task_create
directive, the task ID is stored in a user provided location. Second, the task
ID may be obtained later using the rtems_task_ident
directive. The task ID
is used by other directives to manipulate this task.
7.3.3. Starting and Restarting Tasks¶
The rtems_task_start
directive is used to place a dormant task in the ready
state. This enables the task to compete, based on its current priority, for
the processor and other system resources. Any actions, such as suspension or
change of priority, performed on a task prior to starting it are nullified when
the task is started.
With the rtems_task_start
directive the user specifies the task’s starting
address and argument. The argument is used to communicate some startup
information to the task. As part of this directive, RTEMS initializes the
task’s stack based upon the task’s initial execution mode and start address.
The starting argument is passed to the task in accordance with the target
processor’s calling convention.
The rtems_task_restart
directive restarts a task at its initial starting
address with its original priority and execution mode, but with a possibly
different argument. The new argument may be used to distinguish between the
original invocation of the task and subsequent invocations. The task’s stack
and control block are modified to reflect their original creation values.
Although references to resources that have been requested are cleared,
resources allocated by the task are NOT automatically returned to RTEMS. A
task cannot be restarted unless it has previously been started (i.e. dormant
tasks cannot be restarted). All restarted tasks are placed in the ready state.
7.3.4. Suspending and Resuming Tasks¶
The rtems_task_suspend
directive is used to place either the caller or
another task into a suspended state. The task remains suspended until a
rtems_task_resume
directive is issued. This implies that a task may be
suspended as well as blocked waiting either to acquire a resource or for the
expiration of a timer.
The rtems_task_resume
directive is used to remove another task from the
suspended state. If the task is not also blocked, resuming it will place it in
the ready state, allowing it to once again compete for the processor and
resources. If the task was blocked as well as suspended, this directive clears
the suspension and leaves the task in the blocked state.
Suspending a task which is already suspended or resuming a task which is not
suspended is considered an error. The rtems_task_is_suspended
can be used
to determine if a task is currently suspended.
7.3.5. Delaying the Currently Executing Task¶
The rtems_task_wake_after
directive creates a sleep timer which allows a
task to go to sleep for a specified interval. The task is blocked until the
delay interval has elapsed, at which time the task is unblocked. A task
calling the rtems_task_wake_after
directive with a delay interval of
RTEMS_YIELD_PROCESSOR
ticks will yield the processor to any other ready
task of equal or greater priority and remain ready to execute.
The rtems_task_wake_when
directive creates a sleep timer which allows a
task to go to sleep until a specified date and time. The calling task is
blocked until the specified date and time has occurred, at which time the task
is unblocked.
7.3.6. Changing Task Priority¶
The rtems_task_set_priority
directive is used to obtain or change the
current priority of either the calling task or another task. If the new
priority requested is RTEMS_CURRENT_PRIORITY
or the task’s actual priority,
then the current priority will be returned and the task’s priority will remain
unchanged. If the task’s priority is altered, then the task will be scheduled
according to its new priority.
The rtems_task_restart
directive resets the priority of a task to its
original value.
7.3.7. Changing Task Mode¶
The rtems_task_mode
directive is used to obtain or change the current
execution mode of the calling task. A task’s execution mode is used to enable
preemption, timeslicing, ASR processing, and to set the task’s interrupt level.
The rtems_task_restart
directive resets the mode of a task to its original
value.
7.3.8. Task Deletion¶
RTEMS provides the rtems_task_delete
directive to allow a task to delete
itself or any other task. This directive removes all RTEMS references to the
task, frees the task’s control block, removes it from resource wait queues, and
deallocates its stack as well as the optional floating point context. The
task’s name and ID become inactive at this time, and any subsequent references
to either of them is invalid. In fact, RTEMS may reuse the task ID for another
task which is created later in the application. A specialization of
rtems_task_delete
is rtems_task_exit
which deletes the calling task.
Unexpired delay timers (i.e. those used by rtems_task_wake_after
and
rtems_task_wake_when
) and timeout timers associated with the task are
automatically deleted, however, other resources dynamically allocated by the
task are NOT automatically returned to RTEMS. Therefore, before a task is
deleted, all of its dynamically allocated resources should be deallocated by
the user. This may be accomplished by instructing the task to delete itself
rather than directly deleting the task. Other tasks may instruct a task to
delete itself by sending a “delete self” message, event, or signal, or by
restarting the task with special arguments which instruct the task to delete
itself.
7.3.9. Setting Affinity to a Single Processor¶
On some embedded applications targeting SMP systems, it may be beneficial to
lock individual tasks to specific processors. In this way, one can designate a
processor for I/O tasks, another for computation, etc.. The following
illustrates the code sequence necessary to assign a task an affinity for
processor with index processor_index
.
#include <rtems.h>
#include <assert.h>
void pin_to_processor(rtems_id task_id, int processor_index)
{
rtems_status_code sc;
cpu_set_t cpuset;
CPU_ZERO(&cpuset);
CPU_SET(processor_index, &cpuset);
sc = rtems_task_set_affinity(task_id, sizeof(cpuset), &cpuset);
assert(sc == RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL);
}
It is important to note that the cpuset
is not validated until the
rtems_task_set_affinity
call is made. At that point, it is validated
against the current system configuration.
7.3.10. Transition Advice for Removed Notepads¶
Task notepads and the associated directives TASK_GET_NOTE - Get task notepad entry and TASK_SET_NOTE - Set task notepad entry were removed in RTEMS 5.1. These were never thread-safe to access and subject to conflicting use of the notepad index by libraries which were designed independently.
It is recommended that applications be modified to use services which are thread safe and not subject to issues with multiple applications conflicting over the key (e.g. notepad index) selection. For most applications, POSIX Keys should be used. These are available in all RTEMS build configurations. It is also possible that thread-local storage (TLS) is an option for some use cases.
7.3.11. Transition Advice for Removed Task Variables¶
Task notepads and the associated directives TASK_VARIABLE_ADD - Associate per task variable, TASK_VARIABLE_GET - Obtain value of a per task variable and TASK_VARIABLE_DELETE - Remove per task variable were removed in RTEMS 5.1. Task variables must be replaced by POSIX Keys or thread-local storage (TLS). POSIX Keys are available in all configurations and support value destructors. For the TLS support consult the RTEMS CPU Architecture Supplement.
7.4. Directives¶
This section details the task manager’s directives. A subsection is dedicated to each of this manager’s directives and describes the calling sequence, related constants, usage, and status codes.
7.4.1. TASK_CREATE - Create a task¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_create( rtems_name name, rtems_task_priority initial_priority, size_t stack_size, rtems_mode initial_modes, rtems_attribute attribute_set, rtems_id *id );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
task created successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
id
is NULLRTEMS_INVALID_NAME
invalid task name
RTEMS_INVALID_PRIORITY
invalid task priority
RTEMS_TOO_MANY
too many tasks created
RTEMS_UNSATISFIED
not enough memory for stack/FP context
RTEMS_UNSATISFIED
non-preemption mode not supported on SMP system
RTEMS_UNSATISFIED
interrupt level mode not supported on SMP system
RTEMS_TOO_MANY
too many global objects
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive creates a task which resides on the local node. It allocates and initializes a TCB, a stack, and an optional floating point context area. The mode parameter contains values which sets the task’s initial execution mode. The
RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
attribute should be specified if the created task is to use a numeric coprocessor. For performance reasons, it is recommended that tasks not using the numeric coprocessor should specify theRTEMS_NO_FLOATING_POINT
attribute. If theRTEMS_GLOBAL
attribute is specified, the task can be accessed from remote nodes. The task id, returned in id, is used in other task related directives to access the task. When created, a task is placed in the dormant state and can only be made ready to execute using the directivertems_task_start
.- NOTES:
This directive may cause the calling task to be preempted.
The scheduler of the new task is the scheduler of the executing task at some point during the task creation. The specified task priority must be valid for the selected scheduler.
The task processor affinity is initialized to the set of online processors.
If the requested stack size is less than the configured minimum stack size, then RTEMS will use the configured minimum as the stack size for this task. In addition to being able to specify the task stack size as a integer, there are two constants which may be specified:
RTEMS_MINIMUM_STACK_SIZE
The minimum stack size RECOMMENDED for use on this processor. This value is selected by the RTEMS developers conservatively to minimize the risk of blown stacks for most user applications. Using this constant when specifying the task stack size, indicates that the stack size will be at least
RTEMS_MINIMUM_STACK_SIZE
bytes in size. If the user configured minimum stack size is larger than the recommended minimum, then it will be used.RTEMS_CONFIGURED_MINIMUM_STACK_SIZE
Indicates this task is to be created with a stack size of the minimum stack size that was configured by the application. If not explicitly configured by the application, the default configured minimum stack size is the processor dependent value
RTEMS_MINIMUM_STACK_SIZE
. Since this uses the configured minimum stack size value, you may get a stack size that is smaller or larger than the recommended minimum. This can be used to provide large stacks for all tasks on complex applications or small stacks on applications that are trying to conserve memory.
Application developers should consider the stack usage of the device drivers when calculating the stack size required for tasks which utilize the driver.
The following task attribute constants are defined by RTEMS:
RTEMS_NO_FLOATING_POINT
does not use coprocessor (default)
RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
uses numeric coprocessor
RTEMS_LOCAL
local task (default)
RTEMS_GLOBAL
global task
The following task mode constants are defined by RTEMS:
RTEMS_PREEMPT
enable preemption (default)
RTEMS_NO_PREEMPT
disable preemption
RTEMS_NO_TIMESLICE
disable timeslicing (default)
RTEMS_TIMESLICE
enable timeslicing
RTEMS_ASR
enable ASR processing (default)
RTEMS_NO_ASR
disable ASR processing
RTEMS_INTERRUPT_LEVEL(0)
enable all interrupts (default)
RTEMS_INTERRUPT_LEVEL(n)
execute at interrupt level
n
The interrupt level portion of the task execution mode supports a maximum of 256 interrupt levels. These levels are mapped onto the interrupt levels actually supported by the target processor in a processor dependent fashion.
Tasks should not be made global unless remote tasks must interact with them. This avoids the system overhead incurred by the creation of a global task. When a global task is created, the task’s name and id must be transmitted to every node in the system for insertion in the local copy of the global object table.
The total number of global objects, including tasks, is limited by the maximum_global_objects field in the Configuration Table.
7.4.2. TASK_IDENT - Get ID of a task¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_ident( rtems_name name, uint32_t node, rtems_id *id );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
task identified successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
id
is NULLRTEMS_INVALID_NAME
invalid task name
RTEMS_INVALID_NODE
invalid node id
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive obtains the task id associated with the task name specified in name. A task may obtain its own id by specifying
RTEMS_SELF
or its own task name in name. If the task name is not unique, then the task id returned will match one of the tasks with that name. However, this task id is not guaranteed to correspond to the desired task. The task id, returned in id, is used in other task related directives to access the task.- NOTES:
This directive will not cause the running task to be preempted.
If node is
RTEMS_SEARCH_ALL_NODES
, all nodes are searched with the local node being searched first. All other nodes are searched with the lowest numbered node searched first.If node is a valid node number which does not represent the local node, then only the tasks exported by the designated node are searched.
This directive does not generate activity on remote nodes. It accesses only the local copy of the global object table.
7.4.3. TASK_SELF - Obtain ID of caller¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_id rtems_task_self(void);
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
Returns the object Id of the calling task.
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive returns the Id of the calling task.
- NOTES:
If called from an interrupt service routine, this directive will return the Id of the interrupted task.
7.4.4. TASK_START - Start a task¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_start( rtems_id id, rtems_task_entry entry_point, rtems_task_argument argument );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
ask started successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
invalid task entry point
RTEMS_INVALID_ID
invalid task id
RTEMS_INCORRECT_STATE
task not in the dormant state
RTEMS_ILLEGAL_ON_REMOTE_OBJECT
cannot start remote task
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive readies the task, specified by
id
, for execution based on the priority and execution mode specified when the task was created. The starting address of the task is given inentry_point
. The task’s starting argument is contained in argument. This argument can be a single value or used as an index into an array of parameter blocks. The type of this numeric argument is an unsigned integer type with the property that any valid pointer to void can be converted to this type and then converted back to a pointer to void. The result will compare equal to the original pointer.- NOTES:
The calling task will be preempted if its preemption mode is enabled and the task being started has a higher priority.
Any actions performed on a dormant task such as suspension or change of priority are nullified when the task is initiated via the
rtems_task_start
directive.
7.4.5. TASK_RESTART - Restart a task¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_restart( rtems_id id, rtems_task_argument argument );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
task restarted successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ID
task id invalid
RTEMS_INCORRECT_STATE
task never started
RTEMS_ILLEGAL_ON_REMOTE_OBJECT
cannot restart remote task
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive resets the task specified by id to begin execution at its original starting address. The task’s priority and execution mode are set to the original creation values. If the task is currently blocked, RTEMS automatically makes the task ready. A task can be restarted from any state, except the dormant state.
The task’s starting argument is contained in argument. This argument can be a single value or an index into an array of parameter blocks. The type of this numeric argument is an unsigned integer type with the property that any valid pointer to void can be converted to this type and then converted back to a pointer to void. The result will compare equal to the original pointer. This new argument may be used to distinguish between the initial
rtems_task_start
of the task and any ensuing calls tortems_task_restart
of the task. This can be beneficial in deleting a task. Instead of deleting a task using thertems_task_delete
directive, a task can delete another task by restarting that task, and allowing that task to release resources back to RTEMS and then delete itself.- NOTES:
If id is
RTEMS_SELF
, the calling task will be restarted and will not return from this directive.The calling task will be preempted if its preemption mode is enabled and the task being restarted has a higher priority.
The task must reside on the local node, even if the task was created with the
RTEMS_GLOBAL
option.
7.4.6. TASK_DELETE - Delete a task¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_delete( rtems_id id );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
task deleted successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ID
task id invalid
RTEMS_ILLEGAL_ON_REMOTE_OBJECT
cannot restart remote task
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive deletes a task, either the calling task or another task, as specified by id. RTEMS stops the execution of the task and reclaims the stack memory, any allocated delay or timeout timers, the TCB, and, if the task is
RTEMS_FLOATING_POINT
, its floating point context area. RTEMS does not reclaim the following resources: region segments, partition buffers, semaphores, timers, or rate monotonic periods.- NOTES:
A task is responsible for releasing its resources back to RTEMS before deletion. To insure proper deallocation of resources, a task should not be deleted unless it is unable to execute or does not hold any RTEMS resources. If a task holds RTEMS resources, the task should be allowed to deallocate its resources before deletion. A task can be directed to release its resources and delete itself by restarting it with a special argument or by sending it a message, an event, or a signal.
Deletion of the current task (
RTEMS_SELF
) will force RTEMS to select another task to execute.When a global task is deleted, the task id must be transmitted to every node in the system for deletion from the local copy of the global object table.
The task must reside on the local node, even if the task was created with the
RTEMS_GLOBAL
option.
7.4.7. TASK_EXIT - Delete the calling task¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
void rtems_task_exit( void ) RTEMS_NO_RETURN;
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
NONE - This function will not return to the caller.
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive deletes the calling task.
- NOTES:
This directive must be called from a regular task context with enabled interrupts, otherwise one of the fatal errors
will occur.
The
rtems_task_exit()
call is equivalent to the following code sequence:pthread_detach(pthread_self()); pthread_exit(NULL);
See also rtems_task_delete().
7.4.8. TASK_SUSPEND - Suspend a task¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_suspend( rtems_id id );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
task suspended successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ID
task id invalid
RTEMS_ALREADY_SUSPENDED
task already suspended
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive suspends the task specified by id from further execution by placing it in the suspended state. This state is additive to any other blocked state that the task may already be in. The task will not execute again until another task issues the
rtems_task_resume
directive for this task and any blocked state has been removed.- NOTES:
The requesting task can suspend itself by specifying
RTEMS_SELF
as id. In this case, the task will be suspended and a successful return code will be returned when the task is resumed.Suspending a global task which does not reside on the local node will generate a request to the remote node to suspend the specified task.
If the task specified by id is already suspended, then the
RTEMS_ALREADY_SUSPENDED
status code is returned.
7.4.9. TASK_RESUME - Resume a task¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_resume( rtems_id id );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
task resumed successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ID
task id invalid
RTEMS_INCORRECT_STATE
task not suspended
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive removes the task specified by id from the suspended state. If the task is in the ready state after the suspension is removed, then it will be scheduled to run. If the task is still in a blocked state after the suspension is removed, then it will remain in that blocked state.
- NOTES:
The running task may be preempted if its preemption mode is enabled and the local task being resumed has a higher priority.
Resuming a global task which does not reside on the local node will generate a request to the remote node to resume the specified task.
If the task specified by id is not suspended, then the
RTEMS_INCORRECT_STATE
status code is returned.
7.4.10. TASK_IS_SUSPENDED - Determine if a task is Suspended¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_is_suspended( rtems_id id );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
task is NOT suspended
RTEMS_ALREADY_SUSPENDED
task is currently suspended
RTEMS_INVALID_ID
task id invalid
RTEMS_ILLEGAL_ON_REMOTE_OBJECT
not supported on remote tasks
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive returns a status code indicating whether or not the specified task is currently suspended.
- NOTES:
This operation is not currently supported on remote tasks.
7.4.11. TASK_SET_PRIORITY - Set task priority¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_set_priority( rtems_id id, rtems_task_priority new_priority, rtems_task_priority *old_priority );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
task priority set successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ID
invalid task id
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
invalid return argument pointer
RTEMS_INVALID_PRIORITY
invalid task priority
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive manipulates the priority of the task specified by id. An id of
RTEMS_SELF
is used to indicate the calling task. When new_priority is not equal toRTEMS_CURRENT_PRIORITY
, the specified task’s previous priority is returned in old_priority. When new_priority isRTEMS_CURRENT_PRIORITY
, the specified task’s current priority is returned in old_priority. Valid priorities range from a high of 1 to a low of 255.- NOTES:
The calling task may be preempted if its preemption mode is enabled and it lowers its own priority or raises another task’s priority.
In case the new priority equals the current priority of the task, then nothing happens.
Setting the priority of a global task which does not reside on the local node will generate a request to the remote node to change the priority of the specified task.
If the task specified by id is currently holding any binary semaphores which use the priority inheritance algorithm, then the task’s priority cannot be lowered immediately. If the task’s priority were lowered immediately, then priority inversion results. The requested lowering of the task’s priority will occur when the task has released all priority inheritance binary semaphores. The task’s priority can be increased regardless of the task’s use of priority inheritance binary semaphores.
7.4.12. TASK_GET_PRIORITY - Get task priority¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_get_priority( rtems_id task_id, rtems_id scheduler_id, rtems_task_priority *priority );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
Successful operation.
RTEMS_ILLEGAL_ON_REMOTE_OBJECT
Directive is illegal on remote tasks.
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
The priority parameter is NULL.
RTEMS_INVALID_ID
Invalid task or scheduler identifier.
RTEMS_NOT_DEFINED
The task has no priority within the specified scheduler instance. This error is only possible in SMP configurations.
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive returns the current priority of the task specified by
task_id
with respect to the scheduler instance specified byscheduler_id
. A task id ofRTEMS_SELF
is used to indicate the calling task.- NOTES:
The current priority reflects temporary priority adjustments due to locking protocols, the rate-monotonic period objects on some schedulers and other mechanisms.
7.4.13. TASK_MODE - Change the current task mode¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_mode( rtems_mode mode_set, rtems_mode mask, rtems_mode *previous_mode_set );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive manipulates the execution mode of the calling task. A task’s execution mode enables and disables preemption, timeslicing, asynchronous signal processing, as well as specifying the current interrupt level. To modify an execution mode, the mode class(es) to be changed must be specified in the mask parameter and the desired mode(s) must be specified in the mode parameter.
- NOTES:
The calling task will be preempted if it enables preemption and a higher priority task is ready to run.
Enabling timeslicing has no effect if preemption is disabled. For a task to be timesliced, that task must have both preemption and timeslicing enabled.
A task can obtain its current execution mode, without modifying it, by calling this directive with a mask value of
RTEMS_CURRENT_MODE
.To temporarily disable the processing of a valid ASR, a task should call this directive with the
RTEMS_NO_ASR
indicator specified in mode.The set of task mode constants and each mode’s corresponding mask constant is provided in the following table:
RTEMS_PREEMPT
is masked by
RTEMS_PREEMPT_MASK
and enables preemptionRTEMS_NO_PREEMPT
is masked by
RTEMS_PREEMPT_MASK
and disables preemptionRTEMS_NO_TIMESLICE
is masked by
RTEMS_TIMESLICE_MASK
and disables timeslicingRTEMS_TIMESLICE
is masked by
RTEMS_TIMESLICE_MASK
and enables timeslicingRTEMS_ASR
is masked by
RTEMS_ASR_MASK
and enables ASR processingRTEMS_NO_ASR
is masked by
RTEMS_ASR_MASK
and disables ASR processingRTEMS_INTERRUPT_LEVEL(0)
is masked by
RTEMS_INTERRUPT_MASK
and enables all interruptsRTEMS_INTERRUPT_LEVEL(n)
is masked by
RTEMS_INTERRUPT_MASK
and sets interrupts level n
7.4.14. TASK_WAKE_AFTER - Wake up after interval¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_wake_after( rtems_interval ticks );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
always successful
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive blocks the calling task for the specified number of system clock ticks. When the requested interval has elapsed, the task is made ready. The clock tick directives automatically updates the delay period.
- NOTES:
Setting the system date and time with the
rtems_clock_set
directive has no effect on artems_task_wake_after
blocked task.A task may give up the processor and remain in the ready state by specifying a value of
RTEMS_YIELD_PROCESSOR
in ticks.The maximum timer interval that can be specified is the maximum value which can be represented by the uint32_t type.
A clock tick is required to support the functionality of this directive.
7.4.15. TASK_WAKE_WHEN - Wake up when specified¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_wake_when( rtems_time_of_day *time_buffer );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
awakened at date/time successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
time_buffer
is NULLRTEMS_INVALID_TIME_OF_DAY
invalid time buffer
RTEMS_NOT_DEFINED
system date and time is not set
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive blocks a task until the date and time specified in time_buffer. At the requested date and time, the calling task will be unblocked and made ready to execute.
- NOTES:
The ticks portion of time_buffer structure is ignored. The timing granularity of this directive is a second.
A clock tick is required to support the functionality of this directive.
7.4.16. TASK_GET_SCHEDULER - Get scheduler of a task¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_get_scheduler( rtems_id task_id, rtems_id *scheduler_id );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
successful operation
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
scheduler_id
is NULLRTEMS_INVALID_ID
invalid task id
- DESCRIPTION:
Returns the scheduler identifier of a task identified by
task_id
inscheduler_id
.- NOTES:
None.
7.4.17. TASK_SET_SCHEDULER - Set scheduler of a task¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_set_scheduler( rtems_id task_id, rtems_id scheduler_id, rtems_task_priority priority );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
successful operation
RTEMS_INVALID_ID
invalid task or scheduler id
RTEMS_INVALID_PRIORITY
invalid task priority
RTEMS_RESOURCE_IN_USE
the task is in the wrong state to perform a scheduler change
RTEMS_UNSATISFIED
the processor set of the scheduler is empty
RTEMS_ILLEGAL_ON_REMOTE_OBJECT
not supported on remote tasks
- DESCRIPTION:
Sets the scheduler of a task identified by
task_id
to the scheduler identified byscheduler_id
. The scheduler of a task is initialized to the scheduler of the task that created it. The priority of the task is set topriority
.- NOTES:
It is recommended to set the scheduler of a task before it is started or in case it is guaranteed that the task owns no resources. Otherwise, sporadic
RTEMS_RESOURCE_IN_USE
errors may occur.- EXAMPLE:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33
#include <rtems.h> #include <assert.h> rtems_task task( rtems_task_argument arg ); void example( void ) { rtems_status_code sc; rtems_id task_id; rtems_id scheduler_id; rtems_name scheduler_name; scheduler_name = rtems_build_name( 'W', 'O', 'R', 'K' ); sc = rtems_scheduler_ident( scheduler_name, &scheduler_id ); assert( sc == RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL ); sc = rtems_task_create( rtems_build_name( 'T', 'A', 'S', 'K' ), 1, RTEMS_MINIMUM_STACK_SIZE, RTEMS_DEFAULT_MODES, RTEMS_DEFAULT_ATTRIBUTES, &task_id ); assert( sc == RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL ); sc = rtems_task_set_scheduler( task_id, scheduler_id, 2 ); assert( sc == RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL ); sc = rtems_task_start( task_id, task, 0 ); assert( sc == RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL ); }
7.4.18. TASK_GET_AFFINITY - Get task processor affinity¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_get_affinity( rtems_id id, size_t cpusetsize, cpu_set_t *cpuset );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
successful operation
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
cpuset
is NULLRTEMS_INVALID_ID
invalid task id
RTEMS_INVALID_NUMBER
the affinity set buffer is too small for the current processor affinity set of the task
- DESCRIPTION:
Returns the current processor affinity set of the task in
cpuset
. A set bit in the affinity set means that the task can execute on this processor and a cleared bit means the opposite.- NOTES:
The task processor affinity is initialized to the set of online processors.
7.4.19. TASK_SET_AFFINITY - Set task processor affinity¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_set_affinity( rtems_id id, size_t cpusetsize, const cpu_set_t *cpuset );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
successful operation
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
cpuset
is NULLRTEMS_INVALID_ID
invalid task id
RTEMS_INVALID_NUMBER
invalid processor affinity set
- DESCRIPTION:
Sets the processor affinity set for the task specified by
cpuset
. A set bit in the affinity set means that the task can execute on this processor and a cleared bit means the opposite.- NOTES:
This function will not change the scheduler of the task. The intersection of the processor affinity set and the set of processors owned by the scheduler of the task must be non-empty. It is not an error if the processor affinity set contains processors that are not part of the set of processors owned by the scheduler instance of the task. A task will simply not run under normal circumstances on these processors since the scheduler ignores them. Some locking protocols may temporarily use processors that are not included in the processor affinity set of the task. It is also not an error if the processor affinity set contains processors that are not part of the system.
In case a scheduler without support for task affinites is used for the task, then the task processor affinity set must contain all online processors of the system. This prevents odd corner cases if processors are added/removed at run-time to/from scheduler instances.
7.4.20. TASK_ITERATE - Iterate Over Tasks¶
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
typedef bool ( *rtems_task_visitor )( rtems_tcb *tcb, void *arg ); void rtems_task_iterate( rtems_task_visitor visitor, void *arg );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
NONE
- DESCRIPTION:
Iterates over all tasks in the system. This operation covers all tasks of all APIs. The user should be careful in accessing the contents of the thread control block
tcb
. The visitor argumentarg
is passed to all invocations ofvisitor
in addition to the thread control block. The iteration stops immediately in case the visitor function returns true.- NOTES:
Must be called from task context. This operation obtains and releases the objects allocator lock. The task visitor is called while owning the objects allocator lock. It is possible to perform blocking operations in the task visitor, however, take care that no deadlocks via the object allocator lock can occur.
7.5. Deprecated Directives¶
7.5.1. ITERATE_OVER_ALL_THREADS - Iterate Over Tasks¶
Warning
This directive is deprecated. Its use is unsafe. Use TASK_ITERATE - Iterate Over Tasks instead.
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
typedef void (*rtems_per_thread_routine)(Thread_Control *the_thread); void rtems_iterate_over_all_threads( rtems_per_thread_routine routine );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
NONE
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive iterates over all of the existant threads in the system and invokes
routine
on each of them. The user should be careful in accessing the contents ofthe_thread
.This routine is intended for use in diagnostic utilities and is not intented for routine use in an operational system.
- NOTES:
There is no protection while this routine is called. The thread control block may be in an inconsistent state or may change due to interrupts or activity on other processors.
7.6. Removed Directives¶
7.6.1. TASK_GET_NOTE - Get task notepad entry¶
Warning
This directive was removed in RTEMS 5.1.
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_get_note( rtems_id id, uint32_t notepad, uint32_t *note );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
note value obtained successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
note
parameter is NULLRTEMS_INVALID_ID
invalid task id
RTEMS_INVALID_NUMBER
invalid notepad location
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive returns the note contained in the notepad location of the task specified by id.
- NOTES:
This directive will not cause the running task to be preempted.
If id is set to
RTEMS_SELF
, the calling task accesses its own notepad.The sixteen notepad locations can be accessed using the constants
RTEMS_NOTEPAD_0
throughRTEMS_NOTEPAD_15
.Getting a note of a global task which does not reside on the local node will generate a request to the remote node to obtain the notepad entry of the specified task.
7.6.2. TASK_SET_NOTE - Set task notepad entry¶
Warning
This directive was removed in RTEMS 5.1.
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_set_note( rtems_id id, uint32_t notepad, uint32_t note );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
note set successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ID
invalid task id
RTEMS_INVALID_NUMBER
invalid notepad location
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive sets the notepad entry for the task specified by id to the value note.
- NOTES:
If
id
is set toRTEMS_SELF
, the calling task accesses its own notepad.This directive will not cause the running task to be preempted.
The sixteen notepad locations can be accessed using the constants
RTEMS_NOTEPAD_0
throughRTEMS_NOTEPAD_15
.Setting a note of a global task which does not reside on the local node will generate a request to the remote node to set the notepad entry of the specified task.
7.6.3. TASK_VARIABLE_ADD - Associate per task variable¶
Warning
This directive was removed in RTEMS 5.1.
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_variable_add( rtems_id tid, void **task_variable, void (*dtor)(void *) );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
per task variable added successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
task_variable
is NULLRTEMS_INVALID_ID
invalid task id
RTEMS_NO_MEMORY
invalid task id
RTEMS_ILLEGAL_ON_REMOTE_OBJECT
not supported on remote tasks
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive adds the memory location specified by the ptr argument to the context of the given task. The variable will then be private to the task. The task can access and modify the variable, but the modifications will not appear to other tasks, and other tasks’ modifications to that variable will not affect the value seen by the task. This is accomplished by saving and restoring the variable’s value each time a task switch occurs to or from the calling task. If the dtor argument is non-NULL it specifies the address of a ‘destructor’ function which will be called when the task is deleted. The argument passed to the destructor function is the task’s value of the variable.
- NOTES:
Task variables increase the context switch time to and from the tasks that own them so it is desirable to minimize the number of task variables. One efficient method is to have a single task variable that is a pointer to a dynamically allocated structure containing the task’s private ‘global’ data. In this case the destructor function could be ‘free’.
Per-task variables are disabled in SMP configurations and this service is not available.
7.6.4. TASK_VARIABLE_GET - Obtain value of a per task variable¶
Warning
This directive was removed in RTEMS 5.1.
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_variable_get( rtems_id tid, void **task_variable, void **task_variable_value );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
per task variable obtained successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
task_variable
is NULLRTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
task_variable_value
is NULLRTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
task_variable
is not foundRTEMS_NO_MEMORY
invalid task id
RTEMS_ILLEGAL_ON_REMOTE_OBJECT
not supported on remote tasks
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive looks up the private value of a task variable for a specified task and stores that value in the location pointed to by the result argument. The specified task is usually not the calling task, which can get its private value by directly accessing the variable.
- NOTES:
If you change memory which
task_variable_value
points to, remember to declare that memory as volatile, so that the compiler will optimize it correctly. In this case both the pointertask_variable_value
and data referenced bytask_variable_value
should be considered volatile.Per-task variables are disabled in SMP configurations and this service is not available.
7.6.5. TASK_VARIABLE_DELETE - Remove per task variable¶
Warning
This directive was removed in RTEMS 5.1.
- CALLING SEQUENCE:
rtems_status_code rtems_task_variable_delete( rtems_id id, void **task_variable );
- DIRECTIVE STATUS CODES:
RTEMS_SUCCESSFUL
per task variable deleted successfully
RTEMS_INVALID_ID
invalid task id
RTEMS_NO_MEMORY
invalid task id
RTEMS_INVALID_ADDRESS
task_variable
is NULLRTEMS_ILLEGAL_ON_REMOTE_OBJECT
not supported on remote tasks
- DESCRIPTION:
This directive removes the given location from a task’s context.
- NOTES:
Per-task variables are disabled in SMP configurations and this service is not available.