atomic_init
Defined in header <stdatomic.h>
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void atomic_init( volatile A* obj, C desired ); |
(since C11) | |
Initializes the default-constructed atomic object obj with the value desired. The function is not atomic: concurrent access from another thread, even through an atomic operation, is a data race.
This is a generic function defined for all atomic object types A
. The argument is pointer to a volatile atomic type to accept addresses of both non-volatile and volatile (e.g. memory-mapped I/O) atomic objects, and volatile semantic is preserved when applying this operation to volatile atomic objects. C
is the non-atomic type corresponding to A
.
It is unspecified whether the name of a generic function is a macro or an identifier declared with external linkage. If a macro definition is suppressed in order to access an actual function (e.g. parenthesized like (atomic_init)(...)), or a program defines an external identifier with the name of a generic function, the behavior is undefined.
Contents |
[edit] Parameters
obj | - | pointer to an atomic object to initialize |
desired | - | the value to initialize atomic object with |
[edit] Return value
(none)
[edit] Notes
atomic_init
is the only way to initialize dynamically-allocated atomic objects. For example:
_Atomic int *p = malloc(sizeof(_Atomic int)); atomic_init(p, 42);
[edit] References
- C23 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2024):
- 7.17.2.2 The atomic_init generic function (p: TBD)
- C17 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2018):
- 7.17.2.2 The atomic_init generic function (p: 201)
- C11 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2011):
- 7.17.2.2 The atomic_init generic function (p: 274-275)
[edit] See also
(C11)(deprecated in C17)(removed in C23) |
initializes a new atomic object (function macro) |
C++ documentation for atomic_init
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