CSc 139 Programming Assignment 4

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This assignment requires you to write a multi-threaded C program for the same problem as in the Assignment 3: the
bounded-buffer producer/consumer approach for file copying, but using mutex locks and condition variables (in
POSIX thread library) instead of semaphores. Make sure that your submitted program compiles and runs in Athena.
1. Your program should be run with two file names provided at the command line: infile and outfile. Otherwise,
your program prompts the user with the message: “Correct Usage: pc infile outfile” and then terminates.
2. In your program, the main thread checks for correct number of input, verifies and opens the infile, and creates
the (empty) outfile. The main thread then spawns a producer thread and a consumer thread, and waits for both
the producer and the consumer to finish before it terminates. The producer and the consumer share a buffer of
9 slots with each slot having a size of 18 bytes. The producer reads a string of the buffer slot size from the
infile and places it into the next available buffer slot. The consumer takes the next available string from a buffer
slot and writes it into the outfile. The outfile is again a verbatim copy of the infile.
3. The buffer can only be accessed in a mutually exclusive fashion, which is enforced through the use of a mutex
lock buf_lock and pthread_mutex_lock and pthread_mutex_unlock operations.
4. When the buffer is full, the producer must wait until a buffer slot becomes available before it can place a string
into it. When the buffer is empty, the consumer must wait for an item (a string) to be available. These
synchronization conditions between the producer and the consumer are facilitated through two condition
variables empty_slot and avail_item, and the pthread_cond_wait and pthread_cond_signal
operations.
5. A condition variable is always used in conjunction with a mutex lock and a condition, and should be declared
global. A thread uses a condition variable to (a) either notify other cooperating threads (with access to the same
condition variable) that a condition has been met (pthread_cond_signal); (b) or block and wait for some
condition to be met (pthread_cond_wait). When a thread blocks on a condition variable, it automatically
releases the associated mutex lock, allowing other threads to gain the mutex lock. In the context of the
producer/consumer approach, the producer can be synchronized with the consumer in the following manner
when the buffer is full:
When the producer has the lock to the buffer first, and then realizes that the buffer is full, it uses a wait
operation to block itself on the condition variable empty_slot and releases buf_lock. Later when the
consumer gains buf_lock and empties a slot, it uses a signal operation on the condition variable
empty_slot to notify the producer that there is an empty slot so that the producer can continue. After being
awakened, the producer reacquires buf_lock and continues from the line immediately after where it was
blocked.
Alternatively, the consumer can be synchronized with the producer in a similar manner when the buffer is
empty (it should wait on the condition variable avail_item instead). A wait operation will unconditionally
block the calling thread, but a signal operation on a condition variable on which there is not any waiting
thread is not remembered.
Producer
pthread_mutex_lock(&buf_lock);
while (buffer is full) {
pthread_cond_wait(&empty_slot, &buf_lock);
}
{fill a buffer slot, update variables, ……}
pthread_cond_signal(&avail_item);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&buf_lock);
Consumer
pthread_mutex_lock(&buf_lock);
while (buffer is empty) {
pthread_cond_wait(&avail_item, &buf_lock);
}
{empty a buffer slot, update variables, ……}
pthread_cond_signal(&empty_slot);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&buf_lock);
CSc 139 Spring 2015
Department of Computer Science, CSUS
4/1/2015
6. A condition variable can be declared and statically initialized as follows:
pthread_cond_t empty_slot = PTHREAD_COND_INITIALIZER;
Condition variable can be destroyed using pthread_cond_destroy(&empty_slot). The wait operation takes
both a condition variable and a mutex lock, while the signal operation just takes a condition variable as its
argument.
pthread_cond_wait(&empty_slot, &buf_lock);
pthread_cond_signal(&empty_slot);
7. A mutex lock can be declared and initialized as follows:
pthread_mutex_t buf_lock = PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER
The following calls can be used with a mutex lock:
pthread_mutex_lock(&buf_lock);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&buf_lock);
8. The data type for the buffer are given as follows:
#define SLOTSIZE 18
#define SLOTCNT 9
char buffer[SLOTCNT][SLOTSIZE];
Like in Assignment 3, you need to have some additional variables to handle things like (a) the next available
slot for the producer; (b) the next available item for the consumer; (c) number of items available in the buffer;
(d) number of bytes in a slot; and (e) a flag to indicate when producing/consuming process ends.
9. Test your program with your own data. Then make sure that your program works for the following as the
content of the infile:
Instead of using semaphores to synchronize concurrent activities,
This assignment offers an opportunity for you to use the mutex locks
and condition variables to coordinate the producer and the consumer
activities in the context of the file copying application.
In contrast to the semaphore-based solution where the order
of two semaphore wait operations is of pivotal importance to avoid
potential deadlocks, the mutex-lock-condition-variable approach allows
a thread to suspend on a particular condition and release the mutex
lock at the same time via the pthread_cond_wait operation, therefore
avoiding potential deadlocks. This exercise helps reinforce the point
that there are different synchronization approaches to a given problem.
10. Submission Requirements. Your program must include adequate commenting (points deduction for programs
with inadequate comments). Compile your program with the following:
gcc prog4.c -o prog4 -lpthread
Submit your prog4.c file to “Program4 Submission” in SacCT.