Difference between revisions of "Example pthread hello"

From wiki.emacinc.com
Jump to: navigation, search
(Opening, Building and Uploading the Project Files)
Line 14: Line 14:
 
stub
 
stub
  
<big>2. Open the fbench project files.</big>
+
<big>2. Open the project files.</big>
  
 
stub
 
stub
  
<big>3. Build the fbench project.</big>
+
<big>3. Build the project.</big>
  
 
stub
 
stub
  
<big>4. Upload the fbench and ffbench executables to the target system.</big>
+
<big>4. Upload the executables to the target system.</big>
  
 
stub
 
stub

Revision as of 14:45, 11 December 2013

TODO: {{#todo:Review(12.11.13-12:52->JG+)|Jgreene|oe 4,oe 5,jg,md,Review}}

This is a guide to the pthread_hello C example project included in the EMAC OE SDK.

This is a simple pthreads example application. A number of pthread nodes are created and each reports its existence by printing a hello message to the console.

The term pthread refers to POSIX Threads, a POSIX standard for threads.

The pthread_hello project builds one executable: p_hello.

Opening, Building and Uploading the Project Files

1. Open the C/C++ editing perspective.

stub

2. Open the project files.

stub

3. Build the project.

stub

4. Upload the executables to the target system.

stub

Usage and Behavior

Hardware Requirements

The pthread_hello C example project has no special hardware requirements. It should run just fine on any system for which the project files can be successfully compiled.

Using pthread_hello

./p_hello n

where n is number of threads

Usage Example

root@PPCE7:/tmp# ./p_hello 3
Hello from node 0
Hello from node 2
Hello from node 1

Summary

The pthread_hello C example project demonstrates how to use pthreads. For another example of pthread usage see example pthread demo.