/* * Copyright (c) 2002, Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. * Created by: bing.wei.liu REMOVE-THIS AT intel DOT com * This file is licensed under the GPL license. For the full content * of this license, see the COPYING file at the top level of this * source tree. * Test that pthread_mutexattr_getprioceiling() * * Gets the priority ceiling attribute of a mutexattr object (which was prev. created * by the function pthread_mutexattr_init()). * * Steps: * 1. Initialize a pthread_mutexattr_t object with pthread_mutexattr_init() * 2. Get the min and max boundries for SCHED_FIFO of what prioceiling can be. * 3. In a for loop, go through each valid SCHED_FIFO value, set the prioceiling, then * get the prio ceiling. These should always be the same. If not, fail the test. * */ #include #include #include #include "posixtest.h" int main() { /* Make sure there is prioceiling capability. */ /* #ifndef _POSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING fprintf(stderr,"prioceiling attribute is not available for testing\n"); return PTS_UNRESOLVED; #endif */ pthread_mutexattr_t mta; int prioceiling, max_prio, min_prio, i; /* Initialize a mutex attributes object */ if(pthread_mutexattr_init(&mta) != 0) { perror("Error at pthread_mutexattr_init()\n"); return PTS_UNRESOLVED; } /* Get the max and min prio according to SCHED_FIFO (posix scheduling policy) */ max_prio = sched_get_priority_max(SCHED_FIFO); min_prio = sched_get_priority_min(SCHED_FIFO); for(i=min_prio;(i