In a System V-like environment, one has the two types
mcontext_t and ucontext_t defined in
<ucontext.h> and the four functions
getcontext(), setcontext(), makecontext()
and swapcontext()
that allow user-level context switching between multiple
threads of control within a process.
The mcontext_t type is machine-dependent and opaque.
The ucontext_t type is a structure that has at least
the following fields:
typedef struct ucontext {
struct ucontext *uc_link;
sigset_t uc_sigmask;
stack_t uc_stack;
mcontext_t uc_mcontext;
...
} ucontext_t;
with sigset_t and stack_t defined in
<signal.h>. Here uc_link points to the context that will be resumed
when the current context terminates (in case the current context
was created using makecontext()), uc_sigmask is the
set of signals blocked in this context (see
sigprocmask(2)),
uc_stack is the stack used by this context (see
sigaltstack(2)),
and uc_mcontext is the
machine-specific representation of the saved context,
that includes the calling threads machine registers.
The function getcontext() initializes the structure
pointed at by ucp to the currently active context.
The function setcontext() restores the user context
pointed at by ucp. A successful call does not return.
The context should have been obtained by a call of getcontext(),
or makecontext(), or passed as third argument to a signal
handler.
If the context was obtained by a call of getcontext(),
program execution continues as if this call just returned.
If the context was obtained by a call of makecontext(),
program execution continues by a call to the function func
specified as the second argument of that call to makecontext().
When the function func returns, we continue with the
uc_link member of the structure ucp specified as the
first argument of that call to makecontext().
When this member is NULL, the thread exits.
If the context was obtained by a call to a signal handler,
then old standard text says that "program execution continues with the
program instruction following the instruction interrupted
by the signal". However, this sentence was removed in SUSv2,
and the present verdict is "the result is unspecified".