pset_bind(2) System Calls pset_bind(2)NAMEpset_bind - bind LWPs to a set of processors
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/pset.h>
int pset_bind(psetid_t pset, idtype_t idtype, id_t id, psetid_t *opset);
DESCRIPTION
The pset_bind() function binds the LWP or set of LWPs specified by
idtype and id to the processor set specified by pset. If opset is not
NULL, pset_bind() sets the psetid_t variable pointed to by opset to the
previous processor set binding of one of the specified LWP, or to
PS_NONE if the selected LWP was not bound.
If idtype is P_PID, the binding affects all LWPs of the process with
process ID (PID) id.
If idtype is P_LWPID, the binding affects the LWP of the current
process with LWP ID id.
If idtype is P_TASKID, the binding affects all LWPs of all processes
with task ID id.
If idtype is P_PROJID, the binding affects all LWPs of all processes
with project ID id.
If idtype is P_ZONEID, the binding affects all LWPs of all processes
with zone ID id.
If idtype is P_CTID, the binding affects all LWPs of all processes with
process contract ID id.
If id is P_MYID, the specified LWP, process, task, process, zone, or
process contract is the current one.
If pset is PS_NONE, the processor set bindings of the specified LWPs
are cleared.
If pset is PS_QUERY, the processor set bindings are not changed.
If pset is PS_MYID, the specified LWPs are bound to the same processor
set as the caller. If the caller is not bound to a processor set, the
processor set bindings are cleared.
The {PRIV_SYS_RES_CONFIG} privilege must be asserted in the effective
set of the calling process or pset must be PS_QUERY.
LWPs that have been bound to a processor with processor_bind(2) may
also be bound to a processor set if the processor is part of the pro‐
cessor set. If this occurs, the binding to the processor remains in
effect. If the processor binding is later removed, the processor set
binding becomes effective.
Processor set bindings are inherited across fork(2) and exec(2).
RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion, 0 is returned. Otherwise, −1 is returned
and errno is set to indicate the error.
ERRORS
The pset_bind() function will fail if:
EBUSY One of the LWPs is bound to a processor, and the specified
processor set does not include that processor.
EFAULT The location pointed to by opset was not NULL and not
writable by the user.
EINVAL An invalid processor set ID was specified; or idtype was
not P_PID, P_LWPID, P_PROJID, P_TASKID, P_ZONEID, or P_CTID.
ENOTSUP The pools facility is active. See pooladm(1M) and
pool_set_status(3POOL) for information about enabling and
disabling the pools facility. Processes can be bound to
pools using the poolbind(1M) utility or the pool_set_bind‐
ing(3POOL) function.
Binding a system process to a processor set is not sup‐
ported.
EPERM The {PRIV_PROC_OWNER} is not asserted in the effecive set of
the calling process and either the real or effective user ID
of the calling process does not match the real or effective
user ID of one of the LWPs being bound, or the processor set
from which one or more of the LWPs are being unbound has the
PSET_NOESCAPE attribute set and {PRIV_SYS_RES_CONFIG) is not
asserted in the effective set of the calling process. See
pset_setattr(2) for more information about processor set
attributes.
ESRCH No processes, LWPs, or tasks were found to match the crite‐
ria specified by idtype and id.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Interface Stability │Committed │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│MT-Level │Async-Signal-Safe │
└─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
SEE ALSOpbind(1M), pooladm(1M), poolbind(1M), psrset(1M), exec(2), fork(2),
processor_bind(2), pset_create(2), pset_info(2), pset_setattr(2),
pool_set_binding(3POOL), pool_set_status(3POOL), pset_getloadavg(3C),
process(4), project(4), attributes(5), privileges(5)SunOS 5.11 13 Mar 2009 pset_bind(2)