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						Class std.concurrency.ThreadScheduler
An example Scheduler using kernel threads.
						
					
				This is an example Scheduler that mirrors the default scheduling behavior
 of creating one kernel thread per call to spawn.  It is fully functional
 and may be instantiated and used, but is not a necessary part of the
 default functioning of this module.
Properties
| Name | Type | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| thisInfo[get] | ThreadInfo | Returns ThreadInfo, since it is a thread-local instance ofThreadInfo, which is the correct behavior for this scheduler. | 
Methods
| Name | Description | 
|---|---|
| newCondition(m) | Creates a new Conditionvariable.  No custom behavior is needed here. | 
| spawn(op) | Creates a new kernel thread and assigns it to run the supplied op. | 
| start(op) | This simply runs op directly, since no real scheduling is needed by this approach. | 
| yield() | This scheduler does no explicit multiplexing, so this is a no-op. | 
| factory(classname) | Create instance of class specified by the fully qualified name classname. The class must either have no constructors or have a default constructor. | 
| opCmp(o) | Compare with another Object obj. | 
| opEquals(o) | Test whether thisis equal too.
 The default implementation only compares by identity (using theisoperator).
 Generally, overrides and overloads foropEqualsshould attempt to compare objects by their contents.
 A class will most likely want to add an overload that takes your specific type as the argument
 and does the content comparison. Then you can override this and forward it to your specific
 typed overload with a cast. Remember to check fornullon the typed overload. | 
| toHash() | Compute hash function for Object. | 
| toString() | Convert Object to a human readable string. | 
Authors
Sean Kelly, Alex Rønne Petersen, Martin Nowak
License
					Copyright © 1999-2024 by the D Language Foundation | Page generated by ddox.