Struct std::thread::Builder1.0.0[][src]

pub struct Builder { /* fields omitted */ }

Thread factory, which can be used in order to configure the properties of a new thread.

Methods can be chained on it in order to configure it.

The two configurations available are:

The spawn method will take ownership of the builder and create an io::Result to the thread handle with the given configuration.

The thread::spawn free function uses a Builder with default configuration and unwraps its return value.

You may want to use spawn instead of thread::spawn, when you want to recover from a failure to launch a thread, indeed the free function will panick where the Builder method will return a io::Result.

Examples

use std::thread;

let builder = thread::Builder::new();

let handler = builder.spawn(|| {
    // thread code
}).unwrap();

handler.join().unwrap();Run

Methods

impl Builder
[src]

Generates the base configuration for spawning a thread, from which configuration methods can be chained.

Examples

use std::thread;

let builder = thread::Builder::new()
                              .name("foo".into())
                              .stack_size(10);

let handler = builder.spawn(|| {
    // thread code
}).unwrap();

handler.join().unwrap();Run

Names the thread-to-be. Currently the name is used for identification only in panic messages.

The name must not contain null bytes (\0).

For more information about named threads, see this module-level documentation.

Examples

use std::thread;

let builder = thread::Builder::new()
    .name("foo".into());

let handler = builder.spawn(|| {
    assert_eq!(thread::current().name(), Some("foo"))
}).unwrap();

handler.join().unwrap();Run

Sets the size of the stack (in bytes) for the new thread.

The actual stack size may be greater than this value if the platform specifies minimal stack size.

For more information about the stack size for threads, see this module-level documentation.

Examples

use std::thread;

let builder = thread::Builder::new().stack_size(32 * 1024);Run

Spawns a new thread by taking ownership of the Builder, and returns an io::Result to its JoinHandle.

The spawned thread may outlive the caller (unless the caller thread is the main thread; the whole process is terminated when the main thread finishes). The join handle can be used to block on termination of the child thread, including recovering its panics.

For a more complete documentation see thread::spawn.

Errors

Unlike the spawn free function, this method yields an io::Result to capture any failure to create the thread at the OS level.

Panics

Panics if a thread name was set and it contained null bytes.

Examples

use std::thread;

let builder = thread::Builder::new();

let handler = builder.spawn(|| {
    // thread code
}).unwrap();

handler.join().unwrap();Run

Trait Implementations

impl Debug for Builder
[src]

Formats the value using the given formatter. Read more

Auto Trait Implementations

impl Send for Builder

impl Sync for Builder