There is a POSIX definition for sched_setscheduler(), but Linux does
not implement that; instead of changing the process's scheduler, it
only affects one thread. This has caused some confusion among
application developers and C library developers.
While glibc implements Linux semantics, Musl has made their
sched_setscheduler() function an always-failing no-op, causing the
error message "sched_setscheduler failed: Function not implemented".
http://git.musl-libc.org/cgit/musl/commit/src/sched/sched_setscheduler.c?id=1e21e78bf7a5c24c217446d8760be7b7188711c2
Instead of relying on the C library which may be unreliable here, we
now roll our own system call wrapper.
Closes#218
Android native code should be position-independent.
The NDK build scripts use "-fpic" instead of "-fPIC" for ARM, but that
doesn't work with FFmpeg's assembly code, because it requires
R_ARM_MOVW_ABS_NC which is unavailable with "-fpic".
Work around automake warning:
Makefile.am:310: warning: variable 'JAVA_SOURCES' is defined but no program or
Makefile.am:310: library has 'JAVA' as canonical name (possible typo)
Closes#195
This attribute shall be used only for IsInside() to make this safe
against a race condition described in #188:
> There is no requirement on the implementation that the ID of the
> created thread be available before the newly created thread starts
> executing.
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/pthread_create.html):
This means that on some pthread implementations (e.g. Haiku), the
assert(thread.IsInside()) could fail.
Closes#188
Use the "==" operator instead of pthread_equal().
This allows us to eliminate two boolean flags which are there to avoid
race conditions, and made the thing so fragile that I got tons of
(correct) thread sanitizer warnings.
This completes the bug fix commit
2065e3290452377b2931f3129b230c8cc536cbc8; if we clear "queued" then we
must clear "queued_song" as well, or another variant of the assertion
fails.