use Thread::Semaphore;
my $s = new Thread::Semaphore;
- $s->up; # Also known as the semaphore V -operation.
+ $s->down; # Also known as the semaphore P operation.
# The guarded section is here
- $s->down; # Also known as the semaphore P -operation.
+ $s->up; # Also known as the semaphore V operation.
# The default semaphore value is 1.
my $s = new Thread::Semaphore($initial_value);
+ $s->down($down_value);
$s->up($up_value);
- $s->down($up_value);
=head1 DESCRIPTION
Semaphores don't limit their values to zero or one, so they can be used to
control access to some resource that there may be more than one of. (For
-example, filehandles). Increment and decrement amounts aren't fixed at one
+example, filehandles.) Increment and decrement amounts aren't fixed at one
either, so threads can reserve or return multiple resources at once.
=head1 FUNCTIONS AND METHODS
count is equal to or larger than the amount you're C<down>ing the
semaphore's count by.
+This is the semaphore "P operation" (the name derives from the Dutch
+word "pak", which means "capture" -- the semaphore operations were
+named by the late Dijkstra, who was Dutch).
+
=item up
=item up NUMBER
trying to C<down> the semaphore if the C<up> raises the semaphore count
above the amount that the C<down>s are trying to decrement it by.
+This is the semaphore "V operation" (the name derives from the Dutch
+word "vrij", which means "release").
+
=back
=cut