zephyr/samples/portability/cmsis_rtos_v1/philosophers
David B. Kinder 60136f00cb doc: add how to exit from QEMU in samples
While trying out the hello_world sample built for QEMU, I was expecting
the sample app to exit and I'd return to a command prompt.  Nope.  You
need to exit QEMU manually, so add that step to the sample instructions.
Looking around, there are more uses of QEMU like this that could use
this added step after running the sample app.

Signed-off-by: David B. Kinder <david.b.kinder@intel.com>
2019-09-02 12:06:08 -04:00
..
src cleanup: include/: move misc/printk.h to sys/printk.h 2019-06-27 22:55:49 -04:00
CMakeLists.txt license: cleanup: add SPDX Apache-2.0 license identifier 2019-04-07 08:45:22 -04:00
README.rst doc: add how to exit from QEMU in samples 2019-09-02 12:06:08 -04:00
prj.conf tests: samples: Apps shouldn't set tick rate 2019-07-02 22:52:29 -04:00
sample.yaml

README.rst

.. _cmsis_rtos_v1-sample:

Dining Philosophers (CMSI RTOS V1 APIs)
#######################################

Overview
********
This sample implements a solution to the `Dining Philosophers problem
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dining_philosophers_problem>`_ (a classic
multi-thread synchronization problem) using CMSIS RTOS V1 APIs.  This particular
implementation demonstrates the usage of multiple preemptible and cooperative
threads of differing priorities, as well as mutex/semaphore and thread sleeping
which uses CMSIS RTOS V1 API implementation in Zephyr.

The philosopher always tries to get the lowest fork first (f1 then f2).  When
done, he will give back the forks in the reverse order (f2 then f1).  If he
gets two forks, he is EATING.  Otherwise, he is THINKING. Transitional states
are shown as well, such as STARVING when the philosopher is hungry but the
forks are not available, and HOLDING ONE FORK when a philosopher is waiting
for the second fork to be available.

Each Philosopher will randomly alternate between the EATING and THINKING state.


Building and Running
********************

This project outputs to the console.  It can be built and executed
on QEMU as follows:

.. zephyr-app-commands::
   :zephyr-app: samples/philosophers
   :host-os: unix
   :board: qemu_x86
   :goals: run
   :compact:

Sample Output
=============

.. code-block:: console

    Philosopher 0 [C:-2]  THINKING [  500 ms ]
    Philosopher 1 [C:-1]  THINKING [  375 ms ]
    Philosopher 2 [P: 0]  THINKING [  575 ms ]
    Philosopher 3 [P: 1]   EATING  [  525 ms ]
    Philosopher 4 [P: 2]  THINKING [  800 ms ]
    Philosopher 5 [P: 3]   EATING  [  625 ms ]

    Demo Description
    ----------------
    An implementation of a solution to the Dining Philosophers
    problem (a classic multi-thread synchronization problem) using
    CMSIS RTOS V1 APIs. This particular implementation demonstrates the
    usage of multiple preemptible threads of differing
    priorities, as well as semaphores and thread sleeping.

Exit QEMU by pressing :kbd:`CTRL+A` :kbd:`x`.