well yeah.. you're doing some weird kind of declaring your variables. I tried it with an array.
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use threads;
my @th;
for($i=0;$i<10;$i++){
push @th, threads->new(\&sub2,$i) ;
}
for($i=0;$i<10;$i++) {
$th[$i]->join;
#$result = $th[$i]->eval;
$th[$i]->detach;
}
sub sub2 :locked {
my @para = @_;
my $t = $_[0];
my $temp="test";
my $user=$temp.$t;
if (!defined($pid = fork)) {
die "Cannot fork\n";
} elsif ($pid == 0 ) {
exec("echo $user");
} else {
waitpid($pid,0);
}
}
the output is, yes.. indeed:
test0
test1
test2
test3
test4
test5
test7
test8
test9
test6
i couldn't find anything in perldoc threads about the ->eval you have in your code.
but maybe you already solved your problem..
--
to ask a question is a moment of shame
to remain ignorant is a lifelong shame
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