CreateEvent
The CreateEvent
function creates a named or unnamed event object.
HANDLE CreateEvent(
LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES lpEventAttributes, |
// pointer to
security attributes |
BOOL bManualReset, |
// flag for
manual-reset event |
BOOL bInitialState, |
// flag for initial
state |
LPCTSTR lpName |
// pointer to
event-object name |
); |
|
Parameters
lpEventAttributes
Pointer to a SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES
Windows NT:
The lpSecurityDescriptor member of the structure specifies a security
descriptor for the new event. If lpEventAttributes is NULL, the event
gets a default security descriptor.
Windows 95:
The lpSecurityDescriptor member of the structure is ignored.
bManualReset
Specifies
whether a manual-reset or auto-reset event object is created. If TRUE, then you
must use the ResetEvent
bInitialState
Specifies the
initial state of the event object. If TRUE, the initial state is signaled;
otherwise, it is nonsignaled.
lpName
Points to a
null-terminated string specifying the name of the event object. The name is
limited to MAX_PATH characters and can contain any character except the backslash
path-separator character (\). Name comparison is case sensitive.
If lpName matches the name of an existing named event object,
this function requests EVENT_ALL_ACCESS access to the existing object. In this
case, the bManualReset and bInitialState parameters are ignored
because they have already been set by the creating process. If the lpEventAttributes
parameter is not NULL, it determines whether the handle can be inherited, but
its security-descriptor member is ignored.
If lpName is NULL, the event object is created without a name.
If lpName matches the name of an existing semaphore, mutex, or
file-mapping object, the function fails and the GetLastError function
returns ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE. This occurs because event, mutex, semaphore, and
file-mapping objects share the same name space.
Return Values
If the
function succeeds, the return value is a handle to the event object. If the
named event object existed before the function call, the GetLastError
function returns ERROR_ALREADY_EXISTS. Otherwise, GetLastError returns
zero.
If the
function fails, the return value is NULL. To get extended error information,
call GetLastError
Remarks
The handle
returned by CreateEvent has EVENT_ALL_ACCESS access to the new event
object and can be used in any function that requires a handle to an event
object.
Any thread of
the calling process can specify the event-object handle in a call to one of the
wait functions
The initial
state of the event object is specified by the bInitialState parameter.
Use the SetEvent
When the
state of a manual-reset event object is signaled, it remains signaled until it
is explicitly reset to nonsignaled by the ResetEvent function. Any
number of waiting threads, or threads that subsequently begin wait operations
for the specified event object, can be released while the object s state is
signaled.
When the
state of an auto-reset event object is signaled, it remains signaled until a
single waiting thread is released; the system then automatically resets the
state to nonsignaled. If no threads are waiting, the event object s state
remains signaled.
Multiple
processes can have handles of the same event object, enabling use of the object
for interprocess synchronization. The following object-sharing mechanisms are
available:
A child process created by the CreateProcess
function can inherit a handle to an event object if the lpEventAttributes
parameter of CreateEvent enabled inheritance.
A process can specify the
event-object handle in a call to the DuplicateHandle function to create
a duplicate handle that can be used by another process.
A process can specify the name
of an event object in a call to the OpenEvent or CreateEvent
function.
Use the CloseHandle
function to close the handle. The system closes the handle automatically when
the process terminates. The event object is destroyed when its last handle has
been closed.
See Also