try to clarify the async-apply protocol for callbacks
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@ -393,20 +393,29 @@ the process may crash or misbehave.
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If an @scheme[async-apply] procedure is provided, then a Racket
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procedure with the generated procedure type can be applied in a
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foreign thread (i.e., an OS-level thread other than the one used to
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run Racket). In that case, @scheme[async-apply] is applied to a thunk
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that encapsulates the specific callback invocation, and the foreign
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thread blocks until the thunk is called and completes; the thunk must
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be called exactly once, and the callback invocation must return
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normally. The @scheme[async-apply] procedure itself is called in an
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unspecified Racket thread and in atomic mode (see @scheme[atomic?]
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above); its job is to arrange for the thunk to be called in a suitable
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context without blocking in any synchronization. (If the callback is
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known to complete quickly, require no synchronization, and work
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independent of the Racket thread in which it runs, then
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@scheme[async-apply] can apply the thunk directly.) Foreign-thread
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detection to trigger @scheme[async-apply] works only when Racket is
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compiled with OS-level thread support, which is the default for many
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platforms.
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run Racket). The call in the foreign thread is transferred to the
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OS-level thread that runs Racket, but the Racket-level thread (in the
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sense of @racket[thread]) is unspecified; the job of
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@scheme[async-apply] is to arrange for the callback procedure to be
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run in a suitable Racket thread. The @scheme[async-apply] function is
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applied to a thunk that encapsulates the specific callback invocation,
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and the foreign OS-level thread blocks until the thunk is called and
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completes; the thunk must be called exactly once, and the callback
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invocation must return normally. The @scheme[async-apply] procedure
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itself is called in atomic mode (see @scheme[atomic?] above). If the
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callback is known to complete quickly, requires no synchronization,
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and works independent of the Racket thread in which it runs, then
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@scheme[async-apply] can apply the thunk directly. Otherwise,
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@racket[async-apply] must arrange for the thunk to be applied in a
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suitable Racket thread sometime after @racket[async-apply] itself
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returns; if the thunk raises an exception or synchronizes within an
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unsuitable Racket-level thread, it can deadlock or otherwise damage
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the Racket process. Foreign-thread detection to trigger
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@scheme[async-apply] works only when Racket is compiled with OS-level
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thread support, which is the default for many platforms. If a callback
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with an @scheme[async-apply] is called from foreign code in the same
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OS-level thread that runs Racket, then the @scheme[async-apply] wrapper is
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not used.
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If @scheme[save-errno] is @scheme['posix], then the value of
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@as-index{@tt{errno}} is saved (specific to the current thread)
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