Will set @cancellable to cancelled, and will emit the
#GCancellable::cancelled signal. (However, see the warning about
race conditions in the documentation for that signal if you are
planning to connect to it.)
This function is thread-safe. In other words, you can safely call
it from a thread other than the one running the operation that was
passed the @cancellable.
If @cancellable is %NULL, this function returns immediately for convenience.
The convention within GIO is that cancelling an asynchronous
operation causes it to complete asynchronously. That is, if you
cancel the operation from the same thread in which it is running,
then the operation's #GAsyncReadyCallback will not be invoked until
the application returns to the main loop.
Will set @cancellable to cancelled, and will emit the #GCancellable::cancelled signal. (However, see the warning about race conditions in the documentation for that signal if you are planning to connect to it.)
This function is thread-safe. In other words, you can safely call it from a thread other than the one running the operation that was passed the @cancellable.
If @cancellable is %NULL, this function returns immediately for convenience.
The convention within GIO is that cancelling an asynchronous operation causes it to complete asynchronously. That is, if you cancel the operation from the same thread in which it is running, then the operation's #GAsyncReadyCallback will not be invoked until the application returns to the main loop.