I am currently trying to create a very simple thread pool using std::thread.
In order to maintain threads ‘alive’ after their given task is done, I associate a std::mutex with each one of them.
The principle is somewhat like this:
// Thread loop
while (1)
{
m_oMutex->lock();
m_oMutex->unlock();
m_bAvailable = false;
m_oTask();
m_bAvailable = true;
}
// ThreadPool function which gives a task to a thread
void runTask(boost::function<void ()> oTask)
{
[...]
m_oThreads[i]->setTask(oTask);
m_oMutexes[i]->unlock(); // same mutex as thread's m_oMutex
m_oMutexes[i]->lock();
}
To find the i, the ThreadPool searches for a thread object with m_bAvailable set to true. It unlocks the corresponding mutex so the thread can lock it and execute its task. The thread unlocks it immediately so the ThreadPool can lock it again so the thread is halted once its task is done.
But the question is, will locks be made in the order the threads ask them? In other words, if a thread does a lock on a mutex, then the ThreadPool unlocks it and locks it again, am I sure that the lock will be given to the thread first? If not, is there a way to ensure it?
No, you cannot guarantee that your thread loop will ever acquire the lock with your example as is. Use a conditional variable to signal to the thread loop that it should awake and take the lock. See
std::condition_variable::wait(...).condition-variable
More on this topic in general can be found here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Condition_variable. If you were using the pthread library, the equivalent call would be
pthread_cond_waitin your “Thread loop” andpthread_cond_signalin your runTask function.