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Home/ Questions/Q 3611712
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T21:54:34+00:00 2026-05-18T21:54:34+00:00

In a code review today, I stumbled across the following bit of code (slightly

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In a code review today, I stumbled across the following bit of code (slightly modified for posting):

while (!initialized)
{
  // The thread can start before the constructor has finished initializing the object.
  // Can lead to strange behavior. 
  continue;
}

This is the first few lines of code that runs in a new thread. In another thread, once initialization is complete, it sets initialized to true.

I know that the optimizer could turn this into an infinite loop, but what’s the best way to avoid that?

  • volatile – considered harmful
  • calling an isInitialized() function instead of using the variable directly – would this guarantee a memory barrier? What if the function was declared inline?

Are there other options?

Edit:

Should have mentioned this sooner, but this is portable code that needs to run on Windows, Linux, Solaris, etc. We use mostly use Boost.Thread for our portable threading library.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T21:54:35+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 9:54 pm

    Calling a function won’t help at all; even if a function is not declared inline, its body can still be inlined (barring something extreme, like putting your isInitialized() function in another library and dynamically linking against it).

    Two options that come to mind:

    • Declare initialized as an atomic flag (in C++0x, you can use std::atomic_flag; otherwise, you’ll want to consult the documentation for your threading library for how to do this)

    • Use a semaphore; acquire it in the other thread and wait for it in this thread.

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