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Home/ Questions/Q 3215998
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T15:14:35+00:00 2026-05-17T15:14:35+00:00

While making an edit to a class with a long history, I was stymied

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While making an edit to a class with a long history, I was stymied by a particular habit of the architect of wrapping his va_start -> va_end sequence in a mutex. The changelog for that addition (which was made some 15 years ago, and not revised since) noted that it was because va_start et. all was not reentrant.

I was not aware of any such issues with va_start, as I always thought it was just a macro for some stack-pointer math. Is there something here I’m not aware of? I don’t want to change this code if there will be side-effects.

Specifically, the function in question looks a lot like this:

void write(const char *format, ...)
{
    mutex.Lock();
    va_list args;
    va_start(args, format);
    _write(format, args);
    va_end(args);
    mutex.Unlock();
}

This is called from multiple threads.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T15:14:36+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 3:14 pm

    As far as being serially-reentrant (ie., if foo() uses va_start is it safe for foo() to call bar() which also uses va_start), the answer is that’s fine – as long as the va_list instance isn’t the same. The standard says,

    Neither the va_start nor va_copy macro shall be invoked to reinitialize ap without an intervening invocation of the va_end macro for the same ap.

    So, you’re OK as long as a different va_list (referred to above as ap) is used.

    If by reentrant you mean thread-safe (which I assume you are, since mutexes are involved), you’ll need to look to the implementation for the specifics. Since the C standard doesn’t talk about multi-threading, this issue is really up to the implementation to ensure. I could imagine that it might be difficult to make va_start thread-safe on some oddball or small architectures, but I think if you’re working on a modern mainstream platform you’re likely to have no problems.

    On the more mainstream platforms as long as a different va_list argument is being passed to the va_start macro you should have no problem with multiple threads passing through the ‘same’ va_start. And since the va_list argument is typically on the stack (and therefore different threads will have different instances) you’re generally dealing with different instances of the va_list.

    I think that in your example, the mutexes are unnecessary for the varargs use. However, if the write(), it certainly would make sense for a write() call to be serialized so that you don’t have multiple write() threads screwing up each other’s output.

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