Taking a look at the manual page on MacOS X 10.6.6, it documents two functions, atof()
and atof_l()
, and I suspect that gives a hint as to why the function is deemed not thread-safe:
SYNOPSIS
#include <stdlib.h>
double atof(const char *str);
#include <xlocale.h>
double atof_l(const char *str, locale_t loc);
DESCRIPTION
The atof()
function converts the initial portion of the string pointed to by str to double representation.
It is equivalent to:
strtod(str, (char **)NULL);
The decimal point character is defined in the program's locale (category LC_NUMERIC).
While the atof()
function uses the current locale, the atof_l()
function may be passed a locale directly. See xlocale(3) for more information.
IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
The atof()
function is not thread-safe and also not async-cancel-safe.
The atof()
function has been deprecated by strtod()
and should not be used in new code.
ERRORS
The function atof()
need not affect the value of errno
on an error.
My suspicion is that if the current locale is changed by another thread while the atof()
function is executing, the result is not guaranteed. Otherwise, there seems to be no reason for the warning.
I've poked around for a definitive location of the Darwin C library source code, but have not found one. If you go to the FreeBSD source code for atoi()
, it is clear that the function implementation is trivial:
int
atoi(str)
const char *str;
{
return (int)strtol(str, (char **)NULL, 10);
}
(Yes, not even using a prototyped definition!)
The man page for strtol()
does not have the weasel wording about thread safety or async-cancel safety. However, a quick look at the source code for strtol()
shows that it uses isspace()
, which is affected by locale:
ISO/IEC 9899:1999, Section 7.11.1.1 The setlocale function
187 The only functions in 7.4 whose behavior is not affected by the current locale are isdigit and isxdigit.
(Where §7.4 is for <ctype.h>
.)
Now, while I'm not sure that this code is identical to what's in Darwin (MacOS X), it is likely to be similar. I think that there could be room for errata in the man pages - it is not so clear whether the page that needs correction is the one for atoi()
or the one for strtol()
.
setlocale
results in undefined behavior, but this is considered separate (by POSIX) from those functions being thread-safe or not. Basically you cannot usesetlocale
except before creating any threads or under extreme synchronization. This is whyuselocale
etc. were introduced in POSIX 2008.