To use errno in multithread application this reference http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/cerrno/errno/ indicates that it should be locally implemented in every thread. What does that mean?
3 Answers
errno
should be thread-local
. In each thread
value of this variable can be different.
that it should be locally implemented in every thread
It's not your duty to implement errno
as thread_local
variable. It's work for compiler developers.
From cppreference.com
errno is a preprocessor macro used for error indication. It expands to a thread-local modifiable lvalue of type int. (since C++11)
Simply in C++11 compilers this code should never assert
#include <iostream>
#include <cerrno>
#include <thread>
#include <cassert>
int g_errno = 0;
void thread_function()
{
errno = E2BIG;
g_errno = errno;
}
int main()
{
errno = EINVAL;
std::thread thread(thread_function);
thread.join();
assert(errno != g_errno && "not multithreaded");
}
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My problem is how to do this? the usual procedure is to include the header #include <errno.h> and use directly errno. How to make it local? Jul 12, 2013 at 9:58
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tha above reference said that: "Libraries that support multi-threading shall implement errno in a per-thread basis: With each thread having its own local errno". At the implementation level How does it look like? Jul 12, 2013 at 10:06
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@WildThing from C++ standard: A separate errno value shall be provided for each thread. "Libraries" means implementations really.– ForEveRJul 12, 2013 at 10:07
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So i include errno.h and use errno in my class that implements multithreading without any other modification? Jul 12, 2013 at 10:18
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@WildThing exactly. It you use C++11 compiler, where this feature is implemented.– ForEveRJul 12, 2013 at 10:19
Historically, errno
was a common variable of type int
-- i.e. every module brought its own definition, and the linker was responsible for merging them. So programs simply stated int errno;
globally and had a working definition.
This breaks down in multithreaded environments, because there is only a single variable. Thus, errno.h
now needs to define something that is an lvalue int
, and programs should not define their own errno
.
The GNU C library for example defines something similar to
#define errno (*(__errno_location()))
where __errno_location()
is an inline function that calculates the address of the thread-local errno
.
All of this is of no concern to the application, except that it is an error to define your own errno
.
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Was it really a common variable? I thought it was an external variable defined in libc. Jul 12, 2013 at 10:43
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@Maxim, yes --
extern int errno;
also works because that can also be used to refer to a common definition. Initializing withint errno = 0;
fails to link, however. Jul 12, 2013 at 10:51
It means that each thread should have its own instance of the errno
variable
The implementation can easily achieve this by using something like:
int __thread errno;
__thread
being a gcc extension that ensures the variable is thread local (so one thread cannot overwrite another threads instance of the variable)
As a user of errno, you don't need to worry about this. You don't even need to worry that errno may have been pre-emptively changed by another thread.