1

When I try to destroy mutex via pthread_mutex_destroy(&mutex), it intermittently fails.

I am doing an assert if the pthread_mutex_destroy fails. But do we have a better option compared to assert (apart from raising exception)?

EDIT:

void cleanUp()
{
  int rval=0;
  rval = pthread_cond_destroy(&m_Condition);
  assert(rval == 0);
  rval = pthread_mutex_destroy(&m_Mutex);
  assert(rval == 0);
  rval = pthread_mutexattr_destroy(&m_Attr);
  assert(rval == 0);
}

EDIT 2:

void semaphoreVMware::semaphoreVMware()
{
int rval = 0;
rval = pthread_mutexattr_init(&m_Attr);
assert(rval == 0);
rval = pthread_mutexattr_settype(&m_Attr, PTHREAD_MUTEX_RECURSIVE);
assert(rval == 0);
rval = pthread_mutex_init(&m_Mutex, &m_Attr);
assert(rval == 0);
rval = pthread_cond_init(&m_Condition, NULL);
assert(rval == 0);
}

EDIT 3:Declaration of the mutex:

env::Mutex m_Mutex;
7
  • do you know why it is failing? Dec 10, 2013 at 6:36
  • Can you please post some sample code? Can't you check the return value and take an action instead of throwing an assert? Dec 10, 2013 at 6:37
  • @ServerMonkey almost all of the errors from pthread_mutex_destroy are programming errors, with the exception of resource limitation, which should not be intermittent. It would be better to fix the problems so that the errors do not occur. Dec 10, 2013 at 6:41
  • Hello,Thanks for your reply.Actually the cleanup code which i have posted gets called whenever we stop our service.The scenario is starting and stopping of the service and this we doing in a loop.When we do these iteration,pthread_mutex_destroy() returns non-zero value very intermittently and hence assert hits and then aborts the program and coredumps.This abortion is irregular.
    – Ravikanth
    Dec 10, 2013 at 6:56
  • 1
    You should really add error checking and logging to the pthread calls. This would at least shed light on what is happening and you do not need to dig around in the dark, guessing what might have happend ...
    – alk
    Dec 10, 2013 at 11:24

1 Answer 1

4

According to man pthread_mutex_destroy there is only one error that can occur. That is that at destruction time the mutex is still locked. Thus you probably don't unlock your mutex before trying to destroy/free it.

from man 3 pthread_mutex_destroy:

   The pthread_mutex_destroy function returns the following error code on error:

          EBUSY  the mutex is currently locked.

If you destroy the mutex you should check whether the return value is EBUSY (you might have to #include <errno.h>).

So what you do now is you have void cleanUp() you could make it return an int and try again when pthread_mutex_destroy fails. however you do have three functions that can fail in one function, thus in this case it might be wiser to break the function to different parts.

edit What I'm telling above can help one to the question you orininally asked. But after quite some comments on this answere there is more than meets the eye. It seems you are mixing the Pthreads API with C++ style mutex systems. Because you are mixing them you get in troubles. Stick to either the C++ mutex/thread API or the pthread api, probably your C++ API is a wrapper around the pthread API, and therefore you'll get very strange results.

30
  • Tis issue is typical of the messes that multithreaded devs. get into when trying to shut down complex, multithreaded code in a 'clean' manner. On many OS, it's better to not try. Dec 10, 2013 at 9:21
  • @MartinJames An other issue is that it seems that the OP puts the mutexes on the stack, not allocating them dynamically. But he doesn't show that part of the code. Dec 10, 2013 at 9:25
  • @MartinJames: Besides I feel not to do a "clean" shutdown is bad advice, I wonder what the OS has got to do with this?
    – alk
    Dec 10, 2013 at 9:46
  • @alk - it's bad advice on some of the more primitive OS that posix may run on. On others, the cost of attempting a 'clean' shutdown, both in terms of time, CPU-use, bugs in avoidable shutdown-code like this appears to be, extra testing of shutdown code etc. is very high. A complex, multithreaded app is very difficult to shut down cleanly unless you are an OS - user code does not have the tools to always do it reliably. Sometimes, you have to pay the high cost of clean shutdowns, but I try very hard to not pay it if I can avoid it. Dec 10, 2013 at 10:03
  • 1
    @Ravikanth Are you sure the mutex is actually a pthread_mutex_t you seem to be mixing C++ and C. Since C++ std::Mutex in C++11 might be a wrapper around phtread_mutex_t, you are in trouble if you start mixing them. Dec 10, 2013 at 13:46

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.