I want to store a collection of threads in a vector, and join them all before exiting my program. I receive the following error when trying to join the first thread no matter how many I place in the collection:
system_error: thread::join failed: No such process
Here is some simple code that demonstrates my issue:
#include <thread>
#include <iostream>
#include <vector>
#include <functional>
using std::cout;
using std::endl;
using std::vector;
using std::thread;
using std::mem_fn;
int main()
{
vector<thread> threads(1);
threads.push_back(thread([]{ cout << "Hello" << endl; }));
for_each(threads.begin(), threads.end(), mem_fn(&thread::join));
// also tried --> for(thread &t : threads) t.join()
}
And I'm building it using the following (tried clang++ 4.2.1 and g++ 5.3.1):
g++ -o src/thread_test.o -c -std=c++14 src/thread_test.cpp -pthread
g++ -o thread_test src/thread_test.o -pthread
I see lots of examples doing just this around the internet. Did something change in the contract of <thread>
or <vector>
that's rendered these examples defunct?
NOTE: As an aside for future readers, I ended up adding the (1) constructor argument after trying {}
assignment, which fails due to a private copy constructor. In trying to avoid the copy constructor I ended up allocating uninitialized threads -- careless mistake.
-pthread
compiler flags for both compiling and linking stage, rather than linking-lpthread
.-lpthread
is a direct request to the linker whereas-pthread
is an option interpreted by the compiler driver. If you use-pthread
consistently at both compile and link time, that gives the compiler driver the opportunity to do anything else that may be required, besides linking in libpthread, to make a multithread-capable program. That said, I haven't tripped over a system where anything else was actually necessary in many years.<thread>
for our platform.