Does anyone know? And a bigger question is what happens when you encounter this maximum? Is this the same number with other Windows OSs such as Vista, XP etc.?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
First I would advise reading this: http://blogs.msdn.com/oldnewthing/archive/2007/03/01/1775759.aspx then http://blogs.msdn.com/oldnewthing/archive/2005/07/29/444912.aspx To summarise, the limitation is normally stack space (which must be in contiguous blocks) and since every thread consumes this scattered about you rapidly run out of contiguous blocks. On 64 bit machines and operating systems this is much less of a problem. Mitigation strategies exist but will only go so far (and rely on you not using much stack per thread) As a rough guide:
You likely shouldn't need to create more than ten anyway (and if you really do need to you should know this information already) |
|||
|
|
|
|
The best answer I've heard when asking such questions is:
|
||
|
|
|
Note that you should examine your design closely if you are concerned about hitting this limit!!!!!!!! The answer to your "More Important Question" of what happens is OutOfMemoryException. Not exactly a direct answer, but here's some code to find out the limit. It could be available memory dependent though. Would be interested in seeing other OS/cpu/mem results. Feel free to edit and add your machine in:
|
||||||
|
|
|
As far as I understand the whole threading model it should not have changed much since Win2K. There is no real limit of threads per se, but more a limit of the processes stack-space. See an in-depth explanation of threading limits from Raymond Chen for more details on this. |
||
|
|
|
Im guessing its not the number of threads, but the memory usage that is the limiting factor. |
||
|
|
|
|
Do read the Raymond Chen blog postings that ShuggyCoUk's answer pointed to. But pay special attention to this bit:
|
||
|
|
