I'm implementing a message passing algorithm. The messages propagate through the nodes of the graph, blocking until they have have received enough information (from other neighbours) to send a message.
The algorithm is easy to write if I put each message in its own thread and use a boost::condition to pause the thread until all the required information is available. I create many thousands of threads, but mostly only a few are active at any time. This seems to work pretty well.
My problem is, when unit testing I find that if I create more than about 32705 threads, I get
unknown location(0): fatal error in "Tree_test": std::exception: boost::thread_resource_error
and I don't know what causes this, or how to fix it.
There seems to be pleanty of memory available (Each thread only holds two pointers - the objects that the message passes between).
From this question: Maximum number of threads per process in Linux? I think the following information is relevent (although I don't really know what any of it means...)
~> cat /proc/sys/kernel/threads-max
1000000
(I increased this from 60120 - do I need to restart?)
~>ulimit -a
core file size (blocks, -c) 0
data seg size (kbytes, -d) unlimited
scheduling priority (-e) 20
file size (blocks, -f) unlimited
pending signals (-i) 16382
max locked memory (kbytes, -l) 64
max memory size (kbytes, -m) unlimited
open files (-n) 1024
pipe size (512 bytes, -p) 8
POSIX message queues (bytes, -q) 819200
real-time priority (-r) 0
stack size (kbytes, -s) 8192
cpu time (seconds, -t) unlimited
max user processes (-u) unlimited
virtual memory (kbytes, -v) unlimited
file locks (-x) unlimited
I tried fiddling with the pending signals (my limit is very close to 2* that number)
and stack size with ulimit -S -i 8191
- (I couldn't increase it) but these changes seemed to make no effect at all)
I'm on a 64 bit Ubuntu-10-10 if that helps...