As a practical matter EAGAIN is almost always related to running out of memory for the process. Often this has to do with the stack size allocated for the thread which you can adjust with pthread_attr_setstacksize()
. But there are process limits to how many threads you can run. You can query the hard and soft limits with getrlimit()
using RLIMIT_NPROC as the first parameter.
There are quite a few questions here dedicated to keeping track of threads, their number, whether they are dead or alive, etc. Simply put, the easiest way to keep track of them is to do it yourself through some mechanism you code, which can be as simple as incrementing and decrementing a global counter (protected by a mutex) or something more elaborate.
Open sockets or other file descriptors shouldn't cause pthread_create()
to fail. If you reached the maximum for descriptors you would have already failed before creating the new thread and the new thread would have already have had to be successfully created to open more of them and thus could not have failed with EAGAIN.