up vote 0 down vote favorite
share [g+] share [fb]

I come into a strange problem in pthread programming I've compiled the following code in vs2005 with pthread-w32

#include <cstdio>
#include <cstdlib>
#include <ctime>
#include <pthread.h>
#include <windows.h>

pthread_mutex_t lock;

void* thread1(void *) {
  int r1;
  while(true) {
    pthread_mutex_lock(&lock); // rand is maybe a CS
    r1 = rand() % 1500;
    pthread_mutex_unlock(&lock);
    Sleep(r1); printf("1:%d\n", r1);
  }
  return NULL;
}

void* thread2(void *) {
  int r2;
  while(true) {
    pthread_mutex_lock(&lock);
    r2 = rand() % 1500;
    pthread_mutex_unlock(&lock);
    Sleep(r2); printf("2:%d\n", r2);
  }
  return NULL;
}

int main() {
  srand((int)time(NULL));
  pthread_mutex_init(&lock, NULL);

  pthread_t tc_p, tc_v;
  pthread_create(&tc_p, NULL, thread1, NULL);
  pthread_create(&tc_v, NULL, thread2, NULL);

  pthread_join(tc_p, NULL);
  pthread_join(tc_v, NULL);

  pthread_mutex_destroy(&lock);

    return 0;
}

and output is like this

2:41
1:41
1:467
2:467
1:334
2:334
1:1000
2:1000

it's just like that rand() is return the same result in every two calls and i have srand() but the result doesn't change each time i run the program

i'm very new to multi thread programming and i've heard about the rand() is not thread safe. but i still can't figure out if the program above is wrong or the rand() function has some problem in it.

link|improve this question

feedback

3 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

rand is only pseudo-random, and will return the same sequence each time. srand only works on the current thread, so calling it in your main thread won't affect your worker threads.

You need to call srand from within each thread, with a value that's different for each thread - for instance, within your thread1 and thread2 functions:

srand((int)time(NULL) ^ (int)pthread_getthreadid_np());
link|improve this answer
thanks a lot but I wonder why srand() only works on current thread? – lilo May 17 '09 at 6:23
probably uses thread-local storage - each thread will have its own copy of the random number seed – anon May 17 '09 at 6:31
feedback

Try using rand_s() instead, it is thread-safe. See here. Of course, it's not portable.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Related SO question: Is Windows’ rand_s thread-safe?

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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