Just adding this answer because I think the accepted answer might be misleading. In all cases you will need to lock the mutex, prior to calling notify_one() somewhere for your code to be thread-safe, although you might unlock it again before actually calling notify_*().
To clarify, you MUST take the lock before entering wait(lk) because wait() unlocks lk and it would be Undefined Behavior if the lock wasn't locked. This is not the case with notify_one(), but you need to make sure you won't call notify_*() before entering wait() and having that call unlock the mutex; which obviously only can be done by locking that same mutex before you call notify_*().
For example, consider the following case:
std::atomic_int count;
std::mutex cancel_mutex;
std::condition_variable cancel_cv;
void stop()
{
if (count.fetch_sub(1) == -999) // Reached -1000 ?
cv.notify_one();
}
bool start()
{
if (count.fetch_add(1) >= 0)
return true;
// Failure.
stop();
return false;
}
void cancel()
{
if (count.fetch_sub(1000) == 0) // Reached -1000?
return;
// Wait till count reached -1000.
std::unique_lock<std::mutex> lk(cancel_mutex);
cancel_cv.wait(lk);
}
Warning: this code contains a bug.
The idea is the following: threads call start() and stop() in pairs, but only as long as start() returned true. For example:
if (start())
{
// Do stuff
stop();
}
One (other) thread at some point will call cancel() and after returning from cancel() will destroy objects that are needed at 'Do stuff'. However, cancel() is supposed not to return while there are threads between start() and stop(), and once cancel() executed its first line, start() will always return false, so no new threads will enter the 'Do stuff' area.
Works right?
The reasoning is as follows:
1) If any thread successfully executes the first line of start() (and therefore will return true) then no thread did execute the first line of cancel() yet (we assume that the total number of threads is much smaller than 1000 by the way).
2) Also, while a thread successfully executed the first line of start(), but not yet the first line of stop() then it is impossible that any thread will successfully execute the first line of cancel() (note that only one thread ever calls cancel()): the value returned by fetch_sub(1000) will be larger than 0.
3) Once a thread executed the first line of cancel(), the first line of start() will always return false and a thread calling start() will not enter the 'Do stuff' area anymore.
4) The number of calls to start() and stop() are always balanced, so after the first line of cancel() is unsuccessfully executed, there will always be a moment where a (the last) call to stop() causes count to reach -1000 and therefore notify_one() to be called. Note that can only ever happen when the first line of cancel resulted in that thread to fall through.
Apart from a starvation problem where so many threads are calling start()/stop() that count never reaches -1000 and cancel() never returns, which one might accept as "unlikely and never lasting long", there is another bug:
It is possible that there is one thread inside the 'Do stuff' area, lets say it is just calling stop(); at that moment a thread executes the first line of cancel() reading the value 1 with the fetch_sub(1000) and falling through. But before it takes the mutex and/or does the call to wait(lk), the first thread executes the first line of stop(), reads -999 and calls cv.notify_one()!
Then this call to notify_one() is done BEFORE we are wait()-ing on the condition variable! And the program would indefinitely dead-lock.
For this reason we should not be able to call notify_one() until we called wait(). Note that the power of a condition variable lies there in that it is able to atomically unlock the mutex, check if a call to notify_one() happened and go to sleep or not. You can't fool it, but you do need to keep the mutex locked whenever you make changes to variables that might change the condition from false to true and keep it locked while calling notify_one() because of race conditions like described here.
In this example there is no condition however. Why didn't I use as condition 'count == -1000'? Because that isn't interesting at all here: as soon as -1000 is reached at all, we are sure that no new thread will enter the 'Do stuff' area. Moreover, threads can still call start() and will increment count (to -999 and -998 etc) but we don't care about that. The only thing that matters is that -1000 was reached - so that we know for sure that there are no threads anymore in the 'Do stuff' area. We are sure that this is the case when notify_one() is being called, but how to make sure we don't call notify_one() before cancel() locked its mutex? Just locking cancel_mutex shortly prior to notify_one() isn't going to help of course.
The problem is that, despite that we're not waiting for a condition, there still is a condition, and we need to lock the mutex
1) before that condition is reached
2) before we call notify_one.
The correct code therefore becomes:
void stop()
{
if (count.fetch_sub(1) == -999) // Reached -1000 ?
{
cancel_mutex.lock();
cancel_mutex.unlock();
cv.notify_one();
}
}
[...same start()...]
void cancel()
{
std::unique_lock<std::mutex> lk(cancel_mutex);
if (count.fetch_sub(1000) == 0)
return;
cancel_cv.wait(lk);
}
Of course this is just one example but other cases are very much alike; in almost all cases where you use a conditional variable you will need to have that mutex locked (shortly) before calling notify_one(), or else it is possible that you call it before calling wait().
Note that I unlocked the mutex prior to calling notify_one() in this case, because otherwise there is the (small) chance that the call to notify_one() wakes up the thread waiting for the condition variable which then will try to take the mutex and block, before we release the mutex again. That's just slightly slower than needed.
This example was kinda special in that the line that changes the condition is executed by the same thread that calls wait().
More usual is the case where one thread simply wait's for a condition to become true and another thread takes the lock before changing the variables involved in that condition (causing it to possibly become true). In that case the mutex is locked immediately before (and after) the condition became true - so it is totally ok to just unlock the mutex before calling notify_*() in that case.