9

I have just started an Operating System course and currently we are learning multi-threading, so I am new to all this.

Here is my question: Whenever we create a thread using pthread_create(), why do we need to pass the arguments of the function we want our thread to run in type void*?

For example, consider the following code.

void *test(void* data)
{
   ...
}

int main()
{
      int temp;
      pthread_t tid;
      pthread_attr_t attr;
   
      pthread_attr_init(&attr);
      pthread_create(&tid, &attr, test, (void*)&temp);
}

So, here in,

pthread_create(&tid, &attr, test, (void*)&temp);

why do we need to type cast the integer to void*. Why not just pass integer as is? And similarly, instead of

void* test(void* data);

why not this,

void* test(int data);
3
  • 4
    Think of how pthread_create could be declared. How would you declare it for all types in a way which would also work in C? Jan 27, 2016 at 14:50
  • 2
    what if you want to pass in two ints, or any other combination of whatever? Jan 27, 2016 at 14:51
  • 3
    pthreads are a C api. There is no overloading, no templates, etc. There has to be one fixed interface, that can allow for all kinds of functions to be called. When you use a C++ thread, you really do pass the arguments as their real types.
    – BoBTFish
    Jan 27, 2016 at 14:51

1 Answer 1

8

First off, pthread_create() is a C function, not C++, so all the things C++ could do at this point -- e.g. something using templates -- is not possible. C programs want to start threads as well.

(Actually newer versions of C++ have their own threading interface.)

So, C.

The idea is to have a generic interface, so you can pass anything to any function to be called by pthread_create(), and return anything as well.

You can't pass-by-value, because you don't know the size of the argument. Is it int, double, or struct something? So you need to pass by pointer.

And since you don't know the type of the argument (and return value) either, you use void *, the "anonymous" pointer type. Inside the called thread function (test() in this case), you do know the type of the argument and return value, so you can cast from and to void * as appropriate.

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    @MuzahirHussain: It's a basic concept of C, really. Whenever you see void *, it means "generic something". Ref. memcpy(), qsort(), bsearch(). Once you realize that, void * will never confuse you again. Just, don't use void * in C++, it's basically always a design flaw.
    – DevSolar
    Jan 27, 2016 at 15:08
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    This sounds reasonable. However, printf() shows that in C you can actually pass a variable number of arguments to a function without restricting size, type or number. So, why not pthread_create(pthread_t*, pthrad_attr_t*, ...) ? I believe the actual reason is that POSIX is intentionally simple.
    – MSalters
    Jan 27, 2016 at 15:10
  • @MSalters: Varargs are solving a different problem, that of a variable-length argument list. We know the exact number of arguments here, we just don't know their exact type. Besides, you would still need to pull them off the stack as void *, because there is nothing to tell you what type actually "hides" behind it (no printf()-style format string). You would have won nothing, and added a possible error cause (too few / wrong type of arguments)
    – DevSolar
    Jan 27, 2016 at 15:11
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    @DevSolar: Why would I need to pull them from the stack as void*? pthread_create needs to create a stack for me anyway. It could just copy the whole vararg list to that new stack, so my thread entry function can retrieve them using the normal vararg mechanism. Remember that in pthread_create the caller controls both sides. I know what I pass.
    – MSalters
    Jan 27, 2016 at 15:17
  • @MSalters: Ah... think-o. Mentally dropped the "caller controls both sides" ball there for a minute. Yes, perhaps varargs might have been a solution as well -- but only for the arguments, not the return value.
    – DevSolar
    Jan 27, 2016 at 15:22

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