std:: mutex
|
|
Member functions | ||||
Locking | ||||
Native handle | ||||
Defined in header
<mutex>
|
||
class
mutex
;
|
(since C++11) | |
The
mutex
class is a synchronization primitive that can be used to protect shared data from being simultaneously accessed by multiple threads.
mutex
offers exclusive, non-recursive ownership semantics:
-
A calling thread
owns
a
mutex
from the time that it successfully calls eitherlock
ortry_lock
until it callsunlock
. -
When a thread owns a
mutex
, all other threads will block (for calls tolock
) or receive a false return value (fortry_lock
) if they attempt to claim ownership of themutex
. -
A calling thread must not own the
mutex
prior to callinglock
ortry_lock
.
The behavior of a program is undefined if a
mutex
is destroyed while still owned by any threads, or a thread terminates while owning a
mutex
. The
mutex
class satisfies all requirements of
Mutex
and
StandardLayoutType
.
std::mutex
is neither copyable nor movable.
Nested types
Name | Definition |
native_handle_type
(
optional*
)
|
implementation-defined |
Member functions
constructs the mutex
(public member function) |
|
destroys the mutex
(public member function) |
|
operator=
[deleted]
|
not copy-assignable
(public member function) |
Locking |
|
locks the mutex, blocks if the mutex is not available
(public member function) |
|
tries to lock the mutex, returns if the mutex is not available
(public member function) |
|
unlocks the mutex
(public member function) |
|
Native handle |
|
returns the underlying implementation-defined native handle object
(public member function) |
Notes
std::mutex
is usually not accessed directly:
std::unique_lock
,
std::lock_guard
,
or
std::scoped_lock
(since C++17)
manage locking in a more exception-safe manner.
Example
This example shows how a
mutex
can be used to protect an
std::map
shared between two threads.
#include <chrono> #include <iostream> #include <map> #include <mutex> #include <string> #include <thread> std::map<std::string, std::string> g_pages; std::mutex g_pages_mutex; void save_page(const std::string& url) { // simulate a long page fetch std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::seconds(2)); std::string result = "fake content"; std::lock_guard<std::mutex> guard(g_pages_mutex); g_pages[url] = result; } int main() { std::thread t1(save_page, "http://foo"); std::thread t2(save_page, "http://bar"); t1.join(); t2.join(); // safe to access g_pages without lock now, as the threads are joined for (const auto& [url, page] : g_pages) std::cout << url << " => " << page << '\n'; }
Output:
http://bar => fake content http://foo => fake content
See also
(C++11)
|
provides mutual exclusion facility which can be locked recursively by the same thread
(class) |
(C++11)
|
implements a strictly scope-based mutex ownership wrapper
(class template) |
(C++11)
|
implements movable mutex ownership wrapper
(class template) |
(C++17)
|
deadlock-avoiding RAII wrapper for multiple mutexes
(class template) |
(C++11)
|
provides a condition variable associated with a
std::unique_lock
(class) |