_Atomic
(
type-name )
(1) (since C11) _Atomic
type-name (2) (since C11)
1) Use as a type specifier; this designates a new atomic type
2)Use as a type qualifier; this designates the atomic version of
type-name. In this role, it may be mixed with
const
,
volatile
, and
restrict
, although unlike other qualifiers, the atomic version of
type-namemay have a different size, alignment, and object representation.
type-name - any type other than array or function. For (1), type-name also cannot be atomic or cvr-qualifiedThe header <stdatomic.h> defines many convenience type aliases, from atomic_bool to atomic_uintmax_t, which simplify the use of this keyword with built-in and library types.
_Atomic const int* p1; // p is a pointer to an atomic const int const atomic_int* p2; // same const _Atomic(int)* p3; // same
If the macro constant __STDC_NO_ATOMICS__ is defined by the compiler, the keyword _Atomic is not provided.
[edit] ExplanationObjects of atomic types are the only objects that are free from data races; that is, they may be modified by two threads concurrently or modified by one and read by another.
Each atomic object has its own associated modification order, which is a total order of modifications made to that object. If, from some thread's point of view, modification A
of some atomic M
happens-before modification B
of the same atomic M
, then in the modification order of M
, A
occurs before B
.
Note that although each atomic object has its own modification order, there is no single total order; different threads may observe modifications to different atomic objects in different orders.
There are four coherence kinds that are guaranteed for all atomic operations:
A
that modifies an atomic object M
happens-before an operation B
that modifies M
, then A
appears earlier than B
in the modification order of M
.A
of an atomic object M
happens before a value computation B
of M
, and A
takes its value from a side effect X
on M
, then the value computed by B
is either the value stored by X
or is the value stored by a side effect Y
on M
, where Y
appears later than X
in the modification order of M
.A
of an atomic object M
happens-before an operation B
on M
, then A
takes its value from a side effect X
on M
, where X
appears before B
in the modification order of M
.X
on an atomic object M
happens-before a value computation B
of M
, then the evaluation B
takes its value from X
or from a side effect Y
that appears after X
in the modification order of M
.Some atomic operations are also synchronization operations; they may have additional release semantics, acquire semantics, or sequentially-consistent semantics. See memory_order.
Built-in increment and decrement operators and compound assignment are read-modify-write atomic operations with total sequentially consistent ordering (as if using memory_order_seq_cst). If less strict synchronization semantics are desired, the standard library functions may be used instead.
Atomic properties are only meaningful for lvalue expressions. Lvalue-to-rvalue conversion (which models a memory read from an atomic location to a CPU register) strips atomicity along with other qualifiers.
[edit] NotesAccessing a member of an atomic struct/union is undefined behavior.
The library type sig_atomic_t does not provide inter-thread synchronization or memory ordering, only atomicity.
The volatile
types do not provide inter-thread synchronization, memory ordering, or atomicity.
Implementations are recommended to ensure that the representation of _Atomic(T) in C is same as that of std::atomic<T> in C++ for every possible type T
. The mechanisms used to ensure atomicity and memory ordering should be compatible.
#include <stdatomic.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <threads.h> atomic_int acnt; int cnt; int f(void* thr_data) { for (int n = 0; n < 1000; ++n) { ++cnt; ++acnt; // for this example, relaxed memory order is sufficient, e.g. // atomic_fetch_add_explicit(&acnt, 1, memory_order_relaxed); } return 0; } int main(void) { thrd_t thr[10]; for (int n = 0; n < 10; ++n) thrd_create(&thr[n], f, NULL); for (int n = 0; n < 10; ++n) thrd_join(thr[n], NULL); printf("The atomic counter is %u\n", acnt); printf("The non-atomic counter is %u\n", cnt); }
Possible output:
The atomic counter is 10000 The non-atomic counter is 8644[edit] References
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