-pthread
tells the compiler to link in the pthread library as well as configure the compilation for threads.
For example, the following shows the macros that get defined when the -pthread
option gets used on the GCC package installed on my Ubuntu machine:
$ gcc -pthread -E -dM test.c > dm.pthread.txt
$ gcc -E -dM test.c > dm.nopthread.txt
$ diff dm.pthread.txt dm.nopthread.txt
152d151
< #define _REENTRANT 1
208d206
< #define __USE_REENTRANT 1
Using the -lpthread
option only causes the pthread library to be linked - the pre-defined macros don't get defined.
Bottom line: you should use the -pthread
option.
Note: the -pthread
option is documented as a platform specific option in the GCC docs, so it might not always be available. However, it is available on platforms that the GCC docs don't explicitly list it for (such as i386 and x86-64) - you should use it when available.
Also note that other similar options have been used by GCC, such as -pthreads
(listed as a synonym for -pthread
on Solaris 2) and -mthread
(for MinGW-specific thread support on i386 and x86-64 Windows). My understanding is that GCC is trying to move to using -pthread
uniformly going forward.
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