I have a std::map that I use to map values (field ID's) to a human readable string. This map is initialised once when my program starts before any other threads are started, and after that it is never modified again. Right now, I give every thread its own copy of this (rather large) map but this is obviously inefficient use of memory and it slows program startup. So I was thinking of giving each thread a pointer to the map, but that raises a thread-safety issue.
If all I'm doing is reading from the map using the following code:
std::string name;
//here N is the field id for which I want the human readable name
unsigned field_id = N;
std::map<unsigned,std::string>::const_iterator map_it;
// fields_p is a const std::map<unsigned, std::string>* to the map concerned.
// multiple threads will share this.
map_it = fields_p->find(field_id);
if (map_it != fields_p->end())
{
name = map_it->second;
}
else
{
name = "";
}
Will this work or are there issues with reading a std::map from multiple threads?
Note: I'm working with visual studio 2008 currently, but I'd like this to work acros most main STL implementations.
Update: Edited code sample for const correctness.
See Question&Answers more detail:
os 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…