I use the command below to view the maximum number of threads my system allows:
# cat /proc/sys/kernel/threads-max
And the number is 772432.
However, I use the code below to create 1 million threads. And it works.
#include <pthread.h>
#include <stdio.h>
static unsigned long long thread_nr = 0;
pthread_mutex_t mutex_;
void* inc_thread_nr(void* arg) {
/* int arr[1024][1024]; */
(void*)arg;
pthread_mutex_lock(&mutex_);
thread_nr ++;
pthread_mutex_unlock(&mutex_);
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
int err;
int cnt = 0;
pthread_mutex_init(&mutex_, NULL);
while (cnt < 1000000) {
pthread_t pid;
err = pthread_create(&pid, NULL, (void*)inc_thread_nr, NULL);
if (err != 0) {
break;
}
pthread_join(pid, NULL);
cnt++;
}
pthread_mutex_destroy(&mutex_);
printf("Maximum number of threads per process is = %d
", thread_nr);
}
The output is :
Maximum number of threads per process is = 1000000
which is larger than the maximum number of threads. What is the reason for this? And is the thread create by pthread_create
the same with the kernel thread?
My OS is Fedora 16, with 12 cores, 48G RAM.
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