Ravi Chandra
Ravi Chandra

Reputation: 1869

How to get thread id of a pthread in linux c program?

In a Linux C program, how do I print the thread id of a thread created by the pthread library? For example like how we can get pid of a process by getpid().

Upvotes: 134

Views: 376977

Answers (12)

Evan Langlois
Evan Langlois

Reputation: 4353

What? The person asked for Linux specific, and the equivalent of getpid(). Not BSD or Apple. The answer is gettid() and returns an integral type.

#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/types.h>

....

pid_t tid = gettid();

While this may not be portable to non-linux systems, the threadid is directly comparable and very fast to acquire. It can be printed (such as for LOGs) like a normal integer.

Upvotes: 142

Jianyong Wu
Jianyong Wu

Reputation: 49

For different OS there is different answer. I find a helper here.

You can try this:

#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/syscall.h>

int get_thread_id() {
#if defined(__linux__)
    return syscall(SYS_gettid);
#elif defined(__FreeBSD__)
    long tid;
    thr_self(&tid);
    return (int)tid;
#elif defined(__NetBSD__)
    return _lwp_self();
#elif defined(__OpenBSD__)
    return getthrid();
#else
    return getpid();
#endif
}

Upvotes: 4

Pranav Kumar
Pranav Kumar

Reputation: 93

You can also write in this manner and it does the same. For eg:

for(int i=0;i < total; i++)
{
    pthread_join(pth[i],NULL);
    cout << "SUM of thread id " << pth[i] << " is " << args[i].sum << endl;
}

This program sets up an array of pthread_t and calculate sum on each. So it is printing the sum of each thread with thread id.

Upvotes: -6

I think not only is the question not clear but most people also are not cognizant of the difference. Examine the following saying,

POSIX thread IDs are not the same as the thread IDs returned by the Linux specific gettid() system call. POSIX thread IDs are assigned and maintained by the threading implementation. The thread ID returned by gettid() is a number (similar to a process ID) that is assigned by the kernel. Although each POSIX thread has a unique kernel thread ID in the Linux NPTL threading implementation, an application generally doesn’t need to know about the kernel IDs (and won’t be portable if it depends on knowing them).

Excerpted from: The Linux Programming Interface: A Linux and UNIX System Programming Handbook, Michael Kerrisk

IMHO, there is only one portable way that pass a structure in which define a variable holding numbers in an ascending manner e.g. 1,2,3... to per thread. By doing this, threads' id can be kept track. Nonetheless, int pthread_equal(tid1, tid2) function should be used.

if (pthread_equal(tid1, tid2)) printf("Thread 2 is same as thread 1.\n");
else printf("Thread 2 is NOT same as thread 1.\n");

Upvotes: 7

Oleg Oleg
Oleg Oleg

Reputation: 585

Platform-independent way (starting from c++11) is:

#include <thread>

std::this_thread::get_id();

Upvotes: -3

emre can
emre can

Reputation: 358

There is also another way of getting thread id. While creating threads with

int pthread_create(pthread_t * thread, const pthread_attr_t * attr, void * (*start_routine)(void *), void *arg);

function call; the first parameter pthread_t * thread is actually a thread id (that is an unsigned long int defined in bits/pthreadtypes.h). Also, the last argument void *arg is the argument that is passed to void * (*start_routine) function to be threaded.

You can create a structure to pass multiple arguments and send a pointer to a structure.

typedef struct thread_info {
    pthread_t thread;
    //...
} thread_info;
//...
tinfo = malloc(sizeof(thread_info) * NUMBER_OF_THREADS);
//...
pthread_create (&tinfo[i].thread, NULL, handler, (void*)&tinfo[i]);
//...
void *handler(void *targs) {
    thread_info *tinfo = targs;
    // here you get the thread id with tinfo->thread
}

Upvotes: 1

Weiqi Gu
Weiqi Gu

Reputation: 181

pid_t tid = syscall(SYS_gettid);

Linux provides such system call to allow you get id of a thread.

Upvotes: 18

bleater
bleater

Reputation: 5499

As noted in other answers, pthreads does not define a platform-independent way to retrieve an integral thread ID.

On Linux systems, you can get thread ID thus:

#include <sys/types.h>
pid_t tid = gettid();

On many BSD-based platforms, this answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/21206357/316487 gives a non-portable way.

However, if the reason you think you need a thread ID is to know whether you're running on the same or different thread to another thread you control, you might find some utility in this approach

static pthread_t threadA;

// On thread A...
threadA = pthread_self();

// On thread B...
pthread_t threadB = pthread_self();
if (pthread_equal(threadA, threadB)) printf("Thread B is same as thread A.\n");
else printf("Thread B is NOT same as thread A.\n");

If you just need to know if you're on the main thread, there are additional ways, documented in answers to this question how can I tell if pthread_self is the main (first) thread in the process?.

Upvotes: 32

user2074102
user2074102

Reputation:

pthread_getthreadid_np wasn't on my Mac os x. pthread_t is an opaque type. Don't beat your head over it. Just assign it to void* and call it good. If you need to printf use %p.

Upvotes: 3

Jeff
Jeff

Reputation: 394

You can use pthread_self()

The parent gets to know the thread id after the pthread_create() is executed sucessfully, but while executing the thread if we want to access the thread id we have to use the function pthread_self().

Upvotes: 10

nandan
nandan

Reputation: 133

This single line gives you pid , each threadid and spid.

 printf("before calling pthread_create getpid: %d getpthread_self: %lu tid:%lu\n",getpid(), pthread_self(), syscall(SYS_gettid));

Upvotes: 9

Abhitesh khatri
Abhitesh khatri

Reputation: 3057

pthread_self() function will give the thread id of current thread.

pthread_t pthread_self(void);

The pthread_self() function returns the Pthread handle of the calling thread. The pthread_self() function does NOT return the integral thread of the calling thread. You must use pthread_getthreadid_np() to return an integral identifier for the thread.

NOTE:

pthread_id_np_t   tid;
tid = pthread_getthreadid_np();

is significantly faster than these calls, but provides the same behavior.

pthread_id_np_t   tid;
pthread_t         self;
self = pthread_self();
pthread_getunique_np(&self, &tid);

Upvotes: 114

Related Questions