What does boost::thread sleep() do?

user240137 picture user240137 · Dec 29, 2009 · Viewed 37.3k times · Source

I am currently working on a small wrapper class for boost thread but I dont really get how the sleep function works, this is what I have got so far:

BaseThread::BaseThread(){
    thread = boost::thread();
    bIsActive = true;
}

BaseThread::~BaseThread(){
    join();
}

void BaseThread::join(){
    thread.join();
}

void BaseThread::sleep(uint32 _msecs){
    if(bIsActive)
        boost::this_thread::sleep(boost::posix_time::milliseconds(_msecs));
}

This is how I implemented it so far but I dont really understand how the static this_thread::sleep method knows which thread to sleep if for example multiple instances of my thread wrapper are active. Is this the right way to implement it?

Answer

Klaim picture Klaim · Dec 29, 2009

boost::this_thread::sleep will sleep the current thread. Only the thread itself can get to sleep. If you want to make a thread sleep, add some check code in the thread or use interruptions.

UPDATE: if you use a c++11 compiler with the up to date standard library, you'll have access to std::this_thread::sleep_for and std::this_thread::sleep_until functions. However, there is no standard interruption mechanism.