37

Which is preferred boost::lock_guard or boost::mutex::scoped_lock?

I'm using Boost.Thread with the hope to move to C++11 threading when it becomes available.

Is scoped_lock part of the next c++ standard?

Are the any advantages to prefer one over the other?


NOTE: I'm aware that scoped_lock is just a typedef of lock_guard.


edit: I was wrong scoped_lock is not a typedef of lock_guard. It's a typedef of unique_lock.

deft_code
  • 57,255
  • 29
  • 141
  • 224

2 Answers2

30

Amit is right: boost::mutex::scoped_lock is a typedef for boost::unique_lock<boost::mutex>, not lock_guard. scoped_lock is not available in C++0x.

Unless you need the flexibility of unique_lock, I would use lock_guard. It is simpler, and more clearly expresses the intent to limit the lock to a defined scope.

Anthony Williams
  • 66,628
  • 14
  • 133
  • 155
  • I have a question regarding this: afaik while in the scope_lock, any call to shared_lock will be blocked. Is this the same for lock_guard? – PazO Mar 26 '18 at 15:26
27

Not much difference between the two. As per Boost, scoped_lock is a typedef for unique_lock<mutex>. Both of unique_lock and lock_guard implement RAII-style locking. The difference between is simply that unique_lock has a more complex interface -- it allows to defer lock and call unlock.

amit kumar
  • 20,438
  • 23
  • 90
  • 126