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

I would like to know what the meaning of restrict is?

q0987
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1 Answers1

40

It's something introduced in C99 which lets the compiler know that the pointer passed in there isn't pointing to the same place as any other pointers in the arguments. If you give this hint to the compiler, it can do some more aggressive optimizations without breaking code.

As an example, consider this function:

int add(int *a, int *b) {
    return *a + *b;
}

Obviously, it adds two numbers from pointers. We can use it like this if we want:

// includes excluded for brevity
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
    int number=4;
    printf("%d\n", add(&number, &number));
    return 0;
}

Obviously, it will output 8; it's adding 4 to itself. However, if we add restrict to add like so:

int add(int *restrict a, int *restrict b) {
    return *a + *b;
}

Then the previous main is now invalid; it's passing &number as both arguments. You may, however, pass in two pointers pointing to different places.

int main(int argc, char **argv) {
    int numberA=4;
    int numberB=4;
    printf("%d\n", add(&numberA, &numberB));
    return 0;
}
icktoofay
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    For information about how this is beneficial, see [the Wikipedia page](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restrict). – ughoavgfhw Jul 14 '11 at 03:32
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    @ugho: it's pretty obvious how it's beneficial, just think of how you would implement `memmove()` – ninjalj Jul 14 '11 at 06:45