@AProgrammer Sorry there is no prior context. See this answer: stackoverflow.com/a/16364456/9868445, it's working for me, but the poster has not explained it clearly.
I find it interesting that operator[] doesn't have a lock. Initially I wanted to suggest adding it, but the lock is actually useless there as it doesn't protect against anything. Only insert and push_back can be used concurrently, for everything else you need to use an external lock first which makes the class not very useful.
Additionally insert doesn't insert, it just assigns.
I don't know why you got so many upvotes. In my opinion it doesn't belong on codereview because "it doesn't work", meaning it doesn't implement a thread-safe vector.
I would expect SafeVector svec; svec.insert("Hi", 0); to insert "Hi" into svec at position 0. Instead it crashes because it accesses vec[0] which doesn't exist.
You seem to expect vec[index] to create an element. It doesn't.
I'm still not sure who's waiting on that? Are you trying to rely on some platform specific implementation where it wakes up all threads that have a mutex or something
not that that would be really great, since you're still holding the lock while calling notify
if you would have some function like "get me the first element and if there is none, wait for there to be one" the condition_variable would make more sense
That's what's confusing me. When exactly is notify_one needed vs when is just unlocking the mutex enough?
I guess it would be needed in things like the producer-consumer model: it wouldn't make sense to consume when nothings there. But in other situations it wouldn't need notify because such a state doesn't exist where one must happen before the other?
a condition variable is there in order to wait on some condition, you need to own the lock when starting to wait, so "wait till the mutex unlocked that I'm guarding this condition variable with" is not a valid use-case
So stuff like "there's something in the buffer" like you said in the producer-consumer sense or stuff like "wait until cache is too full to evict some older entries"
or "wait until all the requests have finished", basically any condition that another thread may change that is more complicated than "this one lock is available"
So before we got semaphores in C++20 you're have to use condition_variable to implement semaphores yourself
you don't necessarily want to spawn a new thread if you can just re-use a worker
but yeah, you could use futures and call .get() on all of them, but let's say it's more like "only ever have 4 requests running at the same time, now get me the results for these 200 requests", but that's the producer consumer thing again I guess
So the problem is I have two folders -folder1 -|- file1.proto -folder2 -|-file2.proto Now file2 has file1 as depedency and during file2.pb.cc generation, it says file1.bh.h not found.