Kill Thread in Pthread Library Kill Thread in Pthread Library multithreading multithreading

Kill Thread in Pthread Library


First store the thread id

pthread_create(&thr, ...)

then later call

pthread_cancel(thr)

However, this not a recommended programming practice! It's better to use an inter-thread communication mechanism like semaphores or messages to communicate to the thread that it should stop execution.

Note that pthread_kill(...) does not actually terminate the receiving thread, but instead delivers a signal to it, and it depends on the signal and signal handlers what happens.


There are two approaches to this problem.

  • Use a signal: The thread installs a signal handler using sigaction() which sets a flag, and the thread periodically checks the flag to see whether it must terminate. When the thread must terminate, issue the signal to it using pthread_kill() and wait for its termination with pthread_join(). This approach requires pre-synchronization between the parent thread and the child thread, to guarantee that the child thread has already installed the signal handler before it is able to handle the termination signal;
  • Use a cancellation point: The thread terminates whenever a cancellation function is executed. When the thread must terminate, execute pthread_cancel() and wait for its termination with pthread_join(). This approach requires detailed usage of pthread_cleanup_push() and pthread_cleanup_pop() to avoid resource leakage. These last two calls might mess with the lexical scope of the code (since they may be macros yielding { and } tokens) and are very difficult to maintain properly.

(Note that if you have already detached the thread using pthread_detach(), you cannot join it again using pthread_join().)

Both approaches can be very tricky, but either might be specially useful in a given situation.


I agree with Antti, better practice would be to implement some checkpoint(s) where the thread checks if it should terminate. These checkpoints can be implemented in a number of ways e.g.: a shared variable with lock or an event that the thread checks if it is set (the thread can opt to wait zero time).