[/ Copyright 2006-2007 John Maddock. Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt). ] [section:thread_safety Thread Safety] The Boost.Regex library is thread safe when Boost is: you can verify that Boost is in thread safe mode by checking to see if `BOOST_HAS_THREADS` is defined: this macro is set automatically by the config system when threading support is turned on in your compiler. Class [basic_regex] and its typedefs regex and wregex are thread safe, in that compiled regular expressions can safely be shared between threads. The matching algorithms [regex_match], [regex_search], and [regex_replace] are all re-entrant and thread safe. Class [match_results] is now thread safe, in that the results of a match can be safely copied from one thread to another (for example one thread may find matches and push [match_results] instances onto a queue, while another thread pops them off the other end), otherwise use a separate instance of [match_results] per thread. The [link boost_regex.ref.posix POSIX API functions] are all re-entrant and thread safe, regular expressions compiled with regcomp can also be shared between threads. The [link boost_regex.ref.deprecated.old_regex class RegEx] is only thread safe if each thread gets its own RegEx instance (apartment threading) - this is a consequence of RegEx handling both compiling and matching regular expressions. Finally note that changing the global locale invalidates all compiled regular expressions, therefore calling `set_locale` from one thread while another uses regular expressions will produce unpredictable results. There is also a requirement that there is only one thread executing prior to the start of main(). [endsect]