Provided by: libcurl4-doc_8.11.0-1ubuntu2_all bug

NAME

       libcurl-thread - libcurl thread safety

Multi-threading with libcurl

       libcurl is thread safe but has no internal thread synchronization. You may have to provide
       your own locking should you meet any of the thread safety exceptions below.

Handles

       You must never share the same handle in multiple threads. You can pass the handles  around
       among  threads,  but  you  must never use a single handle from more than one thread at any
       given time.

Shared objects

       You can share certain data between multiple handles by using the share interface  but  you
       must  provide  your  own  locking  and  set  curl_share_setopt(3)  CURLSHOPT_LOCKFUNC  and
       CURLSHOPT_UNLOCKFUNC.

       Note that some items are specifically documented as not thread-safe in the share API  (the
       connection pool and HSTS cache for example).

TLS

       All current TLS libraries libcurl supports are thread-safe.

       OpenSSL
              OpenSSL  1.1.0+  can  be  safely  used in multi-threaded applications provided that
              support for the underlying OS threading API is  built-in.  For  older  versions  of
              OpenSSL, the user must set mutex callbacks.

              libcurl may not be able to fully clean up after multi-threaded OpenSSL depending on
              how OpenSSL was built and loaded  as  a  library.  It  is  possible  in  some  rare
              circumstances  a  memory  leak  could  occur  unless you implement your own OpenSSL
              thread cleanup.

              For example, on Windows if both libcurl and OpenSSL are linked statically to a  DLL
              or  application  then  OpenSSL  may leak memory unless the DLL or application calls
              OPENSSL_thread_stop() before each thread terminates. If OpenSSL is built as  a  DLL
              then  it  does this cleanup automatically and there is no leak. If libcurl is built
              as a DLL and OpenSSL is linked statically to it  then  libcurl  does  this  cleanup
              automatically and there is no leak (added in libcurl 8.8.0).

              Please  review  the  OpenSSL  documentation  for  a  full  list  of  circumstances:
              https://docs.openssl.org/3.0/man3/OPENSSL_init_crypto/#notes

Signals

       Signals are used for timing out name resolves (during DNS lookup)  -  when  built  without
       using  either  the  c-ares  or  threaded  resolver backends. On systems that have a signal
       concept.

       When using multiple threads you should set the CURLOPT_NOSIGNAL(3) option to  1L  for  all
       handles. Everything works fine except that timeouts cannot be honored during DNS lookups -
       which you can work around by building libcurl with c-ares  or  threaded-resolver  support.
       c-ares  is  a library that provides asynchronous name resolves. On some platforms, libcurl
       simply cannot function properly multi-threaded unless the  CURLOPT_NOSIGNAL(3)  option  is
       set.

       When  CURLOPT_NOSIGNAL(3)  is set to 1L, your application needs to deal with the risk of a
       SIGPIPE  (that  at  least  the  OpenSSL  backend   can   trigger).   Note   that   setting
       CURLOPT_NOSIGNAL(3)  to  0L  does  not  work  in  a  threaded situation as there is a race
       condition where libcurl risks restoring the former signal  handler  while  another  thread
       should still ignore it.

Name resolving

       The gethostbyname or getaddrinfo and other name resolving system calls used by libcurl are
       provided by your operating system and must be thread safe. It is  important  that  libcurl
       can  find  and  use  thread safe versions of these and other system calls, as otherwise it
       cannot function fully thread safe. Some operating systems are known to have faulty  thread
       implementations.  We  have  previously  received  problem reports on *BSD (at least in the
       past, they may be working fine these days). Some operating systems that are known to  have
       solid and working thread support are Linux, Solaris and Windows.

curl_global_* functions

       These  functions  are  thread-safe  since  libcurl  7.84.0 if curl_version_info(3) has the
       CURL_VERSION_THREADSAFE feature bit set (most platforms).

       If these functions are not thread-safe and you are using libcurl with multiple threads  it
       is    especially   important   that   before   use   you   call   curl_global_init(3)   or
       curl_global_init_mem(3) to explicitly initialize the library and  its  dependents,  rather
       than  rely  on  the  "lazy"  fail-safe  initialization  that  takes  place  the first time
       curl_easy_init(3) is called. For an  in-depth  explanation  refer  to  libcurl(3)  section
       GLOBAL CONSTANTS.

Memory functions

       These  functions,  provided either by your operating system or your own replacements, must
       be thread safe. You can use curl_global_init_mem(3) to set  your  own  replacement  memory
       functions.

Non-safe functions

       CURLOPT_DNS_USE_GLOBAL_CACHE(3) is not thread-safe.

       curl_version_info(3) is not thread-safe before libcurl initialization.

SEE ALSO

       libcurl-security(3)