enum
<atomic>

std::memory_order

enum memory_order;
Memory order
Used as an argument to functions that conduct atomic operations to specify how other operations on different threads are synchronized.

It is defined as:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
typedef enum memory_order {
    memory_order_relaxed,   // relaxed
    memory_order_consume,   // consume
    memory_order_acquire,   // acquire
    memory_order_release,   // release
    memory_order_acq_rel,   // acquire/release
    memory_order_seq_cst    // sequentially consistent
} memory order;


All atomic operations produce well-defined behavior with respect to an atomic object when multiple threads access it: each atomic operation is entirely performed on the object before any other atomic operation can access it. This guarantees no data races on these objects, and this is precisely the feature that defines atomicity.

But each thread may perform operations on memory locations other than the atomic object itself: and these other operations may produce visible side effects on other threads. Arguments of this type allow to specify a memory order for the operation that determines how these (possibly non-atomic) visible side effects are synchronized among threads, using the atomic operations as synchronization points:

memory_order_relaxed
The operation is ordered to happen atomically at some point.
This is the loosest memory order, providing no guarantees on how memory accesses in different threads are ordered with respect to the atomic operation.
memory_order_consume
[Applies to loading operations]
The operation is ordered to happen once all accesses to memory in the releasing thread that carry a dependency on the releasing operation (and that have visible side effects on the loading thread) have happened.
memory_order_acquire
[Applies to loading operations]
The operation is ordered to happen once all accesses to memory in the releasing thread (that have visible side effects on the loading thread) have happened.
memory_order_release
[Applies to storing operations]
The operation is ordered to happen before a consume or acquire operation, serving as a synchronization point for other accesses to memory that may have visible side effects on the loading thread.
memory_acq_rel
[Applies to loading/storing operations]
The operation loads acquiring and stores releasing (as defined above for memory_order_acquire and memory_order_release).
memory_order_seq_cst
The operation is ordered in a sequentially consistent manner: All operations using this memory order are ordered to happen once all accesses to memory that may have visible side effects on the other threads involved have already happened.
This is the strictest memory order, guaranteeing the least unexpected side effects between thread interactions though the non-atomic memory accesses.
For consume and acquire loads, sequentially consistent store operations are considered releasing operations.