Thread Safety in the Standard C++ Library
The following thread safety rules apply to the Standard C++ Library:
Container Classes and complex
The container classes are vector, deque, list, queue, stack, priority_queue, valarray, map, hash_map, multimap, hash_multimap, set, hash_set, multiset, hash_multiset, basic_string, and bitset.
A single object is thread safe for reading from multiple threads. For example, given an object A, it is safe to read A from thread 1 and from thread 2 simultaneously.
If a single object is being written to by one thread, then all reads and writes to that object on the same or other threads must be protected. For example, given an object A, if thread 1 is writing to A, then thread 2 must be prevented from reading from or writing to A.
It is safe to read and write to one instance of a type even if another thread is reading or writing to a different instance of the same type. For example, given objects A and B of the same type, it is safe if A is being written in thread 1 and B is being read in thread 2.
iostream Classes
The iostream classes follow the same rules as the container classes, with one exception. It is safe to write to an object from multiple threads. For example, thread 1 can write to cout at the same time as thread 2. However, this can result in the output from the two threads being intermixed.
Nota
Reading from a stream buffer is not considered to be a read operation. It should be considered as a write operation, because this changes the state of the class.