This is unrelated to moving.
Multiple threads are executing vector::push_back() on the same vector but
vector::push_back() is not threadsafe. The modifications to the vector need to be synchronized.
A std::mutex could be used to synchronize the calls to push_back():
std::vector<int> values;
std::mutex values_mutex;
void values_push_back()
{
values_mutex.lock();
values.push_back(i);
values_mutex.unlock();
}
Also, the variable i is being shared among threads without synchronization which is will result in a race condition (a possible outcome of this is duplicate ints added to the vector). Consider passing the int value as an argument to the thread to avoid this:
std::vector<int> values;
std::mutex values_mutex;
void values_push_back(int i)
{
values_mutex.lock();
values.push_back(i);
values_mutex.unlock();
}
for (int i = 0; i < 10; ++i)
{
threads.push_back(std::thread(values_push_back, i));
}
for (auto& t: threads) t.join();
As commented by bamboon prefer std::lock_guard to ensure the lock is released if push_back() throws (which in this case could only be bad_alloc() but if the vector changes to hold more complex objects that have throwing constructors it becomes more important):
void values_push_back(int i)
{
std::lock_guard<std::mutex> lk(values_mutex);
values.push_back(i);
}