You'll all be familiar with questions like this one. It happens to be a homework question (which is not in itself problematic). The reason I object to this question is it's fantastically specific. The questioner wants a specific answer to his very specific homework problem. He is not asking what would be a much better question about how to use mutexes to mediate a limited number of resources.
As such, this question (or its answers if it gets any) is going to be of no help to anyone else. No search term is going to find it. It adds nothing to the SO community.
But let's look at possible close reasons:
duplicate of...
This question has been asked before and already has an answer.
Unless someone has asked this exact homework question before, this is not a duplicate.
off-topic because...
This question does not appear to be about programming within the scope defined in the help center.
It isn't off-topic; it is about programming.
unclear what you're asking
Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question.
It's very clear what he's asking. He wants his homework done. To the extent it is unclear, let's pretend he made it very clear - the question should still not (in my view) survive.
too broad
There are either too many possible answers, or good answers would be too long for this format. Please add details to narrow the answer set or to isolate an issue that can be answered in a few paragraphs.
This is how many such questions seem to be closed. But the question itself is not too broad. Rather its problem is that it is too specific - too specific to be useful to anyone else. Moreover, knowing whether an answer would be too long requires actually understanding piles of code. Perhaps the answer is very simple (e.g. 'if (i=0) ...
should be if (i==0)
') - in which case there is only one answer, and it is very short.
Indeed using this close reason is only going to encourage even more specific questions. Perhaps the guy will specify the indentation style needed in the answer!
A much broader question (e.g. 'what are the advantages of using UNIX pipes over socketpair()') would be far more useful - I recognise that particular one might be a dupe.
primarily opinion-based
Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise.
I don't see anything opinion-based in the answer here. There might be more than one way to skin a cat in terms of answering it, but one can't know that without analysing the reams of code.
And again, a far more opinion based question (e.g. 'what are the advantages of using UNIX pipes over socketpair()') would be far more useful.
(Personally I think 'too broad' and 'primarily-opinion based' are close cousins, but that's another issue)
My view is that there is no satisfactory close reason for too specific questions such as this. As in general they are asked by less than experienced question askers, we can normally find some other close reason to use, but that's missing the point. We want people to know they shouldn't ask them in the first place, and if they do, precisely why their question got closed.
I thus propose another close reason:
too specific
This question is so specific that it is only ever likely to be useful to you. Stack Overflow is a community-based site and we want to ensure questions that are asked are likely to be relevant to other visitors. Your question is so narrowly focused that this is unlikely to be the case. If it contains a large amount of code that any answerer would need to debug, please reduce it to a Minimal Complete Verifiable Example (noting the word 'minimal').