Reputation: 47980
I have a main thread that invokes a child thread function at different times but I am not sure whether that is right way of doing it in Qt.What is wrong with the below code and looking for better alternative
There is a main thread running infinitly when ever main thread releases the lock child does a piece of work.
#include <QtCore/QCoreApplication>
#include <QSemaphore>
#include <QThread>
QSemaphore sem(0);
class Background : public QThread
{
protected:
void run()
{
for(;;)
{
sem.acquire(1);
qDebug("Child function ran");
}
}
};
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
QCoreApplication a(argc, argv);
Background child;
child.start();
qDebug("Main running");
qDebug("release a lock");
sem.release(1);
qDebug("Do somework in main");
//call child
sem.release(1);
sem.release(1);
return a.exec();
}
Upvotes: 5
Views: 5209
Reputation: 3698
Edit: rework of entire post to cover basics as well.
Background.h
:
#ifndef BACKGROUND_H
#define BACKGROUND_H
#include <QThread>
#include <QObject>
class Background : public QThread
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
Background(QObject* parent = 0):QThread(parent){}
protected:
void run()
{
qDebug(qPrintable(QString("Child function ran in thread: %1").arg(QThread::currentThreadId())));
}
};
class BackgroundConcurrent : public QObject
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
BackgroundConcurrent(QObject* parent = 0):QObject(parent){}
public slots:
void doWork() const
{
qDebug(qPrintable(QString("Concurrent child function ran in thread: %1").arg(QThread::currentThreadId())));
}
};
class BackgroundTrigger : public QObject
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
BackgroundTrigger(QObject* parent = 0):QObject(parent){}
~BackgroundTrigger()
{
foreach(QObject* child, children())
{
QThread* childThread = qobject_cast<QThread*>(child);
if (childThread)
childThread->wait();
}
}
public slots:
void triggerWorker()
{
Background* child = new Background(this);
child->start();
}
};
#endif // BACKGROUND_H
main.cpp
:
#include "Background.h"
#include <QCoreApplication>
#include <QtConcurrentRun>
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
QCoreApplication a(argc, argv);
// Using QThread
BackgroundTrigger childTrigger;
qDebug(qPrintable(QString("Main function ran in thread: %1").arg(QThread::currentThreadId())));
// Call child
childTrigger.triggerWorker();
childTrigger.triggerWorker();
// Using QtConcurrent
BackgroundConcurrent cchild;
QFuture<void> future1 = QtConcurrent::run(&cchild, &BackgroundConcurrent::doWork);
QFuture<void> future2 = QtConcurrent::run(&cchild, &BackgroundConcurrent::doWork);
return 0;
}
Sample output:
Main function ran in thread: 1087038064 Child function ran in thread: 1091267472 Child function ran in thread: 1093417872 Concurrent child function ran in thread: 1095519120 Concurrent child function ran in thread: 1097644944
Be sure you run moc on your header files, qmake and cmake both support creating your makefiles.
Here is the CMakeLists.txt
file I used to build the code:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.6)
#Project name
project(TEST)
#Use Qt4
find_package(Qt4)
if(QT4_FOUND)
set(QT_USE_QTOPENGL TRUE)
include(${QT_USE_FILE})
set(LIBS
${QT_LIBRARIES}
)
#Source files (*.cpp, *.o)
set(TEST_SRCS main.cpp)
#Header files (*.h[pp])
set(TEST_HDRS Background.h)
#Qt macros to handle uic, moc, etc...
QT4_WRAP_CPP(TEST_MOC ${TEST_HDRS} OPTIONS -nw)
set(TEST_ALLSRC ${TEST_SRCS} ${TEST_MOC})
#Create main
add_executable(test ${TEST_ALLSRC})
target_link_libraries(test ${LIBS})
endif(QT4_FOUND)
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 52387
Actually your current solution to the problem is quite a nice hack.
If you prefer to do it in a "cleaner" fashion, you should start an event loop in your worker thread. Then the worker thread will be able to receive signals from the main thread. You could call a function in the child thread (using signal/slot mechanism) from the main thread to trigger operation.
See here for more details: http://doc.trolltech.com/4.2/threads.html#per-thread-event-loop
(Hint: The key idea is that you create the receiving object in the worker thread; then its slots will be processed in that thread; or you could use MoveToThread() function)
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 180145
It seems that you might want to use a signal for that, to fit in with the normal Qt style. Check out this question; the accepted answer there seems to match your question too.
Upvotes: 0