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| 2 | ** | 
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| 3 | ** Copyright (C) 2009 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). | 
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| 40 | ****************************************************************************/ | 
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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 | /*! | 
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| 43 | \page threads.html | 
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| 44 | \title Thread Support in Qt | 
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| 45 | \ingroup architecture | 
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| 46 | \brief A detailed discussion of thread handling in Qt. | 
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| 47 |  | 
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| 48 | Qt provides thread support in the form of platform-independent | 
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| 49 | threading classes, a thread-safe way of posting events, and | 
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| 50 | signal-slot connections across threads. This makes it easy to | 
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| 51 | develop portable multithreaded Qt applications and take advantage | 
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| 52 | of multiprocessor machines. Multithreaded programming is also a | 
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| 53 | useful paradigm for performing time-consuming operations without | 
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| 54 | freezing the user interface of an application. | 
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| 55 |  | 
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| 56 | Earlier versions of Qt offered an option to build the library | 
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| 57 | without thread support. Since Qt 4.0, threads are always enabled. | 
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| 58 |  | 
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| 59 | This document is intended for an audience that has knowledge of, | 
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| 60 | and experience with, multithreaded applications. If you are new | 
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| 61 | to threading see our \l{#reading}{Recommended Reading} list. | 
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| 62 |  | 
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| 63 | Topics: | 
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| 64 |  | 
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| 65 | \tableofcontents | 
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| 66 |  | 
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| 67 | \section1 The Threading Classes | 
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| 68 |  | 
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| 69 | Qt includes the following thread classes: | 
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| 70 |  | 
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| 71 | \list | 
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| 72 | \o QThread provides the means to start a new thread. | 
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| 73 | \o QThreadStorage provides per-thread data storage. | 
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| 74 | \o QThreadPool manages a pool of threads that run QRunnable objects. | 
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| 75 | \o QRunnable is an abstract class representing a runnable object. | 
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| 76 | \o QMutex provides a mutual exclusion lock, or mutex. | 
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| 77 | \o QMutexLocker is a convenience class that automatically locks | 
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| 78 | and unlocks a QMutex. | 
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| 79 | \o QReadWriteLock provides a lock that allows simultaneous read access. | 
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| 80 | \o QReadLocker and QWriteLocker are convenience classes that automatically | 
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| 81 | lock and unlock a QReadWriteLock. | 
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| 82 | \o QSemaphore provides an integer semaphore (a generalization of a mutex). | 
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| 83 | \o QWaitCondition provides a way for threads to go to sleep until | 
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| 84 | woken up by another thread. | 
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| 85 | \o QAtomicInt provides atomic operations on integers. | 
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| 86 | \o QAtomicPointer provides atomic operations on pointers. | 
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| 87 | \endlist | 
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| 88 |  | 
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| 89 | \note Qt's threading classes are implemented with native threading APIs; | 
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| 90 | e.g., Win32 and pthreads. Therefore, they can be used with threads of the | 
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| 91 | same native API. | 
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| 92 |  | 
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| 93 | \section2 Creating a Thread | 
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| 94 |  | 
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| 95 | To create a thread, subclass QThread and reimplement its | 
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| 96 | \l{QThread::run()}{run()} function. For example: | 
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| 97 |  | 
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| 98 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/threads/threads.h 0 | 
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| 99 | \codeline | 
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| 100 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/threads/threads.cpp 0 | 
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| 101 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/threads/threads.cpp 1 | 
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| 102 | \dots | 
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| 103 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/threads/threads.cpp 2 | 
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| 104 |  | 
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| 105 | Then, create an instance of the thread object and call | 
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| 106 | QThread::start(). The code that appears in the | 
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| 107 | \l{QThread::run()}{run()} reimplementation will then be executed | 
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| 108 | in a separate thread. Creating threads is explained in more | 
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| 109 | detail in the QThread documentation. | 
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| 110 |  | 
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| 111 | Note that QCoreApplication::exec() must always be called from the | 
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| 112 | main thread (the thread that executes \c{main()}), not from a | 
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| 113 | QThread. In GUI applications, the main thread is also called the | 
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| 114 | GUI thread because it's the only thread that is allowed to | 
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| 115 | perform GUI-related operations. | 
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| 116 |  | 
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| 117 | In addition, you must create the QApplication (or | 
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| 118 | QCoreApplication) object before you can create a QThread. | 
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| 119 |  | 
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| 120 | \section2 Synchronizing Threads | 
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| 121 |  | 
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| 122 | The QMutex, QReadWriteLock, QSemaphore, and QWaitCondition | 
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| 123 | classes provide means to synchronize threads. While the main idea | 
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| 124 | with threads is that they should be as concurrent as possible, | 
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| 125 | there are points where threads must stop and wait for other | 
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| 126 | threads. For example, if two threads try to access the same | 
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| 127 | global variable simultaneously, the results are usually | 
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| 128 | undefined. | 
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| 129 |  | 
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| 130 | QMutex provides a mutually exclusive lock, or mutex. At most one | 
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| 131 | thread can hold the mutex at any time. If a thread tries to | 
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| 132 | acquire the mutex while the mutex is already locked, the thread will | 
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| 133 | be put to sleep until the thread that currently holds the mutex | 
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| 134 | unlocks it. Mutexes are often used to protect accesses to shared | 
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| 135 | data (i.e., data that can be accessed from multiple threads | 
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| 136 | simultaneously). In the \l{Reentrancy and Thread-Safety} section | 
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| 137 | below, we will use it to make a class thread-safe. | 
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| 138 |  | 
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| 139 | QReadWriteLock is similar to QMutex, except that it distinguishes | 
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| 140 | between "read" and "write" access to shared data and allows | 
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| 141 | multiple readers to access the data simultaneously. Using | 
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| 142 | QReadWriteLock instead of QMutex when it is possible can make | 
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| 143 | multithreaded programs more concurrent. | 
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| 144 |  | 
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| 145 | QSemaphore is a generalization of QMutex that protects a certain | 
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| 146 | number of identical resources. In contrast, a mutex protects | 
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| 147 | exactly one resource. The \l{threads/semaphores}{Semaphores} | 
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| 148 | example shows a typical application of semaphores: synchronizing | 
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| 149 | access to a circular buffer between a producer and a consumer. | 
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| 150 |  | 
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| 151 | QWaitCondition allows a thread to wake up other threads when some | 
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| 152 | condition has been met. One or many threads can block waiting for | 
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| 153 | a QWaitCondition to set a condition with | 
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| 154 | \l{QWaitCondition::wakeOne()}{wakeOne()} or | 
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| 155 | \l{QWaitCondition::wakeAll()}{wakeAll()}. Use | 
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| 156 | \l{QWaitCondition::wakeOne()}{wakeOne()} to wake one randomly | 
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| 157 | selected event or \l{QWaitCondition::wakeAll()}{wakeAll()} to | 
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| 158 | wake them all. The \l{threads/waitconditions}{Wait Conditions} | 
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| 159 | example shows how to solve the producer-consumer problem using | 
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| 160 | QWaitCondition instead of QSemaphore. | 
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| 161 |  | 
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| 162 | Note that Qt's synchronization classes rely on the use of properly | 
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| 163 | aligned pointers. For instance, you cannot use packed classes with | 
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| 164 | MSVC. | 
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| 165 |  | 
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| 166 | \target qtconcurrent intro | 
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| 167 | \section1 QtConcurrent | 
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| 168 |  | 
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| 169 | The QtConcurrent namespace provides high-level APIs that make it | 
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| 170 | possible to write multi-threaded programs without using low-level | 
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| 171 | threading primitives such as mutexes, read-write locks, wait | 
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| 172 | conditions, or semaphores. Programs written with QtConcurrent | 
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| 173 | automatically adjust the number of threads used according to the | 
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| 174 | number of processor cores available. This means that applications | 
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| 175 | written today will continue to scale when deployed on multi-core | 
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| 176 | systems in the future. | 
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| 177 |  | 
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| 178 | QtConcurrent includes functional programming style APIs for | 
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| 179 | parallel list processing, including a MapReduce and FilterReduce | 
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| 180 | implementation for shared-memory (non-distributed) systems, and | 
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| 181 | classes for managing asynchronous computations in GUI | 
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| 182 | applications: | 
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| 183 |  | 
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| 184 | \list | 
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| 185 |  | 
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| 186 | \o QtConcurrent::map() applies a function to every item in a container, | 
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| 187 | modifying the items in-place. | 
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| 188 |  | 
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| 189 | \o QtConcurrent::mapped() is like map(), except that it returns a new | 
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| 190 | container with the modifications. | 
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| 191 |  | 
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| 192 | \o QtConcurrent::mappedReduced() is like mapped(), except that the | 
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| 193 | modified results are reduced or folded into a single result. | 
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| 194 |  | 
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| 195 | \o QtConcurrent::filter() removes all items from a container based on the | 
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| 196 | result of a filter function. | 
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| 197 |  | 
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| 198 | \o QtConcurrent::filtered() is like filter(), except that it returns a new | 
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| 199 | container with the filtered results. | 
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| 200 |  | 
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| 201 | \o QtConcurrent::filteredReduced() is like filtered(), except that the | 
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| 202 | filtered results are reduced or folded into a single result. | 
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| 203 |  | 
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| 204 | \o QtConcurrent::run() runs a function in another thread. | 
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| 205 |  | 
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| 206 | \o QFuture represents the result of an asynchronous computation. | 
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| 207 |  | 
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| 208 | \o QFutureIterator allows iterating through results available via QFuture. | 
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| 209 |  | 
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| 210 | \o QFutureWatcher allows monitoring a QFuture using signals-and-slots. | 
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| 211 |  | 
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| 212 | \o QFutureSynchronizer is a convenience class that automatically | 
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| 213 | synchronizes several QFutures. | 
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| 214 |  | 
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| 215 | \endlist | 
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| 216 |  | 
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| 217 | Qt Concurrent supports several STL-compatible container and iterator types, | 
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| 218 | but works best with Qt containers that have random-access iterators, such as | 
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| 219 | QList or QVector. The map and filter functions accept both containers and begin/end iterators. | 
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| 220 |  | 
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| 221 | STL Iterator support overview: | 
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| 222 |  | 
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| 223 | \table | 
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| 224 | \header | 
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| 225 | \o Iterator Type | 
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| 226 | \o Example classes | 
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| 227 | \o Support status | 
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| 228 | \row | 
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| 229 | \o Input Iterator | 
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| 230 | \o | 
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| 231 | \o Not Supported | 
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| 232 | \row | 
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| 233 | \o Output Iterator | 
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| 234 | \o | 
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| 235 | \o Not Supported | 
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| 236 | \row | 
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| 237 | \o Forward Iterator | 
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| 238 | \o std::slist | 
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| 239 | \o Supported | 
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| 240 | \row | 
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| 241 | \o Bidirectional Iterator | 
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| 242 | \o QLinkedList, std::list | 
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| 243 | \o Supported | 
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| 244 | \row | 
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| 245 | \o Random Access Iterator | 
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| 246 | \o QList, QVector, std::vector | 
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| 247 | \o Supported and Recommended | 
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| 248 | \endtable | 
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| 249 |  | 
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| 250 | Random access iterators can be faster in cases where Qt Concurrent is iterating | 
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| 251 | over a large number of lightweight items, since they allow skipping to any point | 
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| 252 | in the container. In addition, using random access iterators allows Qt Concurrent | 
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| 253 | to provide progress information trough QFuture::progressValue() and QFutureWatcher:: | 
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| 254 | progressValueChanged(). | 
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| 255 |  | 
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| 256 | The non in-place modifying functions such as mapped() and filtered() makes a | 
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| 257 | copy of the container when called. If you are using STL containers this copy operation | 
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| 258 | might take some time, in this case we recommend specifying the begin and end iterators | 
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| 259 | for the container instead. | 
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| 260 |  | 
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| 261 | \keyword reentrant | 
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| 262 | \keyword thread-safe | 
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| 263 | \section1 Reentrancy and Thread-Safety | 
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| 264 |  | 
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| 265 | Throughout the Qt documentation, the terms \e reentrant and \e | 
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| 266 | thread-safe are used to specify how a function can be used in | 
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| 267 | multithreaded applications: | 
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| 268 |  | 
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| 269 | \list | 
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| 270 | \o A \e reentrant function can be called simultaneously by | 
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| 271 | multiple threads provided that each invocation of the function | 
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| 272 | references unique data. | 
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| 273 | \o A \e thread-safe function can be called simultaneously by | 
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| 274 | multiple threads when each invocation references shared data. | 
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| 275 | All access to the shared data is serialized. | 
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| 276 | \endlist | 
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| 277 |  | 
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| 278 | By extension, a class is said to be reentrant if each and every | 
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| 279 | one of its functions can be called simultaneously by multiple | 
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| 280 | threads on different instances of the class. Similarly, the class | 
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| 281 | is said to be thread-safe if the functions can be called by | 
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| 282 | different threads on the same instance. | 
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| 283 |  | 
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| 284 | Classes in the documentation will be documented as thread-safe only | 
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| 285 | if they are intended to be used by multiple threads. | 
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| 286 |  | 
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| 287 | Note that the terminology in this domain isn't entirely | 
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| 288 | standardized. POSIX uses a somewhat different definition of | 
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| 289 | reentrancy and thread-safety for its C APIs. When dealing with an | 
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| 290 | object-oriented C++ class library such as Qt, the definitions | 
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| 291 | must be adapted. | 
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| 292 |  | 
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| 293 | Most C++ classes are inherently reentrant, since they typically | 
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| 294 | only reference member data. Any thread can call such a member | 
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| 295 | function on an instance of the class, as long as no other thread | 
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| 296 | is calling a member function on the same instance. For example, | 
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| 297 | the \c Counter class below is reentrant: | 
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| 298 |  | 
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| 299 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/threads/threads.cpp 3 | 
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| 300 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/threads/threads.cpp 4 | 
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| 301 |  | 
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| 302 | The class isn't thread-safe, because if multiple threads try to | 
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| 303 | modify the data member \c n, the result is undefined. This is | 
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| 304 | because C++'s \c ++ and \c -- operators aren't necessarily | 
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| 305 | atomic. Indeed, they usually expand to three machine | 
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| 306 | instructions: | 
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| 307 |  | 
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| 308 | \list 1 | 
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| 309 | \o Load the variable's value in a register. | 
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| 310 | \o Increment or decrement the register's value. | 
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| 311 | \o Store the register's value back into main memory. | 
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| 312 | \endlist | 
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| 313 |  | 
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| 314 | If thread A and thread B load the variable's old value | 
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| 315 | simultaneously, increment their register, and store it back, they | 
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| 316 | end up overwriting each other, and the variable is incremented | 
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| 317 | only once! | 
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| 318 |  | 
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| 319 | Clearly, the access must be serialized: Thread A must perform | 
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| 320 | steps 1, 2, 3 without interruption (atomically) before thread B | 
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| 321 | can perform the same steps; or vice versa. An easy way to make | 
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| 322 | the class thread-safe is to protect all access to the data | 
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| 323 | members with a QMutex: | 
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| 324 |  | 
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| 325 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/threads/threads.cpp 5 | 
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| 326 | \snippet doc/src/snippets/threads/threads.cpp 6 | 
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| 327 |  | 
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| 328 | The QMutexLocker class automatically locks the mutex in its | 
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| 329 | constructor and unlocks it when the destructor is invoked, at the | 
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| 330 | end of the function. Locking the mutex ensures that access from | 
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| 331 | different threads will be serialized. The \c mutex data member is | 
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| 332 | declared with the \c mutable qualifier because we need to lock | 
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| 333 | and unlock the mutex in \c value(), which is a const function. | 
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| 334 |  | 
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| 335 | Most Qt classes are reentrant and not thread-safe, to avoid the | 
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| 336 | overhead of repeatedly locking and unlocking a QMutex. For | 
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| 337 | example, QString is reentrant, meaning that you can use it in | 
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| 338 | different threads, but you can't access the same QString object | 
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| 339 | from different threads simultaneously (unless you protect it with | 
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| 340 | a mutex yourself). A few classes and functions are thread-safe; | 
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| 341 | these are mainly thread-related classes such as QMutex, or | 
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| 342 | fundamental functions such as QCoreApplication::postEvent(). | 
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| 343 |  | 
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| 344 | \section1 Threads and QObjects | 
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| 345 |  | 
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| 346 | QThread inherits QObject. It emits signals to indicate that the | 
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| 347 | thread started or finished executing, and provides a few slots as | 
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| 348 | well. | 
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| 349 |  | 
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| 350 | More interesting is that \l{QObject}s can be used in multiple | 
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| 351 | threads, emit signals that invoke slots in other threads, and | 
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| 352 | post events to objects that "live" in other threads. This is | 
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| 353 | possible because each thread is allowed to have its own event | 
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| 354 | loop. | 
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| 355 |  | 
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| 356 | \section2 QObject Reentrancy | 
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| 357 |  | 
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| 358 | QObject is reentrant. Most of its non-GUI subclasses, such as | 
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| 359 | QTimer, QTcpSocket, QUdpSocket, QHttp, QFtp, and QProcess, are | 
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| 360 | also reentrant, making it possible to use these classes from | 
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| 361 | multiple threads simultaneously. Note that these classes are | 
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| 362 | designed to be created and used from within a single thread; | 
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| 363 | creating an object in one thread and calling its functions from | 
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| 364 | another thread is not guaranteed to work. There are three | 
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| 365 | constraints to be aware of: | 
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| 366 |  | 
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| 367 | \list | 
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| 368 | \o \e{The child of a QObject must always be created in the thread | 
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| 369 | where the parent was created.} This implies, among other | 
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| 370 | things, that you should never pass the QThread object (\c | 
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| 371 | this) as the parent of an object created in the thread (since | 
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| 372 | the QThread object itself was created in another thread). | 
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| 373 |  | 
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| 374 | \o \e{Event driven objects may only be used in a single thread.} | 
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| 375 | Specifically, this applies to the \l{timers.html}{timer | 
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| 376 | mechanism} and the \l{QtNetwork}{network module}. For example, | 
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| 377 | you cannot start a timer or connect a socket in a thread that | 
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| 378 | is not the \l{QObject::thread()}{object's thread}. | 
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| 379 |  | 
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| 380 | \o \e{You must ensure that all objects created in a thread are | 
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| 381 | deleted before you delete the QThread.} This can be done | 
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| 382 | easily by creating the objects on the stack in your | 
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| 383 | \l{QThread::run()}{run()} implementation. | 
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| 384 | \endlist | 
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| 385 |  | 
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| 386 | Although QObject is reentrant, the GUI classes, notably QWidget | 
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| 387 | and all its subclasses, are not reentrant. They can only be used | 
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| 388 | from the main thread. As noted earlier, QCoreApplication::exec() | 
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| 389 | must also be called from that thread. | 
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| 390 |  | 
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| 391 | In practice, the impossibility of using GUI classes in other | 
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| 392 | threads than the main thread can easily be worked around by | 
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| 393 | putting time-consuming operations in a separate worker thread and | 
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| 394 | displaying the results on screen in the main thread when the | 
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| 395 | worker thread is finished. This is the approach used for | 
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| 396 | implementing the \l{threads/mandelbrot}{Mandelbrot} and | 
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| 397 | the \l{network/blockingfortuneclient}{Blocking Fortune Client} | 
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| 398 | example. | 
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| 399 |  | 
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| 400 | \section2 Per-Thread Event Loop | 
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| 401 |  | 
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| 402 | Each thread can have its own event loop. The initial thread | 
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| 403 | starts its event loops using QCoreApplication::exec(); other | 
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| 404 | threads can start an event loop using QThread::exec(). Like | 
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| 405 | QCoreApplication, QThread provides an | 
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| 406 | \l{QThread::exit()}{exit(int)} function and a | 
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| 407 | \l{QThread::quit()}{quit()} slot. | 
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| 408 |  | 
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| 409 | An event loop in a thread makes it possible for the thread to use | 
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| 410 | certain non-GUI Qt classes that require the presence of an event | 
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| 411 | loop (such as QTimer, QTcpSocket, and QProcess). It also makes it | 
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| 412 | possible to connect signals from any threads to slots of a | 
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| 413 | specific thread. This is explained in more detail in the | 
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| 414 | \l{Signals and Slots Across Threads} section below. | 
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| 415 |  | 
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| 416 | \image threadsandobjects.png Threads, objects, and event loops | 
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| 417 |  | 
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| 418 | A QObject instance is said to \e live in the thread in which it | 
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| 419 | is created. Events to that object are dispatched by that thread's | 
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| 420 | event loop. The thread in which a QObject lives is available using | 
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| 421 | QObject::thread(). | 
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| 422 |  | 
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| 423 | Note that for QObjects that are created before QApplication, | 
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| 424 | QObject::thread() returns zero. This means that the main thread | 
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| 425 | will only handle posted events for these objects; other event | 
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| 426 | processing is not done at all for objects with no thread. Use the | 
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| 427 | QObject::moveToThread() function to change the thread affinity for | 
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| 428 | an object and its children (the object cannot be moved if it has a | 
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| 429 | parent). | 
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| 430 |  | 
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| 431 | Calling \c delete on a QObject from another thread than the | 
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| 432 | thread where it is created (or accessing the object in other | 
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| 433 | ways) is unsafe unless you can guarantee that the object isn't | 
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| 434 | processing events at the same moment. Use QObject::deleteLater() | 
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| 435 | instead; it will post a | 
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| 436 | \l{QEvent::DeferredDelete}{DeferredDelete} event, which the | 
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| 437 | event loop of the object's thread will eventually pick up. | 
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| 438 |  | 
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| 439 | If no event loop is running, events won't be delivered to the | 
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| 440 | object. For example, if you create a QTimer object in a thread | 
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| 441 | but never call \l{QThread::exec()}{exec()}, the QTimer will never emit its | 
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| 442 | \l{QTimer::timeout()}{timeout()} signal. Calling | 
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| 443 | \l{QObject::deleteLater()}{deleteLater()} won't work either. (These | 
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| 444 | restrictions apply to the main thread as well.) | 
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| 445 |  | 
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| 446 | You can manually post events to any object in any thread at any | 
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| 447 | time using the thread-safe function | 
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| 448 | QCoreApplication::postEvent(). The events will automatically be | 
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| 449 | dispatched by the event loop of the thread where the object was | 
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| 450 | created. | 
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| 451 |  | 
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| 452 | Event filters are supported in all threads, with the restriction | 
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| 453 | that the monitoring object must live in the same thread as the | 
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| 454 | monitored object. Similarly, QCoreApplication::sendEvent() | 
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| 455 | (unlike \l{QCoreApplication::postEvent()}{postEvent()}) can only | 
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| 456 | be used to dispatch events to objects living in the thread from | 
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| 457 | which the function is called. | 
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| 458 |  | 
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| 459 | \section2 Accessing QObject Subclasses from Other Threads | 
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| 460 |  | 
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| 461 | QObject and all of its subclasses are not thread-safe. This | 
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| 462 | includes the entire event delivery system. It is important to keep | 
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| 463 | in mind that the event loop may be delivering events to your | 
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| 464 | QObject subclass while you are accessing the object from another | 
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| 465 | thread. | 
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| 466 |  | 
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| 467 | If you are calling a function on an QObject subclass that doesn't | 
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| 468 | live in the current thread and the object might receive events, | 
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| 469 | you must protect all access to your QObject subclass's internal | 
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| 470 | data with a mutex; otherwise, you may experience crashes or other | 
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| 471 | undesired behavior. | 
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| 472 |  | 
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| 473 | Like other objects, QThread objects live in the thread where the | 
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| 474 | object was created -- \e not in the thread that is created when | 
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| 475 | QThread::run() is called. It is generally unsafe to provide slots | 
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| 476 | in your QThread subclass, unless you protect the member variables | 
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| 477 | with a mutex. | 
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| 478 |  | 
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| 479 | On the other hand, you can safely emit signals from your | 
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| 480 | QThread::run() implementation, because signal emission is | 
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| 481 | thread-safe. | 
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| 482 |  | 
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| 483 | \section2 Signals and Slots Across Threads | 
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| 484 |  | 
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| 485 | Qt supports three types of signal-slot connections: | 
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| 486 |  | 
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| 487 | \list | 
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| 488 | \o With \l{Qt::DirectConnection}{direct connections}, the | 
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| 489 | slot gets called immediately when the signal is emitted. The | 
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| 490 | slot is executed in the thread that emitted the signal (which | 
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| 491 | is not necessarily the thread where the receiver object | 
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| 492 | lives). | 
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| 493 |  | 
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| 494 | \o With \l{Qt::QueuedConnection}{queued connections}, the | 
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| 495 | slot is invoked when control returns to the event loop of the | 
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| 496 | thread to which the object belongs. The slot is executed in | 
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| 497 | the thread where the receiver object lives. | 
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| 498 |  | 
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| 499 | \o With \l{Qt::AutoConnection}{auto connections} (the default), | 
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| 500 | the behavior is the same as with direct connections if | 
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| 501 | the signal is emitted in the thread where the receiver lives; | 
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| 502 | otherwise, the behavior is that of a queued connection. | 
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| 503 | \endlist | 
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| 504 |  | 
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| 505 | The connection type can be specified by passing an additional | 
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| 506 | argument to \l{QObject::connect()}{connect()}. Be aware that | 
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| 507 | using direct connections when the sender and receiver live in | 
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| 508 | different threads is unsafe if an event loop is running in the | 
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| 509 | receiver's thread, for the same reason that calling any function | 
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| 510 | on an object living in another thread is unsafe. | 
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| 511 |  | 
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| 512 | QObject::connect() itself is thread-safe. | 
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| 513 |  | 
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| 514 | The \l{threads/mandelbrot}{Mandelbrot} example uses a queued | 
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| 515 | connection to communicate between a worker thread and the main | 
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| 516 | thread. To avoid freezing the main thread's event loop (and, as a | 
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| 517 | consequence, the application's user interface), all the | 
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| 518 | Mandelbrot fractal computation is done in a separate worker | 
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| 519 | thread. The thread emits a signal when it is done rendering the | 
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| 520 | fractal. | 
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| 521 |  | 
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| 522 | Similarly, the \l{network/blockingfortuneclient}{Blocking Fortune | 
|---|
| 523 | Client} example uses a separate thread for communicating with | 
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| 524 | a TCP server asynchronously. | 
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| 525 |  | 
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| 526 | \section1 Threads and Implicit Sharing | 
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| 527 |  | 
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| 528 | Qt uses an optimization called \l{implicit sharing} for many of | 
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| 529 | its value class, notably QImage and QString. Beginning with Qt 4, | 
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| 530 | implicit shared classes can safely be copied across threads, like | 
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| 531 | any other value classes. They are fully | 
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| 532 | \l{#reentrant}{reentrant}. The implicit sharing is really | 
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| 533 | \e implicit. | 
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| 534 |  | 
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| 535 | In many people's minds, implicit sharing and multithreading are | 
|---|
| 536 | incompatible concepts, because of the way the reference counting | 
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| 537 | is typically done. Qt, however, uses atomic reference counting to | 
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| 538 | ensure the integrity of the shared data, avoiding potential | 
|---|
| 539 | corruption of the reference counter. | 
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| 540 |  | 
|---|
| 541 | Note that atomic reference counting does not guarantee | 
|---|
| 542 | \l{#thread-safe}{thread-safety}. Proper locking should be used | 
|---|
| 543 | when sharing an instance of an implicitly shared class between | 
|---|
| 544 | threads. This is the same requirement placed on all | 
|---|
| 545 | \l{#reentrant}{reentrant} classes, shared or not. Atomic reference | 
|---|
| 546 | counting does, however, guarantee that a thread working on its | 
|---|
| 547 | own, local instance of an implicitly shared class is safe. We | 
|---|
| 548 | recommend using \l{Signals and Slots Across Threads}{signals and | 
|---|
| 549 | slots} to pass data between threads, as this can be done without | 
|---|
| 550 | the need for any explicit locking. | 
|---|
| 551 |  | 
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| 552 | To sum it up, implicitly shared classes in Qt 4 are really \e | 
|---|
| 553 | implicitly shared. Even in multithreaded applications, you can | 
|---|
| 554 | safely use them as if they were plain, non-shared, reentrant | 
|---|
| 555 | value-based classes. | 
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| 556 |  | 
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| 557 | \section1 Threads and the SQL Module | 
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| 558 |  | 
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| 559 | A connection can only be used from within the thread that created it. | 
|---|
| 560 | Moving connections between threads or creating queries from a different | 
|---|
| 561 | thread is not supported. | 
|---|
| 562 |  | 
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| 563 | In addition, the third party libraries used by the QSqlDrivers can impose | 
|---|
| 564 | further restrictions on using the SQL Module in a multithreaded program. | 
|---|
| 565 | Consult the manual of your database client for more information | 
|---|
| 566 |  | 
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| 567 | \section1 Painting in Threads | 
|---|
| 568 |  | 
|---|
| 569 | QPainter can be used to paint onto QImage, QPrinter, and QPicture | 
|---|
| 570 | paint devices. Painting onto QPixmaps and QWidgets is \e not | 
|---|
| 571 | supported. On Mac OS X the automatic progress dialog will not be | 
|---|
| 572 | displayed if you are printing from outside the GUI thread. | 
|---|
| 573 |  | 
|---|
| 574 | Any number of threads can paint at any given time, however only | 
|---|
| 575 | one thread at a time can paint on a given paint device. In other | 
|---|
| 576 | words, two threads can paint at the same time if each paints onto | 
|---|
| 577 | separate QImages, but the two threads cannot paint onto the same | 
|---|
| 578 | QImage at the same time. | 
|---|
| 579 |  | 
|---|
| 580 | Note that on X11 systems without FontConfig support, Qt cannot | 
|---|
| 581 | render text outside of the GUI thread. You can use the | 
|---|
| 582 | QFontDatabase::supportsThreadedFontRendering() function to detect | 
|---|
| 583 | whether or not font rendering can be used outside the GUI thread. | 
|---|
| 584 |  | 
|---|
| 585 | \section1 Threads and Rich Text Processing | 
|---|
| 586 |  | 
|---|
| 587 | The QTextDocument, QTextCursor, and \link richtext.html all | 
|---|
| 588 | related classes\endlink are reentrant. | 
|---|
| 589 |  | 
|---|
| 590 | Note that a QTextDocument instance created in the GUI thread may | 
|---|
| 591 | contain QPixmap image resources. Use QTextDocument::clone() to | 
|---|
| 592 | create a copy of the document, and pass the copy to another thread for | 
|---|
| 593 | further processing (such as printing). | 
|---|
| 594 |  | 
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| 595 | \section1 Threads and the SVG module | 
|---|
| 596 |  | 
|---|
| 597 | The QSvgGenerator and QSvgRenderer classes in the QtSvg module | 
|---|
| 598 | are reentrant. | 
|---|
| 599 |  | 
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| 600 | \target reading | 
|---|
| 601 | \section1 Recommended Reading | 
|---|
| 602 |  | 
|---|
| 603 | \list | 
|---|
| 604 | \o \l{Threads Primer: A Guide to Multithreaded Programming} | 
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| 605 | \o \l{Thread Time: The Multithreaded Programming Guide} | 
|---|
| 606 | \o \l{Pthreads Programming: A POSIX Standard for Better Multiprocessing} | 
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| 607 | \o \l{Win32 Multithreaded Programming} | 
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| 608 | \endlist | 
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| 609 | */ | 
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