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  4. [SOLVED]Possible? Multiple QSerialPort Threads Simultaneously Independently

[SOLVED]Possible? Multiple QSerialPort Threads Simultaneously Independently

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qserialportmultiplethreadsindependentsimultaneouslyterminal
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  • S SGaist
    10 Jun 2015, 21:16

    How are you putting SenSerialControlAlgorithmObject in a QThread ?

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    Sen Li
    wrote on 10 Jun 2015, 21:18 last edited by Sen Li 6 Oct 2015, 21:20
    #5

    @SGaist

    In the constructor in MainWindow of Terminal.
    The MainWindow has ui for Serial Info Setting.

        mySerialThread = new QThread();
    //    SenSerialControlAlgorithmObject ->moveToThread(mySerialThread );
        mySerialThread ->start();
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    • S SGaist
      10 Jun 2015, 21:16

      How are you putting SenSerialControlAlgorithmObject in a QThread ?

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      Sen Li
      wrote on 10 Jun 2015, 21:32 last edited by Sen Li 6 Oct 2015, 21:34
      #6

      @SGaist
      MainWindow:

      #include <QMainWindow>
      #include <QtSerialPort/QSerialPort>
      #include "SenConsole.h"
      #include "SenSettingsDialog.h"
      #include "SenSerialControlAlgorithmObject.h"
      
      class SenOpticalFlowSensorsMainWindow : public QMainWindow
      {
      private slots:
          void writeData(const QByteArray &data);
          void showDataInConsole(QByteArray data);
      
      signals:
          void emitOpenSerialOrder(SenSettingsDialog::Settings);
      
      private:
          Ui::SenOpticalFlowSensorsMainWindow *myMainWindow_ui;
          SenConsole *mySenConsole;
          SenSettingsDialog *mySenSettingsDialog;
      
          SenSettingsDialog::Settings mySettingInfo;
          SenSerialControlAlgorithmObject *myDefaulSerialObject;
      
          QThread *mySerialThread;
      };
      

      Constructor:

      SenOpticalFlowSensorsMainWindow::SenOpticalFlowSensorsMainWindow(QWidget *parent) :    QMainWindow(parent),
          myMainWindow_ui(new Ui::SenOpticalFlowSensorsMainWindow)
      {
          myMainWindow_ui->setupUi(this);
          mySenConsole = new SenConsole;
          setCentralWidget(mySenConsole);
      ////
          myDefaulSerialObject = new SenSerialControlAlgorithmObject();
      ////
          mySenSettingsDialog = new SenSettingsDialog;
          initActionsConnections();
      
          mySerialThread = new QThread();
      //    myDefaulSerialObject ->moveToThread(mySerialThread );
          mySerialThread ->start();
      }
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      • K Offline
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        kuzulis
        Qt Champions 2020
        wrote on 11 Jun 2015, 07:54 last edited by
        #7

        Just do not use the threads if you don't know how to do it.

        S 1 Reply Last reply 11 Jun 2015, 19:38
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        • K kuzulis
          11 Jun 2015, 07:54

          Just do not use the threads if you don't know how to do it.

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          Sen Li
          wrote on 11 Jun 2015, 19:38 last edited by
          #8

          @kuzulis
          So is it impossible to do multi-Terminal in Qt?

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            SGaist
            Lifetime Qt Champion
            wrote on 11 Jun 2015, 21:13 last edited by
            #9

            No it's not impossible, however thread programming is a complex matter where it's very very very easy to shoot yourself in the foot.

            One guess: your actual QSerialPort doesn't have a parent, so when your move myDefaultSerialObject, the serial port itself is not moved.

            Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
            Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

            S 1 Reply Last reply 12 Jun 2015, 00:51
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            • S SGaist
              11 Jun 2015, 21:13

              No it's not impossible, however thread programming is a complex matter where it's very very very easy to shoot yourself in the foot.

              One guess: your actual QSerialPort doesn't have a parent, so when your move myDefaultSerialObject, the serial port itself is not moved.

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              Sen Li
              wrote on 12 Jun 2015, 00:51 last edited by Sen Li 6 Dec 2015, 00:52
              #10

              @SGaist

              QWinEventNotifier: Event notifiers cannot be enabled or disabled from another thread

              I appreciate your guessing, however the application output reminder is telling something failed in another thread, which means the command of

                  if (mySerialPort->open(QIODevice::ReadWrite)) {//Here is when the hint comes out
                      emit emitSerialOpenedSetting();
                      syncNumMotionsCount = 0;
                      SenMotionByteArray.clear();
                      debugError = false;
                  } else {
                      emit emitSerialOpenErrorSetting(mySerialPort->errorString());
                  }
              

              failed in another thread instead of main thread.

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              • S Offline
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                Sen Li
                wrote on 12 Jun 2015, 19:49 last edited by
                #11

                Although it is not allowed to open/close QSerialPort in a new thread, I can open/close it in the main thread, and push it into the new thread after it is opened.

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                • K Offline
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                  kuzulis
                  Qt Champions 2020
                  wrote on 14 Jun 2015, 15:01 last edited by
                  #12

                  Although it is not allowed to open/close QSerialPort in a new thread,

                  It is not true. There are no differences in from what a thread to do open/close. A main things is that the QSerialPort should be moved into another thread before than opened/closed/read/write on it and so on. Besides, this should be called in that thread to which the QSerialPort was moved (not from the main thread or any others).

                  And I do not understand what is reason to use a more than one thread.. Because you can handle a data from the several serial ports (sensors) from the one main thread "simultaneous".

                  S 1 Reply Last reply 15 Jun 2015, 17:56
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                  • K kuzulis
                    14 Jun 2015, 15:01

                    Although it is not allowed to open/close QSerialPort in a new thread,

                    It is not true. There are no differences in from what a thread to do open/close. A main things is that the QSerialPort should be moved into another thread before than opened/closed/read/write on it and so on. Besides, this should be called in that thread to which the QSerialPort was moved (not from the main thread or any others).

                    And I do not understand what is reason to use a more than one thread.. Because you can handle a data from the several serial ports (sensors) from the one main thread "simultaneous".

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                    Sen Li
                    wrote on 15 Jun 2015, 17:56 last edited by
                    #13

                    @kuzulis

                    That is also what I do not understand.

                    However, the truth is:
                    QWinEventNotifier: Event notifiers cannot be enabled or disabled from another thread

                    and how will you explain this when it comes to open/close QSerialPort?

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                    • S Offline
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                      Sen Li
                      wrote on 15 Jun 2015, 20:48 last edited by
                      #14

                      It seems that, there is no way to push the Object, which contains QSerialPort, back to main thread and then close QSerialPort.

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                      • K Offline
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                        kuzulis
                        Qt Champions 2020
                        wrote on 16 Jun 2015, 08:14 last edited by
                        #15

                        That is also what I do not understand.

                        What do you don't understand?

                        I once again will repeat: simply don't use the threads, if no reason for this! (in your case there are is no any reason)

                        QWinEventNotifier: Event notifiers cannot be enabled or disabled from another thread

                        Obviously, you do something wrong: all methods of QSerialPort shall be called from the same thread in which an QSerialPort lives.

                        It seems that, there is no way to push the Object, which contains QSerialPort, back to main thread and then close QSerialPort.

                        WTF?

                        S 1 Reply Last reply 16 Jun 2015, 16:26
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                        • K kuzulis
                          16 Jun 2015, 08:14

                          That is also what I do not understand.

                          What do you don't understand?

                          I once again will repeat: simply don't use the threads, if no reason for this! (in your case there are is no any reason)

                          QWinEventNotifier: Event notifiers cannot be enabled or disabled from another thread

                          Obviously, you do something wrong: all methods of QSerialPort shall be called from the same thread in which an QSerialPort lives.

                          It seems that, there is no way to push the Object, which contains QSerialPort, back to main thread and then close QSerialPort.

                          WTF?

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                          Sen Li
                          wrote on 16 Jun 2015, 16:26 last edited by Sen Li
                          #16

                          @kuzulis
                          I don't understand what's wrong with my codes; it doesn't work anyway to open/close QSerialPort in a new thread.

                          I made it in main thread, no problem without putting the Serial Communication Control in a new thread; however, is that possible to do multiple serial threads?

                          Two reasons to do threads:

                          1. To make it as fast as possible;
                          2. Learn my bug in programming: I do not want to encounter the same bug again.
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                          • S Offline
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                            SGaist
                            Lifetime Qt Champion
                            wrote on 16 Jun 2015, 20:40 last edited by SGaist
                            #17

                            @Sen-Li

                            Threads are not always the way to make a program go faster. In some cases performance can be worse with threads. Qt's asynchronous nature allows to avoid usage of thread for most of the cases and generally serial port can be handled in the GUI thread without problem.

                            Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
                            Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                            S 1 Reply Last reply 19 Jun 2015, 18:12
                            0
                            • S SGaist
                              16 Jun 2015, 20:40

                              @Sen-Li

                              Threads are not always the way to make a program go faster. In some cases performance can be worse with threads. Qt's asynchronous nature allows to avoid usage of thread for most of the cases and generally serial port can be handled in the GUI thread without problem.

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                              Sen Li
                              wrote on 19 Jun 2015, 18:12 last edited by
                              #18

                              @SGaist

                              Thank you very much for your tips!
                              I probably should give up on the serial thread. It is beyond my ability to play with that problem.

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                              15 Jun 2015, 20:48

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