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When program quit, QSystemTrayIcon crashed.

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qsystemtrayiconcrashed
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  • SGaistS Offline
    SGaistS Offline
    SGaist
    Lifetime Qt Champion
    wrote on last edited by
    #2

    Hi and welcome to devnet,

    Why all these singletons ?

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

    ugiwghU 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • SGaistS SGaist

      Hi and welcome to devnet,

      Why all these singletons ?

      ugiwghU Offline
      ugiwghU Offline
      ugiwgh
      wrote on last edited by
      #3

      @SGaist I want it new once, and call it in some other functions. It seems that it carsh, does not because of singletons. I new QTray, and show it, and then delete it, and then it crash.

      kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • ugiwghU Offline
        ugiwghU Offline
        ugiwgh
        wrote on last edited by
        #4

        When I hide tray, and then delete, it does not crash.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • ugiwghU ugiwgh

          @SGaist I want it new once, and call it in some other functions. It seems that it carsh, does not because of singletons. I new QTray, and show it, and then delete it, and then it crash.

          kshegunovK Offline
          kshegunovK Offline
          kshegunov
          Moderators
          wrote on last edited by
          #5

          @ugiwgh
          Your problem is you're calling destructors of QObject instances, after the root QObject (i.e. QApplication) has been destroyed. You just can't, shouldn't and mustn't do that. So yes, the singleton is responsible for that bloody mess, because variables with global storage are allocated before (but not necessarily constructed) and destroyed after main().

          One more remark:
          That trick with having a special object for cleanup is very tricky. You can lose the pointer to the object before invoking the delete operator, so you can be deleting a memory location pointed by an invalid variable that may (or may not) still hold a valid address; it would depend on the compiler implementation.
          I haven't actually checked the standard to see whether integral types are freed after objects with non-trivial destructors, but whatsoever it says, this way - to depend on the order of construction/destruction of static variables - is a terrible technique.

          Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

          ugiwghU 2 Replies Last reply
          1
          • kshegunovK kshegunov

            @ugiwgh
            Your problem is you're calling destructors of QObject instances, after the root QObject (i.e. QApplication) has been destroyed. You just can't, shouldn't and mustn't do that. So yes, the singleton is responsible for that bloody mess, because variables with global storage are allocated before (but not necessarily constructed) and destroyed after main().

            One more remark:
            That trick with having a special object for cleanup is very tricky. You can lose the pointer to the object before invoking the delete operator, so you can be deleting a memory location pointed by an invalid variable that may (or may not) still hold a valid address; it would depend on the compiler implementation.
            I haven't actually checked the standard to see whether integral types are freed after objects with non-trivial destructors, but whatsoever it says, this way - to depend on the order of construction/destruction of static variables - is a terrible technique.

            ugiwghU Offline
            ugiwghU Offline
            ugiwgh
            wrote on last edited by
            #6

            @kshegunov I think you are right. Thanks for your help.

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • kshegunovK kshegunov

              @ugiwgh
              Your problem is you're calling destructors of QObject instances, after the root QObject (i.e. QApplication) has been destroyed. You just can't, shouldn't and mustn't do that. So yes, the singleton is responsible for that bloody mess, because variables with global storage are allocated before (but not necessarily constructed) and destroyed after main().

              One more remark:
              That trick with having a special object for cleanup is very tricky. You can lose the pointer to the object before invoking the delete operator, so you can be deleting a memory location pointed by an invalid variable that may (or may not) still hold a valid address; it would depend on the compiler implementation.
              I haven't actually checked the standard to see whether integral types are freed after objects with non-trivial destructors, but whatsoever it says, this way - to depend on the order of construction/destruction of static variables - is a terrible technique.

              ugiwghU Offline
              ugiwghU Offline
              ugiwgh
              wrote on last edited by
              #7

              @kshegunov

              It is nessary to add "instance_=NULL;" into destructor?

              class Tray : public QSystemTrayIcon
              {
              Q_OBJECT
              public:
              ~Tray() { instance_=NULL; }
              static Tray* instance()
              {
              if(NULL==instance_)
              {
              instance_=new PTray();
              }
              return instance_;
              }
              private:
              Tray(){}
              static Tray *instance_;
              };

              kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • ugiwghU ugiwgh

                @kshegunov

                It is nessary to add "instance_=NULL;" into destructor?

                class Tray : public QSystemTrayIcon
                {
                Q_OBJECT
                public:
                ~Tray() { instance_=NULL; }
                static Tray* instance()
                {
                if(NULL==instance_)
                {
                instance_=new PTray();
                }
                return instance_;
                }
                private:
                Tray(){}
                static Tray *instance_;
                };

                kshegunovK Offline
                kshegunovK Offline
                kshegunov
                Moderators
                wrote on last edited by kshegunov
                #8

                @ugiwgh

                It is nessary to add "instance_=NULL;" into destructor?

                Well, no. This does nothing, as delete NULL is valid and does nothing. The object will be still in memory anyway. Beside refactoring your code and not using globally available objects (which the singleton is - basically a global variable) you can hook up the destruction to be tied to Qt's application object's life cycle. To do that you just parent the QObject you're creating to the QApplication object like this:

                class Tray : public QSystemTrayIcon
                {
                    Q_OBJECT
                
                public:
                    Tray(QObject *);
                    ~Tray();
                
                    static Tray * instance();
                };
                
                Tray::Tray(QObject * parent = NULL)
                    : QSystemTrayIcon(parent)
                {
                }
                
                Tray::~Tray()
                {
                    // Don't delete the object. Qt will delete it when the parent goes out of scope.
                }
                
                Tray * Tray::instance()
                {
                    QCoreApplication * app = QCoreApplication::instance();
                    Q_ASSERT(app); //< Make sure this is not called before the application was constructed.
                    
                    static Tray * trayInstance = new Tray(app);
                    return trayInstance;
                }
                

                Again, it's better to not have singletons at all, C++ is not Java and not everything that's written in books about Java (or is common there) is applicable to C++. But the above snippet should work, although I haven't tested it.

                Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

                ugiwghU 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • kshegunovK kshegunov

                  @ugiwgh

                  It is nessary to add "instance_=NULL;" into destructor?

                  Well, no. This does nothing, as delete NULL is valid and does nothing. The object will be still in memory anyway. Beside refactoring your code and not using globally available objects (which the singleton is - basically a global variable) you can hook up the destruction to be tied to Qt's application object's life cycle. To do that you just parent the QObject you're creating to the QApplication object like this:

                  class Tray : public QSystemTrayIcon
                  {
                      Q_OBJECT
                  
                  public:
                      Tray(QObject *);
                      ~Tray();
                  
                      static Tray * instance();
                  };
                  
                  Tray::Tray(QObject * parent = NULL)
                      : QSystemTrayIcon(parent)
                  {
                  }
                  
                  Tray::~Tray()
                  {
                      // Don't delete the object. Qt will delete it when the parent goes out of scope.
                  }
                  
                  Tray * Tray::instance()
                  {
                      QCoreApplication * app = QCoreApplication::instance();
                      Q_ASSERT(app); //< Make sure this is not called before the application was constructed.
                      
                      static Tray * trayInstance = new Tray(app);
                      return trayInstance;
                  }
                  

                  Again, it's better to not have singletons at all, C++ is not Java and not everything that's written in books about Java (or is common there) is applicable to C++. But the above snippet should work, although I haven't tested it.

                  ugiwghU Offline
                  ugiwghU Offline
                  ugiwgh
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #9

                  @kshegunov
                  I have tested that. It crashed.
                  If I add tray->hide() after app.exec(). It normal exit.

                  (gdb) bt
                  #0 0x000000000045821a in QWidget::~QWidget() ()
                  #1 0x00000000008b79a9 in QBalloonTip::~QBalloonTip() ()
                  #2 0x00000000008b6cca in QBalloonTip::hideBalloon() ()
                  #3 0x00000000008c6e33 in QSystemTrayIconPrivate::remove_sys() ()
                  #4 0x00000000008b7bef in QSystemTrayIcon::~QSystemTrayIcon() ()
                  #5 0x00000000004124b9 in Tray::~Tray (this=0x2878cc0, __in_chrg=<value optimized out>)
                  at tray.cpp:26
                  #6 0x00000000004124f0 in Tray::~Tray (this=0x2878cc0, __in_chrg=<value optimized out>)
                  at tray.cpp:26
                  #7 0x0000000000ba1f67 in QObjectPrivate::deleteChildren() ()
                  #8 0x0000000000ba84b6 in QObject::~QObject() ()
                  #9 0x000000000042568c in QApplication::~QApplication() ()
                  #10 0x00000000004121af in QtSingleApplication::~QtSingleApplication (this=0x7fff44a4b6f0,
                  __in_chrg=<value optimized out>) at ../qtsingleapplication/src/qtsingleapplication.h:65
                  #11 0x0000000000411c8f in main (argc=1, argv=0x7fff44a4b898) at main.cpp:103

                  kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • ugiwghU ugiwgh

                    @kshegunov
                    I have tested that. It crashed.
                    If I add tray->hide() after app.exec(). It normal exit.

                    (gdb) bt
                    #0 0x000000000045821a in QWidget::~QWidget() ()
                    #1 0x00000000008b79a9 in QBalloonTip::~QBalloonTip() ()
                    #2 0x00000000008b6cca in QBalloonTip::hideBalloon() ()
                    #3 0x00000000008c6e33 in QSystemTrayIconPrivate::remove_sys() ()
                    #4 0x00000000008b7bef in QSystemTrayIcon::~QSystemTrayIcon() ()
                    #5 0x00000000004124b9 in Tray::~Tray (this=0x2878cc0, __in_chrg=<value optimized out>)
                    at tray.cpp:26
                    #6 0x00000000004124f0 in Tray::~Tray (this=0x2878cc0, __in_chrg=<value optimized out>)
                    at tray.cpp:26
                    #7 0x0000000000ba1f67 in QObjectPrivate::deleteChildren() ()
                    #8 0x0000000000ba84b6 in QObject::~QObject() ()
                    #9 0x000000000042568c in QApplication::~QApplication() ()
                    #10 0x00000000004121af in QtSingleApplication::~QtSingleApplication (this=0x7fff44a4b6f0,
                    __in_chrg=<value optimized out>) at ../qtsingleapplication/src/qtsingleapplication.h:65
                    #11 0x0000000000411c8f in main (argc=1, argv=0x7fff44a4b898) at main.cpp:103

                    kshegunovK Offline
                    kshegunovK Offline
                    kshegunov
                    Moderators
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #10

                    @ugiwgh
                    Can you provide a minimal project that reproduces the crash (e.g. in a git repository somewhere)?

                    That's strange, but what's stranger is this:

                    #10 0x00000000004121af in QtSingleApplication::~QtSingleApplication (this=0x7fff44a4b6f0,
                    __in_chrg=<value optimized out>) at ../qtsingleapplication/src/qtsingleapplication.h:65
                    

                    What is this and how it got there?

                    Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

                    ugiwghU 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • kshegunovK kshegunov

                      @ugiwgh
                      Can you provide a minimal project that reproduces the crash (e.g. in a git repository somewhere)?

                      That's strange, but what's stranger is this:

                      #10 0x00000000004121af in QtSingleApplication::~QtSingleApplication (this=0x7fff44a4b6f0,
                      __in_chrg=<value optimized out>) at ../qtsingleapplication/src/qtsingleapplication.h:65
                      

                      What is this and how it got there?

                      ugiwghU Offline
                      ugiwghU Offline
                      ugiwgh
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #11

                      @kshegunov
                      I have upload it there.
                      https://github.com/ugiwgh/qsystemtray/
                      https://github.com/ugiwgh/qsystemtray.git

                      kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • ugiwghU ugiwgh

                        @kshegunov
                        I have upload it there.
                        https://github.com/ugiwgh/qsystemtray/
                        https://github.com/ugiwgh/qsystemtray.git

                        kshegunovK Offline
                        kshegunovK Offline
                        kshegunov
                        Moderators
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #12

                        @ugiwgh
                        Well works okay on my machine - no crashes. I even see an empty space in the tray where when I click I get a context menu and I can choose to quit. When I do, everything works as expected and the program exits.

                        However, you shouldn't use QtSingleApplication as it seems to be ancient, you'd be better off looking for newer alternatives.

                        Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

                        ugiwghU 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • kshegunovK kshegunov

                          @ugiwgh
                          Well works okay on my machine - no crashes. I even see an empty space in the tray where when I click I get a context menu and I can choose to quit. When I do, everything works as expected and the program exits.

                          However, you shouldn't use QtSingleApplication as it seems to be ancient, you'd be better off looking for newer alternatives.

                          ugiwghU Offline
                          ugiwghU Offline
                          ugiwgh
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #13

                          @kshegunov
                          Yes. I have disabled QtSingleApplication. And I have update the code on github.
                          It also crashed, when I choose to quit.

                          #0 0x00007f094a93564a in QWidget::~QWidget() ()
                          from /opt/qt-5.4.1/5.4/gcc_64/lib/libQt5Widgets.so.5
                          #1 0x00007f094ac92f0e in ?? () from /opt/qt-5.4.1/5.4/gcc_64/lib/libQt5Widgets.so.5
                          #2 0x00007f094ac92b25 in ?? () from /opt/qt-5.4.1/5.4/gcc_64/lib/libQt5Widgets.so.5
                          #3 0x00007f094ac735eb in QSystemTrayIcon::~QSystemTrayIcon() ()
                          from /opt/qt-5.4.1/5.4/gcc_64/lib/libQt5Widgets.so.5
                          #4 0x0000000000403625 in PTray::~PTray (this=0x22a1e60,
                          __in_chrg=<value optimized out>) at para_tray.cpp:26
                          #5 0x000000000040365c in PTray::~PTray (this=0x22a1e60,
                          __in_chrg=<value optimized out>) at para_tray.cpp:26
                          #6 0x00007f0949ba4b1a in QObjectPrivate::deleteChildren() ()
                          from /opt/qt-5.4.1/5.4/gcc_64/lib/libQt5Core.so.5
                          #7 0x00007f0949baa259 in QObject::~QObject() ()
                          from /opt/qt-5.4.1/5.4/gcc_64/lib/libQt5Core.so.5
                          #8 0x00007f094a8edda8 in QApplication::~QApplication() ()
                          from /opt/qt-5.4.1/5.4/gcc_64/lib/libQt5Widgets.so.5
                          #9 0x0000000000403129 in main (argc=1, argv=0x7ffff084acf8) at main.cpp:23

                          kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • ugiwghU ugiwgh

                            @kshegunov
                            Yes. I have disabled QtSingleApplication. And I have update the code on github.
                            It also crashed, when I choose to quit.

                            #0 0x00007f094a93564a in QWidget::~QWidget() ()
                            from /opt/qt-5.4.1/5.4/gcc_64/lib/libQt5Widgets.so.5
                            #1 0x00007f094ac92f0e in ?? () from /opt/qt-5.4.1/5.4/gcc_64/lib/libQt5Widgets.so.5
                            #2 0x00007f094ac92b25 in ?? () from /opt/qt-5.4.1/5.4/gcc_64/lib/libQt5Widgets.so.5
                            #3 0x00007f094ac735eb in QSystemTrayIcon::~QSystemTrayIcon() ()
                            from /opt/qt-5.4.1/5.4/gcc_64/lib/libQt5Widgets.so.5
                            #4 0x0000000000403625 in PTray::~PTray (this=0x22a1e60,
                            __in_chrg=<value optimized out>) at para_tray.cpp:26
                            #5 0x000000000040365c in PTray::~PTray (this=0x22a1e60,
                            __in_chrg=<value optimized out>) at para_tray.cpp:26
                            #6 0x00007f0949ba4b1a in QObjectPrivate::deleteChildren() ()
                            from /opt/qt-5.4.1/5.4/gcc_64/lib/libQt5Core.so.5
                            #7 0x00007f0949baa259 in QObject::~QObject() ()
                            from /opt/qt-5.4.1/5.4/gcc_64/lib/libQt5Core.so.5
                            #8 0x00007f094a8edda8 in QApplication::~QApplication() ()
                            from /opt/qt-5.4.1/5.4/gcc_64/lib/libQt5Widgets.so.5
                            #9 0x0000000000403129 in main (argc=1, argv=0x7ffff084acf8) at main.cpp:23

                            kshegunovK Offline
                            kshegunovK Offline
                            kshegunov
                            Moderators
                            wrote on last edited by kshegunov
                            #14

                            @ugiwgh
                            Well, I don't know man. As I said, I had run your code (the link you provided in your previous post) and it worked okay on my machine, no crashes whatsoever.
                            If it helps I'm running Debian stretch (4.4.0 kernel) + KDE plasma desktop and I used Qt 5.5.1 for the test run. You may have stumbled on a bug or possibly some platform dependent code is not executing properly, I can't tell really.

                            EDIT:
                            I only just now saw something:

                            #4 0x0000000000403625 in PTray::~PTray (this=0x22a1e60,
                            __in_chrg=<value optimized out>) at para_tray.cpp:26
                            #5 0x000000000040365c in PTray::~PTray (this=0x22a1e60,
                            __in_chrg=<value optimized out>) at para_tray.cpp:26
                            

                            Why do you have 2 calls to your destructor??!

                            Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • SGaistS Offline
                              SGaistS Offline
                              SGaist
                              Lifetime Qt Champion
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #15

                              Like @kshegunov already wrote using singleton should be avoided when possible and your use case really does't need any singleton.

                              It sounds that you are rather creating tight coupling between your different classes rather that have a lean path to use system tray.

                              So what are all these classes doing with the system tray icon and that menu ?

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

                              1 Reply Last reply
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