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  4. Qprocess show stdoutput only on ending of excecution.

Qprocess show stdoutput only on ending of excecution.

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  • S saran

    @JNBarchan

    • The read channel is ok, when the process finish, I get the output.
    • I probed QIODevice::Unbuffered option on process->start but still not working.
    JonBJ Offline
    JonBJ Offline
    JonB
    wrote on last edited by JonB
    #8

    @saran
    Thanks for clarifying.
    Is your code your own, or is it taken from an example somewhere?
    Are you saying you never receive SIGNAL(readyReadStandardOutput()) nor SIGNAL(readyRead()), but only SIGNAL(finished)?

    S 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • JonBJ JonB

      @saran
      Thanks for clarifying.
      Is your code your own, or is it taken from an example somewhere?
      Are you saying you never receive SIGNAL(readyReadStandardOutput()) nor SIGNAL(readyRead()), but only SIGNAL(finished)?

      S Offline
      S Offline
      saran
      wrote on last edited by
      #9

      @JNBarchan
      Is my own code, based on examples.
      I recieve both, SIGNAL(readyReadStandardOutput) and them SIGNAL(finished).
      The software output when you open it on a cmd.exe is something like this:
      0_1507751363909_58924232-3d17-4c01-b9cf-ef6b5b21e6a8-image.png

      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • S saran

        @JNBarchan
        Is my own code, based on examples.
        I recieve both, SIGNAL(readyReadStandardOutput) and them SIGNAL(finished).
        The software output when you open it on a cmd.exe is something like this:
        0_1507751363909_58924232-3d17-4c01-b9cf-ef6b5b21e6a8-image.png

        JonBJ Offline
        JonBJ Offline
        JonB
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        @saran
        Your question states:

        when I excecute on Qprocess I have a signal only on end off execution

        Now you say:

        I recieve both, SIGNAL(readyReadStandardOutput) and them SIGNAL(finished).

        Am I being dense, but I'm getting more confused?

        Your code shows 3 signal handlers. Can you state nice & clearly which ones you do and do not get, and when?

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • S saran

          I 'm using QProcess to launch a external application. (st-link_cli.exe)
          if I excecute the application on cmd.exe, I can see the progress of the software but when I excecute on Qprocess I have a signal only on end off execution and I can't show the progress of the app.
          There is another signal that can I use?

                  process = new QProcess(this);
                  QStringList argumentos;
                  process->setWorkingDirectory(QDir::home().absolutePath());
                  QString file = "ST-LINK_CLI.exe";
                  qWarning(file.toStdString().c_str());
                  argumentos << "-P" << filehex  << "-Q" << "-V" <<  "after_programming";
                  process->setReadChannel(QProcess::StandardOutput);
                  process->setProcessChannelMode(QProcess::MergedChannels);
                  process->setCurrentReadChannel(QProcess::StandardOutput);
                  connect(process, SIGNAL(readyReadStandardOutput()), this, SLOT(readOutput()));
                  connect(process, SIGNAL(readyRead()), this, SLOT(readOutput()));
                  connect(process, SIGNAL(finished(int,QProcess::ExitStatus)),this,SLOT(stlinkFinish()));
                  process->start(file,argumentos);
          
          jsulmJ Offline
          jsulmJ Offline
          jsulm
          Lifetime Qt Champion
          wrote on last edited by
          #11

          @saran said in Qprocess show stdoutput only on ending of excecution.:

          process->start(file,argumentos);

          Can you show what you're doing after this line?

          Also why do you have this

          process->setReadChannel(QProcess::StandardOutput);
          process->setProcessChannelMode(QProcess::MergedChannels);
          process->setCurrentReadChannel(QProcess::StandardOutput);
          

          ?

          What are you doing in readOutput()?

          One more question: to which channel does this executable write (stdout or stderr)?

          https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

          JonBJ S 2 Replies Last reply
          0
          • jsulmJ jsulm

            @saran said in Qprocess show stdoutput only on ending of excecution.:

            process->start(file,argumentos);

            Can you show what you're doing after this line?

            Also why do you have this

            process->setReadChannel(QProcess::StandardOutput);
            process->setProcessChannelMode(QProcess::MergedChannels);
            process->setCurrentReadChannel(QProcess::StandardOutput);
            

            ?

            What are you doing in readOutput()?

            One more question: to which channel does this executable write (stdout or stderr)?

            JonBJ Offline
            JonBJ Offline
            JonB
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            @jsulm said in Qprocess show stdoutput only on ending of excecution.:

            One more question: to which channel does this executable write (stdout or stderr)?

            Because he is using setProcessChannelMode(QProcess::MergedChannels) the executable will effectively only write to stdout, not stderr. http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qprocess.html:

            [QProcess::MergedChannels] QProcess merges the output of the running process into the standard output channel (stdout). The standard error channel (stderr) will not receive any data. The standard output and standard error data of the running process are interleaved.

            1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • jsulmJ jsulm

              @saran said in Qprocess show stdoutput only on ending of excecution.:

              process->start(file,argumentos);

              Can you show what you're doing after this line?

              Also why do you have this

              process->setReadChannel(QProcess::StandardOutput);
              process->setProcessChannelMode(QProcess::MergedChannels);
              process->setCurrentReadChannel(QProcess::StandardOutput);
              

              ?

              What are you doing in readOutput()?

              One more question: to which channel does this executable write (stdout or stderr)?

              S Offline
              S Offline
              saran
              wrote on last edited by
              #13

              @jsulm
              process->start is the last line.
              I have

              process->setReadChannel(QProcess::StandardOutput);
              process->setProcessChannelMode(QProcess::MergedChannels);
              process->setCurrentReadChannel(QProcess::StandardOutput);
              

              Just to make sure the process writes to stdout but anyway, without those lines the behavior is the same.

              On readOutput I have:

              void softsWindow::readOutput(){
                  qWarning(QString::number(process->bytesAvailable()).toStdString().c_str());
                  while(process->canReadLine()){
                      QByteArray linea = process->readLine();
                      ui->textBrowser->append(linea);        
                  }
              } 
              

              As you can see, the function directs the text of the stdout to a QTextBrowser
              With the qWarning(QString::number(process->bytesAvailable()).toStdString().c_str()); line, I can see that the function receives all the data at once. the line print a "677" on application output, at same time the QTextBrowser print all the output.

              JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
              1
              • S saran

                @jsulm
                process->start is the last line.
                I have

                process->setReadChannel(QProcess::StandardOutput);
                process->setProcessChannelMode(QProcess::MergedChannels);
                process->setCurrentReadChannel(QProcess::StandardOutput);
                

                Just to make sure the process writes to stdout but anyway, without those lines the behavior is the same.

                On readOutput I have:

                void softsWindow::readOutput(){
                    qWarning(QString::number(process->bytesAvailable()).toStdString().c_str());
                    while(process->canReadLine()){
                        QByteArray linea = process->readLine();
                        ui->textBrowser->append(linea);        
                    }
                } 
                

                As you can see, the function directs the text of the stdout to a QTextBrowser
                With the qWarning(QString::number(process->bytesAvailable()).toStdString().c_str()); line, I can see that the function receives all the data at once. the line print a "677" on application output, at same time the QTextBrowser print all the output.

                JonBJ Offline
                JonBJ Offline
                JonB
                wrote on last edited by JonB
                #14

                @saran
                Do two things:

                1. Replace while(process->canReadLine()) and the process->readLine(); by QProcess::readAllStandardOutput(). It avoids looping and relying on when process->canReadLine() returns true. (It also means we can try "unbufferred", which canReadLine() says it cannot handle; you might want to retry QIODevice::Unbuffered to see if that now makes any difference.) I would think about doing it like that anyway, unless you have reason to want to only grab whole lines at a time for output.

                2. Replace the command you're executing by one which produces voluminous output, e.g. dir /s c:\. What arrives when? Does the subprocess actually get stuck because the parent has failed to read its output as it goes along, which is what will happen if the signal only ever arrives at the end? We need to know whether behaviour is linked to
                  how st-link_cli.exe produces its output versus anything else.

                BTW, if when you last ran it returned just "677" as you say, that does not correspond at all to the output you show in your screenshot. Please try to keep things consistent since we are measuring when output arrives.

                S 1 Reply Last reply
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                • JonBJ JonB

                  @saran
                  Do two things:

                  1. Replace while(process->canReadLine()) and the process->readLine(); by QProcess::readAllStandardOutput(). It avoids looping and relying on when process->canReadLine() returns true. (It also means we can try "unbufferred", which canReadLine() says it cannot handle; you might want to retry QIODevice::Unbuffered to see if that now makes any difference.) I would think about doing it like that anyway, unless you have reason to want to only grab whole lines at a time for output.

                  2. Replace the command you're executing by one which produces voluminous output, e.g. dir /s c:\. What arrives when? Does the subprocess actually get stuck because the parent has failed to read its output as it goes along, which is what will happen if the signal only ever arrives at the end? We need to know whether behaviour is linked to
                    how st-link_cli.exe produces its output versus anything else.

                  BTW, if when you last ran it returned just "677" as you say, that does not correspond at all to the output you show in your screenshot. Please try to keep things consistent since we are measuring when output arrives.

                  S Offline
                  S Offline
                  saran
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #15

                  @JNBarchan
                  When I said that I get "677", I was talking about the qWarning(QString::number(process->bytesAvailable()).toStdString().c_str()); line, this is consistent, when readOutput function is executed, all stdout bytes are availables for read, so process->bytesAvailable() is 677, that is the characters count.
                  The screenshot shows the output when I run st-link_cli.exe on cmd.exe, as astated above.

                  JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • S saran

                    @JNBarchan
                    When I said that I get "677", I was talking about the qWarning(QString::number(process->bytesAvailable()).toStdString().c_str()); line, this is consistent, when readOutput function is executed, all stdout bytes are availables for read, so process->bytesAvailable() is 677, that is the characters count.
                    The screenshot shows the output when I run st-link_cli.exe on cmd.exe, as astated above.

                    JonBJ Offline
                    JonBJ Offline
                    JonB
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #16

                    @saran
                    OIC, that's because it has 677 bytes initially, then it manages to keep satisfying the canReadLine with more data which has arrived since, I guess. WE could have done with another qWarning(QString::number(process->bytesAvailable()).toStdString().c_str()); inside the loop.

                    Never mind about that. Suggest you try my 2 recommendations and report back :)

                    S 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • JonBJ JonB

                      @saran
                      OIC, that's because it has 677 bytes initially, then it manages to keep satisfying the canReadLine with more data which has arrived since, I guess. WE could have done with another qWarning(QString::number(process->bytesAvailable()).toStdString().c_str()); inside the loop.

                      Never mind about that. Suggest you try my 2 recommendations and report back :)

                      S Offline
                      S Offline
                      saran
                      wrote on last edited by saran
                      #17

                      @JNBarchan

                      1. The same with the replaces. The problem is in the SIGNAL, that is not generating the trigger on each new line.

                      2. I tried the following and the code works as I expected:

                          QString file = "ping";
                          QStringList argumentos << "192.168.0.1";
                          process->start(file,argumentos);
                      

                      Result: 5 SIGNAL(readyReadStandardOutput()), on each one, the readOutoput function printed correctly the output on the QTextBrowser.

                      So the problem is the st-link_cli.exe output.

                      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • S saran

                        @JNBarchan

                        1. The same with the replaces. The problem is in the SIGNAL, that is not generating the trigger on each new line.

                        2. I tried the following and the code works as I expected:

                            QString file = "ping";
                            QStringList argumentos << "192.168.0.1";
                            process->start(file,argumentos);
                        

                        Result: 5 SIGNAL(readyReadStandardOutput()), on each one, the readOutoput function printed correctly the output on the QTextBrowser.

                        So the problem is the st-link_cli.exe output.

                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonB
                        wrote on last edited by JonB
                        #18

                        @saran
                        Yes, like it's being buffered there so you don't get it, that's the usual problem I suspected at start. Try the QIODevice::Unbuffered now assuming you've changed to use QProcess::readAllStandardOutput() instead of process->readLine(); ?

                        S 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • JonBJ JonB

                          @saran
                          Yes, like it's being buffered there so you don't get it, that's the usual problem I suspected at start. Try the QIODevice::Unbuffered now assuming you've changed to use QProcess::readAllStandardOutput() instead of process->readLine(); ?

                          S Offline
                          S Offline
                          saran
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #19

                          @JNBarchan
                          There is no SIGNAL(readyReadStandardOutput() nor SIGNAL(readyRead() when I put QIODevice::Unbuffered .

                          JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • S saran

                            @JNBarchan
                            There is no SIGNAL(readyReadStandardOutput() nor SIGNAL(readyRead() when I put QIODevice::Unbuffered .

                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonB
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            @saran
                            Hmm, that sounds odd to me, why would that be?

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                            • J Offline
                              J Offline
                              jdascenzio
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #21

                              I have the same trouble. It's seems to happen when the end of line send by a process is only \n instead of \r\n for windows.....

                              G 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • J jdascenzio

                                I have the same trouble. It's seems to happen when the end of line send by a process is only \n instead of \r\n for windows.....

                                G Offline
                                G Offline
                                greenpitaya
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #22

                                Also facing the same issues, ping works fine realtime, but the readyRead signal isnt getting triggered when theres a 'print' command on my custom executable. As everyone else, it gets triggered only after the process is completed.

                                @saran were you able to debug this problem eventually?

                                @jdascenzio does using \r \n solve this problem? It did not for me

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                                • J Offline
                                  J Offline
                                  jarl93rsa
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #23

                                  Yes I realise this topic is old, but replying to it anyway as it's one of the first things that appear in google when you search this issue.

                                  For anyone who hasn't resolved this there's a chance your application is buffering its stdout, and it's not a problem on the qt side.

                                  I had this same issue, my logging functions writing to stdout in the application I was trying to get output from wouldn't show until the process had finished. It was resolved by flushing stdout.

                                  In my case my c program log function would write to printf(), and at the end of those functions I needed to put fflush(stdout).

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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