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  4. [SOLVED] Problem with cmd process
Forum Update on Monday, May 27th 2025

[SOLVED] Problem with cmd process

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  • C Cimmy

    618bc594-4d2e-4156-97b0-1f2962b716f3-image.png

    First try: use cmd, use rtosim_ik_from_file.exe as parameters. Message "destroyed while process is still running" and nothing happen

    b5ca4651-8541-4a09-9748-2860691ce233-image.png

    Second try: run directly rtosim_ik_from_file.exe with parameters (model, trc ect) but nothing happen. NO "destroyed while [...]" message.

    Any other suggestions?
    Don't know how to create a batch file. I will try...

    jsulmJ Offline
    jsulmJ Offline
    jsulm
    Lifetime Qt Champion
    wrote on last edited by
    #12

    @Cimmy You're creating local QProcess instance on the stack! It is deleted when the slot finishes!
    I wrote before: "Simply add QProcess member to your class".

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

    1 Reply Last reply
    3
    • C Cimmy

      void MainWindow::on_submitpath_clicked()
      {
      QString directory = ui->linepath->text() ;
      QString model = ui->linemodel->text();
      QString tracing = ui->linetracing->text();
      QString taskset = ui->linetaskset->text();
      QString sndstring="rtosim_ik_from_file --model ";
      sndstring.append(model);
      sndstring.append(" --trc ");
      sndstring.append(tracing);
      sndstring.append(" --task-set ");
      sndstring.append(taskset);
      sndstring.append(" -v");
      QString filenew = directory;
      filenew.append("/Filenew.bat");
      QFile file(filenew);
      if ( file.open(QIODevice::ReadWrite) )
      {
      QTextStream stream(&file);
      stream << sndstring <<endl;
      }
      QStringList arguments;
      arguments << "/c" << "Filenew.bat";
      QProcess *exec = new QProcess();
      exec->setWorkingDirectory(directory);
      exec->start("cmd.exe", arguments);
      }

      SOLVED!! Thanks to all!!

      jsulmJ Offline
      jsulmJ Offline
      jsulm
      Lifetime Qt Champion
      wrote on last edited by
      #13

      @Cimmy said in Problem with cmd process:

      SOLVED!! Thanks to all!!

      Not really - you leak memory (exec is never deleted). As I wrote already add exec to your class as member, or pointer to QProcess to be able to delete it when you're done.

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

      1 Reply Last reply
      4
      • C Offline
        C Offline
        Cimmy
        wrote on last edited by
        #14

        QProcess exec;
        exec.setWorkingDirectory(directory);
        exec.start("cmd.exe",arguments);

        right?

        JonBJ jsulmJ 3 Replies Last reply
        0
        • C Cimmy

          QProcess exec;
          exec.setWorkingDirectory(directory);
          exec.start("cmd.exe",arguments);

          right?

          JonBJ Offline
          JonBJ Offline
          JonB
          wrote on last edited by JonB
          #15

          @Cimmy
          You need to make the

          QProcess exec;
          

          a member of your class (MainWindow), not a local variable in function on_submitpath_clicked.

          1 Reply Last reply
          3
          • C Cimmy

            QProcess exec;
            exec.setWorkingDirectory(directory);
            exec.start("cmd.exe",arguments);

            right?

            jsulmJ Offline
            jsulmJ Offline
            jsulm
            Lifetime Qt Champion
            wrote on last edited by
            #16

            @Cimmy said in Problem with cmd process:

            right?

            wrong. Then you will again have same issue: QProcess going out of scope and deleted.
            I write it now for the third time: "I wrote before: "Simply add QProcess member to your class"." (as @JonB suggested also).

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

            1 Reply Last reply
            4
            • C Cimmy

              QProcess exec;
              exec.setWorkingDirectory(directory);
              exec.start("cmd.exe",arguments);

              right?

              JonBJ Offline
              JonBJ Offline
              JonB
              wrote on last edited by JonB
              #17

              @Cimmy
              If you are interested (as I am!) as to why you have things this way. Here is what @jsulm has been telling you:

              The issue is the QProcess destructor:

              Destructs the QProcess object, i.e., killing the process.

              Note that this function will not return until the process is terminated.

              So if a QProcess gets destructed it will kill the process if it's still running. The problem is your code is only going to start() the sub-process running. It can/will continue running for a while. If your code were waiting for it to finish (e.g. QProcess::execute() or QProcess::waitForFinished()), there wouldn't be a problem, after that you could allow the QProcess to get destroyed.

              If your QProcess is a local variable on the stack in a function like you propose, as soon as the function exits (variable goes "out of scope") the destructor would get called. So you can either:

              • Move QProcess exec variable to a member of your class, not destructed till class instance destructed; or

              • Use QProcess *exec = new QProcess(), allocated on the heap. Not destructed till delete exec. But then you need somewhere to save that pointer so that you can later delete it, no use as a local variable, so equally needs moving to class scope.

              @jsulm
              I have musing over this. If you want simple to start a sub-process and "forget" about it (yes, I know about "zombie" processes), this ~QProcess() behaviour is a bit problematic. I don't think startDetached() in itself would help here, it doesn't say that the destructor will not kill the process in this case:

              If the calling process exits, the detached process will continue to run unaffected.

              Yes, but if ~QProcess() called on exit it will still kill it, unless the docs are a bit vague here. Perhaps actually it does not? I wonder if QProcess() could do with a setNoKillOrWaitOnDestruct() flag, if startDetached() does not do that?

              So.... I guess in this case the only safe thing to do would be to go new QProcess and deliberately not delete on exit? C++ doesn't go through everything you've newed and delete prior to exit, does it?! So accept that your program "leaks" prior to exit (e.g. a memory checker) and put up with it?

              jsulmJ 2 Replies Last reply
              0
              • JonBJ JonB

                @Cimmy
                If you are interested (as I am!) as to why you have things this way. Here is what @jsulm has been telling you:

                The issue is the QProcess destructor:

                Destructs the QProcess object, i.e., killing the process.

                Note that this function will not return until the process is terminated.

                So if a QProcess gets destructed it will kill the process if it's still running. The problem is your code is only going to start() the sub-process running. It can/will continue running for a while. If your code were waiting for it to finish (e.g. QProcess::execute() or QProcess::waitForFinished()), there wouldn't be a problem, after that you could allow the QProcess to get destroyed.

                If your QProcess is a local variable on the stack in a function like you propose, as soon as the function exits (variable goes "out of scope") the destructor would get called. So you can either:

                • Move QProcess exec variable to a member of your class, not destructed till class instance destructed; or

                • Use QProcess *exec = new QProcess(), allocated on the heap. Not destructed till delete exec. But then you need somewhere to save that pointer so that you can later delete it, no use as a local variable, so equally needs moving to class scope.

                @jsulm
                I have musing over this. If you want simple to start a sub-process and "forget" about it (yes, I know about "zombie" processes), this ~QProcess() behaviour is a bit problematic. I don't think startDetached() in itself would help here, it doesn't say that the destructor will not kill the process in this case:

                If the calling process exits, the detached process will continue to run unaffected.

                Yes, but if ~QProcess() called on exit it will still kill it, unless the docs are a bit vague here. Perhaps actually it does not? I wonder if QProcess() could do with a setNoKillOrWaitOnDestruct() flag, if startDetached() does not do that?

                So.... I guess in this case the only safe thing to do would be to go new QProcess and deliberately not delete on exit? C++ doesn't go through everything you've newed and delete prior to exit, does it?! So accept that your program "leaks" prior to exit (e.g. a memory checker) and put up with it?

                jsulmJ Offline
                jsulmJ Offline
                jsulm
                Lifetime Qt Champion
                wrote on last edited by
                #18

                @JonB "If the calling process exits, the detached process will continue to run unaffected." - https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qprocess.html#startDetached
                So, the QProcess destructor will not terminate the detached process as it is detached.
                "this ~QProcess() behaviour is a bit problematic" - in what way? If you use startDetached() then the destructor doesn't matter. If you use exec() then I don't see why ~QProcess() terminating process is a problem? At the end it's your job as developer to select the right approach.

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

                JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                4
                • jsulmJ jsulm

                  @JonB "If the calling process exits, the detached process will continue to run unaffected." - https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qprocess.html#startDetached
                  So, the QProcess destructor will not terminate the detached process as it is detached.
                  "this ~QProcess() behaviour is a bit problematic" - in what way? If you use startDetached() then the destructor doesn't matter. If you use exec() then I don't see why ~QProcess() terminating process is a problem? At the end it's your job as developer to select the right approach.

                  JonBJ Offline
                  JonBJ Offline
                  JonB
                  wrote on last edited by JonB
                  #19

                  @jsulm

                  "If the calling process exits, the detached process will continue to run unaffected."

                  That describes what happens if the calling process exits. It does not state it countermands what I quoted from ~QProcess(), which states it kills & waits. The question (my question) is what happens, which "wins", if you do not use new but have a "global" scoped QProcess globProc variable (not *globProc), initiate glocProc.startDetached(), and then exit your program. To me the docs are unclear....

                  Can I try this myself? No, because I'm stinky Python, and there are no variables, only heap pointers....

                  jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • JonBJ JonB

                    @Cimmy
                    If you are interested (as I am!) as to why you have things this way. Here is what @jsulm has been telling you:

                    The issue is the QProcess destructor:

                    Destructs the QProcess object, i.e., killing the process.

                    Note that this function will not return until the process is terminated.

                    So if a QProcess gets destructed it will kill the process if it's still running. The problem is your code is only going to start() the sub-process running. It can/will continue running for a while. If your code were waiting for it to finish (e.g. QProcess::execute() or QProcess::waitForFinished()), there wouldn't be a problem, after that you could allow the QProcess to get destroyed.

                    If your QProcess is a local variable on the stack in a function like you propose, as soon as the function exits (variable goes "out of scope") the destructor would get called. So you can either:

                    • Move QProcess exec variable to a member of your class, not destructed till class instance destructed; or

                    • Use QProcess *exec = new QProcess(), allocated on the heap. Not destructed till delete exec. But then you need somewhere to save that pointer so that you can later delete it, no use as a local variable, so equally needs moving to class scope.

                    @jsulm
                    I have musing over this. If you want simple to start a sub-process and "forget" about it (yes, I know about "zombie" processes), this ~QProcess() behaviour is a bit problematic. I don't think startDetached() in itself would help here, it doesn't say that the destructor will not kill the process in this case:

                    If the calling process exits, the detached process will continue to run unaffected.

                    Yes, but if ~QProcess() called on exit it will still kill it, unless the docs are a bit vague here. Perhaps actually it does not? I wonder if QProcess() could do with a setNoKillOrWaitOnDestruct() flag, if startDetached() does not do that?

                    So.... I guess in this case the only safe thing to do would be to go new QProcess and deliberately not delete on exit? C++ doesn't go through everything you've newed and delete prior to exit, does it?! So accept that your program "leaks" prior to exit (e.g. a memory checker) and put up with it?

                    jsulmJ Offline
                    jsulmJ Offline
                    jsulm
                    Lifetime Qt Champion
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #20

                    @JonB And there are static methods in QProcess to execute a process without even creating a QProcess instance.

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

                    JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                    5
                    • JonBJ JonB

                      @jsulm

                      "If the calling process exits, the detached process will continue to run unaffected."

                      That describes what happens if the calling process exits. It does not state it countermands what I quoted from ~QProcess(), which states it kills & waits. The question (my question) is what happens, which "wins", if you do not use new but have a "global" scoped QProcess globProc variable (not *globProc), initiate glocProc.startDetached(), and then exit your program. To me the docs are unclear....

                      Can I try this myself? No, because I'm stinky Python, and there are no variables, only heap pointers....

                      jsulmJ Offline
                      jsulmJ Offline
                      jsulm
                      Lifetime Qt Champion
                      wrote on last edited by jsulm
                      #21

                      @JonB said in Problem with cmd process:

                      That describes what happens if the calling process exits

                      Yes, and if an application exits ~QProcess() will be called (at least if it exits normally)...
                      It's the whole point of startDetached() - it detaches the QProcess instance from the started process. Just try.

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

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      3
                      • jsulmJ jsulm

                        @JonB And there are static methods in QProcess to execute a process without even creating a QProcess instance.

                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonB
                        wrote on last edited by JonB
                        #22

                        @jsulm
                        Ah!! (And you don't think those create an instance internally?). OK, so if I use static QProcess::startDetached() that really should not call ~QProcess, even on program exit?

                        It's the whole point of startDetached() - it detaches the QProcess instance from the started process.

                        Just because a process is detached that does not mean you cannot wait on or kill it, does it? It just means things like it's in its own session.

                        But it should not matter as the process is detached and the destructor should NOT terminate it.

                        OK, but I don't get that from the docs! Maybe we read them differently. I'm also having a deeper think about C++ static, too long now of having to do Python... :(

                        Time for me to have a play....

                        jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
                        1
                        • JonBJ JonB

                          @jsulm
                          Ah!! (And you don't think those create an instance internally?). OK, so if I use static QProcess::startDetached() that really should not call ~QProcess, even on program exit?

                          It's the whole point of startDetached() - it detaches the QProcess instance from the started process.

                          Just because a process is detached that does not mean you cannot wait on or kill it, does it? It just means things like it's in its own session.

                          But it should not matter as the process is detached and the destructor should NOT terminate it.

                          OK, but I don't get that from the docs! Maybe we read them differently. I'm also having a deeper think about C++ static, too long now of having to do Python... :(

                          Time for me to have a play....

                          jsulmJ Offline
                          jsulmJ Offline
                          jsulm
                          Lifetime Qt Champion
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #23

                          @JonB said in Problem with cmd process:

                          And you don't think those create an instance internally?

                          I don't know. But it should not matter as the process is detached and the destructor should NOT terminate it.

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

                          JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                          1
                          • jsulmJ jsulm

                            @JonB said in Problem with cmd process:

                            And you don't think those create an instance internally?

                            I don't know. But it should not matter as the process is detached and the destructor should NOT terminate it.

                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonB
                            wrote on last edited by JonB
                            #24

                            @jsulm
                            Just to confirm your interpretation.

                            From Python/PySide2, from a terminal if I run an interactive python3 and do

                            >>> from PySide2.QtCore import QProcess
                            >>> p = QProcess(); p.start("./script")
                            

                            and then exit the python session (python will auto-delete everything created), I get a message

                            QProcess: Destroyed while process ("./script") is still running.
                            

                            But if I use

                            >>> p = QProcess(); p.startDetached("./script")
                            # or
                            >>> QProcess.startDetached("./script")
                            

                            no message, and I continue to see ./script's output after the python session has exited.

                            jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
                            1
                            • JonBJ JonB

                              @jsulm
                              Just to confirm your interpretation.

                              From Python/PySide2, from a terminal if I run an interactive python3 and do

                              >>> from PySide2.QtCore import QProcess
                              >>> p = QProcess(); p.start("./script")
                              

                              and then exit the python session (python will auto-delete everything created), I get a message

                              QProcess: Destroyed while process ("./script") is still running.
                              

                              But if I use

                              >>> p = QProcess(); p.startDetached("./script")
                              # or
                              >>> QProcess.startDetached("./script")
                              

                              no message, and I continue to see ./script's output after the python session has exited.

                              jsulmJ Offline
                              jsulmJ Offline
                              jsulm
                              Lifetime Qt Champion
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #25

                              @JonB said in Problem with cmd process:

                              no message, and I continue to see ./script's output after the python session has exited.

                              This is expected, isn't it? As stated in the documentation. ~QProcess() is called in both cases.

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

                              JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • jsulmJ jsulm

                                @JonB said in Problem with cmd process:

                                no message, and I continue to see ./script's output after the python session has exited.

                                This is expected, isn't it? As stated in the documentation. ~QProcess() is called in both cases.

                                JonBJ Offline
                                JonBJ Offline
                                JonB
                                wrote on last edited by JonB
                                #26

                                @jsulm

                                This is expected, isn't it? As stated in the documentation. ~QProcess() is called in both cases.

                                Expected by you apparently, but not by me. If ~QProcess() is called, docs state

                                Destructs the QProcess object, i.e., killing the process.

                                Note that this function will not return until the process is terminated.

                                If it said "but not when started via (non-static) QProcess::startDetached()" then I would be happy. Like I said, perhaps different doc interpretation between you & me.

                                jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                1
                                • JonBJ JonB

                                  @jsulm

                                  This is expected, isn't it? As stated in the documentation. ~QProcess() is called in both cases.

                                  Expected by you apparently, but not by me. If ~QProcess() is called, docs state

                                  Destructs the QProcess object, i.e., killing the process.

                                  Note that this function will not return until the process is terminated.

                                  If it said "but not when started via (non-static) QProcess::startDetached()" then I would be happy. Like I said, perhaps different doc interpretation between you & me.

                                  jsulmJ Offline
                                  jsulmJ Offline
                                  jsulm
                                  Lifetime Qt Champion
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #27

                                  @JonB Well, again:
                                  "If the calling process exits, the detached process will continue to run unaffected." - https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qprocess.html#startDetached

                                  And you even confirmed this behaviour by yourself :-)

                                  You can upload a patch fixing ~QProcess() documentation.

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

                                  JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                  1
                                  • jsulmJ jsulm

                                    @JonB Well, again:
                                    "If the calling process exits, the detached process will continue to run unaffected." - https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qprocess.html#startDetached

                                    And you even confirmed this behaviour by yourself :-)

                                    You can upload a patch fixing ~QProcess() documentation.

                                    JonBJ Offline
                                    JonBJ Offline
                                    JonB
                                    wrote on last edited by JonB
                                    #28

                                    @jsulm
                                    I already wrote above: "calling process exits" does not tell you whether ~QProcess() is or is not called. In C++, if I glob_dangling = new QProcess(); exit(0); C++ cleanup does not call ~QProcess(), does it?

                                    But when ~QProcess() is called for whatever reason, https://code.woboq.org/qt5/qtbase/src/corelib/io/qprocess.cpp.html#_ZN8QProcessD1Ev has

                                    QProcess::~QProcess()
                                    {
                                        Q_D(QProcess);
                                        if (d->processState != NotRunning) {
                                            qWarning().nospace()
                                                << "QProcess: Destroyed while process (" << QDir::toNativeSeparators(program()) << ") is still running.";
                                            kill();
                                            waitForFinished();
                                        }
                                    

                                    so presumably somewhere qProcess->startDetached() ends up causing d->processState = NotRunning.

                                    jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                    1
                                    • JonBJ JonB

                                      @jsulm
                                      I already wrote above: "calling process exits" does not tell you whether ~QProcess() is or is not called. In C++, if I glob_dangling = new QProcess(); exit(0); C++ cleanup does not call ~QProcess(), does it?

                                      But when ~QProcess() is called for whatever reason, https://code.woboq.org/qt5/qtbase/src/corelib/io/qprocess.cpp.html#_ZN8QProcessD1Ev has

                                      QProcess::~QProcess()
                                      {
                                          Q_D(QProcess);
                                          if (d->processState != NotRunning) {
                                              qWarning().nospace()
                                                  << "QProcess: Destroyed while process (" << QDir::toNativeSeparators(program()) << ") is still running.";
                                              kill();
                                              waitForFinished();
                                          }
                                      

                                      so presumably somewhere qProcess->startDetached() ends up causing d->processState = NotRunning.

                                      jsulmJ Offline
                                      jsulmJ Offline
                                      jsulm
                                      Lifetime Qt Champion
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #29

                                      @JonB If allocated on the stack destructor ALWAYS is called if app is closing in a clean way. If allocated on the heap you have to delete it. I'm sure Python has clean memory management and deletes what it allocates (so destrcutor is called).

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

                                      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                      1
                                      • jsulmJ jsulm

                                        @JonB If allocated on the stack destructor ALWAYS is called if app is closing in a clean way. If allocated on the heap you have to delete it. I'm sure Python has clean memory management and deletes what it allocates (so destrcutor is called).

                                        JonBJ Offline
                                        JonBJ Offline
                                        JonB
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #30

                                        @jsulm said in Problem with cmd process:

                                        If allocated on the heap you have to delete it. I'm sure Python has clean memory management and deletes what it allocates (so destrcutor is called).

                                        Indeed exactly. So from C++ you have the choice to new somewhere and not delete, thereby avoiding destructor being called on exit. In Python you can't help destructor being called. Hence my requirement to understand ~QProcess.

                                        As I said, I think we're just differing over what Qt docs might care to say in ~QProcess entry about what happens when pProcess->startDetached() was called. We'd better leave it at that :)

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        1
                                        • C Offline
                                          C Offline
                                          Cimmy
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #31

                                          Thanks to all.
                                          Sorry for my (many!) mistakes but i'm a beginner in c++ and qt programming.

                                          JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
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