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Discussion about "Threads, Events and QObjects" article

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    Wolf P.
    wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 11:46 last edited by
    #7

    bq. how to start, stop, join a thread under (at least) one major operating system;

    Is joining threads such a common pattern?
    I've always imagined threads as autonomous agents. This I was able to produce programmatically and at some point they were finished and forgotten. Whether or not the program code orphaned never seemed to matter to me.

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      giesbert
      wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 11:51 last edited by
      #8

      Joining threads is common, if you put parts of a bigger thing to threads to do that in paralell and want to wait for all results being finished. I know, it can also be done with QtConcurrent but some programs are older than QtConcurrent :-))

      Nokia Certified Qt Specialist.
      Programming Is Like Sex: One mistake and you have to support it for the rest of your life. (Michael Sinz)

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        dangelog
        wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 11:55 last edited by
        #9

        [quote author="Wolf P." date="1292845577"]bq. how to start, stop, join a thread under (at least) one major operating system;

        Is joining threads such a common pattern?
        I've always imagined threads as autonomous agents. This I was able to produce programmatically and at some point they were finished and forgotten. Whether or not the program code orphaned never seemed to matter to me.[/quote]

        It's a pattern, that's all. For instance, a possible use case is telling a worker thread to finish, then actually wait for it to end (by joining it), then deallocate some resources used by it.

        Software Engineer
        KDAB (UK) Ltd., a KDAB Group company

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          Wolf P.
          wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 12:11 last edited by
          #10

          Gerolf, I see. The somewhat outdated framework I worked with, provided only the forking.
          Do you know a good real-world example?

          Peppe, as I see, to join means simply to wait?

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            giesbert
            wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 12:18 last edited by
            #11

            Join means wait for finish, yes.
            I have some in my work, but they are not open source :-)
            removing objects, which are are internally multithreadded for example. You have to close all threads before removing the object.

            Nokia Certified Qt Specialist.
            Programming Is Like Sex: One mistake and you have to support it for the rest of your life. (Michael Sinz)

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              dangelog
              wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 12:23 last edited by
              #12

              [quote author="Wolf P." date="1292847084"]Gerolf, I see. The somewhat outdated framework I worked with, provided only the forking.
              Do you know a good real-world example?

              Peppe, as I see, to join means simply to wait?[/quote]

              I was pretty sure it was standard lexicon when it comes to threading: it means "block the calling thread until the target thread terminates"; and yes, it's what QThread::wait() does. See for instance:
              http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/online/pages/man3/pthread_join.3.html
              http://download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/lang/Thread.html#join()
              http://perldoc.perl.org/threads.html#DESCRIPTION

              Now that you're telling me, perhaps should I change that term?

              Software Engineer
              KDAB (UK) Ltd., a KDAB Group company

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                goetz
                wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 12:27 last edited by
                #13

                I must admit, I did not read the wiki article, but have some experience with QThread. The term "join a thread" was unknown to me, so although this might be a common term in threading in general, it seems it is not used in Qt world.

                http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html

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                  giesbert
                  wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 12:31 last edited by
                  #14

                  It is common in Boost threadding for example, that's where I know it from. If it is a general term... ???

                  Nokia Certified Qt Specialist.
                  Programming Is Like Sex: One mistake and you have to support it for the rest of your life. (Michael Sinz)

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                    dangelog
                    wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 13:06 last edited by
                    #15

                    I can put a footnote and/or a link there, just in case. The point is that you should know what QThread::wait() is for. What do you think?

                    Software Engineer
                    KDAB (UK) Ltd., a KDAB Group company

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                      goetz
                      wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 13:10 last edited by
                      #16

                      Knowledge about QThread::wait() is definitely needed.

                      maybe this wording is a bit more clear:

                      "how to start, stop, wait for a thread (aka join a thread in boost and others) under (at least) one major operating system"

                      http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html

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                        Wolf P.
                        wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 13:20 last edited by
                        #17

                        [quote author="Volker" date="1292850647"] "how to start, stop, wait for a thread [/quote]
                        This sounds very familiar to me (FYI: Win32/VCL).

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                          dangelog
                          wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 13:33 last edited by
                          #18

                          Ok, I changed the sentence to
                          [quote]
                          how to start and stop a thread, and wait for it to finish, under (at least) one major operating system;
                          [/quote]

                          Thank you all for your feedback :)

                          Software Engineer
                          KDAB (UK) Ltd., a KDAB Group company

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                            Wolf P.
                            wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 13:37 last edited by
                            #19

                            Another choice of terminology has me confused: reentrant. Thread-safe I understood, but the definition of reentrancy seemed not clearly demarcated from it. Maybe a slight reworking of the text could help for a better understanding of the difference.

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                              Wolf P.
                              wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 14:17 last edited by
                              #20

                              Sorry for this naive comment. Finally I found that this is Qt terminology: http://doc.qt.nokia.com/latest/threads-reentrancy.html

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                                Franzk
                                wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 15:17 last edited by
                                #21

                                It is not just Qt terminology. It's general programming terminology and something everyone who does at least the slightest bit of multi-threading should know about.

                                http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reentrant_(subroutine)
                                http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thread_safety

                                "Horse sense is the thing a horse has which keeps it from betting on people." -- W.C. Fields

                                http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html

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                                  Wolf P.
                                  wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 15:53 last edited by
                                  #22

                                  [quote author="Franzk" date="1292858262"]...and something everyone who does at least the slightest bit of multi-threading should know about.[/quote] thx for the WP references :)

                                  BTW: I did some multithreaded coding without problems, and without thinking about reentrance.

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                                    dangelog
                                    wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 15:54 last edited by
                                    #23

                                    To be honest, the little problem is that there might be some confusion due to literature and/or other toolkits. That's why I specified that in the article I follow the Qt conventions; anyway, I added a link to http://doc.qt.nokia.com/latest/threads-reentrancy.html, just to make it even more clear :-)

                                    Software Engineer
                                    KDAB (UK) Ltd., a KDAB Group company

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                                      Franzk
                                      wrote on 20 Dec 2010, 15:59 last edited by
                                      #24

                                      It's good. The basics are the same across libraries though (bad library if it diverges...).

                                      "Horse sense is the thing a horse has which keeps it from betting on people." -- W.C. Fields

                                      http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html

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                                        Wolf P.
                                        wrote on 21 Dec 2010, 09:12 last edited by
                                        #25

                                        After reading "Reentrancy and Thread-Safety":http://doc.qt.nokia.com/latest/threads-reentrancy.html , I think the term reentrance is not the best choice, because re-entering (in a sense of entering it twice) isn't really possible. (My problem seems to be that I'm familiar with the non-reentrance of MS-DOS.)

                                        Classes that can be safely used by different threads at different times, I would name just safe. To be honest, I would not discuss it at all, but rather mark those that cannot be used from different threads at different times, maybe as "tread-local" or so.

                                        Am I completely wrong here?

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                                          giesbert
                                          wrote on 21 Dec 2010, 09:20 last edited by
                                          #26

                                          Hi Wolf,
                                          Thread-local is normally used for members/memory. So there is the "ThreadLocalStorage":http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thread-local_storage for example. "Reentrant":http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reentrant_(subroutine) and "thread-safety":http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thread_safety are general terms (from my understanding) which are widely used. So I would stay with the used terms.

                                          Nokia Certified Qt Specialist.
                                          Programming Is Like Sex: One mistake and you have to support it for the rest of your life. (Michael Sinz)

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