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qprocess docker problem

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  • N noahlopezdev

    @JonB
    Thank you for your response, well I inspected the code and if I'm not mistaking, Qt uses fork() in Linux to create processes. I used fork() in a simple program and it works :(

    JonBJ Online
    JonBJ Online
    JonB
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    @noahlopezdev
    Yes it will use fork(). That will not "crash" your parent. I suggested you look to see what path Qt code would have to follow to encounter ProcessError::Crashed in the sources, so that you could reason back from there.

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    • SGaistS SGaist

      Can you provide a minimal project that shows the behaviour ?

      N Offline
      N Offline
      noahlopezdev
      wrote on last edited by
      #8

      @SGaist
      Yes, This github repository reproduces the bug.

      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
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      • N noahlopezdev

        @SGaist
        Yes, This github repository reproduces the bug.

        JonBJ Online
        JonBJ Online
        JonB
        wrote on last edited by JonB
        #9

        @noahlopezdev
        You will probably get the same result (unfortunately), but what about trying for your command:

        ls.start("/usr/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "/usr/bin/ls /");
        

        just in case the /usr/bin/sh actually runs (though I'm guessing it won't, it will just cause the same error itself) and produces some output which might tell us what is going on?

        You might also try attaching a slot to QProcess::stateChanged(QProcess::ProcessState newState) which prints out newState so that you can retrieve it in your readAllStandard...(). We might know which steps it got through before it "crashed". There is also signal QProcess::errorOccurred.

        I used fork() in a simple program and it works :(

        In a program compiled with Qt libraries, or a non-Qt standalone program? I wouldn't mind seeing the source you used which you say works? Don't forget it would not surprise me that in whatever goes wrong it is not on the fork() statement --- which really ought work (unless you have no memory left!) --- but more likely on the subsequent exec...() call in the child, or maybe in the wait...() call in the parent?

        If you suspect it is something about Qt or QProcess which is problematic you could always try the equivalent of the code you show but just using fork/exec/wait() so nothing Qt-y in it.

        N 1 Reply Last reply
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        • JonBJ JonB

          @noahlopezdev
          You will probably get the same result (unfortunately), but what about trying for your command:

          ls.start("/usr/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "/usr/bin/ls /");
          

          just in case the /usr/bin/sh actually runs (though I'm guessing it won't, it will just cause the same error itself) and produces some output which might tell us what is going on?

          You might also try attaching a slot to QProcess::stateChanged(QProcess::ProcessState newState) which prints out newState so that you can retrieve it in your readAllStandard...(). We might know which steps it got through before it "crashed". There is also signal QProcess::errorOccurred.

          I used fork() in a simple program and it works :(

          In a program compiled with Qt libraries, or a non-Qt standalone program? I wouldn't mind seeing the source you used which you say works? Don't forget it would not surprise me that in whatever goes wrong it is not on the fork() statement --- which really ought work (unless you have no memory left!) --- but more likely on the subsequent exec...() call in the child, or maybe in the wait...() call in the parent?

          If you suspect it is something about Qt or QProcess which is problematic you could always try the equivalent of the code you show but just using fork/exec/wait() so nothing Qt-y in it.

          N Offline
          N Offline
          noahlopezdev
          wrote on last edited by
          #10

          @JonB
          Updated the repository with requested changes (this commit )

          I tried
          ls.start("/usr/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "/usr/bin/ls /");
          but nothing changed.
          my simple fork and exec programs are included in repo, they don't use Qt and work fine. here are outputs:

          root@a78391006ad6:/problematic_src/build# ./qt_process_arm
          Hi This is qprocess simultation
          state: QProcess::Running 
          error: QProcess::Crashed 
          state: QProcess::NotRunning 
          ls.readAllStandardOutput: ""
          ls.readAllStandardError: ""
          
          root@a78391006ad6:/problematic_src/build# ./simple_fork
          Parent has x = 0
          Child has x = 2
          
          root@a78391006ad6:/problematic_src/build# ./simple_exec
          Parent Of parent process, pid = 1
          child process, pid = 3058
          parent process, pid = 3055
          parent of child process, pid = 3055
          program execution successful
          
          JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
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          • N noahlopezdev

            @JonB
            Updated the repository with requested changes (this commit )

            I tried
            ls.start("/usr/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "/usr/bin/ls /");
            but nothing changed.
            my simple fork and exec programs are included in repo, they don't use Qt and work fine. here are outputs:

            root@a78391006ad6:/problematic_src/build# ./qt_process_arm
            Hi This is qprocess simultation
            state: QProcess::Running 
            error: QProcess::Crashed 
            state: QProcess::NotRunning 
            ls.readAllStandardOutput: ""
            ls.readAllStandardError: ""
            
            root@a78391006ad6:/problematic_src/build# ./simple_fork
            Parent has x = 0
            Child has x = 2
            
            root@a78391006ad6:/problematic_src/build# ./simple_exec
            Parent Of parent process, pid = 1
            child process, pid = 3058
            parent process, pid = 3055
            parent of child process, pid = 3055
            program execution successful
            
            JonBJ Online
            JonBJ Online
            JonB
            wrote on last edited by JonB
            #11

            @noahlopezdev
            Yep, you have done a good job of testing the fork/exec/wait() pattern.

            I don't know what the issue with your Qt/QProcess code is then. I don't know how you get the output back from docker or whatever, but did neither of your new stateChanged or errorOccurred slots get hit/produce any output? Try putting them before the ls.start(), not after. I would expect at minimum stateChanged to be emitted.

            BTW, I'm not 100% sure you can use QProcess/waitForFinished()/signals given that you have no Qt main event loop running (no QApplication::exec()) in your code. I think you can, but not certain.

            WAIT, HANG ON!!!
            You have not crated an Q[Core]Application object in your main(). Basically nothing will work in Qt till you do! I bet that is your issue....

            N 1 Reply Last reply
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            • JonBJ JonB

              @noahlopezdev
              Yep, you have done a good job of testing the fork/exec/wait() pattern.

              I don't know what the issue with your Qt/QProcess code is then. I don't know how you get the output back from docker or whatever, but did neither of your new stateChanged or errorOccurred slots get hit/produce any output? Try putting them before the ls.start(), not after. I would expect at minimum stateChanged to be emitted.

              BTW, I'm not 100% sure you can use QProcess/waitForFinished()/signals given that you have no Qt main event loop running (no QApplication::exec()) in your code. I think you can, but not certain.

              WAIT, HANG ON!!!
              You have not crated an Q[Core]Application object in your main(). Basically nothing will work in Qt till you do! I bet that is your issue....

              N Offline
              N Offline
              noahlopezdev
              wrote on last edited by noahlopezdev
              #12

              @JonB
              slots produce output, (as mentioned above)
              Here is stateChanged output:

              state: QProcess::Running 
              state: QProcess::NotRunning 
              

              here is errorOccurred output:

              error: QProcess::Crashed 
              
              JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
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              • N noahlopezdev

                @JonB
                slots produce output, (as mentioned above)
                Here is stateChanged output:

                state: QProcess::Running 
                state: QProcess::NotRunning 
                

                here is errorOccurred output:

                error: QProcess::Crashed 
                
                JonBJ Online
                JonBJ Online
                JonB
                wrote on last edited by
                #13

                @noahlopezdev Start with my latest update:

                You have not crated an Q[Core]Application object in your main(). Basically nothing will work in Qt till you do! I bet that is your issue....

                N 1 Reply Last reply
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                • JonBJ JonB

                  @noahlopezdev Start with my latest update:

                  You have not crated an Q[Core]Application object in your main(). Basically nothing will work in Qt till you do! I bet that is your issue....

                  N Offline
                  N Offline
                  noahlopezdev
                  wrote on last edited by noahlopezdev
                  #14

                  @JonB
                  Sorry for late response, I am new user and can't post in sooner :(
                  Changed the code, Is that better now?
                  I Still get the same output

                  JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • N noahlopezdev

                    @JonB
                    Sorry for late response, I am new user and can't post in sooner :(
                    Changed the code, Is that better now?
                    I Still get the same output

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

                    @noahlopezdev said in qprocess docker problem:

                    Changed the code, Is that better now?

                    Yep!

                    I Still get the same output

                    Damn! :)

                    I have a feeling that QProcess::Crashed is emitted by Qt just when it cannot find the child PID to wait on. It is possible nothing is actually "crashing". The output of

                    state: QProcess::Running 
                    state: QProcess::NotRunning 
                    

                    might indicate it ran and exited. But we don't see QProcess::Starting. I asked you to move the connect()s to immediately after QProcess ls;, before the start(), please.

                    Let's test when the command actually does run, no matter what is reported. Your programming seems good so I leave you to write the code :)

                    • Can you somehow see in the docker/host/whatever so you can do things while your Qt app is running? Change the command to like
                    ls.start("/usr/bin/sleep", QStringList() << "10");
                    

                    Can you then see that sleep process running? Like via ps or top?

                    • Change it to e.g.
                    ls.start("/usr/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "/usr/bin/ls / > /tmp/output 2>&1");
                    

                    After all finished does that file exist? Does it contain any output?

                    • Get rid of waitForFinished(). Do everything with the signals & slots from QProcess (including started & finished signals), no wait...() calls. Any difference in behaviour? What steps does it/does it not go through? (This probably means removing your sleep(10); and letting code enter the app.exec().)

                    Otherwise I'm running out of ideas, especially since your own C fork/exec/wait() does work....

                    N 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • JonBJ JonB

                      @noahlopezdev said in qprocess docker problem:

                      Changed the code, Is that better now?

                      Yep!

                      I Still get the same output

                      Damn! :)

                      I have a feeling that QProcess::Crashed is emitted by Qt just when it cannot find the child PID to wait on. It is possible nothing is actually "crashing". The output of

                      state: QProcess::Running 
                      state: QProcess::NotRunning 
                      

                      might indicate it ran and exited. But we don't see QProcess::Starting. I asked you to move the connect()s to immediately after QProcess ls;, before the start(), please.

                      Let's test when the command actually does run, no matter what is reported. Your programming seems good so I leave you to write the code :)

                      • Can you somehow see in the docker/host/whatever so you can do things while your Qt app is running? Change the command to like
                      ls.start("/usr/bin/sleep", QStringList() << "10");
                      

                      Can you then see that sleep process running? Like via ps or top?

                      • Change it to e.g.
                      ls.start("/usr/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "/usr/bin/ls / > /tmp/output 2>&1");
                      

                      After all finished does that file exist? Does it contain any output?

                      • Get rid of waitForFinished(). Do everything with the signals & slots from QProcess (including started & finished signals), no wait...() calls. Any difference in behaviour? What steps does it/does it not go through? (This probably means removing your sleep(10); and letting code enter the app.exec().)

                      Otherwise I'm running out of ideas, especially since your own C fork/exec/wait() does work....

                      N Offline
                      N Offline
                      noahlopezdev
                      wrote on last edited by noahlopezdev
                      #16

                      @JonB
                      refactored the code, please have a look at here.
                      I have monitored the environment with top, nothing shows up but in /proc/<PID>/task/ i see another pid.
                      here is what I think is parent process:

                      root@a78391006ad6:/proc/6104/task/6104# ls -la
                      ...
                      lrwxrwxrwx  1 root root 0 Jul  9 11:52 exe -> /usr/bin/qemu-arm-static
                      ...
                      

                      and i think this is child process.

                      root@a78391006ad6:/proc/6104/task/6106# ls -la
                      ...
                      lrwxrwxrwx  1 root root 0 Jul  9 11:52 exe -> /usr/bin/qemu-arm-static
                      ...
                      

                      Are there any usefull files in proc that I can inspect?

                      ls.start("/usr/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "/usr/bin/ls / > /tmp/output 2>&1");
                      

                      This was a NICE idea, but sadly, output is not created :/
                      Here is full output of the program:

                      root@a78391006ad6:/problematic_src/build# ./qt_process_arm
                      Hi This is qprocess simultation
                      stateChanged: QProcess::Starting 
                      stateChanged: QProcess::Running 
                      Process started 
                      errorOccurred: QProcess::Crashed 
                      stateChanged: QProcess::NotRunning 
                      Process finished: code:  1059250828 status:  QProcess::CrashExit 
                      

                      exit code is always 1059250828 no matter what the input command is.

                      Here is output of the code on my amd64 machine(a proof that code works fine, and something is wrong with qemu)

                      oem@oem:~/programming/$ ./qt_process_arm
                      Hi This is qprocess simultation
                      stateChanged: QProcess::Starting 
                      stateChanged: QProcess::Running 
                      Process started 
                      stdout: "bin\nboot\ndev\netc\nhome\nlib\nlib32\nlib64\nlibx32\nmedia\nmnt\nopt\nproc\nroot\nrun\nsbin\nsnap\nsrv\nstorage\nsys\ntmp\nusr\nvar\n" 
                      stateChanged: QProcess::NotRunning 
                      Process finished: code:  0 status:  QProcess::NormalExit 
                      
                      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • N noahlopezdev

                        @JonB
                        refactored the code, please have a look at here.
                        I have monitored the environment with top, nothing shows up but in /proc/<PID>/task/ i see another pid.
                        here is what I think is parent process:

                        root@a78391006ad6:/proc/6104/task/6104# ls -la
                        ...
                        lrwxrwxrwx  1 root root 0 Jul  9 11:52 exe -> /usr/bin/qemu-arm-static
                        ...
                        

                        and i think this is child process.

                        root@a78391006ad6:/proc/6104/task/6106# ls -la
                        ...
                        lrwxrwxrwx  1 root root 0 Jul  9 11:52 exe -> /usr/bin/qemu-arm-static
                        ...
                        

                        Are there any usefull files in proc that I can inspect?

                        ls.start("/usr/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "/usr/bin/ls / > /tmp/output 2>&1");
                        

                        This was a NICE idea, but sadly, output is not created :/
                        Here is full output of the program:

                        root@a78391006ad6:/problematic_src/build# ./qt_process_arm
                        Hi This is qprocess simultation
                        stateChanged: QProcess::Starting 
                        stateChanged: QProcess::Running 
                        Process started 
                        errorOccurred: QProcess::Crashed 
                        stateChanged: QProcess::NotRunning 
                        Process finished: code:  1059250828 status:  QProcess::CrashExit 
                        

                        exit code is always 1059250828 no matter what the input command is.

                        Here is output of the code on my amd64 machine(a proof that code works fine, and something is wrong with qemu)

                        oem@oem:~/programming/$ ./qt_process_arm
                        Hi This is qprocess simultation
                        stateChanged: QProcess::Starting 
                        stateChanged: QProcess::Running 
                        Process started 
                        stdout: "bin\nboot\ndev\netc\nhome\nlib\nlib32\nlib64\nlibx32\nmedia\nmnt\nopt\nproc\nroot\nrun\nsbin\nsnap\nsrv\nstorage\nsys\ntmp\nusr\nvar\n" 
                        stateChanged: QProcess::NotRunning 
                        Process finished: code:  0 status:  QProcess::NormalExit 
                        
                        JonBJ Online
                        JonBJ Online
                        JonB
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #17

                        @noahlopezdev said in qprocess docker problem:

                        ls.start("/usr/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "/usr/bin/ls / > /tmp/output 2>&1");
                        This was a NICE idea, but sadly, output is not created :/

                        That tells us that it did not even start /usr/bin/sh. If it had it would have created the /tmp/output redirection file. Also you never found the sleep process running. The implication is that it cannot successfully spawn the/any child process. I do not know why.

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