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Communication between multiple threads that run at different frequencies

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  • Axel SpoerlA Axel Spoerl

    @JonB
    Totally fair point! A kitten dies, each time you resolve a symbol with a string search at run time....in Python.
    There are more invokeMethod() overloads for the C++ lovers from 6.4 onward.

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

    @Axel-Spoerl said in Communication between multiple threads that run at different frequencies:

    A kitten dies, each time you resolve a symbol with a string search at run time....in Python.

    :)

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • E Offline
      E Offline
      EvheMary
      wrote on last edited by
      #18

      Thanks for all these comments. I might not fully understand since I'm still a beginner in qt, so sorry if I mentioned something wrong. I thought that since I use a signal to communicate with the Qtimer thread it should be safe. And I should be calling the stop method from the thread that it was created. Is my implementation of the signals and slot not correct?
      my understanding of using the signal and slot is :
      UI Thread --> send signal --> stop method (slot) at another thread --> QTimer stop

      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • E EvheMary

        Thanks for all these comments. I might not fully understand since I'm still a beginner in qt, so sorry if I mentioned something wrong. I thought that since I use a signal to communicate with the Qtimer thread it should be safe. And I should be calling the stop method from the thread that it was created. Is my implementation of the signals and slot not correct?
        my understanding of using the signal and slot is :
        UI Thread --> send signal --> stop method (slot) at another thread --> QTimer stop

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

        @EvheMary
        You call self.worker.stop() (which calls self.timer.stop()) directly from the UI thread.

        1 Reply Last reply
        1
        • E Offline
          E Offline
          EvheMary
          wrote on last edited by EvheMary
          #20

          @JonB But if i call self.worker.stop() that calls self.timer.stop() from the UI Thread, the error QObject::~QObject: Timers cannot be stopped from another thread appears and that's what I want to know what causes it and how to remove it. If i change self.timer.stop() with QMetaObject.invokeMethod(self.timer, 'stop', Qt.AutoConnection) the error don't appear.

          jsulmJ JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
          0
          • E EvheMary

            @JonB But if i call self.worker.stop() that calls self.timer.stop() from the UI Thread, the error QObject::~QObject: Timers cannot be stopped from another thread appears and that's what I want to know what causes it and how to remove it. If i change self.timer.stop() with QMetaObject.invokeMethod(self.timer, 'stop', Qt.AutoConnection) the error don't appear.

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

            @EvheMary said in Communication between multiple threads that run at different frequencies:

            that's what I want to know what causes it

            Your worker object lives in another thread. So, if you call self.worker.stop() in UI thread stop() will be executed in UI thread and it will also call self.timer.stop() in UI thread. But self.timer also lives in the worker thread, so you get that warning (QTimer is not thread safe).
            To avoid this you should NOT call self.worker.stop() directly from the UI thread but instead either use invokeMethod() or connect self.worker.stop() to a signal in your UI and emit this signal to stop the worker.

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

            1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • E Offline
              E Offline
              EvheMary
              wrote on last edited by
              #22

              @jsulm Yes. Thanks for the answer. Now I know that calling method in another thread from the UI thread is not good. But I don't know why when I connect a signal from UI Thread to the self.worker.stop(), the error persists. It will only be gone when I use invokeMethod() instead of self.timer.stop(), which leads to why I suspect QTimer to be another threading interface (because I need to send another signal to the timer itself).

              jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
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              • E EvheMary

                @jsulm Yes. Thanks for the answer. Now I know that calling method in another thread from the UI thread is not good. But I don't know why when I connect a signal from UI Thread to the self.worker.stop(), the error persists. It will only be gone when I use invokeMethod() instead of self.timer.stop(), which leads to why I suspect QTimer to be another threading interface (because I need to send another signal to the timer itself).

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

                @EvheMary said in Communication between multiple threads that run at different frequencies:

                But I don't know why when I connect a signal from UI Thread to the self.worker.stop()

                Can you show how you did the connection?

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

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                • Axel SpoerlA Offline
                  Axel SpoerlA Offline
                  Axel Spoerl
                  Moderators
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #24

                  Adding to @jsulm :

                  what causes it

                  Theoretically, two different threads could call the QTimer's stop()method at the same time. Or, even worse, one of them calls start().
                  The warning is triggered, if a slot is called from a thread different from the timer's living environment.
                  Emitting a signal or calling invokeMethod() makes sure that concurrent calls are properly serialized, posted into the timer's event loop and executed within the timer's thread. Such behaviour is not QTimerspecific. It applies to most Qt classes, check this for more information.

                  Software Engineer
                  The Qt Company, Oslo

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • E EvheMary

                    @JonB But if i call self.worker.stop() that calls self.timer.stop() from the UI Thread, the error QObject::~QObject: Timers cannot be stopped from another thread appears and that's what I want to know what causes it and how to remove it. If i change self.timer.stop() with QMetaObject.invokeMethod(self.timer, 'stop', Qt.AutoConnection) the error don't appear.

                    JonBJ Offline
                    JonBJ Offline
                    JonB
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #25

                    @EvheMary said in Communication between multiple threads that run at different frequencies:

                    @JonB But if i call self.worker.stop() that calls self.timer.stop() from the UI Thread, the error QObject::~QObject: Timers cannot be stopped from another thread appears and that's what I want to know what causes it and how to remove it.

                    That is precisely what I explained: you call self.timer.stop() from the UI Thread, that is not the thread where the timer lives, hence the explicit error message telling you what is wrong.

                    But I don't know why when I connect a signal from UI Thread to the self.worker.stop(), the error persists.

                    As @jsulm said, show your connect() statement for this.

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                    • E Offline
                      E Offline
                      EvheMary
                      wrote on last edited by EvheMary
                      #26

                      I actually updated my code since i also asks similar question in stacks overflow (though still without solution). I'll show the important parts only:

                      class Window(QWidget):
                      
                          startSig = Signal()
                          stopSig = Signal()
                      
                          def __init__(self):
                                      self.button.clicked.connect(self.startThr)
                                      self.button2.clicked.connect(self.stopThr)    # I called the stop method (for the UI Thread) here
                                      self.button3.clicked.connect(self.showDlg)
                      
                          def startThr(self):
                                      if self.thread is None or not self.thread.isRunning():
                                      self.thread = QThread()
                                      self.worker = Inlet_Worker()
                                      self.worker.moveToThread(self.thread)
                                      self.worker.data.connect(self.dlg.update)
                                      self.worker.tabs.connect(self.switch_tab)
                                      self.stopSig.connect(self.worker.stop)    # I connect the signal here
                                      self.worker.finish.connect(self.finished)
                                      self.thread.started.connect(self.worker.starter)
                                      self.thread.start()
                      
                          def stopThr(self):
                                  self.stopSig.emit()    # Emit stop signal
                      

                      And here is the thread

                      class Inlet_Worker(QObject):
                      
                          data = Signal(int)
                          tabs = Signal(int)
                          finish = Signal()
                      
                          def __init__(self):
                              super().__init__()
                              self._stopped = False
                              self._registered = False
                              self.init_timers()
                              self.c = 0
                              self.d = 0
                      
                          def init_timers(self):
                              self.timer1 = QTimer(self)
                              self.timer1.timeout.connect(self.routine)
                              self.timer2 = QTimer(self)
                              self.timer2.timeout.connect(self.routine2)
                      
                          def starter(self):
                              self.timer1.start(1000)
                              self.timer2.start(2000)
                      
                          def routine(self):
                              self.data.emit(self.c)
                              self.c += 1
                              
                          def routine2(self):
                              self.tabs.emit(self.d)
                              self.d += 1
                      
                          @Slot()
                          def stop(self):
                              self.timer1.stop()
                              self.timer2.stop()
                              print('stopped')
                              self.finish.emit()
                      

                      The stop method in UI Thread emit signal
                      I connect the signal to the self.timer.stop() in the thread
                      I can upload the full code if necessary.

                      jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • E EvheMary

                        I actually updated my code since i also asks similar question in stacks overflow (though still without solution). I'll show the important parts only:

                        class Window(QWidget):
                        
                            startSig = Signal()
                            stopSig = Signal()
                        
                            def __init__(self):
                                        self.button.clicked.connect(self.startThr)
                                        self.button2.clicked.connect(self.stopThr)    # I called the stop method (for the UI Thread) here
                                        self.button3.clicked.connect(self.showDlg)
                        
                            def startThr(self):
                                        if self.thread is None or not self.thread.isRunning():
                                        self.thread = QThread()
                                        self.worker = Inlet_Worker()
                                        self.worker.moveToThread(self.thread)
                                        self.worker.data.connect(self.dlg.update)
                                        self.worker.tabs.connect(self.switch_tab)
                                        self.stopSig.connect(self.worker.stop)    # I connect the signal here
                                        self.worker.finish.connect(self.finished)
                                        self.thread.started.connect(self.worker.starter)
                                        self.thread.start()
                        
                            def stopThr(self):
                                    self.stopSig.emit()    # Emit stop signal
                        

                        And here is the thread

                        class Inlet_Worker(QObject):
                        
                            data = Signal(int)
                            tabs = Signal(int)
                            finish = Signal()
                        
                            def __init__(self):
                                super().__init__()
                                self._stopped = False
                                self._registered = False
                                self.init_timers()
                                self.c = 0
                                self.d = 0
                        
                            def init_timers(self):
                                self.timer1 = QTimer(self)
                                self.timer1.timeout.connect(self.routine)
                                self.timer2 = QTimer(self)
                                self.timer2.timeout.connect(self.routine2)
                        
                            def starter(self):
                                self.timer1.start(1000)
                                self.timer2.start(2000)
                        
                            def routine(self):
                                self.data.emit(self.c)
                                self.c += 1
                                
                            def routine2(self):
                                self.tabs.emit(self.d)
                                self.d += 1
                        
                            @Slot()
                            def stop(self):
                                self.timer1.stop()
                                self.timer2.stop()
                                print('stopped')
                                self.finish.emit()
                        

                        The stop method in UI Thread emit signal
                        I connect the signal to the self.timer.stop() in the thread
                        I can upload the full code if necessary.

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

                        @EvheMary said in Communication between multiple threads that run at different frequencies:

                        self.stopSig.connect(self.worker.stop)

                        Maybe you need explicetly define Qt::QueuedConnection (in C++ it is default for connections across threads).

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

                        E 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • jsulmJ jsulm

                          @EvheMary said in Communication between multiple threads that run at different frequencies:

                          self.stopSig.connect(self.worker.stop)

                          Maybe you need explicetly define Qt::QueuedConnection (in C++ it is default for connections across threads).

                          E Offline
                          E Offline
                          EvheMary
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #28

                          @jsulm Oh wow, this also works. Unfortunately, I have already marked the previous answer as the solution but this works too. It seems that the default type for connect in pyqt is Qt.AutoConnection. Do you mind explaining why this happens when using AutoConnection while it works with queuedConnection?

                          jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • E EvheMary

                            @jsulm Oh wow, this also works. Unfortunately, I have already marked the previous answer as the solution but this works too. It seems that the default type for connect in pyqt is Qt.AutoConnection. Do you mind explaining why this happens when using AutoConnection while it works with queuedConnection?

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

                            @EvheMary AutoConnection should be fine (it is also default in C++): Qt decides what to use. So, in case of connections across threads Qt uses QueuedConnection then. But in your case it looks like this is not happening, I don't know why. Maybe there are differences in PyQt.

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

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                            • Axel SpoerlA Offline
                              Axel SpoerlA Offline
                              Axel Spoerl
                              Moderators
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #30

                              AutoConnectionshould connect

                              • directly (synchronously) when object and caller live in the same thread.
                              • queued when object and caller live in different threads.

                              In C++ that can never go wrong. I am not a Python guru (repeating myself now). Maybe the explanation is that the connection type gets stuck in DirectConnection when the signal is connected before the second thread is being detached. In any case there's nothing wrong about explicitly using QueuedConnection.

                              Software Engineer
                              The Qt Company, Oslo

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