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QNetworkReply readyRead is not called, memory filling to max until crash

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  • R robsparrow

    @Christian-Ehrlicher I tried move it to its own class, with signal/slot defined, but its again not working without QEventLoop, and with it its again filling memory until crash, without readyRead slot execution

    fileloader.h

    // fileloader.h
    #include <QDebug>
    #include <QObject>
    #include <QNetworkAccessManager>
    #include <QNetworkRequest>
    #include <QNetworkReply>
    #include <QEventLoop>
    
    class fileloader : public QObject
    {
        Q_OBJECT
    public:
        fileloader();
        void loadcontent();
        QNetworkReply *reply;
    
    private slots:
        void readyRead();
    };
    

    fileloader.cpp

    // fileloader.cpp
    #include "fileloader.h"
    
    fileloader::fileloader()
    {
    
    }
    
    void fileloader::loadcontent() {
    
        QString url = "http://localhost/backup-2022.tar.gz";
        
        QNetworkAccessManager qnam;
        QNetworkRequest request = QNetworkRequest(url);
        reply = qnam.get(request);
    
        // if I remove this, its not even starting request to server
        // with event loop request is started but its again filling memory until crash
        QEventLoop loop;
        connect(reply, SIGNAL(readyRead()), this, SLOT(readyRead()));
        loop.exec();
    }
    
    void fileloader::readyRead()
    {
        reply->readAll();
    }
    

    mainwindow.cpp

    // in mainwindow.cpp
    void MainWindow::on_fileload_clicked()
    {
        fileloader fl;
        fl.loadcontent();
    }
    

    Can You or someone else point me forward - whats wrong now and what should be changed in this structure?

    Thank You!

    M Offline
    M Offline
    mpergand
    wrote on last edited by mpergand
    #4

    @robsparrow said in QNetworkReply readyRead is not called, memory filling to max until crash:

    QNetworkAccessManager qnam;

    QNetworkAccessManager* qnam=new QNetworkAccessManager(this);

    No need of any runloop.

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
    • R robsparrow

      @Christian-Ehrlicher I tried move it to its own class, with signal/slot defined, but its again not working without QEventLoop, and with it its again filling memory until crash, without readyRead slot execution

      fileloader.h

      // fileloader.h
      #include <QDebug>
      #include <QObject>
      #include <QNetworkAccessManager>
      #include <QNetworkRequest>
      #include <QNetworkReply>
      #include <QEventLoop>
      
      class fileloader : public QObject
      {
          Q_OBJECT
      public:
          fileloader();
          void loadcontent();
          QNetworkReply *reply;
      
      private slots:
          void readyRead();
      };
      

      fileloader.cpp

      // fileloader.cpp
      #include "fileloader.h"
      
      fileloader::fileloader()
      {
      
      }
      
      void fileloader::loadcontent() {
      
          QString url = "http://localhost/backup-2022.tar.gz";
          
          QNetworkAccessManager qnam;
          QNetworkRequest request = QNetworkRequest(url);
          reply = qnam.get(request);
      
          // if I remove this, its not even starting request to server
          // with event loop request is started but its again filling memory until crash
          QEventLoop loop;
          connect(reply, SIGNAL(readyRead()), this, SLOT(readyRead()));
          loop.exec();
      }
      
      void fileloader::readyRead()
      {
          reply->readAll();
      }
      

      mainwindow.cpp

      // in mainwindow.cpp
      void MainWindow::on_fileload_clicked()
      {
          fileloader fl;
          fl.loadcontent();
      }
      

      Can You or someone else point me forward - whats wrong now and what should be changed in this structure?

      Thank You!

      ? Offline
      ? Offline
      A Former User
      wrote on last edited by A Former User
      #5

      fileloader.h

      // fileloader.h
      class fileloader : public QObject
      {
          Q_OBJECT
      public:
          fileloader();
          void loadcontent();
          QNetworkReply *reply;
      
      private slots:
          void readyRead();
      
      private:
         QNetworkAccessManager m_qnam ;
      };
      

      fileloader.cpp

      // fileloader.cpp
      

      void fileloader::loadcontent() {

      QString url = "http://localhost/backup-2022.tar.gz";
      
      // QNetworkAccessManager has nothing to do here !!!
      QNetworkRequest request = QNetworkRequest(url);
      reply = m_qnam.get(request);
      connect (reply, &QNetworkReply::readyRead, this, &fileloader::readyRead) ;
      

      }

      void fileloader::readyRead()
      {
      reply->readAll();
      }

      Your QNetworkAccessManager should be private member of the fileloader class and should live as long as this class lives.

      So either you declare it as a pointer and you instanciate it in the constructor, or you just declare it as a simple member and that's good.

      I don't understand how it can overflow your memory if the network manager is destroyed after barely starting the download.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • R Offline
        R Offline
        robsparrow
        wrote on last edited by
        #6

        @ankou29666 , @mpergand, @Christian-Ehrlicher I am still strugling to solve this issue. Moved it to private member. As you can see in screenshot as soon as it starts download file, memory starts increasing until I terminated exection of app.

        Here is full project in .zip with files only 10 KB (just UI and fileloader .h, .cpp files) - https://we.tl/t-aRSHEv8ETa

        memory fill.PNG

        Thank You for helping guys!

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • C Offline
          C Offline
          ChrisW67
          wrote on last edited by
          #7

          @robsparrow said in QNetworkReply readyRead is not called, memory filling to max until crash:

          I have huge file to download.

          Just how big is huge?

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • R robsparrow

            @Christian-Ehrlicher I tried move it to its own class, with signal/slot defined, but its again not working without QEventLoop, and with it its again filling memory until crash, without readyRead slot execution

            fileloader.h

            // fileloader.h
            #include <QDebug>
            #include <QObject>
            #include <QNetworkAccessManager>
            #include <QNetworkRequest>
            #include <QNetworkReply>
            #include <QEventLoop>
            
            class fileloader : public QObject
            {
                Q_OBJECT
            public:
                fileloader();
                void loadcontent();
                QNetworkReply *reply;
            
            private slots:
                void readyRead();
            };
            

            fileloader.cpp

            // fileloader.cpp
            #include "fileloader.h"
            
            fileloader::fileloader()
            {
            
            }
            
            void fileloader::loadcontent() {
            
                QString url = "http://localhost/backup-2022.tar.gz";
                
                QNetworkAccessManager qnam;
                QNetworkRequest request = QNetworkRequest(url);
                reply = qnam.get(request);
            
                // if I remove this, its not even starting request to server
                // with event loop request is started but its again filling memory until crash
                QEventLoop loop;
                connect(reply, SIGNAL(readyRead()), this, SLOT(readyRead()));
                loop.exec();
            }
            
            void fileloader::readyRead()
            {
                reply->readAll();
            }
            

            mainwindow.cpp

            // in mainwindow.cpp
            void MainWindow::on_fileload_clicked()
            {
                fileloader fl;
                fl.loadcontent();
            }
            

            Can You or someone else point me forward - whats wrong now and what should be changed in this structure?

            Thank You!

            jsulmJ Online
            jsulmJ Online
            jsulm
            Lifetime Qt Champion
            wrote on last edited by
            #8

            @robsparrow said in QNetworkReply readyRead is not called, memory filling to max until crash:

            Can You or someone else point me forward - whats wrong now and what should be changed in this structure?

            As already pointed out several times: do not use any local event loops! Use signal/slots. Qt is an asynchronous framework and should use it as such. There are also examples for Qt networking available.
            If you have to download a huge file then do not hold whole downloaded data in memory, instead write directly to file every time you get new package.

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

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • R Offline
              R Offline
              robsparrow
              wrote on last edited by
              #9

              @ChrisW67 - 48 GB file
              @jsulm - that is what I am trying to achieve, write/handle each package of data with readyRead signal.

              I tried also this example - https://code.qt.io/cgit/qt/qtbase.git/tree/examples/network/download?h=6.4

              and added just this:

              connect(reply, &QNetworkReply::readyRead,
                          this, &DownloadManager::readyRead);
              

              and

              void DownloadManager::readyRead() {
                  currentDownloads[0]->readAll(); // const 0
              }
              

              And happens exactly same issue what previously - readyRead is called few times (less than 5) and then memory starts filling.

              At this point I am thinking that there might be issue with Qt, because nothing is really working, all solutions is filling memory, even their example. Maybe this test case should be reported. Currently I am using Qt 6.4.2

              jsulmJ J.HilkJ ? 3 Replies Last reply
              0
              • R robsparrow

                @ChrisW67 - 48 GB file
                @jsulm - that is what I am trying to achieve, write/handle each package of data with readyRead signal.

                I tried also this example - https://code.qt.io/cgit/qt/qtbase.git/tree/examples/network/download?h=6.4

                and added just this:

                connect(reply, &QNetworkReply::readyRead,
                            this, &DownloadManager::readyRead);
                

                and

                void DownloadManager::readyRead() {
                    currentDownloads[0]->readAll(); // const 0
                }
                

                And happens exactly same issue what previously - readyRead is called few times (less than 5) and then memory starts filling.

                At this point I am thinking that there might be issue with Qt, because nothing is really working, all solutions is filling memory, even their example. Maybe this test case should be reported. Currently I am using Qt 6.4.2

                jsulmJ Online
                jsulmJ Online
                jsulm
                Lifetime Qt Champion
                wrote on last edited by
                #10

                @robsparrow I suggested that you write incoming data directly into a file instead of buffering it in RAM - is this what you are doing now or not?

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

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • R robsparrow

                  @ChrisW67 - 48 GB file
                  @jsulm - that is what I am trying to achieve, write/handle each package of data with readyRead signal.

                  I tried also this example - https://code.qt.io/cgit/qt/qtbase.git/tree/examples/network/download?h=6.4

                  and added just this:

                  connect(reply, &QNetworkReply::readyRead,
                              this, &DownloadManager::readyRead);
                  

                  and

                  void DownloadManager::readyRead() {
                      currentDownloads[0]->readAll(); // const 0
                  }
                  

                  And happens exactly same issue what previously - readyRead is called few times (less than 5) and then memory starts filling.

                  At this point I am thinking that there might be issue with Qt, because nothing is really working, all solutions is filling memory, even their example. Maybe this test case should be reported. Currently I am using Qt 6.4.2

                  J.HilkJ Offline
                  J.HilkJ Offline
                  J.Hilk
                  Moderators
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #11

                  @robsparrow said in QNetworkReply readyRead is not called, memory filling to max until crash:

                  At this point I am thinking that there might be issue with Qt

                  No, most certainly not.

                  first of all, either delete your QNetworkReply after use, or set it to be auto deleted.
                  https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qnetworkaccessmanager.html#setAutoDeleteReplies

                  than, as said previously, write your file to disk, from what you have shown so far, you're still not doing that, but rather keep all data in memory


                  Be aware of the Qt Code of Conduct, when posting : https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct


                  Q: What's that?
                  A: It's blue light.
                  Q: What does it do?
                  A: It turns blue.

                  JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • R robsparrow

                    @ChrisW67 - 48 GB file
                    @jsulm - that is what I am trying to achieve, write/handle each package of data with readyRead signal.

                    I tried also this example - https://code.qt.io/cgit/qt/qtbase.git/tree/examples/network/download?h=6.4

                    and added just this:

                    connect(reply, &QNetworkReply::readyRead,
                                this, &DownloadManager::readyRead);
                    

                    and

                    void DownloadManager::readyRead() {
                        currentDownloads[0]->readAll(); // const 0
                    }
                    

                    And happens exactly same issue what previously - readyRead is called few times (less than 5) and then memory starts filling.

                    At this point I am thinking that there might be issue with Qt, because nothing is really working, all solutions is filling memory, even their example. Maybe this test case should be reported. Currently I am using Qt 6.4.2

                    ? Offline
                    ? Offline
                    A Former User
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #12

                    according to qnetworkreply documentation

                    void QNetworkReply::setReadBufferSize(qint64 size)
                    Sets the size of the read buffer to be size bytes. The read buffer is the buffer that holds data that is being downloaded off the network, before it is read with QIODevice::read(). Setting the buffer size to 0 will make the buffer unlimited in size.

                    QNetworkReply will try to stop reading from the network once this buffer is full (i.e., bytesAvailable() returns size or more), thus causing the download to throttle down as well. If the buffer is not limited in size, QNetworkReply will try to download as fast as possible from the network.

                    Unlike QAbstractSocket::setReadBufferSize(), QNetworkReply cannot guarantee precision in the read buffer size. That is, bytesAvailable() can return more than size.

                    The problem is that documentation doesn't tell the default value of buffer size.
                    I think it might be usefull (at least to try) to set explicitly a size for the buffer.

                    I have no idea how this behaves by default with huge files.

                    jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • ? A Former User

                      according to qnetworkreply documentation

                      void QNetworkReply::setReadBufferSize(qint64 size)
                      Sets the size of the read buffer to be size bytes. The read buffer is the buffer that holds data that is being downloaded off the network, before it is read with QIODevice::read(). Setting the buffer size to 0 will make the buffer unlimited in size.

                      QNetworkReply will try to stop reading from the network once this buffer is full (i.e., bytesAvailable() returns size or more), thus causing the download to throttle down as well. If the buffer is not limited in size, QNetworkReply will try to download as fast as possible from the network.

                      Unlike QAbstractSocket::setReadBufferSize(), QNetworkReply cannot guarantee precision in the read buffer size. That is, bytesAvailable() can return more than size.

                      The problem is that documentation doesn't tell the default value of buffer size.
                      I think it might be usefull (at least to try) to set explicitly a size for the buffer.

                      I have no idea how this behaves by default with huge files.

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

                      @ankou29666 Can you please tell us exactly (show the code) what you are doing with incoming data? You still refuse to tell us whether you're writing data directly to a file or accumulating it in RAM. If you accumulate all incoming data in RAM, then of course you will get out of memory if you're sending huge amount of data and this has nothing to do with Qt...
                      And the documentation you posted has nothing to do with what YOU are doing with incoming data.

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

                      ? 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • J.HilkJ J.Hilk

                        @robsparrow said in QNetworkReply readyRead is not called, memory filling to max until crash:

                        At this point I am thinking that there might be issue with Qt

                        No, most certainly not.

                        first of all, either delete your QNetworkReply after use, or set it to be auto deleted.
                        https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qnetworkaccessmanager.html#setAutoDeleteReplies

                        than, as said previously, write your file to disk, from what you have shown so far, you're still not doing that, but rather keep all data in memory

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

                        @J-Hilk said in QNetworkReply readyRead is not called, memory filling to max until crash:

                        than, as said previously, write your file to disk, from what you have shown so far, you're still not doing that, but rather keep all data in memory

                        In what way? The OP has

                        void DownloadManager::readyRead() {
                            currentDownloads[0]->readAll(); // const 0
                        }
                        

                        Every time this is called it should read and discard whatever has arrived so far. Then one would hope that Qt code is not buffering the whole file into memory but rather ca re-use memory allocated. Btw, @ankou29666 have you checked this is getting called regularly?

                        Maybe you are right and writing to a file will make a difference, but I don't see why.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • R Offline
                          R Offline
                          robsparrow
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #15

                          @J-Hilk , @jsulm if I am reading documentation ( https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qnetworkreply.html#details ) correctly then executing "reply->readAll()" should be returning data and flushing it from memory. its not even about writing it to file anymore if its just failing to release data from memory.

                          So far:

                          1. calling "currentDownloads[0]->readAll()" just to flush data - does not releases memory
                          2. writing each chunk of data to file "dfile->write(currentDownloads[0]->readAll());" - also does not release memory

                          Here I am trying to download it in Qt example code- "dfile->write(currentDownloads[0]->readAll());"

                          Added also - "manager.setAutoDeleteReplies(true);" @J-Hilk

                          in readyRead slot I added n++ with qdebug, few times I just see it called 2 times, some times 4..

                          Here is full code based on Qt download example without UI:

                          #include <QtCore>
                          #include <QtNetwork>
                          
                          #include <cstdio>
                          
                          QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
                          class QSslError;
                          QT_END_NAMESPACE
                          
                          using namespace std;
                          
                          class DownloadManager: public QObject
                          {
                              Q_OBJECT
                              QNetworkAccessManager manager;
                              QList<QNetworkReply *> currentDownloads;
                          
                          public:
                              DownloadManager();
                              void doDownload(const QUrl &url);
                              static QString saveFileName(const QUrl &url);
                              bool saveToDisk(const QString &filename, QIODevice *data);
                              static bool isHttpRedirect(QNetworkReply *reply);
                          
                          public slots:
                              void execute();
                              void downloadFinished(QNetworkReply *reply);
                              void readyRead();
                              void sslErrors(const QList<QSslError> &errors);
                          private:
                              int n = 0;
                              QFile *dfile;
                          };
                          
                          DownloadManager::DownloadManager()
                          {
                              manager.setAutoDeleteReplies(true);
                              connect(&manager, &QNetworkAccessManager::finished,
                                      this, &DownloadManager::downloadFinished);
                          
                              dfile = new QFile("failtodownload.tar.gz");
                              dfile->open(QIODevice::WriteOnly);
                          }
                          
                          void DownloadManager::doDownload(const QUrl &url)
                          {
                              QNetworkRequest request(url);
                              QNetworkReply *reply = manager.get(request);
                          
                          #if QT_CONFIG(ssl)
                              connect(reply, &QNetworkReply::sslErrors,
                                      this, &DownloadManager::sslErrors);
                          #endif
                          
                              connect(reply, &QNetworkReply::readyRead,
                                      this, &DownloadManager::readyRead);
                          
                              currentDownloads.append(reply);
                          }
                          
                          QString DownloadManager::saveFileName(const QUrl &url)
                          {
                              QString path = url.path();
                              QString basename = QFileInfo(path).fileName();
                          
                              if (basename.isEmpty())
                                  basename = "download";
                          
                              if (QFile::exists(basename)) {
                                  // already exists, don't overwrite
                                  int i = 0;
                                  basename += '.';
                                  while (QFile::exists(basename + QString::number(i)))
                                      ++i;
                          
                                  basename += QString::number(i);
                              }
                          
                              return basename;
                          }
                          
                          bool DownloadManager::saveToDisk(const QString &filename, QIODevice *data)
                          {
                              QFile file(filename);
                              if (!file.open(QIODevice::WriteOnly)) {
                                  fprintf(stderr, "Could not open %s for writing: %s\n",
                                          qPrintable(filename),
                                          qPrintable(file.errorString()));
                                  return false;
                              }
                          
                              file.write(data->readAll());
                              file.close();
                          
                              return true;
                          }
                          
                          bool DownloadManager::isHttpRedirect(QNetworkReply *reply)
                          {
                              int statusCode = reply->attribute(QNetworkRequest::HttpStatusCodeAttribute).toInt();
                              return statusCode == 301 || statusCode == 302 || statusCode == 303
                                     || statusCode == 305 || statusCode == 307 || statusCode == 308;
                          }
                          
                          void DownloadManager::execute()
                          {
                              // hardcoded url
                              QUrl url = QUrl::fromEncoded("http://localhost/backup-2022.tar.gz");
                              doDownload(url);
                          }
                          
                          void DownloadManager::sslErrors(const QList<QSslError> &sslErrors)
                          {
                          #if QT_CONFIG(ssl)
                              for (const QSslError &error : sslErrors)
                                  fprintf(stderr, "SSL error: %s\n", qPrintable(error.errorString()));
                          #else
                              Q_UNUSED(sslErrors);
                          #endif
                          }
                          
                          void DownloadManager::downloadFinished(QNetworkReply *reply)
                          {
                              QUrl url = reply->url();
                              if (reply->error()) {
                                  fprintf(stderr, "Download of %s failed: %s\n",
                                          url.toEncoded().constData(),
                                          qPrintable(reply->errorString()));
                              } else {
                                  if (isHttpRedirect(reply)) {
                                      fputs("Request was redirected.\n", stderr);
                                  } else {
                                      QString filename = saveFileName(url);
                                      if (saveToDisk(filename, reply)) {
                                          printf("Download of %s succeeded (saved to %s)\n",
                                                 url.toEncoded().constData(), qPrintable(filename));
                                      }
                                  }
                              }
                          
                              currentDownloads.removeAll(reply);
                              reply->deleteLater();
                          
                              if (currentDownloads.isEmpty()) {
                                  // all downloads finished
                                  QCoreApplication::instance()->quit();
                              }
                          
                              dfile->close();
                          }
                          
                          void DownloadManager::readyRead() {
                              n++;
                              qDebug() << "readyRead " << n;
                          
                              // hardcode to first url
                              // currentDownloads[0]->readAll() // just calling this should release data from memory.
                              dfile->write(currentDownloads[0]->readAll());
                          }
                          
                          int main(int argc, char **argv)
                          {
                              QCoreApplication app(argc, argv);
                          
                              DownloadManager manager;
                              QTimer::singleShot(0, &manager, SLOT(execute()));
                          
                              app.exec();
                          }
                          
                          JonBJ jsulmJ 2 Replies Last reply
                          0
                          • R robsparrow

                            @J-Hilk , @jsulm if I am reading documentation ( https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qnetworkreply.html#details ) correctly then executing "reply->readAll()" should be returning data and flushing it from memory. its not even about writing it to file anymore if its just failing to release data from memory.

                            So far:

                            1. calling "currentDownloads[0]->readAll()" just to flush data - does not releases memory
                            2. writing each chunk of data to file "dfile->write(currentDownloads[0]->readAll());" - also does not release memory

                            Here I am trying to download it in Qt example code- "dfile->write(currentDownloads[0]->readAll());"

                            Added also - "manager.setAutoDeleteReplies(true);" @J-Hilk

                            in readyRead slot I added n++ with qdebug, few times I just see it called 2 times, some times 4..

                            Here is full code based on Qt download example without UI:

                            #include <QtCore>
                            #include <QtNetwork>
                            
                            #include <cstdio>
                            
                            QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
                            class QSslError;
                            QT_END_NAMESPACE
                            
                            using namespace std;
                            
                            class DownloadManager: public QObject
                            {
                                Q_OBJECT
                                QNetworkAccessManager manager;
                                QList<QNetworkReply *> currentDownloads;
                            
                            public:
                                DownloadManager();
                                void doDownload(const QUrl &url);
                                static QString saveFileName(const QUrl &url);
                                bool saveToDisk(const QString &filename, QIODevice *data);
                                static bool isHttpRedirect(QNetworkReply *reply);
                            
                            public slots:
                                void execute();
                                void downloadFinished(QNetworkReply *reply);
                                void readyRead();
                                void sslErrors(const QList<QSslError> &errors);
                            private:
                                int n = 0;
                                QFile *dfile;
                            };
                            
                            DownloadManager::DownloadManager()
                            {
                                manager.setAutoDeleteReplies(true);
                                connect(&manager, &QNetworkAccessManager::finished,
                                        this, &DownloadManager::downloadFinished);
                            
                                dfile = new QFile("failtodownload.tar.gz");
                                dfile->open(QIODevice::WriteOnly);
                            }
                            
                            void DownloadManager::doDownload(const QUrl &url)
                            {
                                QNetworkRequest request(url);
                                QNetworkReply *reply = manager.get(request);
                            
                            #if QT_CONFIG(ssl)
                                connect(reply, &QNetworkReply::sslErrors,
                                        this, &DownloadManager::sslErrors);
                            #endif
                            
                                connect(reply, &QNetworkReply::readyRead,
                                        this, &DownloadManager::readyRead);
                            
                                currentDownloads.append(reply);
                            }
                            
                            QString DownloadManager::saveFileName(const QUrl &url)
                            {
                                QString path = url.path();
                                QString basename = QFileInfo(path).fileName();
                            
                                if (basename.isEmpty())
                                    basename = "download";
                            
                                if (QFile::exists(basename)) {
                                    // already exists, don't overwrite
                                    int i = 0;
                                    basename += '.';
                                    while (QFile::exists(basename + QString::number(i)))
                                        ++i;
                            
                                    basename += QString::number(i);
                                }
                            
                                return basename;
                            }
                            
                            bool DownloadManager::saveToDisk(const QString &filename, QIODevice *data)
                            {
                                QFile file(filename);
                                if (!file.open(QIODevice::WriteOnly)) {
                                    fprintf(stderr, "Could not open %s for writing: %s\n",
                                            qPrintable(filename),
                                            qPrintable(file.errorString()));
                                    return false;
                                }
                            
                                file.write(data->readAll());
                                file.close();
                            
                                return true;
                            }
                            
                            bool DownloadManager::isHttpRedirect(QNetworkReply *reply)
                            {
                                int statusCode = reply->attribute(QNetworkRequest::HttpStatusCodeAttribute).toInt();
                                return statusCode == 301 || statusCode == 302 || statusCode == 303
                                       || statusCode == 305 || statusCode == 307 || statusCode == 308;
                            }
                            
                            void DownloadManager::execute()
                            {
                                // hardcoded url
                                QUrl url = QUrl::fromEncoded("http://localhost/backup-2022.tar.gz");
                                doDownload(url);
                            }
                            
                            void DownloadManager::sslErrors(const QList<QSslError> &sslErrors)
                            {
                            #if QT_CONFIG(ssl)
                                for (const QSslError &error : sslErrors)
                                    fprintf(stderr, "SSL error: %s\n", qPrintable(error.errorString()));
                            #else
                                Q_UNUSED(sslErrors);
                            #endif
                            }
                            
                            void DownloadManager::downloadFinished(QNetworkReply *reply)
                            {
                                QUrl url = reply->url();
                                if (reply->error()) {
                                    fprintf(stderr, "Download of %s failed: %s\n",
                                            url.toEncoded().constData(),
                                            qPrintable(reply->errorString()));
                                } else {
                                    if (isHttpRedirect(reply)) {
                                        fputs("Request was redirected.\n", stderr);
                                    } else {
                                        QString filename = saveFileName(url);
                                        if (saveToDisk(filename, reply)) {
                                            printf("Download of %s succeeded (saved to %s)\n",
                                                   url.toEncoded().constData(), qPrintable(filename));
                                        }
                                    }
                                }
                            
                                currentDownloads.removeAll(reply);
                                reply->deleteLater();
                            
                                if (currentDownloads.isEmpty()) {
                                    // all downloads finished
                                    QCoreApplication::instance()->quit();
                                }
                            
                                dfile->close();
                            }
                            
                            void DownloadManager::readyRead() {
                                n++;
                                qDebug() << "readyRead " << n;
                            
                                // hardcode to first url
                                // currentDownloads[0]->readAll() // just calling this should release data from memory.
                                dfile->write(currentDownloads[0]->readAll());
                            }
                            
                            int main(int argc, char **argv)
                            {
                                QCoreApplication app(argc, argv);
                            
                                DownloadManager manager;
                                QTimer::singleShot(0, &manager, SLOT(execute()));
                            
                                app.exec();
                            }
                            
                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonB
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #16

                            @robsparrow said in QNetworkReply readyRead is not called, memory filling to max until crash:

                            then executing "reply->readAll()" should be returning data and flushing it from memory. its not even about writing it to file anymore

                            Yes as I wrote above I see it this way too. FWIW you might try setReadBufferSize(4096) just to see whether that throttles how much memory is used?

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • R robsparrow

                              @J-Hilk , @jsulm if I am reading documentation ( https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qnetworkreply.html#details ) correctly then executing "reply->readAll()" should be returning data and flushing it from memory. its not even about writing it to file anymore if its just failing to release data from memory.

                              So far:

                              1. calling "currentDownloads[0]->readAll()" just to flush data - does not releases memory
                              2. writing each chunk of data to file "dfile->write(currentDownloads[0]->readAll());" - also does not release memory

                              Here I am trying to download it in Qt example code- "dfile->write(currentDownloads[0]->readAll());"

                              Added also - "manager.setAutoDeleteReplies(true);" @J-Hilk

                              in readyRead slot I added n++ with qdebug, few times I just see it called 2 times, some times 4..

                              Here is full code based on Qt download example without UI:

                              #include <QtCore>
                              #include <QtNetwork>
                              
                              #include <cstdio>
                              
                              QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE
                              class QSslError;
                              QT_END_NAMESPACE
                              
                              using namespace std;
                              
                              class DownloadManager: public QObject
                              {
                                  Q_OBJECT
                                  QNetworkAccessManager manager;
                                  QList<QNetworkReply *> currentDownloads;
                              
                              public:
                                  DownloadManager();
                                  void doDownload(const QUrl &url);
                                  static QString saveFileName(const QUrl &url);
                                  bool saveToDisk(const QString &filename, QIODevice *data);
                                  static bool isHttpRedirect(QNetworkReply *reply);
                              
                              public slots:
                                  void execute();
                                  void downloadFinished(QNetworkReply *reply);
                                  void readyRead();
                                  void sslErrors(const QList<QSslError> &errors);
                              private:
                                  int n = 0;
                                  QFile *dfile;
                              };
                              
                              DownloadManager::DownloadManager()
                              {
                                  manager.setAutoDeleteReplies(true);
                                  connect(&manager, &QNetworkAccessManager::finished,
                                          this, &DownloadManager::downloadFinished);
                              
                                  dfile = new QFile("failtodownload.tar.gz");
                                  dfile->open(QIODevice::WriteOnly);
                              }
                              
                              void DownloadManager::doDownload(const QUrl &url)
                              {
                                  QNetworkRequest request(url);
                                  QNetworkReply *reply = manager.get(request);
                              
                              #if QT_CONFIG(ssl)
                                  connect(reply, &QNetworkReply::sslErrors,
                                          this, &DownloadManager::sslErrors);
                              #endif
                              
                                  connect(reply, &QNetworkReply::readyRead,
                                          this, &DownloadManager::readyRead);
                              
                                  currentDownloads.append(reply);
                              }
                              
                              QString DownloadManager::saveFileName(const QUrl &url)
                              {
                                  QString path = url.path();
                                  QString basename = QFileInfo(path).fileName();
                              
                                  if (basename.isEmpty())
                                      basename = "download";
                              
                                  if (QFile::exists(basename)) {
                                      // already exists, don't overwrite
                                      int i = 0;
                                      basename += '.';
                                      while (QFile::exists(basename + QString::number(i)))
                                          ++i;
                              
                                      basename += QString::number(i);
                                  }
                              
                                  return basename;
                              }
                              
                              bool DownloadManager::saveToDisk(const QString &filename, QIODevice *data)
                              {
                                  QFile file(filename);
                                  if (!file.open(QIODevice::WriteOnly)) {
                                      fprintf(stderr, "Could not open %s for writing: %s\n",
                                              qPrintable(filename),
                                              qPrintable(file.errorString()));
                                      return false;
                                  }
                              
                                  file.write(data->readAll());
                                  file.close();
                              
                                  return true;
                              }
                              
                              bool DownloadManager::isHttpRedirect(QNetworkReply *reply)
                              {
                                  int statusCode = reply->attribute(QNetworkRequest::HttpStatusCodeAttribute).toInt();
                                  return statusCode == 301 || statusCode == 302 || statusCode == 303
                                         || statusCode == 305 || statusCode == 307 || statusCode == 308;
                              }
                              
                              void DownloadManager::execute()
                              {
                                  // hardcoded url
                                  QUrl url = QUrl::fromEncoded("http://localhost/backup-2022.tar.gz");
                                  doDownload(url);
                              }
                              
                              void DownloadManager::sslErrors(const QList<QSslError> &sslErrors)
                              {
                              #if QT_CONFIG(ssl)
                                  for (const QSslError &error : sslErrors)
                                      fprintf(stderr, "SSL error: %s\n", qPrintable(error.errorString()));
                              #else
                                  Q_UNUSED(sslErrors);
                              #endif
                              }
                              
                              void DownloadManager::downloadFinished(QNetworkReply *reply)
                              {
                                  QUrl url = reply->url();
                                  if (reply->error()) {
                                      fprintf(stderr, "Download of %s failed: %s\n",
                                              url.toEncoded().constData(),
                                              qPrintable(reply->errorString()));
                                  } else {
                                      if (isHttpRedirect(reply)) {
                                          fputs("Request was redirected.\n", stderr);
                                      } else {
                                          QString filename = saveFileName(url);
                                          if (saveToDisk(filename, reply)) {
                                              printf("Download of %s succeeded (saved to %s)\n",
                                                     url.toEncoded().constData(), qPrintable(filename));
                                          }
                                      }
                                  }
                              
                                  currentDownloads.removeAll(reply);
                                  reply->deleteLater();
                              
                                  if (currentDownloads.isEmpty()) {
                                      // all downloads finished
                                      QCoreApplication::instance()->quit();
                                  }
                              
                                  dfile->close();
                              }
                              
                              void DownloadManager::readyRead() {
                                  n++;
                                  qDebug() << "readyRead " << n;
                              
                                  // hardcode to first url
                                  // currentDownloads[0]->readAll() // just calling this should release data from memory.
                                  dfile->write(currentDownloads[0]->readAll());
                              }
                              
                              int main(int argc, char **argv)
                              {
                                  QCoreApplication app(argc, argv);
                              
                                  DownloadManager manager;
                                  QTimer::singleShot(0, &manager, SLOT(execute()));
                              
                                  app.exec();
                              }
                              
                              jsulmJ Online
                              jsulmJ Online
                              jsulm
                              Lifetime Qt Champion
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #17

                              @robsparrow OK, now I understand.
                              Is there a difference if you comment out currentDownloads[0]->readAll(); ?

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

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • jsulmJ jsulm

                                @ankou29666 Can you please tell us exactly (show the code) what you are doing with incoming data? You still refuse to tell us whether you're writing data directly to a file or accumulating it in RAM. If you accumulate all incoming data in RAM, then of course you will get out of memory if you're sending huge amount of data and this has nothing to do with Qt...
                                And the documentation you posted has nothing to do with what YOU are doing with incoming data.

                                ? Offline
                                ? Offline
                                A Former User
                                wrote on last edited by A Former User
                                #18

                                @jsulm said in QNetworkReply readyRead is not called, memory filling to max until crash:

                                @ankou29666 Can you please tell us exactly (show the code) what you are doing with incoming data? You still refuse to tell us whether you're writing data directly to a file or accumulating it in RAM. If you accumulate all incoming data in RAM, then of course you will get out of memory if you're sending huge amount of data and this has nothing to do with Qt...
                                And the documentation you posted has nothing to do with what YOU are doing with incoming data.

                                I AM NOT THE ONE WITH THE PROBLEM
                                please be a little more careful about it.
                                just trying to help the way I can. I don't download gigabyte files (1kB file is big file in my case so far). All I'm saying is that I wonder what is the default buffer size, because when explicitly set to zero, the buffer size is limited only by the device's memory.

                                jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • ? A Former User

                                  @jsulm said in QNetworkReply readyRead is not called, memory filling to max until crash:

                                  @ankou29666 Can you please tell us exactly (show the code) what you are doing with incoming data? You still refuse to tell us whether you're writing data directly to a file or accumulating it in RAM. If you accumulate all incoming data in RAM, then of course you will get out of memory if you're sending huge amount of data and this has nothing to do with Qt...
                                  And the documentation you posted has nothing to do with what YOU are doing with incoming data.

                                  I AM NOT THE ONE WITH THE PROBLEM
                                  please be a little more careful about it.
                                  just trying to help the way I can. I don't download gigabyte files (1kB file is big file in my case so far). All I'm saying is that I wonder what is the default buffer size, because when explicitly set to zero, the buffer size is limited only by the device's memory.

                                  jsulmJ Online
                                  jsulmJ Online
                                  jsulm
                                  Lifetime Qt Champion
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #19

                                  @ankou29666 Sorry, I replied to you by mistake.

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

                                  ? R 2 Replies Last reply
                                  0
                                  • jsulmJ jsulm

                                    @ankou29666 Sorry, I replied to you by mistake.

                                    ? Offline
                                    ? Offline
                                    A Former User
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #20

                                    @jsulm I had guessed. No worry this can happen to anyone ;)

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • jsulmJ jsulm

                                      @ankou29666 Sorry, I replied to you by mistake.

                                      R Offline
                                      R Offline
                                      robsparrow
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #21

                                      Solved!
                                      reply->setReadBufferSize(4096) did help, now readyRead signal is called and I can read data and release it from memory.

                                      If here is anyone with power to do something with documentation then probably here https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qnetworkreply.html#details should be added that readyRead event is directly controlled by setReadBufferSize(), because now documentation just says "Whenever more data is received from the network and processed, the readyRead() signal is emitted."

                                      Also readyRead is not working as expected if we follow to this part of documentation - https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qnetworkreply.html#setReadBufferSize
                                      "Setting the buffer size to 0 will make the buffer unlimited in size." as default value is 0. I would not expect even 1 signal for readyRead, but I was getting from 1-7 signals even in first seconds while file downloading until memory was filled or app was not responsive. but file was not fully downloaded while those signals was sent. So why there is such random behaviour on this signal..

                                      Christian EhrlicherC 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • R robsparrow has marked this topic as solved on
                                      • R robsparrow

                                        Solved!
                                        reply->setReadBufferSize(4096) did help, now readyRead signal is called and I can read data and release it from memory.

                                        If here is anyone with power to do something with documentation then probably here https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qnetworkreply.html#details should be added that readyRead event is directly controlled by setReadBufferSize(), because now documentation just says "Whenever more data is received from the network and processed, the readyRead() signal is emitted."

                                        Also readyRead is not working as expected if we follow to this part of documentation - https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qnetworkreply.html#setReadBufferSize
                                        "Setting the buffer size to 0 will make the buffer unlimited in size." as default value is 0. I would not expect even 1 signal for readyRead, but I was getting from 1-7 signals even in first seconds while file downloading until memory was filled or app was not responsive. but file was not fully downloaded while those signals was sent. So why there is such random behaviour on this signal..

                                        Christian EhrlicherC Offline
                                        Christian EhrlicherC Offline
                                        Christian Ehrlicher
                                        Lifetime Qt Champion
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #22

                                        @robsparrow said in QNetworkReply readyRead is not called, memory filling to max until crash:

                                        So why there is such random behaviour on this signal..

                                        There is no random behavior on this signal:

                                        "This signal is emitted once every time new data is available for reading from the device's current read channel. It will only be emitted again once new data is available, such as when a new payload of network data has arrived on your network socket, or when a new block of data has been appended to your device."

                                        Nothing about buffer sizes here

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                                        ? 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • Christian EhrlicherC Christian Ehrlicher

                                          @robsparrow said in QNetworkReply readyRead is not called, memory filling to max until crash:

                                          So why there is such random behaviour on this signal..

                                          There is no random behavior on this signal:

                                          "This signal is emitted once every time new data is available for reading from the device's current read channel. It will only be emitted again once new data is available, such as when a new payload of network data has arrived on your network socket, or when a new block of data has been appended to your device."

                                          Nothing about buffer sizes here

                                          ? Offline
                                          ? Offline
                                          A Former User
                                          wrote on last edited by A Former User
                                          #23

                                          @Christian-Ehrlicher said in QNetworkReply readyRead is not called, memory filling to max until crash:

                                          Nothing about buffer sizes here

                                          I think it might. When downloading short files, the signal will only be sent once the request is totally complete. I don't know how it works in internal but I wouldn't be surprised that readyRead signal would be fired only once the bytecount in the buffer matches the bytecount declared in the reply's http header.

                                          I don't know if I'm right or wrong, but in that case it would explain why he never received the readyRead signal if he gets a memory overflow before the file is completely downloaded.

                                          Christian EhrlicherC 1 Reply Last reply
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