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Global static QPixmapCache in Qt internals

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  • kshegunovK kshegunov

    @JKSH said in QApplication in std::thread:

    @kshegunov said in QApplication in std::thread:

    I meant the trace from QT_FATAL_WARNINGS, so we could see what was called leading to the mentioned warning.

    Nothing useful from GDB:

    1 qt_message_fatal(QtMsgType, QMessageLogContext const&, QString const&) [clone .isra.4]   0x68e23630 
    2 ??                                                                                       0x3121a30  
    

    Did you run this with a release Qt or with -developer-build? :)
    (The address is rather odd, though)

    @JKSH said in QApplication in std::thread:

    If you don't interact with the button, then #8 doesn't appear. No difference if qDebug is switched to std::cout with flush.

    Can't reproduce:

    
    09:01:47: Debugging starts
    Event loop stopped
    Thread stopped
    Waiting, waiting...
    Program shutting down
    

    What's your kit?
    I have 5.15.2 from the repo with gcc 10.2.1.

    JKSHJ Offline
    JKSHJ Offline
    JKSH
    Moderators
    wrote on last edited by JKSH
    #6

    @kshegunov said in QApplication in std::thread:

    Did you run this with a release Qt or with -developer-build? :)
    (The address is rather odd, though)

    Ah, right... I thought the Debug build would suffice. Don't have a dev build right now.

    Can't reproduce:

    ...

    What's your kit?
    I have 5.15.2 from the repo with gcc 10.2.1.

    Same result for me on Windows 10 20H2, with all official builds of:

    • Qt 5.12.10 MSVC 2017 64-bit (using MSVC 2019 compiler)
    • Qt 5.14.2 MinGW 7.3.0 32-bit
    • Qt 5.15.2 MSVC 2019 64-bit

    Might be Windows-specific.

    Qt Doc Search for browsers: forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches

    kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
    1
    • JKSHJ JKSH

      @kshegunov said in QApplication in std::thread:

      Did you run this with a release Qt or with -developer-build? :)
      (The address is rather odd, though)

      Ah, right... I thought the Debug build would suffice. Don't have a dev build right now.

      Can't reproduce:

      ...

      What's your kit?
      I have 5.15.2 from the repo with gcc 10.2.1.

      Same result for me on Windows 10 20H2, with all official builds of:

      • Qt 5.12.10 MSVC 2017 64-bit (using MSVC 2019 compiler)
      • Qt 5.14.2 MinGW 7.3.0 32-bit
      • Qt 5.15.2 MSVC 2019 64-bit

      Might be Windows-specific.

      kshegunovK Offline
      kshegunovK Offline
      kshegunov
      Moderators
      wrote on last edited by
      #7

      @JKSH said in QApplication in std::thread:

      Ah, right... I thought the Debug build would suffice. Don't have a dev build right now.

      Not once in a universe lifetime.

      @JKSH said in QApplication in std::thread:

      Might be Windows-specific.

      Possibly. Unfortunately I don't have windows on hand (or rather I'm too lazy now to boot into it). Maybe, I'll check it later.

      Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

      JKSHJ 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • kshegunovK kshegunov

        @J-Hilk said in QApplication in std::thread:

        @JKSH this actually crashes for me on btn.show()

        That's expected. MacOS does not support plugging into the event loop from a thread different from main(). Should work on linux and windows, though.

        J.HilkJ Offline
        J.HilkJ Offline
        J.Hilk
        Moderators
        wrote on last edited by
        #8

        @kshegunov Apple does a lot of funky stuff, in that regard, let me fire up my vm


        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.

        1 Reply Last reply
        2
        • kshegunovK kshegunov

          @JKSH said in QApplication in std::thread:

          Ah, right... I thought the Debug build would suffice. Don't have a dev build right now.

          Not once in a universe lifetime.

          @JKSH said in QApplication in std::thread:

          Might be Windows-specific.

          Possibly. Unfortunately I don't have windows on hand (or rather I'm too lazy now to boot into it). Maybe, I'll check it later.

          JKSHJ Offline
          JKSHJ Offline
          JKSH
          Moderators
          wrote on last edited by JKSH
          #9

          @kshegunov said in QApplication in std::thread:

          Not once in a universe lifetime.

          Duly noted :-D

          But before we get too sidetracked: @Suthiro's main issue isn't the message about timers. Rather, it's the crash which I believe is caused by delete m_qPlotsControl; (see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67257329/weird-qpushbutton-bug ).

          I believe it is fixable with m_qPlotsControl->deleteLater();... but that needs to be done before QApplication::exec() returns, because QDeferredDeleteEvent won't be processed without an event loop.

          Qt Doc Search for browsers: forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches

          J.HilkJ kshegunovK 2 Replies Last reply
          0
          • JKSHJ JKSH

            @kshegunov said in QApplication in std::thread:

            Not once in a universe lifetime.

            Duly noted :-D

            But before we get too sidetracked: @Suthiro's main issue isn't the message about timers. Rather, it's the crash which I believe is caused by delete m_qPlotsControl; (see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67257329/weird-qpushbutton-bug ).

            I believe it is fixable with m_qPlotsControl->deleteLater();... but that needs to be done before QApplication::exec() returns, because QDeferredDeleteEvent won't be processed without an event loop.

            J.HilkJ Offline
            J.HilkJ Offline
            J.Hilk
            Moderators
            wrote on last edited by
            #10

            @JKSH Ok I can reproduce it as well, (on the VM) Qt 15.3 & MSVC2019


            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.

            1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • JKSHJ JKSH

              @kshegunov said in QApplication in std::thread:

              Not once in a universe lifetime.

              Duly noted :-D

              But before we get too sidetracked: @Suthiro's main issue isn't the message about timers. Rather, it's the crash which I believe is caused by delete m_qPlotsControl; (see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67257329/weird-qpushbutton-bug ).

              I believe it is fixable with m_qPlotsControl->deleteLater();... but that needs to be done before QApplication::exec() returns, because QDeferredDeleteEvent won't be processed without an event loop.

              kshegunovK Offline
              kshegunovK Offline
              kshegunov
              Moderators
              wrote on last edited by
              #11

              @JKSH said in QApplication in std::thread:

              I believe it is fixable with m_qPlotsControl->deleteLater();... but that needs to be done before QApplication::exec() returns, because QDeferredDeleteEvent won't be processed without an event loop.

              I still don't understand this. For what reason should that be the case, and why would this generate a crash? I'm pretty sure deferred deletes are processed after the event loop has exited (see for example the QThread::finished -> QObject::deleteLater), but even if that weren't the case the QPushButton's destructor is going to be run before the thread actually finishes and before the application object's destructor's run (there's no difference between main() and any other function from c++'s point of view).

              Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

              JKSHJ 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • JKSHJ JKSH

                [Forked from https://forum.qt.io/topic/126128/qapplication-in-std-thread -- Sorry, I messed up the order of posts when I did the fork; this top post should be further down]

                @kshegunov said in QApplication in std::thread:

                why would this generate a crash?

                Since the widget creates a timer in the background, then it's probably receiving background events/signals. delete could cause the event/signal handler to act on a dangling pointer -- that's how it could generate a crash. And that's why deleteLater() can fix the crash. (Alternatively, we could change from a heap-allocated widget to a stack-allocated widget)

                I'm pretty sure deferred deletes are processed after the event loop has exited (see for example the QThread::finished -> QObject::deleteLater)

                The code below prints "Bye" but not "Widget destroyed", proving that the Widget's destructor is not run:

                // widget.h
                #include <QWidget>
                
                class Widget : public QWidget
                {
                    Q_OBJECT
                public:
                    Widget(QWidget *parent = nullptr) : QWidget(parent) {}
                    ~Widget(){ qDebug("Widget destroyed"); }
                };
                
                // main.cpp
                #include "widget.h"
                #include <QApplication>
                #include <chrono>
                #include <thread>
                
                using namespace std::chrono_literals;
                
                int main(int argc, char *argv[])
                {
                    std::thread thr([&]
                    {
                        QApplication a(argc, argv);
                        auto w = new Widget;
                        w->show();
                        a.exec();
                
                        // delete w; // This WILL run the Widget's destructor
                
                        w->deleteLater(); // This WON'T run the Widget's destructor
                    });
                
                    std::this_thread::sleep_for(5000ms);
                
                    QMetaObject::invokeMethod(qApp, &QApplication::quit);
                    thr.join();
                
                    std::this_thread::sleep_for(5000ms);
                    qDebug("Bye");
                }
                

                Anyway, I was trying to say that @Suthiro can't simply replace delete m_qPlotsControl; with m_qPlotsControl->deleteLater(); in-place at https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67257329/weird-qpushbutton-bug . Some re-shuffling is required.

                kshegunovK Offline
                kshegunovK Offline
                kshegunov
                Moderators
                wrote on last edited by kshegunov
                #12

                @JKSH said in QApplication in std::thread:

                The code below prints "Bye" but not "Widget destroyed", proving that the Widget's destructor is not run:

                I meant connecting to the aboutToQuit signal, but anyhow it's not that important.

                Since the widget creates a timer in the background, then it's probably receiving background events/signals. delete could cause the event/signal handler to act on a dangling pointer -- that's how it could generate a crash.

                I think this shouldn't happen, but can't investigate it currently.

                Anyway, I was trying to say that @Suthiro can't simply replace delete m_qPlotsControl; with m_qPlotsControl->deleteLater(); in-place at https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67257329/weird-qpushbutton-bug . Some re-shuffling is required.

                I suppose, but that timer message should go away, otherwise the code can break at any moment (this applies to your code too - the one you mentioned where you get the warning).

                Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • Chris KawaC Offline
                  Chris KawaC Offline
                  Chris Kawa
                  Lifetime Qt Champion
                  wrote on last edited by Chris Kawa
                  #13

                  I reproduced this on Windows and the message about timers comes from a destructor of a static QPixmapCache object that happens on the main() thread. That's not something the user's code does. It's in Qt's internals.

                  Right, so remember the rule that no QObject should outlive the application object and this means no static QObjects? Apparently Qt itself doesn't respect that rule and also creates static objects that run code in the main thread no matter where the application object is created :/

                  I would consider this a Qt bug and expect it to crash all over the place.

                  EDIT: I missed that JKSH already mentioned this, but yeah, this seems to be the culprit.

                  kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
                  3
                  • Chris KawaC Chris Kawa

                    I reproduced this on Windows and the message about timers comes from a destructor of a static QPixmapCache object that happens on the main() thread. That's not something the user's code does. It's in Qt's internals.

                    Right, so remember the rule that no QObject should outlive the application object and this means no static QObjects? Apparently Qt itself doesn't respect that rule and also creates static objects that run code in the main thread no matter where the application object is created :/

                    I would consider this a Qt bug and expect it to crash all over the place.

                    EDIT: I missed that JKSH already mentioned this, but yeah, this seems to be the culprit.

                    kshegunovK Offline
                    kshegunovK Offline
                    kshegunov
                    Moderators
                    wrote on last edited by kshegunov
                    #14

                    @Chris-Kawa said in QApplication in std::thread:

                    I reproduced this on Windows and the message about timers comes from a destructor of a static QPixmapCache object that happens on the main() thread. That's not something the user's code does. It's in Qt's internals.

                    Hm, interesting. Do you have a woboq location?

                    Right, so remember the rule that no QObject should outlive the application object and this means no static QObjects?
                    Apparently Qt itself doesn't respect that rule and also creates static objects that run code in the main thread no matter where the application object is created :/

                    Yeah. Not living up to its own expectations it seems. :(

                    I would consider this a Qt bug and expect it to crash all over the place.

                    Me too, which is what I wrote somewhere upstairs - this should be fixed at the vendor side.

                    Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

                    Chris KawaC 1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • kshegunovK kshegunov

                      @Chris-Kawa said in QApplication in std::thread:

                      I reproduced this on Windows and the message about timers comes from a destructor of a static QPixmapCache object that happens on the main() thread. That's not something the user's code does. It's in Qt's internals.

                      Hm, interesting. Do you have a woboq location?

                      Right, so remember the rule that no QObject should outlive the application object and this means no static QObjects?
                      Apparently Qt itself doesn't respect that rule and also creates static objects that run code in the main thread no matter where the application object is created :/

                      Yeah. Not living up to its own expectations it seems. :(

                      I would consider this a Qt bug and expect it to crash all over the place.

                      Me too, which is what I wrote somewhere upstairs - this should be fixed at the vendor side.

                      Chris KawaC Offline
                      Chris KawaC Offline
                      Chris Kawa
                      Lifetime Qt Champion
                      wrote on last edited by Chris Kawa
                      #15

                      @kshegunov said in QApplication in std::thread:

                      Hm, interesting. Do you have a woboq location?

                      Instance declaration is here:
                      https://code.woboq.org/qt5/qtbase/src/gui/image/qpixmapcache.cpp.html#pm_cache

                      And here's Windows with MSVC crash callstack on exit:

                      1   QPMCache::~QPMCache                                                                                   qpixmapcache.cpp 269
                      2   ``anonymous namespace'::Q_QGS_pm_cache::innerFunction'::`2'::Holder::~Holder                          Qt5Guid             
                      3   ``anonymous namespace'::Q_QGS_pm_cache::innerFunction'::`2'::`dynamic atexit destructor for 'holder'' Qt5Guid             
                      4   initterm_e                                                                                            ucrtbased           
                      5   initterm_e                                                                                            ucrtbased           
                      6   initterm_e                                                                                            ucrtbased           
                      7   execute_onexit_table                                                                                  ucrtbased           
                      8   __scrt_dllmain_uninitialize_c                                                                         utility.cpp      399
                      9   dllmain_crt_process_detach                                                                            dll_dllmain.cpp  182
                      10  dllmain_crt_dispatch                                                                                  dll_dllmain.cpp  220
                      11  dllmain_dispatch                                                                                      dll_dllmain.cpp  293
                      12  _DllMainCRTStartup                                                                                    dll_dllmain.cpp  335
                      13  RtlActivateActivationContextUnsafeFast                                                                ntdll               
                      14  LdrShutdownProcess                                                                                    ntdll               
                      15  RtlExitUserProcess                                                                                    ntdll               
                      16  FatalExit                                                                                             KERNEL32            
                      17  wassert                                                                                               ucrtbased           
                      18  wassert                                                                                               ucrtbased           
                      19  exit                                                                                                  ucrtbased           
                      20  __scrt_common_main_seh                                                                                exe_common.inl   297
                      

                      I used this simplified code:

                      int main(int argc, char *argv[])
                      {
                          std::thread thr([](int argc, char *argv[])
                          {
                              QApplication a(argc, argv);
                              QPushButton btn("Push");
                              btn.show();
                              a.exec();
                          }, argc, argv);
                      
                          thr.join();
                      }
                      
                      kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
                      2
                      • Chris KawaC Chris Kawa

                        @kshegunov said in QApplication in std::thread:

                        Hm, interesting. Do you have a woboq location?

                        Instance declaration is here:
                        https://code.woboq.org/qt5/qtbase/src/gui/image/qpixmapcache.cpp.html#pm_cache

                        And here's Windows with MSVC crash callstack on exit:

                        1   QPMCache::~QPMCache                                                                                   qpixmapcache.cpp 269
                        2   ``anonymous namespace'::Q_QGS_pm_cache::innerFunction'::`2'::Holder::~Holder                          Qt5Guid             
                        3   ``anonymous namespace'::Q_QGS_pm_cache::innerFunction'::`2'::`dynamic atexit destructor for 'holder'' Qt5Guid             
                        4   initterm_e                                                                                            ucrtbased           
                        5   initterm_e                                                                                            ucrtbased           
                        6   initterm_e                                                                                            ucrtbased           
                        7   execute_onexit_table                                                                                  ucrtbased           
                        8   __scrt_dllmain_uninitialize_c                                                                         utility.cpp      399
                        9   dllmain_crt_process_detach                                                                            dll_dllmain.cpp  182
                        10  dllmain_crt_dispatch                                                                                  dll_dllmain.cpp  220
                        11  dllmain_dispatch                                                                                      dll_dllmain.cpp  293
                        12  _DllMainCRTStartup                                                                                    dll_dllmain.cpp  335
                        13  RtlActivateActivationContextUnsafeFast                                                                ntdll               
                        14  LdrShutdownProcess                                                                                    ntdll               
                        15  RtlExitUserProcess                                                                                    ntdll               
                        16  FatalExit                                                                                             KERNEL32            
                        17  wassert                                                                                               ucrtbased           
                        18  wassert                                                                                               ucrtbased           
                        19  exit                                                                                                  ucrtbased           
                        20  __scrt_common_main_seh                                                                                exe_common.inl   297
                        

                        I used this simplified code:

                        int main(int argc, char *argv[])
                        {
                            std::thread thr([](int argc, char *argv[])
                            {
                                QApplication a(argc, argv);
                                QPushButton btn("Push");
                                btn.show();
                                a.exec();
                            }, argc, argv);
                        
                            thr.join();
                        }
                        
                        kshegunovK Offline
                        kshegunovK Offline
                        kshegunov
                        Moderators
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #16

                        Yes, this is constructed appropriately, however the deallocation should've been tied to the QCoreApplication::aboutToQuit. I doubt anyone is going to bother fixing it though, I'm not sure if it's not going to be discarded with "this is unsupported" even ...

                        Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

                        JKSHJ 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • kshegunovK kshegunov

                          Yes, this is constructed appropriately, however the deallocation should've been tied to the QCoreApplication::aboutToQuit. I doubt anyone is going to bother fixing it though, I'm not sure if it's not going to be discarded with "this is unsupported" even ...

                          JKSHJ Offline
                          JKSHJ Offline
                          JKSH
                          Moderators
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #17

                          Good detective work, @Chris-Kawa!

                          I encountered this a few years ago but had forgotten most of the details.

                          @kshegunov said in Global static QPixmapCache in Qt internals:

                          Yes, this is constructed appropriately, however the deallocation should've been tied to the QCoreApplication::aboutToQuit. I doubt anyone is going to bother fixing it though, I'm not sure if it's not going to be discarded with "this is unsupported" even ...

                          Since a QPixmap requires a QGuiApplication, would a simple(?) and correct fix be to allocate the QPixmapCache in the QGuiApplication constructor, and deallocate it from the QGuiApplication destructor?

                          Qt Doc Search for browsers: forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches

                          kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • JKSHJ JKSH

                            Good detective work, @Chris-Kawa!

                            I encountered this a few years ago but had forgotten most of the details.

                            @kshegunov said in Global static QPixmapCache in Qt internals:

                            Yes, this is constructed appropriately, however the deallocation should've been tied to the QCoreApplication::aboutToQuit. I doubt anyone is going to bother fixing it though, I'm not sure if it's not going to be discarded with "this is unsupported" even ...

                            Since a QPixmap requires a QGuiApplication, would a simple(?) and correct fix be to allocate the QPixmapCache in the QGuiApplication constructor, and deallocate it from the QGuiApplication destructor?

                            kshegunovK Offline
                            kshegunovK Offline
                            kshegunov
                            Moderators
                            wrote on last edited by kshegunov
                            #18

                            Possibly. Or it can be a pseudo-singleton (similarly to QCoreApplication) and be initialized on demand in the instance retrieving function (dropping the global static that it currently uses). You could poke Thiago, but as written, I wouldn't hold my breath.

                            Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

                            jeremy_kJ 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • Christian EhrlicherC Online
                              Christian EhrlicherC Online
                              Christian Ehrlicher
                              Lifetime Qt Champion
                              wrote on last edited by Christian Ehrlicher
                              #19

                              There are some reports about such an issue:
                              https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-48709
                              https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-21807

                              And it does not crash here for me on Linux and Windows (MSVC, debug-build) with 5.15.x

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                              kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • Christian EhrlicherC Christian Ehrlicher

                                There are some reports about such an issue:
                                https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-48709
                                https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-21807

                                And it does not crash here for me on Linux and Windows (MSVC, debug-build) with 5.15.x

                                kshegunovK Offline
                                kshegunovK Offline
                                kshegunov
                                Moderators
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #20

                                @Christian-Ehrlicher said in Global static QPixmapCache in Qt internals:

                                And it does not crash here for me on Linux and Windows (MSVC, debug-build) with 5.15.x

                                We are talking about the QTimers from another thread message. JKSH, split the threads. The other stuff (the supposed crash) contines to befuddle me.

                                Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

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                                • Christian EhrlicherC Online
                                  Christian EhrlicherC Online
                                  Christian Ehrlicher
                                  Lifetime Qt Champion
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #21

                                  I also don't have a warning about the timer with the testcase on windows/msvc :)

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                                  • S Offline
                                    S Offline
                                    Suthiro
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #22

                                    @kshegunov

                                    We are talking about the QTimers from another thread message. JKSH, split the threads. The other stuff (the supposed crash) contines to befuddle me.

                                    I don't know how exactly the crash in the original thread is connected with this. However, the crash and the message about timers are appearing together. They appear after any interaction with simple QPushButton. Using deleteLater() as suggested by @JKSH solves the crash, but the message persists.

                                    @Christian-Ehrlicher said in Global static QPixmapCache in Qt internals:

                                    And it does not crash here for me on Linux and Windows (MSVC, debug-build) with 5.15.x

                                    To clarify: crash appears only when one tries to unload a library with QApplication inside. The library in my case is loaded by lua.exe, but I doubt it is lua-related problem.

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                                    0
                                    • kshegunovK kshegunov

                                      Possibly. Or it can be a pseudo-singleton (similarly to QCoreApplication) and be initialized on demand in the instance retrieving function (dropping the global static that it currently uses). You could poke Thiago, but as written, I wouldn't hold my breath.

                                      jeremy_kJ Offline
                                      jeremy_kJ Offline
                                      jeremy_k
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #23

                                      @kshegunov said in Global static QPixmapCache in Qt internals:

                                      Possibly. Or it can be a pseudo-singleton (similarly to QCoreApplication) and be initialized on demand in the instance retrieving function (dropping the global static that it currently uses). You could poke Thiago, but as written, I wouldn't hold my breath.

                                      That sounds like a source and binary compatibility break, unless instance() is used from within the existing static functions.

                                      A thread_local version would be another solution, that could be implemented without changing any user source code. Keep the global static interface object for binary compatibility, and move the actual QObject-based implementation to thread_local storage for the gui thread.

                                      The QPixmapCache documentation already says that the cache is only usable from the "application's main thread".

                                      Asking a question about code? http://eel.is/iso-c++/testcase/

                                      kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • jeremy_kJ jeremy_k

                                        @kshegunov said in Global static QPixmapCache in Qt internals:

                                        Possibly. Or it can be a pseudo-singleton (similarly to QCoreApplication) and be initialized on demand in the instance retrieving function (dropping the global static that it currently uses). You could poke Thiago, but as written, I wouldn't hold my breath.

                                        That sounds like a source and binary compatibility break, unless instance() is used from within the existing static functions.

                                        A thread_local version would be another solution, that could be implemented without changing any user source code. Keep the global static interface object for binary compatibility, and move the actual QObject-based implementation to thread_local storage for the gui thread.

                                        The QPixmapCache documentation already says that the cache is only usable from the "application's main thread".

                                        kshegunovK Offline
                                        kshegunovK Offline
                                        kshegunov
                                        Moderators
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #24

                                        @jeremy_k said in Global static QPixmapCache in Qt internals:

                                        That sounds like a source and binary compatibility break, unless instance() is used from within the existing static functions.

                                        Adding non-virtual functions doesn't brake API or ABI compatibility. Also this is an internal member, any global getter function could do, it's not really necessary to expose it to the user.

                                        A thread_local version would be another solution, that could be implemented without changing any user source code. Keep the global static interface object for binary compatibility, and move the actual QObject-based implementation to thread_local storage for the gui thread.

                                        The QPixmapCache documentation already says that the cache is only usable from the "application's main thread".

                                        It's an internal class, I didn't intend to modify the QPixmapCache to begin with. (see the woboq link in Chris' post)

                                        Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

                                        jeremy_kJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • kshegunovK kshegunov

                                          @jeremy_k said in Global static QPixmapCache in Qt internals:

                                          That sounds like a source and binary compatibility break, unless instance() is used from within the existing static functions.

                                          Adding non-virtual functions doesn't brake API or ABI compatibility. Also this is an internal member, any global getter function could do, it's not really necessary to expose it to the user.

                                          A thread_local version would be another solution, that could be implemented without changing any user source code. Keep the global static interface object for binary compatibility, and move the actual QObject-based implementation to thread_local storage for the gui thread.

                                          The QPixmapCache documentation already says that the cache is only usable from the "application's main thread".

                                          It's an internal class, I didn't intend to modify the QPixmapCache to begin with. (see the woboq link in Chris' post)

                                          jeremy_kJ Offline
                                          jeremy_kJ Offline
                                          jeremy_k
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #25

                                          @kshegunov said in Global static QPixmapCache in Qt internals:

                                          @jeremy_k said in Global static QPixmapCache in Qt internals:

                                          That sounds like a source and binary compatibility break, unless instance() is used from within the existing static functions.

                                          Adding non-virtual functions doesn't brake API or ABI compatibility. Also this is an internal member, any global getter function could do, it's not really necessary to expose it to the user.

                                          I had read it as a suggestion to introduce a static QPixmapCache::instance(), and make the currently static QPixmapCache member functions non-static. I autocompleted too much.

                                          A thread_local version would be another solution, that could be implemented without changing any user source code. Keep the global static interface object for binary compatibility, and move the actual QObject-based implementation to thread_local storage for the gui thread.

                                          The QPixmapCache documentation already says that the cache is only usable from the "application's main thread".

                                          It's an internal class, I didn't intend to modify the QPixmapCache to begin with. (see the woboq link in Chris' post)

                                          I saw, and if I interpreted correctly, the issue is that the global static QPixmapCache and its internal QObject based implementation will be destroyed from the C++ main thread when main() exits. The destruction of the internal implementation object could be removed from the public QPixmapCache destructor, but the question is where to destroy it while maintaining the current intended behavior. Making the internal object (or a wrapper) thread local in the gui thread solves destruction at a point where the cache can't see further use anyway.

                                          Asking a question about code? http://eel.is/iso-c++/testcase/

                                          kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
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