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10:50
Is it possible to use signals and slots for inter thread communication? Didn t find the info I was looking for on google
I am able to emmit from my worker thread, but seems like the parent thread doesn t receive my signal and thus the slot isn t executed.
I tried the old syntax as follows:
    connect(recognitionClObj, SIGNAL(signPixMapLandmarks(QPixmap)), this, SLOT(mySlot(QPixmap)));
@nwp ?
recognitionClObj is the object for the workerthread
yes, the autoConnection used will automatically use the event loop of the thread the recieving object is in to send the signal
nwp
nwp
1
Q: How to leverage Qt to make a QObject method thread-safe?

Kuba OberSuppose we wrote a non-const method in a QObject-deriving class: class MyClass : public QObject { int x; public: void method(int a) { x = a; // and possibly other things }; }; We want to make that method thread-safe: meaning that calling it from an arbitrary thread, and from multiple...

autoconnection being the default if you don't specify
but you need to make sure the event loop of the thread is actually running
@ratchetfreak sorry I didn't totally get that...
@ratchetfreak didn t get that neither
a Qthread with no overridden run() will enter an event loop
you can move an object to that thread
and then if you send a signal to that object the slot will be called on that thread
unless you explicitly go for a direct connection
10:58
@ratchetfreak euhm... I m affraid I am really not following what you mean.

What I did: I have a main thread and a worker thread. The worker thread runs a function which contains a while(1) loop, that way I don't have to restart the thread somehow every time. When the worker thread has computed a result it emits a signal to the main thread which contains the result (hence the datatype pixmap between brackets of my connect).

So far I used some silly global variable tricks, this worked, but now I want to use a connect instead whihc imo is better.
I am not a very clever guy, please take that into consideration
instead of making the worker thread do a while(1) you can use a timer to make a slot in the worker object run every so often (of just signal that slot directly when needed)
@ratchetfreak It needs to run continuously, not every so often.
set a timeout of 0 then
@ratchetfreak ok thanks I ll try that. What about returning my value to the main thread with a connect?
what you did should work assuming the thread can go back into its event loop
11:04
@ratchetfreak yet the main thread seems to never receive the emitted signal
@ratchetfreak relevant bits of code: pastebin.com/TdGqhcKy
corresponding output:
started process
computing landmarks
going to emit result
emitted
emitUpdateGuiLandmarks() never gets executed
you don't need to implement the signal methods
@ratchetfreak there is no function definition of signPixMapLandmarks(QPixmap)
I just put it in my class under signals:
nothing more
@ratchetfreak I can see the signal is being emitted because
when I put this: `connect(this, &recognitionClass::signPixMapLandmarks, qApp, &QApplication::aboutQt);`

Indisde the getFaialLanmarks() function the aboutQt window does appear
so it is purely the main thread which doesn t seem to receive it
webcamClass belongs to the parent and recognition belongs to the worker
11:21
do you have any type of wait in the main thread?
@ratchetfreak no, because the emitted signal should just trigger the slot immediately no matter what afaik
I am not waiting for the signal to be emitted if this is what you mean
@ratchetfreak do you need more code or code of something else?
Because I don't see why it doesn t work, I think it should work. This is nothing overly complicated afaik.
12:11
0
Q: Qt C++ - How to pass data from a worker thread to main thread?

LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritnI am trying to perform interthread communication in Qt (C++). I have a worker thread which does some calculations and I want the workerthread to return its results to the main thread when done. I therefor use a connect, I know thanks to debugging, that the signal is successfully being emit but th...

nwp
nwp
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn very difficult time intensive to reproduce
@nwp do you want to have a look at the entire code?
nwp
nwp
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn No. I want you to reduce the example so it fits in a single file with less than 100 lines that compiles and runs and shows the problem.
 
1 hour later…
13:24
hello
14:19
first time I am communicating through this chat room so just said hello, next time I will get to the point, right now don't have anything to add here.
it's ok
nwp
nwp
@naren There are rooms better suited for hanging out. Just don't ask C++ questions there.
Hey, I'm back! Anyone know how to read/write WAD files in C++?
To obfuscate game assets
Or is the point of that data type that everyone's implementation is different, thus making it harder to "crack" it?
nwp
nwp
Do you even have anything worth obfuscating?
It's pointless by the way, the user will get to see it anyways. And if not you can just not include it with the game which is much safer.
Okay, so how would I provide assets for the game, but not have them in the directory?
nwp
nwp
14:32
You don't. Just put them in the directory. You are wasting time on a non-issue.
You can't protect your assets anyways. Just go zip file + AES and be done with it.
The use case is obfuscating the soundtrack, so people have to buy it separately :) (like how Hotline Miami 2 does it as opposed to Hotline Miami)
HM1 has the soundtrack files scattered in the game directory, while HM2 has one music file named hlm2_music_desktop.wad that can't be opened by any program
pick a format that you need, encode your audio in it, then aes encrypt with some fixed key hidden in the exe
got it
pick a random extension to confuse the uninitiated
Just wanted to listen to the soundtrack right now ^^
Jup, that's what I thought
nwp
nwp
14:36
@kim366 Try youtube.
Yeah, I'm in a bus with limited internet :/
14:51
@kim366 Note that any such effort will be reversible, but it's not your goal to hinder every attempt, but rather to drive the lazy kind away to thepiratebay instead :)
@milleniumbug Yeah, that's my plan anyways. Doesn't have to be too secure
An alternative option would be providing a lower quality soundtrack in the game
That is, lower bitrate or compressed more
Okay, yeah
I'll figure something out in the next 5 years until I actually release a game :)
 
2 hours later…
16:28
Is there something like an interprocess mutex lock?
Hi all, do you know if C# has something similar to setlocale in C++ ?
I am locking a file using a mutex in my application, but am still able to access the file from another process unfortunately
nwp
nwp
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn Not in standard C++, but operating systems usually have those.
@nwp what about Qt? didn't find anything like an interprocess lock in the docs
16:29
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn yeah regular mutexes are intraprocess
if you want to lock a file, lock the file
@milleniumbug I tried this:
        mutex.lock();
        cv::imwrite("/home/John/Desktop/camera.jpg", imgFrame);
        while(1)
            qDebug("locked");
        mutex.unlock();
35 secs ago, by milleniumbug
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn yeah regular mutexes are intraprocess
while being in the while(1) loop I opened the image myself
manually (by clicking on it) and managed to open it
so I guess this is not interprocess
nwp
nwp
@DonCode Try asking in the C# room.
@DonCode .NET has localization support, yes
16:31
@nwp I did, but no one answered.
@milleniumbug Do you know any of the API's?
intraprocess is the opposite of interprocess, yes
@milleniumbug do you mean inTRAprocess or inTERprocess? Just doublechecking...
@milleniumbug kk
2 mins ago, by milleniumbug
if you want to lock a file, lock the file
POSIXes have flock, Win32 has something different
@milleniumbug interesting.,..
I was once asked on a job interview "do you have any experience with POSIX". I answered that I didn't, if I manage to use flock, I ll be able to sy that I do have experience with it :)
16:34
Those people apparently use POSIX for -I guess- interprocess stuff on embedded devices.
@milleniumbug thanks!
@nwp looks like Qt has something called QLockFile :)
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nwp
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn pthreads are more commonly used
@nwp rather than POSIX? it was for a job in the defence sector.
these are unrelated terms
in fact "pthreads" stands for "POSIX threads"
nwp
nwp
16:36
> Serialization is only guaranteed if all processes that access the shared resource use QLockFile, with the same file path.
Whatever you use to manually open that file will not do that.
@nwp hmm... looks like that won't work... I am creating the file in my cpp code and reading it in a Python script.
nwp
nwp
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn A more commonly known example than flock.
POSIX is meant to be an operating system standard so you can use different operating systems in the same way. Linux-ish OSs tend to be POSIX-conform out of the box, for Windows there are libraries that implement POSIX-functions using the WinAPI which then makes Windows POSIX-conform too.
The problem is that POSIX isn't actually a good library that anyone would want to use.
@nwp lol quite surprising then that a big company in the defence industry uses it
I guess there must be a reason they use it, although it isn't good
@nwp What solutions do you recommend me to look at for my Qt application?
nwp
nwp
17:21
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn What milleniumbug said. Lock the file using flock or some other function.
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn Why is that surprising? Big companies and the defense industry are famous for using 80s technology and they are not completely wrong to do that either.
17:33
@nwp why would it be OK to use old software from the 80's?
don't you want the newest stuff and the best performance?
nwp
nwp
Generally you do, but not if you are in that industry. If you are there you want reliability over everything else. And code that has been maintained and debugged since the 80s tends to do better in that regard.
@nwp so those people would rather go for Fortran than cpp?
wth...
nwp
nwp
It is also a testament of succeeding at scalability and maintainability. They wrote the code in the 80s, didn't change it and it still works. In a way that is awesome.
people are working on AI in the defence industry but at the same time they use fortran
what is this sorcery?
foreign function interface
 
1 hour later…
18:41
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn if the code is in FORTRAN yes they tend to, getting code certified is a royal pain in the arse. I had a friend that interned at a well known avionics provider and his job was to move variables out of FORTRAN COMMON blocks
hehehe, fortran COMMON blocks
was wondering who would know what those were
I'm not naming the company to avoid embarrassing anyone
@milleniumbug I'd forgotten Raymond covered that
 
4 hours later…
23:04
@Mgetz rightfold

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