QThreadPool露
- PyQt5.QtCore.QThreadPool
Inherits from QObject.
Description露
The QThreadPool class manages a collection of QThreads.
QThreadPool manages and recyles individual QThread objects to help reduce thread creation costs in programs that use threads. Each Qt application has one global QThreadPool object, which can be accessed by calling globalInstance().
To use one of the QThreadPool threads, subclass QRunnable and implement the run() virtual function. Then create an object of that class and pass it to start().
# class HelloWorldTask : public QRunnable
# {
# void run() override
# {
# qDebug() << "Hello world from thread" << QThread::currentThread();
# }
# };
# HelloWorldTask *hello = new HelloWorldTask();
# // QThreadPool takes ownership and deletes 'hello' automatically
# QThreadPool::globalInstance()->start(hello);
QThreadPool deletes the QRunnable automatically by default. Use setAutoDelete() to change the auto-deletion flag.
QThreadPool supports executing the same QRunnable more than once by calling tryStart()(this) from within run(). If autoDelete is enabled the QRunnable will be deleted when the last thread exits the run function. Calling start() multiple times with the same QRunnable when autoDelete is enabled creates a race condition and is not recommended.
Threads that are unused for a certain amount of time will expire. The default expiry timeout is 30000 milliseconds (30 seconds). This can be changed using setExpiryTimeout(). Setting a negative expiry timeout disables the expiry mechanism.
Call maxThreadCount() to query the maximum number of threads to be used. If needed, you can change the limit with setMaxThreadCount(). The default maxThreadCount() is idealThreadCount(). The activeThreadCount() function returns the number of threads currently doing work.
The reserveThread() function reserves a thread for external use. Use releaseThread() when your are done with the thread, so that it may be reused. Essentially, these functions temporarily increase or reduce the active thread count and are useful when implementing time-consuming operations that are not visible to the QThreadPool.
Note that QThreadPool is a low-level class for managing threads, see the Qt Concurrent module for higher level alternatives.
See also
Methods露
- __init__(parent: QObject = None)
Constructs a thread pool with the given parent.
- activeThreadCount() → int
TODO
- cancel(QRunnable)
TODO
- clear()
TODO
- expiryTimeout() → int
See also
-
@staticmethod
globalInstance() → QThreadPool Returns the global QThreadPool instance.
- maxThreadCount() → int
See also
- releaseThread()
Releases a thread previously reserved by a call to reserveThread().
Note: Calling this function without previously reserving a thread temporarily increases maxThreadCount(). This is useful when a thread goes to sleep waiting for more work, allowing other threads to continue. Be sure to call reserveThread() when done waiting, so that the thread pool can correctly maintain the activeThreadCount().
See also
- reserveThread()
Reserves one thread, disregarding activeThreadCount() and maxThreadCount().
Once you are done with the thread, call releaseThread() to allow it to be reused.
Note: This function will always increase the number of active threads. This means that by using this function, it is possible for activeThreadCount() to return a value greater than maxThreadCount() .
See also
- setExpiryTimeout(int)
See also
- setMaxThreadCount(int)
See also
- setStackSize(int)
TODO
- stackSize() → int
TODO
- start(QRunnable, priority: int = 0)
Reserves a thread and uses it to run runnable, unless this thread will make the current thread count exceed maxThreadCount(). In that case, runnable is added to a run queue instead. The priority argument can be used to control the run queue鈥檚 order of execution.
Note that the thread pool takes ownership of the runnable if autoDelete() returns
true
, and the runnable will be deleted automatically by the thread pool after the run() returns. If autoDelete() returnsfalse
, ownership of runnable remains with the caller. Note that changing the auto-deletion on runnable after calling this functions results in undefined behavior.
- tryStart(QRunnable) → bool
Attempts to reserve a thread to run runnable.
If no threads are available at the time of calling, then this function does nothing and returns
false
. Otherwise, runnable is run immediately using one available thread and this function returnstrue
.Note that the thread pool takes ownership of the runnable if autoDelete() returns
true
, and the runnable will be deleted automatically by the thread pool after the run() returns. If autoDelete() returnsfalse
, ownership of runnable remains with the caller. Note that changing the auto-deletion on runnable after calling this function results in undefined behavior.
- tryTake(QRunnable) → bool
TODO
- waitForDone(msecs: int = -1) → bool
Waits up to msecs milliseconds for all threads to exit and removes all threads from the thread pool. Returns
true
if all threads were removed; otherwise it returnsfalse
. If msecs is -1 (the default), the timeout is ignored (waits for the last thread to exit).