Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Lucie Gérard
05fc3aef53 Use SPDX license identifiers
Replace the current license disclaimer in files by
a SPDX-License-Identifier.
Files that have to be modified by hand are modified.
License files are organized under LICENSES directory.

Task-number: QTBUG-67283
Change-Id: Id880c92784c40f3bbde861c0d93f58151c18b9f1
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Jörg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
2022-05-16 16:37:38 +02:00
Marc Mutz
c00e443dcc tst_bench_qlocalsocket: fix Clang 10 warnings about unneeded capture
The timeToTest constant doesn't need to be captured, claims Clang.

Since I don't recall seeing this warning on GCC, be pragmatic and fix
by letting the compiler choose what to capture: [&]. timeToTest is
const, so it doesn't matter whether we capture by reference or value,
the lambda cannot change it either way.

This code doesn't seem to exist in 5.15, so merely

Pick-to: 6.3 6.2
Change-Id: I48d42ab13ed22ac5eb512dc61235b72a19636ea3
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Mårten Nordheim <marten.nordheim@qt.io>
2022-01-24 21:11:22 +01:00
Edward Welbourne
328f22561d Convert QLocalSocket benchmark to use QTestEventLoop
Now that this event loop pays attention to test failures, we can avoid
the time-outs that used to happen on test failure. Also check for
premature failures (but don't return early, so we can shut down the
server gracefully) and give the event-loops sensible time-outs.

Task-number: QTBUG-91713
Change-Id: Ib895a5fba0f22654c7fecf996f23649a4b5ce0de
Reviewed-by: Alex Trotsenko <alex1973tr@gmail.com>
2021-07-23 19:48:59 +02:00
Alex Trotsenko
ac40875ba7 QLocalSocket benchmark: improve connectivity and error reporting
For nonblocking Unix domain sockets the connection may not be
completed immediately. So, add a blocking call to waitForConnected()
to improve test stability. Also, explain a possible reason that
cause the connection to fail on Unix.

Task-number: QTBUG-91713
Change-Id: If34070f2383fd0c854e2707c734fe5da4bda1b42
Reviewed-by: Mårten Nordheim <marten.nordheim@qt.io>
2021-07-15 18:06:54 +03:00
Edward Welbourne
65ac651f12 QLocalSocket benchmark: Report server error string if listen() fails
Including the error string gives whoever's running the test at least
some clue what's going wrong. One day it might even give them the
information they need to get later runs of the server past this
hurdle.

Task-number: QTBUG-95136
Change-Id: I5d67097339f1db78dfb7ba2ed4357121396977dd
Reviewed-by: Alex Trotsenko <alex1973tr@gmail.com>
2021-07-15 17:06:53 +02:00
Alex Trotsenko
f265c87e01 Allow QWindowsPipe{Reader|Writer} to work with foreign event loops, take 2
When a foreign event loop that does not enter an alertable wait state
is running (which is also the case when a native dialog window is
modal), pipe handlers would freeze temporarily due to their APC
callbacks not being invoked.

We address this problem by moving the I/O callbacks to the Windows
thread pool, and only posting completion events to the main loop
from there. That makes the actual I/O completely independent from
any main loop, while the signal delivery works also with foreign
loops (because Qt event delivery uses Windows messages, which foreign
loops typically handle correctly).

As a nice side effect, performance (and in particular scalability)
is improved.

Several other approaches have been tried:
1) Using QWinEventNotifier was about a quarter slower and scaled much
   worse. Additionally, it also required a rather egregious hack to
   handle the (pathological) case of a single thread talking to both
   ends of a QLocalSocket synchronously.
2) Queuing APCs from the thread pool to the main thread and also
   posting wake-up events to its event loop, and handling I/O on the
   main thread; this performed roughly like this solution, but scaled
   half as well, and the separate wake-up path was still deemed hacky.
3) Only posting wake-up events to the main thread from the thread pool,
   and still handling I/O on the main thread; this still performed
   comparably to 2), and the pathological case was not handled at all.
4) Using this approach for reads and that of 3) for writes was slightly
   faster with big amounts of data, but scaled slightly worse, and the
   diverging implementations were deemed not desirable.

Fixes: QTBUG-64443
Change-Id: I66443c3021d6ba98639a214c3e768be97d2cf14b
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@gmx.de>
2021-03-02 22:53:06 +02:00
Kai Koehne
ce29ce586f Revert "Allow QWindowsPipe{Reader,Writer} to work with foreign event loops"
This reverts commit ee122077b0.

Reason for revert: This causes QProcess::readAll() to sometimes
return nothing after the process has ended.

Fixes: QTBUG-88624
Change-Id: I34fa27ae7fb38cc7c3a1e8eb2fdae2a5775584c2
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Paul Wicking <paul.wicking@qt.io>
(cherry picked from commit 23100ee61e33680d20f934dcbc96b57e8da29bf9)
Reviewed-by: Qt Cherry-pick Bot <cherrypick_bot@qt-project.org>
2020-11-20 13:28:31 +00:00
Alex Trotsenko
ee122077b0 Allow QWindowsPipe{Reader,Writer} to work with foreign event loops
When a foreign event loop that does not enter an alertable wait state
is running (which is also the case when a native dialog window is
modal), pipe handlers would freeze temporarily due to their APC
callbacks not being invoked.

We address this problem by moving the I/O callbacks to the Windows
thread pool, and only posting completion events to the main loop
from there. That makes the actual I/O completely independent from
any main loop, while the signal delivery works also with foreign
loops (because Qt event delivery uses Windows messages, which foreign
loops typically handle correctly).

As a nice side effect, performance (and in particular scalability)
is improved.

Several other approaches have been tried:
1) Using QWinEventNotifier was about a quarter slower and scaled much
   worse. Additionally, it also required a rather egregious hack to
   handle the (pathological) case of a single thread talking to both
   ends of a QLocalSocket synchronously.
2) Queuing APCs from the thread pool to the main thread and also
   posting wake-up events to its event loop, and handling I/O on the
   main thread; this performed roughly like this solution , but scaled
   half as well, and the separate wake-up path was still deemed hacky.
3) Only posting wake-up events to the main thread from the thread pool,
   and still handling I/O on the main thread; this still performed
   comparably to 2), and the pathological case was not handled at all.
4) Using this approach for reads and that of 3) for writes was slightly
   faster with big amounts of data, but scaled slightly worse, and the
   diverging implementations were deemed not desirable.

Fixes: QTBUG-64443
Change-Id: I1cd87c07db39f3b46a2683ce236d7eb67b5be549
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@gmx.de>
2020-11-17 12:45:50 +02:00