After the recent changes we only have a single implementation of
QSlotObjectBase, which can handle free functions, member functions,
functors, and lambdas. Rename it to callable, and explicitly hide
the static implementation function so that it doesn't become a symbol
of static libraries using Qt.
Also rename makeSlotObject to makeCallableObject, and polish coding
style and comments in the qobjectdefs_impl header a bit.
Change-Id: Id19107cedfe9c624f807cd8089beb80e9eb99f50
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QDebug] Added pretty formatting of C++ <chrono>
durations.
[ChangeLog][QtTest] Added pretty formatting of C++ <chrono> durations
for QCOMPARE expressions.
Change-Id: I3b169860d8bd41e9be6bfffd1757cc087ba957fa
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Add helper that allows us to determine the argument list and return type
of a functor. This triggers a compile time error if the functor has
operator()() overloads (we only support zero-argument call operators, but
there might be const/noexcept variations). Use that helper to declare a
ZeroArgFunctor type which also declares a ReturnType and Arguments alias.
Add a Callable alias that now combines FunctionPointer and ZeroArgFunctor
into a single type that we can then use to merge the specializations of
QMetaObject::invokeMethod.
[ChangeLog][Potentially source-incompatible changes] Using a functor
with several operator() overloads in QMetaObject::invokeMethod now causes
a compile time error. Qt would previously ignore const and noexcept
overloads and always call the mutable version on a copy of the functor.
Change-Id: I3eb62c1128014b729575540deab615469290daeb
Reviewed-by: Mårten Nordheim <marten.nordheim@qt.io>
Amends 642f799fc6 to avoid unnecessary
copies in between the calls to the QFunctorSlotObject construcotr. We
can't use a univeral reference in the QFunctorSlotObject constructor
as the call is not deduced. So provide two overloads for lvalue and
rvalue references instead.
The compile check in the test now no longer fails as we delay the
storage until one level later, but that's acceptable.
Change-Id: Ide95b4a73c70f6f47698dd1e95138aa5d48ee95d
Reviewed-by: Mårten Nordheim <marten.nordheim@qt.io>
Remove duplicate test and outdated comment about move-only functors,
and include return value in move-only functor test.
Change-Id: I58dffe0ccf3ec12e7e05e2c9588303da4a7e75ff
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Amend 3c6e9dcc623c9d7281a81174bb3a696e030f30a7 by making sure that
we explicitly move move-only functors into the slot object in the
respective tests, and that failing to do so doesn't compile.
Also add test coverage for mutable lambdas, which work as they do
with connected functors: the connection stores a copy, and calls
don't modify the original functor.
Change-Id: I637e6f407133e2f8f72109b3fe5369a11d19da93
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
This reverts commit 9958edba41, which
incorrectly tested a move-only functor without actually moving the
functor.
Change-Id: I3707f9f8e5055102f7edfb3e1cb9750978356dd7
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
QWeakPointer can do the same, so there's no reason to not allow it for
QPointer.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QPointer] QPointer<T> can now be (move- and
copy-)constructed from QPointer<X>.
Fixes: QTBUG-112464
Change-Id: I77cf5d39974bf2b3ec849b4afc33e286e864821e
Reviewed-by: Giuseppe D'Angelo <giuseppe.dangelo@kdab.com>
In Qt >= 6.1, < 6.5, a trivially constructible type would have the
NeedsDestruction flag set, but it's dtor pointer would have been null.
In Qt 6.5, the meaning of the NeedsDestruction flag was changed to be
more aligned with what the name suggests, and thus would only be set for
non-trivially destructible types. For QMetaType this was fine, but
QVariant has a check for acceptable metatypes which attempts to verify
whether a QMetaType is usable for QVariant. The check assumes the
semantics of Qt 6.5, and thus fails for metatypes created by older Qt
versions.
To fix this issue, we increment the QMetaType revision field, and only
check the metatype's destruction support if the revision is high enough.
In theory, that allows passing unsuitable metatypes from older Qt
versions to QVariant; however, such code would have been broken in prior
Qt releases already (which didn't attempt the check), and no code that
used to work in any released Qt version will break (as we simply skip a
check that was passing before).
Fixes: QTBUG-113227
Pick-to: 6.5
Change-Id: I12e02bd97d2c410ea1a36efb0ce2389f21d50a30
Reviewed-by: Ulf Hermann <ulf.hermann@qt.io>
Amends 207aae5560 to make it easy to
create human-friendly error messages. Since the functor-accepting member
functions are not removed from the API, the first compile error will be
that there is no suitable overload of the makeSlotObject helper, which.
With the assert helper, the first error message is easier to understand.
Change-Id: I4878ec35a44ddfa5dc9d9e358d81c3fd40389c0c
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Move-only functors must never be passed by value, so fix the
QFunctorSlotObject constructor accordingly.
This then requires adjustments to the various QMetaMethod::invokeMethod
overloads, as those must also perfectly forwad the functor type.
Enable the previously failing test case for move-only functors.
Change-Id: I9c544fd3ddbc5e1da3ca193236291a9f83d86211
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Amend 207aae5560, as code checker
complained that we std::move'd a potential lvalue. This warning was
valid if the public API did not accept the functor parameter by value.
Fix this by consistently std::forward'ing the parameters through the
call stack, and add a compile-time test. Writing that test revealed that
the helper API didn't work with free functions, so fix that as well. It
also revealed that QFunctorSlotObject couldn't work with a const
functor, which is also fixed by this change.
We cannot support move-only functors with that change, as it requires
a change to QFunctorSlotObject that breaks the QMetaObject test.
Change-Id: Iafd747baf4cb0213ecedb391ed46b4595388182b
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
This avoids constructing an object just to copy (later: move) it into a
QVariant.
ChangeLog will be in a follow-up change adding emplace support.
Task-number: QTBUG-112187
Change-Id: I444e580c7d8927d41b3d21d5a521e7c475119e4c
Reviewed-by: Marc Mutz <marc.mutz@qt.io>
Functions in Qt that take a callback need to support callables with or
without context objects, and member functions of an object. The
implementation of those overloads follows a pattern that ultimately
results in a QSlotObjectBase implementation being created and
passed to an implementation helper that takes care of the logic.
Factor that common pattern into a new helper template in QtPrivate
that returns a suitable QSlotObjectBase after checking that the
functor is compatible with the specified argument types.
Use that new helper template in the implementation of
QCoreApplication::requestPermission and QHostInfo::lookupHost.
The only disadvantage of centralizing this logic is that we cannot print
a more detailed error message indicating which argument types the
caller expects. However, that information is visible from the detailed
compiler errors anyway.
Change-Id: I24cf0b2442217857b96ffc4d2d6c997c4fae34e0
Reviewed-by: Mårten Nordheim <marten.nordheim@qt.io>
The expected states are:
- nothing sets theMainThread before main()
- theMainThread is reset when the last QObject (the QCoreApplication in
the test) is destroyed
The GUI version of this test appears to leak a lot of QObjects. By the
time this function runs, theMainThread's QThreadData still has a
refcount of 66 on Linux/XCB. The Windows non-GUI version also
failed. Neither situation was investigated to see why objects are
getting leaked.
Pick-to: 6.5
Change-Id: Idd5e1bb52be047d7b4fffffd17507d9e6ef08743
Reviewed-by: Marc Mutz <marc.mutz@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Amend 4d90c4e74a by clarifying why
moving the QSingleShotObject to the receiver's thread is a good
idea. Move that logic into a separate function and use that also
for the string-based connection.
Optimize the implementation by delaying the timer creation until
after we have moved the QSingleShotTimer object to the target
thread, using a queued metacall if needed to create the timer.
This avoids the creation of the timer in the wrong thread and
then the recreation of the timer in the new thread when QObject
handles QEvent::ThreadChange.
To avoid that the timer is created when it has already expired in
real time, use a deadline timer and fire timeout immediately when
it has expired by the time we get the metacall.
Since the timerId might now not be initialized in the constructor,
initialize it to -1.
Augment the crossThreadSingleShotToFunctor test function by
deliberately not starting the thread until the deadline expired.
[ChangeLog][Core][QTimer] Single-shot timers with a string-based
connection are now started in the receiver's thread, not in the
thread that creates the timer.
Task-number: QTBUG-112162
Change-Id: I3fc94c34c21d9f644da41a2e4c2da479980b8580
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
This removes all uses of QDeadlineTimer::t2 member in the .cpp (so it
gets marked [[maybe_unused]]) and greatly simplifies the code.
Change-Id: Ieec322d73c1e40ad95c8fffd17465bd50c1113ea
Reviewed-by: Ahmad Samir <a.samirh78@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
You can't partially specialize a template function, so these
specializations for steady_clock only worked if the Duration parameter
was nanoseconds. This could have been solved with function overloads
instead, but I find the if constexpr code simpler to read.
Pick-to: 6.5
Change-Id: Ieec322d73c1e40ad95c8fffd17468bd73fc2fe24
Reviewed-by: Marc Mutz <marc.mutz@qt.io>
This matches the work that was done for QElapsedTimer. The
QDeadlineTimer::t2 member is now always 0.
This also removes the last distinction of timer types. Originally I had
intended to use CLOCK_MONOTONIC_COARSE on Linux[1], but that created
more problems than was worth, so I abandoned the idea in 2016.
[1] https://codereview.qt-project.org/c/qt/qtbase/+/159933
Change-Id: Ieec322d73c1e40ad95c8fffd17468b313798ef79
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Ahmad Samir <a.samirh78@gmail.com>
This commit deletes the direct, low-level functionality that
QElapsedTimer has carried since it was introduced. Everything now uses
only std::chrono::steady_clock and std::chrono::nanoseconds.
QDeadlineTimer temporarily still uses qt_gettime(), which is moved to
qcore_unix.cpp.
Task-number: QTBUG-110059
Change-Id: Ieec322d73c1e40ad95c8fffd174641a469b1eee5
Reviewed-by: Ahmad Samir <a.samirh78@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Avoid capturing the same property multiple times in a binding by
storing them in the BindingEvaluationState. We store them in a
QVarLengthArray array, as the number of properties involved in a binding
is expected to be rather low, so a linear scan is fine.
Avoiding double capture is a good idea in general, as we would otherwise
needlessly reevaluate bindings multiple times, and also needlessly
allocate memory for further observers, instead of using a binding's
inline observer array.
Even more importantantly, our notification code makes assumptions that
notify will visit bindings only exactly once. Not upholding that
invariant leads to memory corruption and subsequent crashes, as
observers allocated by the binding would get freed, even though we would
still access them later.
Fixes: QTBUG-112822
Pick-to: 6.5 6.2
Change-Id: Icdc1f43fe554df6fa69e881872b2c429d5fa0bbc
Reviewed-by: Ulf Hermann <ulf.hermann@qt.io>
When a context object is provided, then callers expect that the functor
or slot is executed in the thread of the context object. And if the
context object has been destroyed by the time the permission response
is received, the functor shouldn't be called at all.
To implement this, we either have to plumb the call back through a
signal/slot connection and benefit from QObject's infrastructure. This
is not practical here, as we don't have an "engine QObject" that would
emit a signal.
Instead, we can create a QMetaCallEvent explicitly, following what we do
in e.g. QHostInfo, and using a temporary QObject that handles the event
to then call the functor.
Add test coverage.
Pick-to: 6.5
Change-Id: Id878e45b304857304165ab4a7c6aae76fbee46ce
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
This will be helpful in a number of places, in particular in order to
support enums of different sizes in QML. We record the type as string in
the JSON output and as QMetaTypeInterface in the generated C++.
Task-number: QTBUG-112180
Change-Id: I943fac67f8b25b013d3860301416cdd293c0c69e
Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
Amends 4d90c4e74a, after which the test
became flaky. We need to wait for the functor to be called before
quitting the thread, otherwise we have no guarnatee that any of the
queued metacall events have been processed by the thread. Since
QThread::quit is thread-safe, we can just call it from within the
functor. This guarantees that at least one of the single-shot timers
is processed before we quit.
And since QTimer::singleShot has special code paths for 0-ms timers
(going through an explicitly queued QMetaObject::invokeMethod call
rather than through an actual QSingleShotTimer object), we need to run
the test logic with different timeouts to cover both code paths.
Task-number: QTBUG-112162
Pick-to: 6.5 6.2 5.15
Change-Id: Ide1e7b4b74dcbda72144a0d73ef5f64b0694ddbc
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Currently, Qt assumes that enums always have int as their underlying
type (both in QMetaEnum::keyToValue and in the QML engine). This change
makes it possible to to retrieve the underlying type from an enum's
metaype - or rather, a metatype of an integral type with the same size
and signedness. The use cases aobve don't really rely on the exact same
type. In most cases, we wouldn't even need the signedness, however that
is already available anyway, and it will come in handy once QML supports
bigint, and we need to decide whether we should return
While it would be possible for individual users of this function to
manually query the size and signedness, having a function returning a
metatype offers additional convenience - especially in QML, where the
conversion APIs generally operate on metatypes.
Task-number: QTBUG-27451
Task-number: QTBUG-84055
Task-number: QTBUG-112180
Change-Id: Icf733b42df0ea64017d69f4d94cb7c855d9e3201
Reviewed-by: Ulf Hermann <ulf.hermann@qt.io>
A null QString used to make a QVariant containing it null in Qt 5, but
this is no longer the case. Add a test that get_if works as expected.
Task-number: QTBUG-111598
Change-Id: I0f3511e1b33f4a9d67755269455680feda22ddca
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
This second patch of the series implements get().
Unlike other get() implementations in Qt, don't use my trick with the
constrained friend free function here. Instead, provide the four
overloads manually, like mandated by the standard library for
std::variant (and, indeed, tuple), such that these functions can also
be used on subclasses of QVariant.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QVariant] Implemented the type-based std::variant
access protocol (get<T>()/get_if<T>()) to allow easier access to the
contained element than the previous solution of casting data(), as
well as to allow generic code to treat QVariant and std::variant the
same. The holds_alternative<T>() function is not provided, since it's
the same as get_if<T> != nullptr. The index-based variant access
functions (get<I>()/get_if<I>()) are also not provided, because,
unlike std::variant, QVariant does not have a bounded number of
alternative types, and QMetaType IDs are not (all) compile-time
constants.
Fixes: QTBUG-111598
Change-Id: Id7bc41f7d91761b3483ec5604f1a4685c8079844
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
QVariant supports non-default-constructible payloads, in principle
(QTBUG-105140). And fromValue() works with such types, but value()
insists on providing a wide contract and therefore accidentally
requires default-constructible.
We can now invent other "Qt-ish" API like optional::value_or() or a
value() that returns optional<T>, but we should first get the
interface in that generic code must use, and which at the same time is
the most versatile, because it gives write access to the element
stored in the variant: [variant.get], consisting of get_if(), get(),
and holds_alternative(). The latter is the same as get_if() !=
nullptr, so we won't provide it.
This first patch implements get_if(), adds test for it.
As a Hidden Friend supposed to be called with explicit template
arguments, we run into the problem that wg21.link/P0846 solved for
C++20. Add the usual work-around, and check it works.
The ChangeLog will be on the last patch.
Task-number: QTBUG-111598
Change-Id: I23f57ea2de3946944810c5552c68a7a3060a44f2
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
I must have broken this in the 6.5 work I did for QMetaType and
QVariant, but I haven't searched which commit exactly did it. Our
QVariant tests are old and thus only checked the type ID, which meant
that they caused the registration by the act of asking for the ID in the
first place; this commit adds a couple of explicit checks for the type
registered by name before the ID.
Fixes: QTBUG-112205
Pick-to: 6.5 6.5.0
Change-Id: Idd5e1bb52be047d7b4fffffd174f1b14d90fd7a3
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
For single-shot timers, at least. QSingleShotTimer had either an
optimization or the only way to make new-style slot invocations by
storing the QSlotObject pointer and calling it directly. Instead of
doing that, let's just actually connect and let QObject handle the
actual delivery.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QTimer] Fixed a bug that caused slots connected to
single-slot timers using the new-style connection mechanism to be
delivered in the wrong thread.
Fixes: QTBUG-112162
Pick-to: 5.15 6.2 6.5
Change-Id: Idd5e1bb52be047d7b4fffffd174eadb227ab65ee
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Ahmad Samir <a.samirh78@gmail.com>
All the other overloads are implemented using the new one.
Windows change relies on the pre-check in the code review making sure it
compiles.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QThread] Added sleep(std::chrono::nanoseconds)
overload.
Task-number: QTBUG-110059
Change-Id: I9a4f4bf09041788ec9275093b6b8d0386521e286
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
250ca8d5f8 changed the qConvertToNumber
to have a std::optional return instead of a boolean out-argument.
In doing so a code path that was supposed to report a failure (string
could not be converted to an integer) accidentally starting reporting
success (and converting the string to 0).
The problem is that the `ok` check from QString::toLongLong was
accidentally dropped in the refactoring; previously the function set
`ok` to false and returned 0, now the function just returns 0.
Instead, amend that return to return nullopt (because the conversion has
failed).
Change-Id: Iaedef5463f3ec500a97bd4c9bbddf977f66df61a
Pick-to: 6.5 6.5.0
Fixes: QTBUG-111867
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Marc Mutz <marc.mutz@qt.io>
In most QObjectPrivate-subclasses, the Q_DECLARE_PUBLIC macro is used in
the private segment of the class declaration. In that case, the q_ptr
becomes a private member of the private class, and then the
QObjectPrivate::connect function can no longer be used, as it needs to
access the d_ptr.
Fix this by declaring QObjectPrivate, and the static-assert-helper, as
friends of the class using the Q_DECLARE_PUBLIC macro.
Adapt the QObject test by moving the Q_DECLARE_PUBLIC macro into
the private section of the test-private, and add a compile test.
Pick-to: 6.5 6.5.0
Change-Id: Ifc04be3b305221e138b1e08bb3a3838d871f4fcb
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Axel Spoerl <axel.spoerl@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
QPropertyAlias might be deprecated, but using it should still not fail
to compile.
Pick-to: 6.5
Fixes: QTBUG-111735
Change-Id: I486cddb424b60cd3e5c539e26afca3726e29bb09
Reviewed-by: Ivan Solovev <ivan.solovev@qt.io>
Both QTimer's and QObjectPrivate's destructors print a warning if the
current object lives on another thread and has an active timer:
QWARN : tst_QTimer::moveToThread() QObject::killTimer: Timers cannot be stopped from another thread
QWARN : tst_QTimer::moveToThread() QObject::~QObject: Timers cannot be stopped from another thread
This timer is used to ask the thread to quit, which in turn allows us to
destroy this QObject without a cross-thread warning. Because it's
already fired once and done its duty, we can make sure it's not active
by simply making it single-shot.
Pick-to: 6.4 6.5
Change-Id: Ieec322d73c1e40ad95c8fffd17465067b27c044b
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Marc Mutz <marc.mutz@qt.io>
We so far refetched the first observer after evaluating bindings, as
binding evaluating might change the list of observers.
However, that approach did not take into account that the 'this' pointer
might no longer be valid after binding evaluation: In case of a
QObjectBindableProperty (or a QObjectCompatProperty), binding evaluation
might cause a reallocation of the binding storage, and consequently the
invalidation of the QPropertyBindingData.
Fix this by refetching the QPropertyBindingData from the storage (if a
storage has been provided, which is always the case for the affected
classes).
Fixes: QTBUG-111268
Pick-to: 6.5 6.4 6.2
Change-Id: Ie7e143a0bbb18f1c3f88a81dd9b31e6af463584f
Reviewed-by: Ivan Solovev <ivan.solovev@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Ulf Hermann <ulf.hermann@qt.io>
The code for the QMetaMethod queuedConnectionTypes overload relied on
QMetaMethod::parameterMetaType and QMetaType::flags() to detect whether
we're dealing with a pointer (and then use the VoidStar metatype instead).
However, if the type was incomplete when the slot was defined, and the
type was not registered when connect was called, we would not find a
metatype for the argument.
However, in that case we might still be able to handle the method, by
checking whether the type name of the arguments ends with a "*".
This patch does that, fixing a regression from 5.15.
Pick-to: 6.5 6.4 6.2
Fixes: QTBUG-108537
Change-Id: I54cc48a3343444480ab9094fe1ebaaa5aa75cee0
Reviewed-by: Ulf Hermann <ulf.hermann@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
A RAII wrapper around Qt::{begin,end}PropertyUpdateGroup().
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QScopedPropertyUpdateGroup] New RAII class
wrapping Qt::beginPropertyUpdateGroup() and
Qt::endPropertyUpdateGroup().
Fixes: QTBUG-110710
Change-Id: If2619e9584dd9d57985d63e3babca75421499ab9
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
A QVariant(QString) was not convertible to an enum not registered with
Q_ENUM() which worked fine in Qt5.
The same problem exists for QVariant(enum) to QString.
Fix it by not bailing out when no metatype for the enum was found and
try to convert it to a qlonglong instead (which is then correctly
converted to the enum type).
Fixes: QTBUG-109744
Pick-to: 6.5 6.4
Change-Id: Ie7bb016a860455b69508f0f46b36474c9c294f3a
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
This fixes a use-after-free in QPropertyDelayedNotifications::notify.
Before this patch, evaluateBindings or a notify from a property index
might have caused the originalBindingData to become reallocated.
However, at that point, we've already restored the original bindingData
in evaluateBindings, so we won't track updates, and thus won't adjust
originalBindingStatus, which will then point to already freed data.
To remedy this, we no longer do the notification with data fetched from
originalBindingData, but instead use the information we have in the
proxyData.
We also need to enure that referenced bindings do not get deleted; for
that we keep the PendingBindingObserverList alive for the whole duration
of the endPropertyUpdateGroup.
As we now have the PendingBindingObserverList, we use it for the
notification logic, and only notify change handlers in
QPropertyDelayedNotifications::notify. That will allow a follow-up
cleanup of QPropertyObserverPointer::notify, and aligns the logic for
grouped updates with the logic for "nornal", non-grouped updates.
Amends f1b1773d0a.
Task-number: QTBUG-110899
Pick-to: 6.5 6.4 6.2
Change-Id: Iae826e620d9614b7df39d86d8a28c48c8a5c4881
Reviewed-by: Ulf Hermann <ulf.hermann@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
That use case for the class never materialized, and it was actually
meant for internal use. However, we put it into the public header, so
we cannot remove it (and while undocumented, someone actually used it at
some point, compare e4d62651c2).
Mark it as deprecated instead so that it can be finally be removed in Qt
7.
Change-Id: I058c5831a44610121fbec6eaddebd8b33d4a16c9
Reviewed-by: Ulf Hermann <ulf.hermann@qt.io>
This addresses two different issues:
- Firstly, we were casting the resolved binding data pointer to
QPropertyProxyBindingData, instead of the d_ptr of
QPropertyBindingData. Fix this by introducing a helper function,
and consistently using it to access the proxy data.
- Secondly, we were not resetting the originalBindingData when the
pointed to object was destoyed. Fix that, too.
Pick-to: 6.5 6.4 6.2
Task-number: QTBUG-110899
Change-Id: I7691c9df5cc26e761f6b0e5f16d152f7f2183208
Reviewed-by: Ulf Hermann <ulf.hermann@qt.io>
The fact that read-access is always included makes a bool readWrite
property a little awkward to document and explain. An AccessMode enum
with values ReadOnly and ReadWrite is much easier, and will also lend
itself more easily as a constructor argument than a boolean.
Found in API review.
Pick-to: 6.5
Change-Id: I4f20dbe9f19c7bdb52248a6e544e36d731d5a2ee
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
It's not a lot of files, but it's actually more in the same dir than
mime/ does right now. I'm about to add two more files, though I'll also
merge a few more later.
Change-Id: Id8d5e3999fe94b03acc1fffd171bfe2ea36a35a7
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>