[ChangeLog][qmake] A new feature "cmdline" was added that implies
"CONFIG += console" and "CONFIG -= app_bundle".
Task-number: QTBUG-27079
Change-Id: I6e52b07c9341c904bb1424fc717057432f9360e1
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@gmx.de>
Replacing the qmake test with the one corelib/thread/thread.pri uses
for those classes.
Change-Id: Ie803190b821736c89b056ae51b7dfe92046189eb
Reviewed-by: Ulf Hermann <ulf.hermann@qt.io>
Add it to configure.json and replace all occurrences of QT_NO_THREAD
with QT_CONFIG(thread). Add conditions for other features that depend
on thread support. Remove conditions where we can use the QMutex and
QThreadStorage stubs.
Change-Id: I284e5d794fda9a4c6f4a1ab29e55aa686272a0eb
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io>
The "boot2qt" platform needs to be blacklisted,
not "ubuntu-18.04".
This reverts commit 0d49ac0ffc.
Change-Id: I768a66c56f5fc7e0771473152579ed1c01bbbdb9
Reviewed-by: Sami Nurmenniemi <sami.nurmenniemi@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Giuseppe D'Angelo <giuseppe.dangelo@kdab.com>
Not putting executables into debug/release subdirectories leads to the
WinRT AppxManifest being overwritten by the wrong configuration. When Qt
is configured with -release for example, it was possible that the debug
manifest (Manifest files are always created next to the target) is
written last and thus contains debug VCLibs as a dependency.
Additionally the test was changed in that way, that the resulting file
system structure (having helper and test application in a "top level"
debug and release folder) is the same structure as in tst_qobject.
Change-Id: I53d5238ff36706eb9c6f8eb04b954ec595ca30de
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
If you're on a Unix platform which don't have the necessary defines then
the thread will never be launched due to an error. Skip the test
instead.
Change-Id: I83159988b8f330a750c7aa328a8805e4fa478070
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io>
This only enables compilation, it doesn't fix any test.
Qt on Android supports process, but not TEST_HELPER_INSTALLS. See also
acdd57cb for winrt.
android-ndk-r10e is used to compile, see
http://doc-snapshots.qt.io/qt5-5.11/androidgs.html .
corelib/io/{qdir,qresourceengine} need to be fixed later.
Done-with: Frederik Gladhorn <frederik.gladhorn@qt.io>
Done-with: Mårten Nordheim <marten.nordheim@qt.io>
Change-Id: I34b924c8ae5d46d6835b8f0a6606450920f4423b
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Frederik Gladhorn <frederik.gladhorn@qt.io>
"terminate" and "terminated" both fail on Android since
QThread::terminate not supported on Android. So we should skip them.
Task-number: QTBUG-68596
Change-Id: Id0d1dde2cfa02bb2978e5dd16087bf8f3bf112b0
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
This autotest fails on QEMU armv7 builds.
Task-number: QTBUG-68866
Change-Id: Idb4bf39712a22c40f6d779a46ad2dd1f456ef48b
Reviewed-by: Tony Sarajärvi <tony.sarajarvi@qt.io>
This was originally added so that you could replace a T with
QAtomicInteger<T> in the same class and still keep ABI. However, for
legacy reasons, on 32-bit x86, types larger than 4 bytes keep an old
1990s alignment of only 4 bytes, but modern std::atomic<T> for those 8-
byte types enforces an alignment of 8 bytes. Therefore, the requirement
to keep alignment is not possible to guarantee.
In other words: you may not replace T with QAtomicInteger<T> or
std::atomic<T> and assume no ABI breakages in all platforms.
This is a requirement to implement atomicity. An 8-byte type aligned to
only a 4-byte boundary could cross a 16-byte boundary or, worse, cross a
cacheline boundary. Crossing the 16-byte boundary could be bad on some
processors, but crossing the cacheline boundary (addresses ending in
0x3C, 0x7C, 0xCC and 0xFC, or 4 out of 64 possible addresses or 6.25%)
is always bad: the CPUs cannot guarantee an atomic load or store
operation.
See also <https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=71660>.
Task-number: QTBUG-67858
Change-Id: If90a92b041d3442fa0a4fffd15283e4615474582
Reviewed-by: Frederik Gladhorn <frederik.gladhorn@qt.io>
These two places were sort of manually implementing QTRY_VERIFY except that they
never time out.
Change-Id: I136e6c7400194327c0475c6acfc019825ccec1b5
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart (Woboq GmbH) <ogoffart@woboq.com>
Reviewed-by: Sami Nurmenniemi <sami.nurmenniemi@qt.io>
Use QSignalSpy::wait or QTRY_VERIFY instead. This shaved off ~200 ms of the
running time of the test and is more reliable.
Some unconditional qWait()s still remain in this test. They are giving an
opportunity for the wrong thing to happen and thus are not waiting for any
specific condition to be fulfilled.
Task-number: QTBUG-63992
Change-Id: I25a4470fe8d6a5b8b5039b3ed77321d24faa1707
Reviewed-by: Morten Johan Sørvig <morten.sorvig@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Sami Nurmenniemi <sami.nurmenniemi@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
When the thread that got woken up by release() is supposed to release()
to wake up another thread, we were deadlocking. This happened because we
cleared the bit indicating that there was contention when the first
release(). Instead of storing a single bit, we now store the number of
threads waiting.
Task-number: QTBUG-66875
Change-Id: I72f5230ad59948f784eafffd15193873502ecba4
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
all of these iterator classes already have a member operator+, which allows iter+int.
This commits addes non-member operator+, which allows int+iter, and forwards to the member
QList and QArrayData iterators now satisfy RandomAccessIterator concept
Change-Id: I25c1dd8cea299e735d5a5e288dbe23dc1d7a1933
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Also drops a few instances where the dependency was purely runtime,
especially for examples.
Change-Id: I2a0476f79928143596bdb3b8f01193af90574ae8
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@qt.io>
This test makes sure that we do not introduce a regression where the
threads exited the inner loop over the queue before the queue was
empty. This was triggered by calling tryTake at least maxThreadCount
times, which left the same number of null pointers in the queue
and caused the inner loop to exit too soon for all the threads.
Change-Id: I3a9d800149b88d09510ddc424667670b60f06a33
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
The issue was introduced by eaee1209f0, so
it affected only 5.9.2.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QSemaphore] Fixed a regression that would make
tryAcquire() not to wait forever if the timeout was a negative
value. Note: new code is advised to only use -1 to indicate "forever",
as some other functions taking timeout periods do not accept other
values.
Task-number: QTBUG-64413
Change-Id: I57a1bd6e0c194530b732fffd14f58fce60d5dfc9
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
The vast majority is actually switched to QRandomGenerator::bounded(),
which gives a mostly uniform distribution over the [0, bound)
range. There are very few floating point cases left, as many of those
that did use floating point did not need to, after all. (I did leave
some that were too ugly for me to understand)
This commit also found a couple of calls to rand() instead of qrand().
This commit does not include changes to SSL code that continues to use
qrand() (job for someone else):
src/network/ssl/qsslkey_qt.cpp
src/network/ssl/qsslsocket_mac.cpp
tests/auto/network/ssl/qsslsocket/tst_qsslsocket.cpp
Change-Id: Icd0e0d4b27cb4e5eb892fffd14b5285d43f4afbf
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
<future> is needed by QThread::create. Instead of a fragile series
of preprocessor tests, move its detection to a configure test.
This dramatically simplifies the code, but on the other hand ties
the availability of QThread::create() to the system used to compile
Qt (rather the one used to compile an application).
Change-Id: If1b06363379bf29126cfa68f2a0651cbb78a67f7
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
When many runnables are executed, this improves the
performance by not resizing the queue for each runnable,
which was the case in the previous version, because of
many calls to QVector::takeFirst().
Also add a test that makes sure tryTake() is safe to
call and does not leave the queue in a bad state that
tries to use nullptr entries.
Change-Id: I608134ecfa9cfc03db4878dcbd6f9c1107e13e90
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Remaining uses of Q_NULLPTR are in:
src/corelib/global/qcompilerdetection.h
(definition and documentation of Q_NULLPTR)
tests/manual/qcursor/qcursorhighdpi/main.cpp
(a test executable compilable both under Qt4 and Qt5)
Change-Id: If6b074d91486e9b784138f4514f5c6d072acda9a
Reviewed-by: Ville Voutilainen <ville.voutilainen@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart (Woboq GmbH) <ogoffart@woboq.com>
Remaining uses of Q_DECL_OVERRIDE are in:
src/corelib/global/qcompilerdetection.h
src/corelib/global/qglobal.cpp
doc/global/qt-cpp-defines.qdocconf
(definition and documentation of Q_DECL_OVERRIDE)
tests/manual/qcursor/qcursorhighdpi/main.cpp
(a test executable compilable both under Qt4 and Qt5)
Change-Id: Ib9b05d829add69e98a86238274b6a1fcb19b49ba
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Ville Voutilainen <ville.voutilainen@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart (Woboq GmbH) <ogoffart@woboq.com>
Since MSVC doesn't have <chrono> (according to QT_HAS_INCLUDE), the QSKIP
in the test was printed for every line in the table. Instead, add the
skip in the _data() function.
Change-Id: I6e9274c1e7444ad48c81fffd14dbcee5e5a322aa
Reviewed-by: Mårten Nordheim <marten.nordheim@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart (Woboq GmbH) <ogoffart@woboq.com>
Allows setting the stack size for the thread pool
worker threads. Implemented using QThread::stackSize.
Task-number: QTBUG-2568
Change-Id: Ic7f3981289290685195bbaee977a23e0c3c49bf0
Reviewed-by: Morten Johan Sørvig <morten.sorvig@qt.io>
Qemu uses some memory for each generated thread. This test creates
> 80000 threads and consumes about 10Gb of memory which is too
heavy for a VM.
Task-number: QTBUG-59966
Change-Id: I1bb8a0d7955778f5201948b41befcb9f1f391514
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
tryAcquireWithTimeout(0.2s) was already blacklisted and
now the same failed with "(2s)".
Task-number: QTBUG-58745
Change-Id: I82363238c08056d2969a7616e3a6e5af080d537d
Reviewed-by: Liang Qi <liang.qi@qt.io>
In the spirit of std::thread, which takes a function to call and its
parameters, and runs it in a new thread. Since the user might want to
connect to signals, move QObjects into the new thread, etc., the new
thread is not immediately started.
Although technically all of this _should_ be implementable in pure
C++11, there is nothing in the Standard to help us not reinvent all the
plumbing: packing the decay'd parameters, storing them, invoking the
function over the parameters (honoring INVOKE/std::invoke semantics).
std::function does not do the job, as it's copiable and therefore does
not support move-only functors; std::bind does not have INVOKE
semantics.
I certainly do not want to reimplement all the required facilities
inside of Qt. Therefore, the full blown implementation requires C++17
(std::invoke).
In order to make this useful also in pre-C++17, there are two additional
implementations (C++11 and C++14) that support just a callable, without
any arguments passed to it. The C++11 implementation makes use of a
class to store and call the callable (even move-only ones); basically,
it's what a closure type for a C++14 lambda would look like.
An alternative implementation could've used some of the existing
facilities inside QObject::connect implementation that store a functor
(for the connect() overload connecting to free functions), namely:
the QtPrivate::QFunctorSlotObject class. However:
* QFunctorSlotObject does not support move-only callables (see
QTBUG-60339);
* QFunctorSlotObject itself is not a callable (apparently by design),
and requires to be wrapped in a lambda that calls call() on it;
* the moment QTBUG-60339 is solved, we'd need the same handwritten
closure to keep QFunctorSlotObject working with move-only callabes.
So: just use the handwritten one.
The C++14 implementation is a simplified version of the C++11 one,
actually using a generalized lambda capture (corresponding to the
handwritten C++11 closure type).
All three implementations use std::async (with a deferred launch policy,
a nice use case for it!) under the hood. It's certainly an overkill for
our use case, as we don't need the std::future, but at least std::async
does all the plumbing for us.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QThread] Added the QThread::create function.
Change-Id: I339d0be6f689df7d56766839baebda0aa2f7e94c
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>