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1 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2 // Name: thread.h
3 // Purpose: interface of all thread-related wxWidgets classes
4 // Author: wxWidgets team
5 // RCS-ID: $Id$
6 // Licence: wxWindows licence
7 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8
9
10 /** See wxCondition. */
11 enum wxCondError
12 {
13 wxCOND_NO_ERROR = 0,
14 wxCOND_INVALID,
15 wxCOND_TIMEOUT, //!< WaitTimeout() has timed out
16 wxCOND_MISC_ERROR
17 };
18
19
20 /**
21 @class wxCondition
22
23 wxCondition variables correspond to pthread conditions or to Win32 event objects.
24 They may be used in a multithreaded application to wait until the given condition
25 becomes @true which happens when the condition becomes signaled.
26
27 For example, if a worker thread is doing some long task and another thread has
28 to wait until it is finished, the latter thread will wait on the condition
29 object and the worker thread will signal it on exit (this example is not
30 perfect because in this particular case it would be much better to just
31 wxThread::Wait for the worker thread, but if there are several worker threads
32 it already makes much more sense).
33
34 Note that a call to wxCondition::Signal may happen before the other thread calls
35 wxCondition::Wait and, just as with the pthread conditions, the signal is then
36 lost and so if you want to be sure that you don't miss it you must keep the
37 mutex associated with the condition initially locked and lock it again before calling
38 wxCondition::Signal. Of course, this means that this call is going to block
39 until wxCondition::Wait is called by another thread.
40
41 @section condition_example Example
42
43 This example shows how a main thread may launch a worker thread which starts
44 running and then waits until the main thread signals it to continue:
45
46 @code
47 class MySignallingThread : public wxThread
48 {
49 public:
50 MySignallingThread(wxMutex *mutex, wxCondition *condition)
51 {
52 m_mutex = mutex;
53 m_condition = condition;
54
55 Create();
56 }
57
58 virtual ExitCode Entry()
59 {
60 ... do our job ...
61
62 // tell the other(s) thread(s) that we're about to terminate: we must
63 // lock the mutex first or we might signal the condition before the
64 // waiting threads start waiting on it!
65 wxMutexLocker lock(*m_mutex);
66 m_condition->Broadcast(); // same as Signal() here -- one waiter only
67
68 return 0;
69 }
70
71 private:
72 wxCondition *m_condition;
73 wxMutex *m_mutex;
74 };
75
76 int main()
77 {
78 wxMutex mutex;
79 wxCondition condition(mutex);
80
81 // the mutex should be initially locked
82 mutex.Lock();
83
84 // create and run the thread but notice that it won't be able to
85 // exit (and signal its exit) before we unlock the mutex below
86 MySignallingThread *thread = new MySignallingThread(&mutex, &condition);
87
88 thread->Run();
89
90 // wait for the thread termination: Wait() atomically unlocks the mutex
91 // which allows the thread to continue and starts waiting
92 condition.Wait();
93
94 // now we can exit
95 return 0;
96 }
97 @endcode
98
99 Of course, here it would be much better to simply use a joinable thread and
100 call wxThread::Wait on it, but this example does illustrate the importance of
101 properly locking the mutex when using wxCondition.
102
103 @library{wxbase}
104 @category{threading}
105
106 @see wxThread, wxMutex
107 */
108 class wxCondition
109 {
110 public:
111 /**
112 Default and only constructor.
113 The @a mutex must be locked by the caller before calling Wait() function.
114 Use IsOk() to check if the object was successfully initialized.
115 */
116 wxCondition(wxMutex& mutex);
117
118 /**
119 Destroys the wxCondition object.
120
121 The destructor is not virtual so this class should not be used polymorphically.
122 */
123 ~wxCondition();
124
125 /**
126 Broadcasts to all waiting threads, waking all of them up.
127
128 Note that this method may be called whether the mutex associated with
129 this condition is locked or not.
130
131 @see Signal()
132 */
133 wxCondError Broadcast();
134
135 /**
136 Returns @true if the object had been initialized successfully, @false
137 if an error occurred.
138 */
139 bool IsOk() const;
140
141 /**
142 Signals the object waking up at most one thread.
143
144 If several threads are waiting on the same condition, the exact thread
145 which is woken up is undefined. If no threads are waiting, the signal is
146 lost and the condition would have to be signalled again to wake up any
147 thread which may start waiting on it later.
148
149 Note that this method may be called whether the mutex associated with this
150 condition is locked or not.
151
152 @see Broadcast()
153 */
154 wxCondError Signal();
155
156 /**
157 Waits until the condition is signalled.
158
159 This method atomically releases the lock on the mutex associated with this
160 condition (this is why it must be locked prior to calling Wait()) and puts the
161 thread to sleep until Signal() or Broadcast() is called.
162 It then locks the mutex again and returns.
163
164 Note that even if Signal() had been called before Wait() without waking
165 up any thread, the thread would still wait for another one and so it is
166 important to ensure that the condition will be signalled after
167 Wait() or the thread may sleep forever.
168
169 @return Returns wxCOND_NO_ERROR on success, another value if an error occurred.
170
171 @see WaitTimeout()
172 */
173 wxCondError Wait();
174
175 /**
176 Waits until the condition is signalled or the timeout has elapsed.
177
178 This method is identical to Wait() except that it returns, with the
179 return code of @c wxCOND_TIMEOUT as soon as the given timeout expires.
180
181 @param milliseconds
182 Timeout in milliseconds
183
184 @return Returns wxCOND_NO_ERROR if the condition was signalled,
185 wxCOND_TIMEOUT if the timeout elapsed before this happened or
186 another error code from wxCondError enum.
187 */
188 wxCondError WaitTimeout(unsigned long milliseconds);
189 };
190
191
192 /**
193 @class wxCriticalSectionLocker
194
195 This is a small helper class to be used with wxCriticalSection objects.
196
197 A wxCriticalSectionLocker enters the critical section in the constructor and
198 leaves it in the destructor making it much more difficult to forget to leave
199 a critical section (which, in general, will lead to serious and difficult
200 to debug problems).
201
202 Example of using it:
203
204 @code
205 void Set Foo()
206 {
207 // gs_critSect is some (global) critical section guarding access to the
208 // object "foo"
209 wxCriticalSectionLocker locker(gs_critSect);
210
211 if ( ... )
212 {
213 // do something
214 ...
215
216 return;
217 }
218
219 // do something else
220 ...
221
222 return;
223 }
224 @endcode
225
226 Without wxCriticalSectionLocker, you would need to remember to manually leave
227 the critical section before each @c return.
228
229 @library{wxbase}
230 @category{threading}
231
232 @see wxCriticalSection, wxMutexLocker
233 */
234 class wxCriticalSectionLocker
235 {
236 public:
237 /**
238 Constructs a wxCriticalSectionLocker object associated with given
239 @a criticalsection and enters it.
240 */
241 wxCriticalSectionLocker(wxCriticalSection& criticalsection);
242
243 /**
244 Destructor leaves the critical section.
245 */
246 ~wxCriticalSectionLocker();
247 };
248
249
250
251 /**
252 @class wxThreadHelper
253
254 The wxThreadHelper class is a mix-in class that manages a single background
255 thread, either detached or joinable (see wxThread for the differences).
256 By deriving from wxThreadHelper, a class can implement the thread
257 code in its own wxThreadHelper::Entry() method and easily share data and
258 synchronization objects between the main thread and the worker thread.
259
260 Doing this prevents the awkward passing of pointers that is needed when the
261 original object in the main thread needs to synchronize with its worker thread
262 in its own wxThread derived object.
263
264 For example, wxFrame may need to make some calculations in a background thread
265 and then display the results of those calculations in the main window.
266
267 Ordinarily, a wxThread derived object would be created with the calculation
268 code implemented in wxThread::Entry. To access the inputs to the calculation,
269 the frame object would often need to pass a pointer to itself to the thread object.
270 Similarly, the frame object would hold a pointer to the thread object.
271
272 Shared data and synchronization objects could be stored in either object
273 though the object without the data would have to access the data through
274 a pointer.
275 However with wxThreadHelper the frame object and the thread object are
276 treated as the same object. Shared data and synchronization variables are
277 stored in the single object, eliminating a layer of indirection and the
278 associated pointers.
279
280 Example:
281 @code
282 wxDECLARE_EVENT(wxEVT_COMMAND_MYTHREAD_UPDATE, wxThreadEvent);
283
284 class MyFrame : public wxFrame, public wxThreadHelper
285 {
286 public:
287 MyFrame(...) { ... }
288 ~MyFrame()
289 {
290 // it's better to do any thread cleanup in the OnClose()
291 // event handler, rather than in the destructor.
292 // This is because the event loop for a top-level window is not
293 // active anymore when its destructor is called and if the thread
294 // sends events when ending, they won't be processed unless
295 // you ended the thread from OnClose.
296 // See @ref overview_windowdeletion for more info.
297 }
298
299 ...
300 void DoStartALongTask();
301 void OnThreadUpdate(wxThreadEvent& evt);
302 void OnClose(wxCloseEvent& evt);
303 ...
304
305 protected:
306 virtual wxThread::ExitCode Entry();
307
308 // the output data of the Entry() routine:
309 char m_data[1024];
310 wxCriticalSection m_dataCS; // protects field above
311
312 wxDECLARE_EVENT_TABLE();
313 };
314
315 wxDEFINE_EVENT(wxEVT_COMMAND_MYTHREAD_UPDATE, wxThreadEvent)
316 wxBEGIN_EVENT_TABLE(MyFrame, wxFrame)
317 EVT_COMMAND(wxID_ANY, wxEVT_COMMAND_MYTHREAD_UPDATE, MyFrame::OnThreadUpdate)
318 EVT_CLOSE(MyFrame::OnClose)
319 wxEND_EVENT_TABLE()
320
321 void MyFrame::DoStartALongTask()
322 {
323 // we want to start a long task, but we don't want our GUI to block
324 // while it's executed, so we use a thread to do it.
325 if (CreateThread(wxTHREAD_JOINABLE) != wxTHREAD_NO_ERROR)
326 {
327 wxLogError("Could not create the worker thread!");
328 return;
329 }
330
331 // go!
332 if (GetThread()->Run() != wxTHREAD_NO_ERROR)
333 {
334 wxLogError("Could not run the worker thread!");
335 return;
336 }
337 }
338
339 wxThread::ExitCode MyFrame::Entry()
340 {
341 // IMPORTANT:
342 // this function gets executed in the secondary thread context!
343
344 int offset = 0;
345
346 // here we do our long task, periodically calling TestDestroy():
347 while (!GetThread()->TestDestroy())
348 {
349 // since this Entry() is implemented in MyFrame context we don't
350 // need any pointer to access the m_data, m_processedData, m_dataCS
351 // variables... very nice!
352
353 // this is an example of the generic structure of a download thread:
354 char buffer[1024];
355 download_chunk(buffer, 1024); // this takes time...
356
357 {
358 // ensure noone reads m_data while we write it
359 wxCriticalSectionLocker lock(m_dataCS);
360 memcpy(m_data+offset, buffer, 1024);
361 offset += 1024;
362 }
363
364
365 // VERY IMPORTANT: do not call any GUI function inside this
366 // function; rather use wxQueueEvent():
367 wxQueueEvent(this, new wxThreadEvent(wxEVT_COMMAND_MYTHREAD_UPDATE));
368 // we used pointer 'this' assuming it's safe; see OnClose()
369 }
370
371 // TestDestroy() returned true (which means the main thread asked us
372 // to terminate as soon as possible) or we ended the long task...
373 return (wxThread::ExitCode)0;
374 }
375
376 void MyFrame::OnClose(wxCloseEvent&)
377 {
378 // important: before terminating, we _must_ wait for our joinable
379 // thread to end, if it's running; in fact it uses variables of this
380 // instance and posts events to *this event handler
381
382 if (GetThread() && // DoStartALongTask() may have not been called
383 GetThread()->IsRunning())
384 GetThread()->Wait();
385
386 Destroy();
387 }
388
389 void MyFrame::OnThreadUpdate(wxThreadEvent& evt)
390 {
391 // ...do something... e.g. m_pGauge->Pulse();
392
393 // read some parts of m_data just for fun:
394 wxCriticalSectionLocker lock(m_dataCS);
395 wxPrintf("%c", m_data[100]);
396 }
397 @endcode
398
399 @library{wxbase}
400 @category{threading}
401
402 @see wxThread, wxThreadEvent
403 */
404 class wxThreadHelper
405 {
406 public:
407 /**
408 This constructor simply initializes internal member variables and tells
409 wxThreadHelper which type the thread internally managed should be.
410 */
411 wxThreadHelper(wxThreadKind kind = wxTHREAD_JOINABLE);
412
413 /**
414 The destructor frees the resources associated with the thread, forcing
415 it to terminate (it uses wxThread::Kill function).
416
417 Because of the wxThread::Kill unsafety, you should always wait
418 (with wxThread::Wait) for joinable threads to end or call wxThread::Delete
419 on detached threads, instead of relying on this destructor for stopping
420 the thread.
421 */
422 virtual ~wxThreadHelper();
423
424 /**
425 This is the entry point of the thread.
426
427 This function is pure virtual and must be implemented by any derived class.
428 The thread execution will start here.
429
430 You'll typically want your Entry() to look like:
431 @code
432 wxThread::ExitCode Entry()
433 {
434 while (!GetThread()->TestDestroy())
435 {
436 // ... do some work ...
437
438 if (IsWorkCompleted)
439 break;
440
441 if (HappenedStoppingError)
442 return (wxThread::ExitCode)1; // failure
443 }
444
445 return (wxThread::ExitCode)0; // success
446 }
447 @endcode
448
449 The returned value is the thread exit code which is only useful for
450 joinable threads and is the value returned by @c "GetThread()->Wait()".
451
452 This function is called by wxWidgets itself and should never be called
453 directly.
454 */
455 virtual ExitCode Entry() = 0;
456
457 /**
458 @deprecated
459 Use CreateThread() instead.
460 */
461 wxThreadError Create(unsigned int stackSize = 0);
462
463 /**
464 Creates a new thread of the given @a kind.
465
466 The thread object is created in the suspended state, and you
467 should call @ref wxThread::Run "GetThread()->Run()" to start running it.
468
469 You may optionally specify the stack size to be allocated to it (ignored
470 on platforms that don't support setting it explicitly, e.g. Unix).
471
472 @return One of the ::wxThreadError enum values.
473 */
474 wxThreadError CreateThread(wxThreadKind kind = wxTHREAD_JOINABLE,
475 unsigned int stackSize = 0);
476
477 /**
478 This is a public function that returns the wxThread object associated with
479 the thread.
480 */
481 wxThread* GetThread() const;
482
483 /**
484 Returns the last type of thread given to the CreateThread() function
485 or to the constructor.
486 */
487 wxThreadKind GetThreadKind() const;
488 };
489
490 /**
491 Possible critical section types
492 */
493
494 enum wxCriticalSectionType
495 {
496 wxCRITSEC_DEFAULT,
497 /** Recursive critical section under both Windows and Unix */
498
499 wxCRITSEC_NON_RECURSIVE
500 /** Non-recursive critical section under Unix, recursive under Windows */
501 };
502
503 /**
504 @class wxCriticalSection
505
506 A critical section object is used for exactly the same purpose as a wxMutex.
507 The only difference is that under Windows platform critical sections are only
508 visible inside one process, while mutexes may be shared among processes,
509 so using critical sections is slightly more efficient.
510
511 The terminology is also slightly different: mutex may be locked (or acquired)
512 and unlocked (or released) while critical section is entered and left by the program.
513
514 Finally, you should try to use wxCriticalSectionLocker class whenever
515 possible instead of directly using wxCriticalSection for the same reasons
516 wxMutexLocker is preferrable to wxMutex - please see wxMutex for an example.
517
518 @library{wxbase}
519 @category{threading}
520
521 @note Critical sections can be used before the wxWidgets library is fully
522 initialized. In particular, it's safe to create global
523 wxCriticalSection instances.
524
525 @see wxThread, wxCondition, wxCriticalSectionLocker
526 */
527 class wxCriticalSection
528 {
529 public:
530 /**
531 Default constructor initializes critical section object.
532 By default critical sections are recursive under Unix and Windows.
533 */
534 wxCriticalSection( wxCriticalSectionType critSecType = wxCRITSEC_DEFAULT );
535
536 /**
537 Destructor frees the resources.
538 */
539 ~wxCriticalSection();
540
541 /**
542 Enter the critical section (same as locking a mutex): if another thread
543 has already entered it, this call will block until the other thread
544 calls Leave().
545 There is no error return for this function.
546
547 After entering the critical section protecting a data variable,
548 the thread running inside the critical section may safely use/modify it.
549
550 Note that entering the same critical section twice or more from the same
551 thread doesn't result in a deadlock; in this case in fact this function will
552 immediately return.
553 */
554 void Enter();
555
556 /**
557 Leave the critical section allowing other threads use the global data
558 protected by it. There is no error return for this function.
559 */
560 void Leave();
561 };
562
563 /**
564 The possible thread kinds.
565 */
566 enum wxThreadKind
567 {
568 /** Detached thread */
569 wxTHREAD_DETACHED,
570
571 /** Joinable thread */
572 wxTHREAD_JOINABLE
573 };
574
575 /**
576 The possible thread errors.
577 */
578 enum wxThreadError
579 {
580 /** No error */
581 wxTHREAD_NO_ERROR = 0,
582
583 /** No resource left to create a new thread. */
584 wxTHREAD_NO_RESOURCE,
585
586 /** The thread is already running. */
587 wxTHREAD_RUNNING,
588
589 /** The thread isn't running. */
590 wxTHREAD_NOT_RUNNING,
591
592 /** Thread we waited for had to be killed. */
593 wxTHREAD_KILLED,
594
595 /** Some other error */
596 wxTHREAD_MISC_ERROR
597 };
598
599 /**
600 Defines the interval of priority
601 */
602 enum
603 {
604 WXTHREAD_MIN_PRIORITY = 0u,
605 WXTHREAD_DEFAULT_PRIORITY = 50u,
606 WXTHREAD_MAX_PRIORITY = 100u
607 };
608
609
610 /**
611 @class wxThread
612
613 A thread is basically a path of execution through a program.
614 Threads are sometimes called @e light-weight processes, but the fundamental difference
615 between threads and processes is that memory spaces of different processes are
616 separated while all threads share the same address space.
617
618 While it makes it much easier to share common data between several threads, it
619 also makes it much easier to shoot oneself in the foot, so careful use of
620 synchronization objects such as mutexes (see wxMutex) or critical sections
621 (see wxCriticalSection) is recommended.
622 In addition, don't create global thread objects because they allocate memory
623 in their constructor, which will cause problems for the memory checking system.
624
625
626 @section thread_types Types of wxThreads
627
628 There are two types of threads in wxWidgets: @e detached and @e joinable,
629 modeled after the the POSIX thread API. This is different from the Win32 API
630 where all threads are joinable.
631
632 By default wxThreads in wxWidgets use the @b detached behavior.
633 Detached threads delete themselves once they have completed, either by themselves
634 when they complete processing or through a call to Delete(), and thus
635 @b must be created on the heap (through the new operator, for example).
636
637 Typically you'll want to store the instances of the detached wxThreads you
638 allocate, so that you can call functions on them.
639 Because of their nature however you'll need to always use a critical section
640 when accessing them:
641
642 @code
643 // declare a new type of event, to be used by our MyThread class:
644 wxDECLARE_EVENT(wxEVT_COMMAND_MYTHREAD_COMPLETED, wxThreadEvent);
645 wxDECLARE_EVENT(wxEVT_COMMAND_MYTHREAD_UPDATE, wxThreadEvent);
646 class MyFrame;
647
648 class MyThread : public wxThread
649 {
650 public:
651 MyThread(MyFrame *handler)
652 : wxThread(wxTHREAD_DETACHED)
653 { m_pHandler = handler }
654 ~MyThread();
655
656 protected:
657 virtual ExitCode Entry();
658 MyFrame *m_pHandler;
659 };
660
661 class MyFrame : public wxFrame
662 {
663 public:
664 ...
665 ~MyFrame()
666 {
667 // it's better to do any thread cleanup in the OnClose()
668 // event handler, rather than in the destructor.
669 // This is because the event loop for a top-level window is not
670 // active anymore when its destructor is called and if the thread
671 // sends events when ending, they won't be processed unless
672 // you ended the thread from OnClose.
673 // See @ref overview_windowdeletion for more info.
674 }
675 ...
676 void DoStartThread();
677 void DoPauseThread();
678
679 // a resume routine would be nearly identic to DoPauseThread()
680 void DoResumeThread() { ... }
681
682 void OnThreadUpdate(wxThreadEvent&);
683 void OnThreadCompletion(wxThreadEvent&);
684 void OnClose(wxCloseEvent&);
685
686 protected:
687 MyThread *m_pThread;
688 wxCriticalSection m_pThreadCS; // protects the m_pThread pointer
689
690 wxDECLARE_EVENT_TABLE();
691 };
692
693 wxBEGIN_EVENT_TABLE(MyFrame, wxFrame)
694 EVT_CLOSE(MyFrame::OnClose)
695 EVT_MENU(Minimal_Start, MyFrame::DoStartThread)
696 EVT_COMMAND(wxID_ANY, wxEVT_COMMAND_MYTHREAD_UPDATE, MyFrame::OnThreadUpdate)
697 EVT_COMMAND(wxID_ANY, wxEVT_COMMAND_MYTHREAD_COMPLETED, MyFrame::OnThreadCompletion)
698 wxEND_EVENT_TABLE()
699
700 wxDEFINE_EVENT(wxEVT_COMMAND_MYTHREAD_COMPLETED, wxThreadEvent)
701 wxDEFINE_EVENT(wxEVT_COMMAND_MYTHREAD_UPDATE, wxThreadEvent)
702
703 void MyFrame::DoStartThread()
704 {
705 m_pThread = new MyThread(this);
706
707 if ( m_pThread->Create() != wxTHREAD_NO_ERROR )
708 {
709 wxLogError("Can't create the thread!");
710 delete m_pThread;
711 m_pThread = NULL;
712 }
713 else
714 {
715 if (m_pThread->Run() != wxTHREAD_NO_ERROR )
716 {
717 wxLogError("Can't create the thread!");
718 delete m_pThread;
719 m_pThread = NULL;
720 }
721
722 // after the call to wxThread::Run(), the m_pThread pointer is "unsafe":
723 // at any moment the thread may cease to exist (because it completes its work).
724 // To avoid dangling pointers OnThreadExit() will set m_pThread
725 // to NULL when the thread dies.
726 }
727 }
728
729 wxThread::ExitCode MyThread::Entry()
730 {
731 while (!TestDestroy())
732 {
733 // ... do a bit of work...
734
735 wxQueueEvent(m_pHandler, new wxThreadEvent(wxEVT_COMMAND_MYTHREAD_UPDATE));
736 }
737
738 // signal the event handler that this thread is going to be destroyed
739 // NOTE: here we assume that using the m_pHandler pointer is safe,
740 // (in this case this is assured by the MyFrame destructor)
741 wxQueueEvent(m_pHandler, new wxThreadEvent(wxEVT_COMMAND_MYTHREAD_COMPLETED));
742
743 return (wxThread::ExitCode)0; // success
744 }
745
746 MyThread::~MyThread()
747 {
748 wxCriticalSectionLocker enter(m_pHandler->m_pThreadCS);
749
750 // the thread is being destroyed; make sure not to leave dangling pointers around
751 m_pHandler->m_pThread = NULL;
752 }
753
754 void MyFrame::OnThreadCompletion(wxThreadEvent&)
755 {
756 wxMessageOutputDebug().Printf("MYFRAME: MyThread exited!\n");
757 }
758
759 void MyFrame::OnThreadUpdate(wxThreadEvent&)
760 {
761 wxMessageOutputDebug().Printf("MYFRAME: MyThread update...\n");
762 }
763
764 void MyFrame::DoPauseThread()
765 {
766 // anytime we access the m_pThread pointer we must ensure that it won't
767 // be modified in the meanwhile; since only a single thread may be
768 // inside a given critical section at a given time, the following code
769 // is safe:
770 wxCriticalSectionLocker enter(m_pThreadCS);
771
772 if (m_pThread) // does the thread still exist?
773 {
774 // without a critical section, once reached this point it may happen
775 // that the OS scheduler gives control to the MyThread::Entry() function,
776 // which in turn may return (because it completes its work) making
777 // invalid the m_pThread pointer
778
779 if (m_pThread->Pause() != wxTHREAD_NO_ERROR )
780 wxLogError("Can't pause the thread!");
781 }
782 }
783
784 void MyFrame::OnClose(wxCloseEvent&)
785 {
786 {
787 wxCriticalSectionLocker enter(m_pThreadCS);
788
789 if (m_pThread) // does the thread still exist?
790 {
791 wxMessageOutputDebug().Printf("MYFRAME: deleting thread");
792
793 if (m_pThread->Delete() != wxTHREAD_NO_ERROR )
794 wxLogError("Can't delete the thread!");
795 }
796 } // exit from the critical section to give the thread
797 // the possibility to enter its destructor
798 // (which is guarded with m_pThreadCS critical section!)
799
800 while (1)
801 {
802 { // was the ~MyThread() function executed?
803 wxCriticalSectionLocker enter(m_pThreadCS);
804 if (!m_pThread) break;
805 }
806
807 // wait for thread completion
808 wxThread::This()->Sleep(1);
809 }
810
811 Destroy();
812 }
813 @endcode
814
815 For a more detailed and comprehensive example, see @sample{thread}.
816 For a simpler way to share data and synchronization objects between
817 the main and the secondary thread see wxThreadHelper.
818
819 Conversely, @b joinable threads do not delete themselves when they are done
820 processing and as such are safe to create on the stack. Joinable threads
821 also provide the ability for one to get value it returned from Entry()
822 through Wait().
823 You shouldn't hurry to create all the threads joinable, however, because this
824 has a disadvantage as well: you @b must Wait() for a joinable thread or the
825 system resources used by it will never be freed, and you also must delete the
826 corresponding wxThread object yourself if you did not create it on the stack.
827 In contrast, detached threads are of the "fire-and-forget" kind: you only have
828 to start a detached thread and it will terminate and destroy itself.
829
830
831 @section thread_deletion wxThread Deletion
832
833 Regardless of whether it has terminated or not, you should call Wait() on a
834 @b joinable thread to release its memory, as outlined in @ref thread_types.
835 If you created a joinable thread on the heap, remember to delete it manually
836 with the @c delete operator or similar means as only detached threads handle
837 this type of memory management.
838
839 Since @b detached threads delete themselves when they are finished processing,
840 you should take care when calling a routine on one. If you are certain the
841 thread is still running and would like to end it, you may call Delete()
842 to gracefully end it (which implies that the thread will be deleted after
843 that call to Delete()). It should be implied that you should @b never attempt
844 to delete a detached thread with the @c delete operator or similar means.
845
846 As mentioned, Wait() or Delete() functions attempt to gracefully terminate a
847 joinable and a detached thread, respectively. They do this by waiting until
848 the thread in question calls TestDestroy() or ends processing (i.e. returns
849 from wxThread::Entry).
850
851 Obviously, if the thread does call TestDestroy() and does not end, the
852 thread which called Wait() or Delete() will come to halt.
853 This is why it's important to call TestDestroy() in the Entry() routine of
854 your threads as often as possible and immediately exit when it returns @true.
855
856 As a last resort you can end the thread immediately through Kill(). It is
857 strongly recommended that you do not do this, however, as it does not free
858 the resources associated with the object (although the wxThread object of
859 detached threads will still be deleted) and could leave the C runtime
860 library in an undefined state.
861
862
863 @section thread_secondary wxWidgets Calls in Secondary Threads
864
865 All threads other than the "main application thread" (the one running
866 wxApp::OnInit() or the one your main function runs in, for example) are
867 considered "secondary threads". These include all threads created by Create()
868 or the corresponding constructors.
869
870 GUI calls, such as those to a wxWindow or wxBitmap are explicitly not safe
871 at all in secondary threads and could end your application prematurely.
872 This is due to several reasons, including the underlying native API and
873 the fact that wxThread does not run a GUI event loop similar to other APIs
874 as MFC.
875
876 A workaround for some wxWidgets ports is calling wxMutexGUIEnter()
877 before any GUI calls and then calling wxMutexGUILeave() afterwords.
878 However, the recommended way is to simply process the GUI calls in the main
879 thread through an event that is posted by wxQueueEvent().
880 This does not imply that calls to these classes are thread-safe, however,
881 as most wxWidgets classes are not thread-safe, including wxString.
882
883
884 @section thread_poll Don't Poll a wxThread
885
886 A common problem users experience with wxThread is that in their main thread
887 they will check the thread every now and then to see if it has ended through
888 IsRunning(), only to find that their application has run into problems
889 because the thread is using the default behavior (i.e. it's @b detached) and
890 has already deleted itself.
891 Naturally, they instead attempt to use joinable threads in place of the previous
892 behavior. However, polling a wxThread for when it has ended is in general a
893 bad idea - in fact calling a routine on any running wxThread should be avoided
894 if possible. Instead, find a way to notify yourself when the thread has ended.
895
896 Usually you only need to notify the main thread, in which case you can
897 post an event to it via wxQueueEvent().
898 In the case of secondary threads you can call a routine of another class
899 when the thread is about to complete processing and/or set the value of
900 a variable, possibly using mutexes (see wxMutex) and/or other synchronization
901 means if necessary.
902
903 @library{wxbase}
904 @category{threading}
905
906 @see wxThreadHelper, wxMutex, wxCondition, wxCriticalSection,
907 @ref overview_thread
908 */
909 class wxThread
910 {
911 public:
912 /**
913 The return type for the thread functions.
914 */
915 typedef void* ExitCode;
916
917 /**
918 This constructor creates a new detached (default) or joinable C++
919 thread object. It does not create or start execution of the real thread -
920 for this you should use the Create() and Run() methods.
921
922 The possible values for @a kind parameters are:
923 - @b wxTHREAD_DETACHED - Creates a detached thread.
924 - @b wxTHREAD_JOINABLE - Creates a joinable thread.
925 */
926 wxThread(wxThreadKind kind = wxTHREAD_DETACHED);
927
928 /**
929 The destructor frees the resources associated with the thread.
930 Notice that you should never delete a detached thread -- you may only call
931 Delete() on it or wait until it terminates (and auto destructs) itself.
932
933 Because the detached threads delete themselves, they can only be allocated on the heap.
934 Joinable threads should be deleted explicitly. The Delete() and Kill() functions
935 will not delete the C++ thread object. It is also safe to allocate them on stack.
936 */
937 virtual ~wxThread();
938
939 /**
940 Creates a new thread.
941
942 The thread object is created in the suspended state, and you should call Run()
943 to start running it. You may optionally specify the stack size to be allocated
944 to it (Ignored on platforms that don't support setting it explicitly,
945 eg. Unix system without @c pthread_attr_setstacksize).
946
947 If you do not specify the stack size,the system's default value is used.
948
949 @warning
950 It is a good idea to explicitly specify a value as systems'
951 default values vary from just a couple of KB on some systems (BSD and
952 OS/2 systems) to one or several MB (Windows, Solaris, Linux).
953 So, if you have a thread that requires more than just a few KB of memory, you
954 will have mysterious problems on some platforms but not on the common ones.
955 On the other hand, just indicating a large stack size by default will give you
956 performance issues on those systems with small default stack since those
957 typically use fully committed memory for the stack.
958 On the contrary, if you use a lot of threads (say several hundred),
959 virtual adress space can get tight unless you explicitly specify a
960 smaller amount of thread stack space for each thread.
961
962 @return One of:
963 - @b wxTHREAD_NO_ERROR - No error.
964 - @b wxTHREAD_NO_RESOURCE - There were insufficient resources to create the thread.
965 - @b wxTHREAD_NO_RUNNING - The thread is already running
966 */
967 wxThreadError Create(unsigned int stackSize = 0);
968
969 /**
970 Calling Delete() gracefully terminates a @b detached thread, either when
971 the thread calls TestDestroy() or when it finishes processing.
972
973 @note
974 This function works on a joinable thread but in that case makes
975 the TestDestroy() function of the thread return @true and then
976 waits for its completion (i.e. it differs from Wait() because
977 it asks the thread to terminate before waiting).
978
979 See @ref thread_deletion for a broader explanation of this routine.
980 */
981 wxThreadError Delete(void** rc = NULL);
982
983 /**
984 Returns the number of system CPUs or -1 if the value is unknown.
985
986 For multi-core systems the returned value is typically the total number
987 of @e cores, since the OS usually abstract a single N-core CPU
988 as N different cores.
989
990 @see SetConcurrency()
991 */
992 static int GetCPUCount();
993
994 /**
995 Returns the platform specific thread ID of the current thread as a long.
996
997 This can be used to uniquely identify threads, even if they are not wxThreads.
998
999 @see GetMainId()
1000 */
1001 static wxThreadIdType GetCurrentId();
1002
1003 /**
1004 Gets the thread identifier: this is a platform dependent number that uniquely
1005 identifies the thread throughout the system during its existence
1006 (i.e. the thread identifiers may be reused).
1007 */
1008 wxThreadIdType GetId() const;
1009
1010 /**
1011 Returns the thread kind as it was given in the ctor.
1012
1013 @since 2.9.0
1014 */
1015 wxThreadKind GetKind() const;
1016
1017 /**
1018 Returns the thread ID of the main thread.
1019
1020 @see IsMain()
1021
1022 @since 2.9.1
1023 */
1024 static wxThreadIdType GetMainId();
1025
1026 /**
1027 Gets the priority of the thread, between zero and 100.
1028
1029 The following priorities are defined:
1030 - @b WXTHREAD_MIN_PRIORITY: 0
1031 - @b WXTHREAD_DEFAULT_PRIORITY: 50
1032 - @b WXTHREAD_MAX_PRIORITY: 100
1033 */
1034 unsigned int GetPriority() const;
1035
1036 /**
1037 Returns @true if the thread is alive (i.e. started and not terminating).
1038
1039 Note that this function can only safely be used with joinable threads, not
1040 detached ones as the latter delete themselves and so when the real thread is
1041 no longer alive, it is not possible to call this function because
1042 the wxThread object no longer exists.
1043 */
1044 bool IsAlive() const;
1045
1046 /**
1047 Returns @true if the thread is of the detached kind, @false if it is a
1048 joinable one.
1049 */
1050 bool IsDetached() const;
1051
1052 /**
1053 Returns @true if the calling thread is the main application thread.
1054
1055 Main thread in the context of wxWidgets is the one which initialized
1056 the library.
1057
1058 @see GetMainId(), GetCurrentId()
1059 */
1060 static bool IsMain();
1061
1062 /**
1063 Returns @true if the thread is paused.
1064 */
1065 bool IsPaused() const;
1066
1067 /**
1068 Returns @true if the thread is running.
1069
1070 This method may only be safely used for joinable threads, see the remark in
1071 IsAlive().
1072 */
1073 bool IsRunning() const;
1074
1075 /**
1076 Immediately terminates the target thread.
1077
1078 @b "This function is dangerous and should be used with extreme care"
1079 (and not used at all whenever possible)! The resources allocated to the
1080 thread will not be freed and the state of the C runtime library may become
1081 inconsistent. Use Delete() for detached threads or Wait() for joinable
1082 threads instead.
1083
1084 For detached threads Kill() will also delete the associated C++ object.
1085 However this will not happen for joinable threads and this means that you will
1086 still have to delete the wxThread object yourself to avoid memory leaks.
1087
1088 In neither case OnExit() of the dying thread will be called, so no
1089 thread-specific cleanup will be performed.
1090 This function can only be called from another thread context, i.e. a thread
1091 cannot kill itself.
1092
1093 It is also an error to call this function for a thread which is not running or
1094 paused (in the latter case, the thread will be resumed first) -- if you do it,
1095 a @b wxTHREAD_NOT_RUNNING error will be returned.
1096 */
1097 wxThreadError Kill();
1098
1099 /**
1100 Suspends the thread.
1101
1102 Under some implementations (Win32), the thread is suspended immediately,
1103 under others it will only be suspended when it calls TestDestroy() for
1104 the next time (hence, if the thread doesn't call it at all, it won't be
1105 suspended).
1106
1107 This function can only be called from another thread context.
1108 */
1109 wxThreadError Pause();
1110
1111 /**
1112 Resumes a thread suspended by the call to Pause().
1113
1114 This function can only be called from another thread context.
1115 */
1116 wxThreadError Resume();
1117
1118 /**
1119 Starts the thread execution. Should be called after Create().
1120
1121 Note that once you Run() a @b detached thread, @e any function call you do
1122 on the thread pointer (you must allocate it on the heap) is @e "unsafe";
1123 i.e. the thread may have terminated at any moment after Run() and your pointer
1124 may be dangling. See @ref thread_types for an example of safe manipulation
1125 of detached threads.
1126
1127 This function can only be called from another thread context.
1128
1129 Finally, note that once a thread has completed and its Entry() function
1130 returns, you cannot call Run() on it again (an assert will fail in debug
1131 builds or @c wxTHREAD_RUNNING will be returned in release builds).
1132 */
1133 wxThreadError Run();
1134
1135 /**
1136 Sets the thread concurrency level for this process.
1137
1138 This is, roughly, the number of threads that the system tries to schedule
1139 to run in parallel.
1140 The value of 0 for @a level may be used to set the default one.
1141
1142 @return @true on success or @false otherwise (for example, if this function is
1143 not implemented for this platform -- currently everything except Solaris).
1144 */
1145 static bool SetConcurrency(size_t level);
1146
1147 /**
1148 Sets the priority of the thread, between 0 and 100.
1149 It can only be set after calling Create() but before calling Run().
1150
1151 The following priorities are defined:
1152 - @b WXTHREAD_MIN_PRIORITY: 0
1153 - @b WXTHREAD_DEFAULT_PRIORITY: 50
1154 - @b WXTHREAD_MAX_PRIORITY: 100
1155 */
1156 void SetPriority(unsigned int priority);
1157
1158 /**
1159 Pauses the thread execution for the given amount of time.
1160
1161 This is the same as wxMilliSleep().
1162 */
1163 static void Sleep(unsigned long milliseconds);
1164
1165 /**
1166 This function should be called periodically by the thread to ensure that
1167 calls to Pause() and Delete() will work.
1168
1169 If it returns @true, the thread should exit as soon as possible.
1170 Notice that under some platforms (POSIX), implementation of Pause() also
1171 relies on this function being called, so not calling it would prevent
1172 both stopping and suspending thread from working.
1173 */
1174 virtual bool TestDestroy();
1175
1176 /**
1177 Return the thread object for the calling thread.
1178
1179 @NULL is returned if the calling thread is the main (GUI) thread, but
1180 IsMain() should be used to test whether the thread is really the main one
1181 because @NULL may also be returned for the thread not created with wxThread
1182 class. Generally speaking, the return value for such a thread is undefined.
1183 */
1184 static wxThread* This();
1185
1186 /**
1187 Waits for a @b joinable thread to terminate and returns the value the thread
1188 returned from Entry() or @c "(ExitCode)-1" on error. Notice that, unlike
1189 Delete(), this function doesn't cancel the thread in any way so the caller
1190 waits for as long as it takes to the thread to exit.
1191
1192 You can only Wait() for @b joinable (not detached) threads.
1193
1194 This function can only be called from another thread context.
1195
1196 See @ref thread_deletion for a broader explanation of this routine.
1197 */
1198 ExitCode Wait();
1199
1200 /**
1201 Give the rest of the thread's time-slice to the system allowing the other
1202 threads to run.
1203
1204 Note that using this function is @b strongly discouraged, since in
1205 many cases it indicates a design weakness of your threading model
1206 (as does using Sleep() functions).
1207
1208 Threads should use the CPU in an efficient manner, i.e. they should
1209 do their current work efficiently, then as soon as the work is done block
1210 on a wakeup event (wxCondition, wxMutex, select(), poll(), ...) which will
1211 get signalled e.g. by other threads or a user device once further thread
1212 work is available.
1213 Using Yield() or Sleep() indicates polling-type behaviour, since we're
1214 fuzzily giving up our timeslice and wait until sometime later we'll get
1215 reactivated, at which time we realize that there isn't really much to do
1216 and Yield() again...
1217
1218 The most critical characteristic of Yield() is that it's operating system
1219 specific: there may be scheduler changes which cause your thread to not
1220 wake up relatively soon again, but instead many seconds later,
1221 causing huge performance issues for your application.
1222
1223 <strong>
1224 With a well-behaving, CPU-efficient thread the operating system is likely
1225 to properly care for its reactivation the moment it needs it, whereas with
1226 non-deterministic, Yield-using threads all bets are off and the system
1227 scheduler is free to penalize them drastically</strong>, and this effect
1228 gets worse with increasing system load due to less free CPU resources available.
1229 You may refer to various Linux kernel @c sched_yield discussions for more
1230 information.
1231
1232 See also Sleep().
1233 */
1234 static void Yield();
1235
1236 protected:
1237
1238 /**
1239 This is the entry point of the thread.
1240
1241 This function is pure virtual and must be implemented by any derived class.
1242 The thread execution will start here.
1243
1244 The returned value is the thread exit code which is only useful for
1245 joinable threads and is the value returned by Wait().
1246 This function is called by wxWidgets itself and should never be called
1247 directly.
1248 */
1249 virtual ExitCode Entry() = 0;
1250
1251 /**
1252 This is a protected function of the wxThread class and thus can only be called
1253 from a derived class. It also can only be called in the context of this
1254 thread, i.e. a thread can only exit from itself, not from another thread.
1255
1256 This function will terminate the OS thread (i.e. stop the associated path of
1257 execution) and also delete the associated C++ object for detached threads.
1258 OnExit() will be called just before exiting.
1259 */
1260 void Exit(ExitCode exitcode = 0);
1261
1262 private:
1263
1264 /**
1265 Called when the thread exits.
1266
1267 This function is called in the context of the thread associated with the
1268 wxThread object, not in the context of the main thread.
1269 This function will not be called if the thread was @ref Kill() killed.
1270
1271 This function should never be called directly.
1272 */
1273 virtual void OnExit();
1274 };
1275
1276
1277 /** See wxSemaphore. */
1278 enum wxSemaError
1279 {
1280 wxSEMA_NO_ERROR = 0,
1281 wxSEMA_INVALID, //!< semaphore hasn't been initialized successfully
1282 wxSEMA_BUSY, //!< returned by TryWait() if Wait() would block
1283 wxSEMA_TIMEOUT, //!< returned by WaitTimeout()
1284 wxSEMA_OVERFLOW, //!< Post() would increase counter past the max
1285 wxSEMA_MISC_ERROR
1286 };
1287
1288 /**
1289 @class wxSemaphore
1290
1291 wxSemaphore is a counter limiting the number of threads concurrently accessing
1292 a shared resource. This counter is always between 0 and the maximum value
1293 specified during the semaphore creation. When the counter is strictly greater
1294 than 0, a call to wxSemaphore::Wait() returns immediately and decrements the
1295 counter. As soon as it reaches 0, any subsequent calls to wxSemaphore::Wait
1296 block and only return when the semaphore counter becomes strictly positive
1297 again as the result of calling wxSemaphore::Post which increments the counter.
1298
1299 In general, semaphores are useful to restrict access to a shared resource
1300 which can only be accessed by some fixed number of clients at the same time.
1301 For example, when modeling a hotel reservation system a semaphore with the counter
1302 equal to the total number of available rooms could be created. Each time a room
1303 is reserved, the semaphore should be acquired by calling wxSemaphore::Wait
1304 and each time a room is freed it should be released by calling wxSemaphore::Post.
1305
1306 @library{wxbase}
1307 @category{threading}
1308 */
1309 class wxSemaphore
1310 {
1311 public:
1312 /**
1313 Specifying a @a maxcount of 0 actually makes wxSemaphore behave as if
1314 there is no upper limit. If @a maxcount is 1, the semaphore behaves almost as a
1315 mutex (but unlike a mutex it can be released by a thread different from the one
1316 which acquired it).
1317
1318 @a initialcount is the initial value of the semaphore which must be between
1319 0 and @a maxcount (if it is not set to 0).
1320 */
1321 wxSemaphore(int initialcount = 0, int maxcount = 0);
1322
1323 /**
1324 Destructor is not virtual, don't use this class polymorphically.
1325 */
1326 ~wxSemaphore();
1327
1328 /**
1329 Increments the semaphore count and signals one of the waiting
1330 threads in an atomic way. Returns @e wxSEMA_OVERFLOW if the count
1331 would increase the counter past the maximum.
1332
1333 @return One of:
1334 - wxSEMA_NO_ERROR: There was no error.
1335 - wxSEMA_INVALID : Semaphore hasn't been initialized successfully.
1336 - wxSEMA_OVERFLOW: Post() would increase counter past the max.
1337 - wxSEMA_MISC_ERROR: Miscellaneous error.
1338 */
1339 wxSemaError Post();
1340
1341 /**
1342 Same as Wait(), but returns immediately.
1343
1344 @return One of:
1345 - wxSEMA_NO_ERROR: There was no error.
1346 - wxSEMA_INVALID: Semaphore hasn't been initialized successfully.
1347 - wxSEMA_BUSY: Returned by TryWait() if Wait() would block, i.e. the count is zero.
1348 - wxSEMA_MISC_ERROR: Miscellaneous error.
1349 */
1350 wxSemaError TryWait();
1351
1352 /**
1353 Wait indefinitely until the semaphore count becomes strictly positive
1354 and then decrement it and return.
1355
1356 @return One of:
1357 - wxSEMA_NO_ERROR: There was no error.
1358 - wxSEMA_INVALID: Semaphore hasn't been initialized successfully.
1359 - wxSEMA_MISC_ERROR: Miscellaneous error.
1360 */
1361 wxSemaError Wait();
1362
1363 /**
1364 Same as Wait(), but with a timeout limit.
1365
1366 @return One of:
1367 - wxSEMA_NO_ERROR: There was no error.
1368 - wxSEMA_INVALID: Semaphore hasn't been initialized successfully.
1369 - wxSEMA_TIMEOUT: Timeout occurred without receiving semaphore.
1370 - wxSEMA_MISC_ERROR: Miscellaneous error.
1371 */
1372 wxSemaError WaitTimeout(unsigned long timeout_millis);
1373 };
1374
1375
1376
1377 /**
1378 @class wxMutexLocker
1379
1380 This is a small helper class to be used with wxMutex objects.
1381
1382 A wxMutexLocker acquires a mutex lock in the constructor and releases
1383 (or unlocks) the mutex in the destructor making it much more difficult to
1384 forget to release a mutex (which, in general, will promptly lead to serious
1385 problems). See wxMutex for an example of wxMutexLocker usage.
1386
1387 @library{wxbase}
1388 @category{threading}
1389
1390 @see wxMutex, wxCriticalSectionLocker
1391 */
1392 class wxMutexLocker
1393 {
1394 public:
1395 /**
1396 Constructs a wxMutexLocker object associated with mutex and locks it.
1397 Call IsOk() to check if the mutex was successfully locked.
1398 */
1399 wxMutexLocker(wxMutex& mutex);
1400
1401 /**
1402 Destructor releases the mutex if it was successfully acquired in the ctor.
1403 */
1404 ~wxMutexLocker();
1405
1406 /**
1407 Returns @true if mutex was acquired in the constructor, @false otherwise.
1408 */
1409 bool IsOk() const;
1410 };
1411
1412
1413 /**
1414 The possible wxMutex kinds.
1415 */
1416 enum wxMutexType
1417 {
1418 /** Normal non-recursive mutex: try to always use this one. */
1419 wxMUTEX_DEFAULT,
1420
1421 /** Recursive mutex: don't use these ones with wxCondition. */
1422 wxMUTEX_RECURSIVE
1423 };
1424
1425
1426 /**
1427 The possible wxMutex errors.
1428 */
1429 enum wxMutexError
1430 {
1431 /** The operation completed successfully. */
1432 wxMUTEX_NO_ERROR = 0,
1433
1434 /** The mutex hasn't been initialized. */
1435 wxMUTEX_INVALID,
1436
1437 /** The mutex is already locked by the calling thread. */
1438 wxMUTEX_DEAD_LOCK,
1439
1440 /** The mutex is already locked by another thread. */
1441 wxMUTEX_BUSY,
1442
1443 /** An attempt to unlock a mutex which is not locked. */
1444 wxMUTEX_UNLOCKED,
1445
1446 /** wxMutex::LockTimeout() has timed out. */
1447 wxMUTEX_TIMEOUT,
1448
1449 /** Any other error */
1450 wxMUTEX_MISC_ERROR
1451 };
1452
1453
1454 /**
1455 @class wxMutex
1456
1457 A mutex object is a synchronization object whose state is set to signaled when
1458 it is not owned by any thread, and nonsignaled when it is owned. Its name comes
1459 from its usefulness in coordinating mutually-exclusive access to a shared
1460 resource as only one thread at a time can own a mutex object.
1461
1462 Mutexes may be recursive in the sense that a thread can lock a mutex which it
1463 had already locked before (instead of dead locking the entire process in this
1464 situation by starting to wait on a mutex which will never be released while the
1465 thread is waiting) but using them is not recommended under Unix and they are
1466 @b not recursive by default. The reason for this is that recursive
1467 mutexes are not supported by all Unix flavours and, worse, they cannot be used
1468 with wxCondition.
1469
1470 For example, when several threads use the data stored in the linked list,
1471 modifications to the list should only be allowed to one thread at a time
1472 because during a new node addition the list integrity is temporarily broken
1473 (this is also called @e program @e invariant).
1474
1475 @code
1476 // this variable has an "s_" prefix because it is static: seeing an "s_" in
1477 // a multithreaded program is in general a good sign that you should use a
1478 // mutex (or a critical section)
1479 static wxMutex *s_mutexProtectingTheGlobalData;
1480
1481 // we store some numbers in this global array which is presumably used by
1482 // several threads simultaneously
1483 wxArrayInt s_data;
1484
1485 void MyThread::AddNewNode(int num)
1486 {
1487 // ensure that no other thread accesses the list
1488 s_mutexProtectingTheGlobalList->Lock();
1489
1490 s_data.Add(num);
1491
1492 s_mutexProtectingTheGlobalList->Unlock();
1493 }
1494
1495 // return true if the given number is greater than all array elements
1496 bool MyThread::IsGreater(int num)
1497 {
1498 // before using the list we must acquire the mutex
1499 wxMutexLocker lock(s_mutexProtectingTheGlobalData);
1500
1501 size_t count = s_data.Count();
1502 for ( size_t n = 0; n < count; n++ )
1503 {
1504 if ( s_data[n] > num )
1505 return false;
1506 }
1507
1508 return true;
1509 }
1510 @endcode
1511
1512 Notice how wxMutexLocker was used in the second function to ensure that the
1513 mutex is unlocked in any case: whether the function returns true or false
1514 (because the destructor of the local object @e lock is always called).
1515 Using this class instead of directly using wxMutex is, in general, safer
1516 and is even more so if your program uses C++ exceptions.
1517
1518 @library{wxbase}
1519 @category{threading}
1520
1521 @see wxThread, wxCondition, wxMutexLocker, wxCriticalSection
1522 */
1523 class wxMutex
1524 {
1525 public:
1526 /**
1527 Default constructor.
1528 */
1529 wxMutex(wxMutexType type = wxMUTEX_DEFAULT);
1530
1531 /**
1532 Destroys the wxMutex object.
1533 */
1534 ~wxMutex();
1535
1536 /**
1537 Locks the mutex object.
1538 This is equivalent to LockTimeout() with infinite timeout.
1539
1540 Note that if this mutex is already locked by the caller thread,
1541 this function doesn't block but rather immediately returns.
1542
1543 @return One of: @c wxMUTEX_NO_ERROR, @c wxMUTEX_DEAD_LOCK.
1544 */
1545 wxMutexError Lock();
1546
1547 /**
1548 Try to lock the mutex object during the specified time interval.
1549
1550 @return One of: @c wxMUTEX_NO_ERROR, @c wxMUTEX_DEAD_LOCK, @c wxMUTEX_TIMEOUT.
1551 */
1552 wxMutexError LockTimeout(unsigned long msec);
1553
1554 /**
1555 Tries to lock the mutex object. If it can't, returns immediately with an error.
1556
1557 @return One of: @c wxMUTEX_NO_ERROR, @c wxMUTEX_BUSY.
1558 */
1559 wxMutexError TryLock();
1560
1561 /**
1562 Unlocks the mutex object.
1563
1564 @return One of: @c wxMUTEX_NO_ERROR, @c wxMUTEX_UNLOCKED.
1565 */
1566 wxMutexError Unlock();
1567 };
1568
1569
1570
1571 // ============================================================================
1572 // Global functions/macros
1573 // ============================================================================
1574
1575 /** @addtogroup group_funcmacro_thread */
1576 //@{
1577
1578 /**
1579 This macro declares a (static) critical section object named @a cs if
1580 @c wxUSE_THREADS is 1 and does nothing if it is 0.
1581
1582 @header{wx/thread.h}
1583 */
1584 #define wxCRIT_SECT_DECLARE(cs)
1585
1586 /**
1587 This macro declares a critical section object named @a cs if
1588 @c wxUSE_THREADS is 1 and does nothing if it is 0. As it doesn't include
1589 the @c static keyword (unlike wxCRIT_SECT_DECLARE()), it can be used to
1590 declare a class or struct member which explains its name.
1591
1592 @header{wx/thread.h}
1593 */
1594 #define wxCRIT_SECT_DECLARE_MEMBER(cs)
1595
1596 /**
1597 This macro creates a wxCriticalSectionLocker named @a name and associated
1598 with the critical section @a cs if @c wxUSE_THREADS is 1 and does nothing
1599 if it is 0.
1600
1601 @header{wx/thread.h}
1602 */
1603 #define wxCRIT_SECT_LOCKER(name, cs)
1604
1605 /**
1606 This macro combines wxCRIT_SECT_DECLARE() and wxCRIT_SECT_LOCKER(): it
1607 creates a static critical section object and also the lock object
1608 associated with it. Because of this, it can be only used inside a function,
1609 not at global scope. For example:
1610
1611 @code
1612 int IncCount()
1613 {
1614 static int s_counter = 0;
1615
1616 wxCRITICAL_SECTION(counter);
1617
1618 return ++s_counter;
1619 }
1620 @endcode
1621
1622 Note that this example assumes that the function is called the first time
1623 from the main thread so that the critical section object is initialized
1624 correctly by the time other threads start calling it, if this is not the
1625 case this approach can @b not be used and the critical section must be made
1626 a global instead.
1627
1628 @header{wx/thread.h}
1629 */
1630 #define wxCRITICAL_SECTION(name)
1631
1632 /**
1633 This macro is equivalent to
1634 @ref wxCriticalSection::Leave "critical_section.Leave()" if
1635 @c wxUSE_THREADS is 1 and does nothing if it is 0.
1636
1637 @header{wx/thread.h}
1638 */
1639 #define wxLEAVE_CRIT_SECT(critical_section)
1640
1641 /**
1642 This macro is equivalent to
1643 @ref wxCriticalSection::Enter "critical_section.Enter()" if
1644 @c wxUSE_THREADS is 1 and does nothing if it is 0.
1645
1646 @header{wx/thread.h}
1647 */
1648 #define wxENTER_CRIT_SECT(critical_section)
1649
1650 /**
1651 Returns @true if this thread is the main one. Always returns @true if
1652 @c wxUSE_THREADS is 0.
1653
1654 @header{wx/thread.h}
1655 */
1656 bool wxIsMainThread();
1657
1658
1659
1660 /**
1661 This function must be called when any thread other than the main GUI thread
1662 wants to get access to the GUI library. This function will block the
1663 execution of the calling thread until the main thread (or any other thread
1664 holding the main GUI lock) leaves the GUI library and no other thread will
1665 enter the GUI library until the calling thread calls wxMutexGuiLeave().
1666
1667 Typically, these functions are used like this:
1668
1669 @code
1670 void MyThread::Foo(void)
1671 {
1672 // before doing any GUI calls we must ensure that
1673 // this thread is the only one doing it!
1674
1675 wxMutexGuiEnter();
1676
1677 // Call GUI here:
1678 my_window->DrawSomething();
1679
1680 wxMutexGuiLeave();
1681 }
1682 @endcode
1683
1684 This function is only defined on platforms which support preemptive
1685 threads and only works under some ports (wxMSW currently).
1686
1687 @note Under GTK, no creation of top-level windows is allowed in any thread
1688 but the main one.
1689
1690 @header{wx/thread.h}
1691 */
1692 void wxMutexGuiEnter();
1693
1694 /**
1695 This function is only defined on platforms which support preemptive
1696 threads.
1697
1698 @see wxMutexGuiEnter()
1699
1700 @header{wx/thread.h}
1701 */
1702 void wxMutexGuiLeave();
1703
1704 //@}
1705