source: trunk/doc/src/examples/waitconditions.qdoc@ 560

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41
42/*!
43 \example threads/waitconditions
44 \title Wait Conditions Example
45
46 The Wait Conditions example shows how to use QWaitCondition and
47 QMutex to control access to a circular buffer shared by a
48 producer thread and a consumer thread.
49
50 The producer writes data to the buffer until it reaches the end
51 of the buffer, at which point it restarts from the beginning,
52 overwriting existing data. The consumer thread reads the data as
53 it is produced and writes it to standard error.
54
55 Wait conditions make it possible to have a higher level of
56 concurrency than what is possible with mutexes alone. If accesses
57 to the buffer were simply guarded by a QMutex, the consumer
58 thread couldn't access the buffer at the same time as the
59 producer thread. Yet, there is no harm in having both threads
60 working on \e{different parts} of the buffer at the same time.
61
62 The example comprises two classes: \c Producer and \c Consumer.
63 Both inherit from QThread. The circular buffer used for
64 communicating between these two classes and the synchronization
65 tools that protect it are global variables.
66
67 An alternative to using QWaitCondition and QMutex to solve the
68 producer-consumer problem is to use QSemaphore. This is what the
69 \l{threads/semaphores}{Semaphores} example does.
70
71 \section1 Global Variables
72
73 Let's start by reviewing the circular buffer and the associated
74 synchronization tools:
75
76 \snippet examples/threads/waitconditions/waitconditions.cpp 0
77
78 \c DataSize is the amount of data that the producer will generate.
79 To keep the example as simple as possible, we make it a constant.
80 \c BufferSize is the size of the circular buffer. It is less than
81 \c DataSize, meaning that at some point the producer will reach
82 the end of the buffer and restart from the beginning.
83
84 To synchronize the producer and the consumer, we need two wait
85 conditions and one mutex. The \c bufferNotEmpty condition is
86 signalled when the producer has generated some data, telling the
87 consumer that it can start reading it. The \c bufferNotFull
88 condition is signalled when the consumer has read some data,
89 telling the producer that it can generate more. The \c numUsedBytes
90 is the number of bytes in the buffer that contain data.
91
92 Together, the wait conditions, the mutex, and the \c numUsedBytes
93 counter ensure that the producer is never more than \c BufferSize
94 bytes ahead of the consumer, and that the consumer never reads
95 data that the consumer hasn't generated yet.
96
97 \section1 Producer Class
98
99 Let's review the code for the \c Producer class:
100
101 \snippet examples/threads/waitconditions/waitconditions.cpp 1
102 \snippet examples/threads/waitconditions/waitconditions.cpp 2
103
104 The producer generates \c DataSize bytes of data. Before it
105 writes a byte to the circular buffer, it must first check whether
106 the buffer is full (i.e., \c numUsedBytes equals \c BufferSize).
107 If the buffer is full, the thread waits on the \c bufferNotFull
108 condition.
109
110 At the end, the producer increments \c numUsedBytes and signalls
111 that the condition \c bufferNotEmpty is true, since \c
112 numUsedBytes is necessarily greater than 0.
113
114 We guard all accesses to the \c numUsedBytes variable with a
115 mutex. In addition, the QWaitCondition::wait() function accepts a
116 mutex as its argument. This mutex is unlocked before the thread
117 is put to sleep and locked when the thread wakes up. Furthermore,
118 the transition from the locked state to the wait state is atomic,
119 to prevent race conditions from occurring.
120
121 \section1 Consumer Class
122
123 Let's turn to the \c Consumer class:
124
125 \snippet examples/threads/waitconditions/waitconditions.cpp 3
126 \snippet examples/threads/waitconditions/waitconditions.cpp 4
127
128 The code is very similar to the producer. Before we read the
129 byte, we check whether the buffer is empty (\c numUsedBytes is 0)
130 instead of whether it's full and wait on the \c bufferNotEmpty
131 condition if it's empty. After we've read the byte, we decrement
132 \c numUsedBytes (instead of incrementing it), and we signal the
133 \c bufferNotFull condition (instead of the \c bufferNotEmpty
134 condition).
135
136 \section1 The main() Function
137
138 In \c main(), we create the two threads and call QThread::wait()
139 to ensure that both threads get time to finish before we exit:
140
141 \snippet examples/threads/waitconditions/waitconditions.cpp 5
142 \snippet examples/threads/waitconditions/waitconditions.cpp 6
143
144 So what happens when we run the program? Initially, the producer
145 thread is the only one that can do anything; the consumer is
146 blocked waiting for the \c bufferNotEmpty condition to be
147 signalled (\c numUsedBytes is 0). Once the producer has put one
148 byte in the buffer, \c numUsedBytes is \c BufferSize - 1 and the
149 \c bufferNotEmpty condition is signalled. At that point, two
150 things can happen: Either the consumer thread takes over and
151 reads that byte, or the consumer gets to produce a second byte.
152
153 The producer-consumer model presented in this example makes it
154 possible to write highly concurrent multithreaded applications.
155 On a multiprocessor machine, the program is potentially up to
156 twice as fast as the equivalent mutex-based program, since the
157 two threads can be active at the same time on different parts of
158 the buffer.
159
160 Be aware though that these benefits aren't always realized.
161 Locking and unlocking a QMutex has a cost. In practice, it would
162 probably be worthwhile to divide the buffer into chunks and to
163 operate on chunks instead of individual bytes. The buffer size is
164 also a parameter that must be selected carefully, based on
165 experimentation.
166*/
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