Adding list widget items async Pyside - python

I am taking photos using gphoto2 and would like to them to a list widget asynchronously as the photos are taken but for some reason it isn't working as intended. It takes the photo on a QThread but is not adding the photo to the list until all photos have been taken (like a bulk add). How would I go about this?
Here is the relevant source code (it won't compile because as there is too many dependencies to fit within the question):
class DownloadThread(QThread):
data_downloaded = Signal(object)
def __init__(self, photo_name):
QThread.__init__(self)
self.photo_name = photo_name
def run(self):
image_location = capture_image.take_photo(self.photo_name)
image = QImage(image_location)
to_pixmap = QPixmap.fromImage(image).scaled(200, 200)
to_qicon = QIcon(to_pixmap)
self.data_downloaded.emit(QListWidgetItem(to_qicon, image_location))
class MainWindow(QMainWindow, Ui_MainWindow):
def take_photo(self):
import time
for x in range(2):
photo_name = str(x) +'.jpg'
downloader = DownloadThread(photo_name)
downloader.data_downloaded.connect(self.on_photo_ready)
downloader.start()
time.sleep(5)
def on_photo_ready(self, photo):
print "WHY"
self.listWidget.addItem(photo)
I have some simple print statement in the function being called so the terminal looks like this:
Photo
Photo
Photo
Photo
Photo
Photo
WHY
WHY
WHY
WHY
WHY
WHY
Meaning it waits to actually call emit until the for loop is complete and not on its own thread as intended. Any help would be AWESOME!

You are telling the main thread to sleep while the secondary thread works. This queues all of your signals so that they arrive at once. Remove time.sleep(5) and change
downloader = ...
To
self.downloader = ...
And you should be fine.
That said, the worker model is a Good Thing. See this question or this one for details.

There are a few problems
1. Your thread isn't actually running
You need to call QThread.start() to actually run QThread.run(). That being said, you probably don't want to design your application like this. There's no reason to create dozens or hundreds of different threads -- one for each image download. It would be far more efficient to create one worker thread that downloads all the images in a queue. See below for an example.
2. You can't create QPixmaps or GUI items in a secondary thread
You can't create QPixmap's outside the main thread. You can't create QListWidgetItem's either, or any GUI element for that matter; they can only be created (and safely manipulated) in the main thread. You can use other similar elements (like QImage), but really, the only thing you need to pass back to the main thread is the downloaded filepath; the main thread can handle the QPixmap and item creation.
class DownloadWorker(QObject):
data_downloaded = Signal(object)
#QtCore.Slot(str)
def download_image(self, name):
image_location = capture_image.take_photo(name)
self.data_downloaded.emit(image_location)
class MainWindow(QMainWindow, Ui_MainWindow):
request_download = QtCore.Signal(str)
def __init__(self, ...)
...
self.worker = DownloadWorker()
self.thread = QThread(self)
self.request_download.connect(self.worker.download_image)
self.worker.data_downloaded.connect(self.on_photo_ready)
self.worker.moveToThread(self.thread)
self.thread.start()
self.timer = QTimer(self)
self.timer.timeout.connect(self.take_photo)
self.timer.start(5000)
def take_photo(self):
import time
photo_name = str(time.time()) +'.jpg'
self.request_download.emit(photo_name)
#QtCore.Slot(str)
def on_photo_ready(self, filepath):
item = QListWidgetItem(QIcon(filepath))
self.listWidget.addItem(item)

Related

Qt (PyQt5) threading: Do all GUI changes need to be defined in the main thread?

I would like to divide my GUI into processes that are run when activated by a ProcessManager.
As the diagram below shows, the MainWindow would instantiate the ProcessManager, which instantiates the Processes.
Now let's say I want to interact with components of the GUI across threads (using signals and slots) -- as an example (also in the picture below):
Process2 has a method that reads out the QLineEdit foo_line_edit.text() and enters it to the QLabel via foo_label.setText().
If I have many processes, I would prefer if all the logic would be implement on the Process without having to add to much on the MainWindow, therefore:
Is there a way to define such a process without having to create any methods/slots in the MainWindow? If there isn't how can I create a process driven design with Qt?
Here is the simplest implementation that comes to my mind:
class Main(QMainWindow):
foo_line_edit = QLineEdit()
foo_label = QLabel()
def __init__(self):
self.process_manager = ProcessManager(self)
# I would like to have the logic of this line in the Process2 class
# (Not sure, but I think it needs to be defined in the main thread?)
self.process_manager.process2.change_label.connect(self.process2_specific_change_label)
# This is the functionality, I would like to define in the Process2 class
def process2_specific_change_label(text):
self.foo_label.setText(text)
class ProcessManager(QObject):
def __init__(self, main_gui):
self.main_gui = main_gui
self.process2 = Process2(self)
class Process(QObject):
def __init__(self, process_manager):
self.process_manager=process_manager
self.thread = QThread()
self.moveToThread(self.thread)
self.thread.start()
class Process2(Process):
change_label = pyqtSignal(str)
def run(self):
# I think this line works, although it already creates access across threads, right?
text = self.process_manager.main_gui.foo_line_edit.text()
# This line does not work because of threads:
self.process_manager.main_gui.foo_label.setText(text)
# This works, but requires the function to be defined in the main thread?
change_label.emit(text)
Rethinking my original requirement and processing musicamante's input, it came to my mind, that the Process Manager and the Processes should run directly in the main thread, calling processspecific workers in threads. This way, the logic is within the specific Process and not somewhere in the MainWindow.
I agree, that the word process is confusing here. It was not meant in a programmatical aspect, but in its application aspect (the gui will follow along a production process). Renaming Process to Step might be better.
This leaves us with the following architecture:
The signals and slots are defined in the Step and its Worker counterpart.
class Main(QMainWindow):
foo_line_edit = QLineEdit()
foo_label = QLabel()
def __init__(self):
self.step_manager = StepManager(self)
class StepManager(QObject):
def __init__(self, main_gui):
self.main_gui = main_gui
self.step2 = Step2(self)
# For example simplicity, the step is run directly:
self.step2.run()
class Step(QObject):
start_worker = pyqtSignal()
worker = Worker()
def __init__(self, step_manager):
self.step_manager=step_manager
self.start_worker.connect(self.worker.run)
def run(self):
self.start_worker.emit()
class Worker(QObject):
finished = pyqtSignal()
def __init__(self):
self.thread = QThread()
self.moveToThread(self.thread)
self.thread.start()
def run(self):
self.finished.emit()
class Step2(Step):
start_worker = pyqtSignal(str)
worker = Worker2()
def __init__(self, step):
super().__init__(step)
self.worker.finished.connect(self.change_label)
def run(self):
text = self.step_manager.main_gui.foo_line_edit.text()
self.start_worker.emit(text)
def change_label(self, text):
self.step_manager.main_gui.foo_label.setText(text)
class Worker2(Worker):
finished = pyqtSignal(str)
def run(self, text):
self.finished.emit(text)
Although 2 classes need to be managed for each step, the MainWindow is free from step specific logic.
Of course, I'm very open to suggestions.

Perform modifications in the scene and update custom window from a QThread in Maya

Context
I'm creating a PySide2 tool running in Maya. The tool is executing a lot of long tasks, some modifying the scene (cleaning tasks), some creating files (exporting tasks).
Because this is a long task, I'd like to display feedback (progress bar) while it's running.
Problems
Unfortunately, so far, the whole UI does not seem to be updated during the executing.
Also, because I had odd behaviors (Maya freezing forever) in the real code, I'm guessing this is not a safe use of threads.
Example code
Here is a simplified bit of code showing where I am so far. Is this the right way to use QThread? I'm from a CG Artist background, not a professional programmer, so I'm probably misusing or misunderstanding the concepts I'm trying to use (threads, PySide...)
import time
from PySide2.QtGui import *
from PySide2.QtCore import *
from PySide2.QtWidgets import *
import maya.cmds as cmds
class Application(object):
def __init__(self):
self.view = View(self)
def do_something(self, callback):
start = int(cmds.playbackOptions(q=True, min=True))
end = int(cmds.playbackOptions(q=True, max=True))
# First operation
for frame in xrange(start, end + 1):
cmds.currentTime(frame, edit=True)
# Export ...
callback(33)
time.sleep(1)
# Second operation
for frame in xrange(start, end + 1):
cmds.currentTime(frame, edit=True)
# Export ...
callback(66)
time.sleep(1)
# Third operation
for frame in xrange(start, end + 1):
cmds.currentTime(frame, edit=True)
# Export ...
callback(100)
time.sleep(1)
class View(QWidget):
def __init__(self, controller):
super(View, self).__init__()
self.controller = controller
self.thread = None
self.setLayout(QVBoxLayout())
self.progress = QLabel()
self.layout().addWidget(self.progress)
self.button = QPushButton('Do something')
self.layout().addWidget(self.button)
self.button.clicked.connect(self.do_something)
self.show()
def do_something(self):
self.thread = DoSomethingThread(self.controller)
self.thread.updated.connect(lambda progress: self.progress.setText(str(progress) + '%'))
self.thread.run()
class DoSomethingThread(QThread):
completed = Signal()
updated = Signal(int)
def __init__(self, controller, parent=None):
super(DoSomethingThread, self).__init__(parent)
self.controller = controller
def run(self):
self.controller.do_something(self.update_progress)
self.completed.emit()
def update_progress(self, progress):
self.updated.emit(int(progress))
app = Application()
Threads are difficult to use correctly in Maya Python (you can see this from the number of questions listed here)
Generally there are two hard rules to observe:
all work that touches the Maya scene (say selecting or moving an object) has to happen in the main thread
all work that touches Maya GUI also has to happen in the main thread.
"main thread" here is the thread you get when you run a script from the listener, not on you're creating for yourself
This obviously makes a lot of things hard to do. Generally a solution will involve the a controlling operation running on the main thread while other work that does not touch Maya GUI or scene objects is happening elsewhere. A thread-safe container (like a python Queue can be used to move completed work out of a worker thread into a place where the main thread can get to it safely, or you can use QT signals to safely trigger work in the main thread.... all of which is a bit tricky if you're not far along in your programming career.
The good news is -- if all the work you want to do in Maya is in the scene you aren't losing much by not having threads. Unless the work is basically non-Maya work -- like grabbing data of the web using an HTTP request, or writing a non-Maya file to disk, or something else that does not deal with Maya-specific data -- adding threads won't get you any additional performance. It looks like your example is advancing the time line, doing work, and then trying to update a PySide GUI. For that you don't really need threads at all (you also don't need a separate QApplication -- Maya is already a QApplication)
Here's a really dumb example.
from PySide2.QtCore import *
from PySide2.QtGui import *
from PySide2.QtWidgets import *
import maya.cmds as cmds
class DumbWindow(QWidget):
def __init__(self):
super(DumbWindow, self).__init__()
#get the maya app
maya_app = QCoreApplication.instance()
# find the main window for a parent
for widget in maya_app.topLevelWidgets():
if 'TmainWindow' in widget.metaObject().className():
self.setParent(widget)
break
self.setWindowTitle("Hello World")
self.setWindowFlags(Qt.Window)
self.layout = QVBoxLayout()
self.setLayout(self.layout)
start_button = QPushButton('Start', self)
stop_button = QPushButton('Stop', self)
self.layout.addWidget(start_button)
self.layout.addWidget(stop_button)
self.should_cancel = False
self.operation = None
self.job = None
# hook up the buttons
start_button.clicked.connect(self.start)
stop_button.clicked.connect(self.stop)
def start(self):
'''kicks off the work in 'this_is_the_work'''
self.operation = self.this_is_the_work()
self.should_cancel = False
self.job = cmds.scriptJob(ie=self.this_makes_it_tick)
def stop(self):
''' cancel before the next step'''
self.should_cancel = True
def this_is_the_work(self):
print "--- started ---"
for frame in range(100):
cmds.currentTime(frame, edit=True)
yield "advanced", frame
print "--- DONE ----"
def bail(self):
self.operation = None
def kill_my_job():
cmds.scriptJob(k=self.job)
print "job killed"
cmds.scriptJob(ie = kill_my_job, runOnce=True)
def this_makes_it_tick(self):
'''
this is called whenever Maya is idle and thie
'''
# not started yet
if not self.operation:
return
# user asked to cancel
if self.should_cancel:
print "cancelling"
self.bail()
return
try:
# do one step. Here's where you can update the
# gui if you need to
result = next(self.operation)
print result
# example GUI update
self.setWindowTitle("frame %i" % result[-1])
except StopIteration:
# no more stpes, we're done
print "completed"
self.bail()
except Exception as e:
print "oops", e
self.bail()
test = DumbWindow()
test.show()
Hitting start creates a maya scriptJob that will try to run whatever operation is in the function called this_is_the_work(). It will run to the next yield statement and then check to make sure the user hasn't asked to cancel the job. Between yields Maya will be busy (just as it would if you entered some lines in the listener) but if you're interacting with Maya when a yield comes up, the script will wait for you instead. This allows for safe user interaction without a separate thread, though of course it's not as smooth as a completely separate thread either.
You'll notice that this kicks off a second scriptJob in the bail() method -- that's because a scriptJob can't kill itself, so we create another one which will run during the next idle event and kill the one we don't want.
This trick is basically how most of the Maya's MEL-based UI works under the hood -- if you run cmds.scriptJob(lj=True) in the listener you'll usually see a lot of scriptJobs that represent UI elements keeping track of things.

my code window doesnt responding when its calculating stuffs [duplicate]

I have a program which interfaces with a radio I am using via a gui I wrote in PyQt. Obviously one of the main functions of the radio is to transmit data, but to do this continuously, I have to loop the writes, which causes the gui to hang. Since I have never dealt with threading, I tried to get rid of these hangs using QCoreApplication.processEvents(). The radio needs to sleep between transmissions, though, so the gui still hangs based on how long these sleeps last.
Is there a simple way to fix this using QThread? I have looked for tutorials on how to implement multithreading with PyQt, but most of them deal with setting up servers and are much more advanced than I need them to be. I honestly don't even really need my thread to update anything while it is running, I just need to start it, have it transmit in the background, and stop it.
I created a little example that shows 3 different and simple ways of dealing with threads. I hope it will help you find the right approach to your problem.
import sys
import time
from PyQt5.QtCore import (QCoreApplication, QObject, QRunnable, QThread,
QThreadPool, pyqtSignal)
# Subclassing QThread
# http://qt-project.org/doc/latest/qthread.html
class AThread(QThread):
def run(self):
count = 0
while count < 5:
time.sleep(1)
print("A Increasing")
count += 1
# Subclassing QObject and using moveToThread
# http://blog.qt.digia.com/blog/2007/07/05/qthreads-no-longer-abstract
class SomeObject(QObject):
finished = pyqtSignal()
def long_running(self):
count = 0
while count < 5:
time.sleep(1)
print("B Increasing")
count += 1
self.finished.emit()
# Using a QRunnable
# http://qt-project.org/doc/latest/qthreadpool.html
# Note that a QRunnable isn't a subclass of QObject and therefore does
# not provide signals and slots.
class Runnable(QRunnable):
def run(self):
count = 0
app = QCoreApplication.instance()
while count < 5:
print("C Increasing")
time.sleep(1)
count += 1
app.quit()
def using_q_thread():
app = QCoreApplication([])
thread = AThread()
thread.finished.connect(app.exit)
thread.start()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
def using_move_to_thread():
app = QCoreApplication([])
objThread = QThread()
obj = SomeObject()
obj.moveToThread(objThread)
obj.finished.connect(objThread.quit)
objThread.started.connect(obj.long_running)
objThread.finished.connect(app.exit)
objThread.start()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
def using_q_runnable():
app = QCoreApplication([])
runnable = Runnable()
QThreadPool.globalInstance().start(runnable)
sys.exit(app.exec_())
if __name__ == "__main__":
#using_q_thread()
#using_move_to_thread()
using_q_runnable()
Take this answer updated for PyQt5, python 3.4
Use this as a pattern to start a worker that does not take data and return data as they are available to the form.
1 - Worker class is made smaller and put in its own file worker.py for easy memorization and independent software reuse.
2 - The main.py file is the file that defines the GUI Form class
3 - The thread object is not subclassed.
4 - Both thread object and the worker object belong to the Form object
5 - Steps of the procedure are within the comments.
# worker.py
from PyQt5.QtCore import QThread, QObject, pyqtSignal, pyqtSlot
import time
class Worker(QObject):
finished = pyqtSignal()
intReady = pyqtSignal(int)
#pyqtSlot()
def procCounter(self): # A slot takes no params
for i in range(1, 100):
time.sleep(1)
self.intReady.emit(i)
self.finished.emit()
And the main file is:
# main.py
from PyQt5.QtCore import QThread
from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication, QLabel, QWidget, QGridLayout
import sys
import worker
class Form(QWidget):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
self.label = QLabel("0")
# 1 - create Worker and Thread inside the Form
self.obj = worker.Worker() # no parent!
self.thread = QThread() # no parent!
# 2 - Connect Worker`s Signals to Form method slots to post data.
self.obj.intReady.connect(self.onIntReady)
# 3 - Move the Worker object to the Thread object
self.obj.moveToThread(self.thread)
# 4 - Connect Worker Signals to the Thread slots
self.obj.finished.connect(self.thread.quit)
# 5 - Connect Thread started signal to Worker operational slot method
self.thread.started.connect(self.obj.procCounter)
# * - Thread finished signal will close the app if you want!
#self.thread.finished.connect(app.exit)
# 6 - Start the thread
self.thread.start()
# 7 - Start the form
self.initUI()
def initUI(self):
grid = QGridLayout()
self.setLayout(grid)
grid.addWidget(self.label,0,0)
self.move(300, 150)
self.setWindowTitle('thread test')
self.show()
def onIntReady(self, i):
self.label.setText("{}".format(i))
#print(i)
app = QApplication(sys.argv)
form = Form()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
According to the Qt developers, subclassing QThread is incorrect (see http://blog.qt.io/blog/2010/06/17/youre-doing-it-wrong/). But that article is really hard to understand (plus the title is a bit condescending). I found a better blog post that gives a more detailed explanation about why you should use one style of threading over another: http://mayaposch.wordpress.com/2011/11/01/how-to-really-truly-use-qthreads-the-full-explanation/
Also, I would highly recommend this video from KDAB on signals and slots between threads.
In my opinion, you should probably never subclass thread with the intent to overload the run method. While that does work, you're basically circumventing how Qt wants you to work. Plus you'll miss out on things like events and proper thread safe signals and slots. Plus as you'll likely see in the above blog post, the "correct" way of threading forces you to write more testable code.
Here's a couple of examples of how to take advantage of QThreads in PyQt (I posted a separate answer below that properly uses QRunnable and incorporates signals/slots, that answer is better if you have a lot of async tasks that you need to load balance).
import sys
from PyQt4 import QtCore
from PyQt4 import QtGui
from PyQt4.QtCore import Qt
# very testable class (hint: you can use mock.Mock for the signals)
class Worker(QtCore.QObject):
finished = QtCore.pyqtSignal()
dataReady = QtCore.pyqtSignal(list, dict)
#QtCore.pyqtSlot()
def processA(self):
print "Worker.processA()"
self.finished.emit()
#QtCore.pyqtSlot(str, list, list)
def processB(self, foo, bar=None, baz=None):
print "Worker.processB()"
for thing in bar:
# lots of processing...
self.dataReady.emit(['dummy', 'data'], {'dummy': ['data']})
self.finished.emit()
class Thread(QtCore.QThread):
"""Need for PyQt4 <= 4.6 only"""
def __init__(self, parent=None):
QtCore.QThread.__init__(self, parent)
# this class is solely needed for these two methods, there
# appears to be a bug in PyQt 4.6 that requires you to
# explicitly call run and start from the subclass in order
# to get the thread to actually start an event loop
def start(self):
QtCore.QThread.start(self)
def run(self):
QtCore.QThread.run(self)
app = QtGui.QApplication(sys.argv)
thread = Thread() # no parent!
obj = Worker() # no parent!
obj.moveToThread(thread)
# if you want the thread to stop after the worker is done
# you can always call thread.start() again later
obj.finished.connect(thread.quit)
# one way to do it is to start processing as soon as the thread starts
# this is okay in some cases... but makes it harder to send data to
# the worker object from the main gui thread. As you can see I'm calling
# processA() which takes no arguments
thread.started.connect(obj.processA)
thread.start()
# another way to do it, which is a bit fancier, allows you to talk back and
# forth with the object in a thread safe way by communicating through signals
# and slots (now that the thread is running I can start calling methods on
# the worker object)
QtCore.QMetaObject.invokeMethod(obj, 'processB', Qt.QueuedConnection,
QtCore.Q_ARG(str, "Hello World!"),
QtCore.Q_ARG(list, ["args", 0, 1]),
QtCore.Q_ARG(list, []))
# that looks a bit scary, but its a totally ok thing to do in Qt,
# we're simply using the system that Signals and Slots are built on top of,
# the QMetaObject, to make it act like we safely emitted a signal for
# the worker thread to pick up when its event loop resumes (so if its doing
# a bunch of work you can call this method 10 times and it will just queue
# up the calls. Note: PyQt > 4.6 will not allow you to pass in a None
# instead of an empty list, it has stricter type checking
app.exec_()
# Without this you may get weird QThread messages in the shell on exit
app.deleteLater()
Very nice example from Matt, I fixed the typo and also pyqt4.8 is common now so I removed the dummy class as well and added an example for the dataReady signal
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import sys
from PyQt4 import QtCore, QtGui
from PyQt4.QtCore import Qt
# very testable class (hint: you can use mock.Mock for the signals)
class Worker(QtCore.QObject):
finished = QtCore.pyqtSignal()
dataReady = QtCore.pyqtSignal(list, dict)
#QtCore.pyqtSlot()
def processA(self):
print "Worker.processA()"
self.finished.emit()
#QtCore.pyqtSlot(str, list, list)
def processB(self, foo, bar=None, baz=None):
print "Worker.processB()"
for thing in bar:
# lots of processing...
self.dataReady.emit(['dummy', 'data'], {'dummy': ['data']})
self.finished.emit()
def onDataReady(aList, aDict):
print 'onDataReady'
print repr(aList)
print repr(aDict)
app = QtGui.QApplication(sys.argv)
thread = QtCore.QThread() # no parent!
obj = Worker() # no parent!
obj.dataReady.connect(onDataReady)
obj.moveToThread(thread)
# if you want the thread to stop after the worker is done
# you can always call thread.start() again later
obj.finished.connect(thread.quit)
# one way to do it is to start processing as soon as the thread starts
# this is okay in some cases... but makes it harder to send data to
# the worker object from the main gui thread. As you can see I'm calling
# processA() which takes no arguments
thread.started.connect(obj.processA)
thread.finished.connect(app.exit)
thread.start()
# another way to do it, which is a bit fancier, allows you to talk back and
# forth with the object in a thread safe way by communicating through signals
# and slots (now that the thread is running I can start calling methods on
# the worker object)
QtCore.QMetaObject.invokeMethod(obj, 'processB', Qt.QueuedConnection,
QtCore.Q_ARG(str, "Hello World!"),
QtCore.Q_ARG(list, ["args", 0, 1]),
QtCore.Q_ARG(list, []))
# that looks a bit scary, but its a totally ok thing to do in Qt,
# we're simply using the system that Signals and Slots are built on top of,
# the QMetaObject, to make it act like we safely emitted a signal for
# the worker thread to pick up when its event loop resumes (so if its doing
# a bunch of work you can call this method 10 times and it will just queue
# up the calls. Note: PyQt > 4.6 will not allow you to pass in a None
# instead of an empty list, it has stricter type checking
app.exec_()
In PyQt there are a lot of options for getting asynchronous behavior. For things that need event processing (ie. QtNetwork, etc) you should use the QThread example I provided in my other answer on this thread. But for the vast majority of your threading needs, I think this solution is far superior than the other methods.
The advantage of this is that the QThreadPool schedules your QRunnable instances as tasks. This is similar to the task pattern used in Intel's TBB. It's not quite as elegant as I like but it does pull off excellent asynchronous behavior.
This allows you to utilize most of the threading power of Qt in Python via QRunnable and still take advantage of signals and slots. I use this same code in several applications, some that make hundreds of asynchronous REST calls, some that open files or list directories, and the best part is using this method, Qt task balances the system resources for me.
import time
from PyQt4 import QtCore
from PyQt4 import QtGui
from PyQt4.QtCore import Qt
def async(method, args, uid, readycb, errorcb=None):
"""
Asynchronously runs a task
:param func method: the method to run in a thread
:param object uid: a unique identifier for this task (used for verification)
:param slot updatecb: the callback when data is receieved cb(uid, data)
:param slot errorcb: the callback when there is an error cb(uid, errmsg)
The uid option is useful when the calling code makes multiple async calls
and the callbacks need some context about what was sent to the async method.
For example, if you use this method to thread a long running database call
and the user decides they want to cancel it and start a different one, the
first one may complete before you have a chance to cancel the task. In that
case, the "readycb" will be called with the cancelled task's data. The uid
can be used to differentiate those two calls (ie. using the sql query).
:returns: Request instance
"""
request = Request(method, args, uid, readycb, errorcb)
QtCore.QThreadPool.globalInstance().start(request)
return request
class Request(QtCore.QRunnable):
"""
A Qt object that represents an asynchronous task
:param func method: the method to call
:param list args: list of arguments to pass to method
:param object uid: a unique identifier (used for verification)
:param slot readycb: the callback used when data is receieved
:param slot errorcb: the callback used when there is an error
The uid param is sent to your error and update callbacks as the
first argument. It's there to verify the data you're returning
After created it should be used by invoking:
.. code-block:: python
task = Request(...)
QtCore.QThreadPool.globalInstance().start(task)
"""
INSTANCES = []
FINISHED = []
def __init__(self, method, args, uid, readycb, errorcb=None):
super(Request, self).__init__()
self.setAutoDelete(True)
self.cancelled = False
self.method = method
self.args = args
self.uid = uid
self.dataReady = readycb
self.dataError = errorcb
Request.INSTANCES.append(self)
# release all of the finished tasks
Request.FINISHED = []
def run(self):
"""
Method automatically called by Qt when the runnable is ready to run.
This will run in a separate thread.
"""
# this allows us to "cancel" queued tasks if needed, should be done
# on shutdown to prevent the app from hanging
if self.cancelled:
self.cleanup()
return
# runs in a separate thread, for proper async signal/slot behavior
# the object that emits the signals must be created in this thread.
# Its not possible to run grabber.moveToThread(QThread.currentThread())
# so to get this QObject to properly exhibit asynchronous
# signal and slot behavior it needs to live in the thread that
# we're running in, creating the object from within this thread
# is an easy way to do that.
grabber = Requester()
grabber.Loaded.connect(self.dataReady, Qt.QueuedConnection)
if self.dataError is not None:
grabber.Error.connect(self.dataError, Qt.QueuedConnection)
try:
result = self.method(*self.args)
if self.cancelled:
# cleanup happens in 'finally' statement
return
grabber.Loaded.emit(self.uid, result)
except Exception as error:
if self.cancelled:
# cleanup happens in 'finally' statement
return
grabber.Error.emit(self.uid, unicode(error))
finally:
# this will run even if one of the above return statements
# is executed inside of the try/except statement see:
# https://docs.python.org/2.7/tutorial/errors.html#defining-clean-up-actions
self.cleanup(grabber)
def cleanup(self, grabber=None):
# remove references to any object or method for proper ref counting
self.method = None
self.args = None
self.uid = None
self.dataReady = None
self.dataError = None
if grabber is not None:
grabber.deleteLater()
# make sure this python obj gets cleaned up
self.remove()
def remove(self):
try:
Request.INSTANCES.remove(self)
# when the next request is created, it will clean this one up
# this will help us avoid this object being cleaned up
# when it's still being used
Request.FINISHED.append(self)
except ValueError:
# there might be a race condition on shutdown, when shutdown()
# is called while the thread is still running and the instance
# has already been removed from the list
return
#staticmethod
def shutdown():
for inst in Request.INSTANCES:
inst.cancelled = True
Request.INSTANCES = []
Request.FINISHED = []
class Requester(QtCore.QObject):
"""
A simple object designed to be used in a separate thread to allow
for asynchronous data fetching
"""
#
# Signals
#
Error = QtCore.pyqtSignal(object, unicode)
"""
Emitted if the fetch fails for any reason
:param unicode uid: an id to identify this request
:param unicode error: the error message
"""
Loaded = QtCore.pyqtSignal(object, object)
"""
Emitted whenever data comes back successfully
:param unicode uid: an id to identify this request
:param list data: the json list returned from the GET
"""
NetworkConnectionError = QtCore.pyqtSignal(unicode)
"""
Emitted when the task fails due to a network connection error
:param unicode message: network connection error message
"""
def __init__(self, parent=None):
super(Requester, self).__init__(parent)
class ExampleObject(QtCore.QObject):
def __init__(self, parent=None):
super(ExampleObject, self).__init__(parent)
self.uid = 0
self.request = None
def ready_callback(self, uid, result):
if uid != self.uid:
return
print "Data ready from %s: %s" % (uid, result)
def error_callback(self, uid, error):
if uid != self.uid:
return
print "Data error from %s: %s" % (uid, error)
def fetch(self):
if self.request is not None:
# cancel any pending requests
self.request.cancelled = True
self.request = None
self.uid += 1
self.request = async(slow_method, ["arg1", "arg2"], self.uid,
self.ready_callback,
self.error_callback)
def slow_method(arg1, arg2):
print "Starting slow method"
time.sleep(1)
return arg1 + arg2
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
app = QtGui.QApplication(sys.argv)
obj = ExampleObject()
dialog = QtGui.QDialog()
layout = QtGui.QVBoxLayout(dialog)
button = QtGui.QPushButton("Generate", dialog)
progress = QtGui.QProgressBar(dialog)
progress.setRange(0, 0)
layout.addWidget(button)
layout.addWidget(progress)
button.clicked.connect(obj.fetch)
dialog.show()
app.exec_()
app.deleteLater() # avoids some QThread messages in the shell on exit
# cancel all running tasks avoid QThread/QTimer error messages
# on exit
Request.shutdown()
When exiting the application you'll want to make sure you cancel all of the tasks or the application will hang until every scheduled task has completed
Based on the Worker objects methods mentioned in other answers, I decided to see if I could expand on the solution to invoke more threads - in this case the optimal number the machine can run and spin up multiple workers with indeterminate completion times.
To do this I still need to subclass QThread - but only to assign a thread number and to 'reimplement' the signals 'finished' and 'started' to include their thread number.
I've focused quite a bit on the signals between the main gui, the threads, and the workers.
Similarly, others answers have been a pains to point out not parenting the QThread but I don't think this is a real concern. However, my code also is careful to destroy the QThread objects.
However, I wasn't able to parent the worker objects so it seems desirable to send them the deleteLater() signal, either when the thread function is finished or the GUI is destroyed. I've had my own code hang for not doing this.
Another enhancement I felt was necessary was was reimplement the closeEvent of the GUI (QWidget) such that the threads would be instructed to quit and then the GUI would wait until all the threads were finished. When I played with some of the other answers to this question, I got QThread destroyed errors.
Perhaps it will be useful to others. I certainly found it a useful exercise. Perhaps others will know a better way for a thread to announce it identity.
#!/usr/bin/env python3
#coding:utf-8
# Author: --<>
# Purpose: To demonstrate creation of multiple threads and identify the receipt of thread results
# Created: 19/12/15
import sys
from PyQt4.QtCore import QThread, pyqtSlot, pyqtSignal
from PyQt4.QtGui import QApplication, QLabel, QWidget, QGridLayout
import sys
import worker
class Thread(QThread):
#make new signals to be able to return an id for the thread
startedx = pyqtSignal(int)
finishedx = pyqtSignal(int)
def __init__(self,i,parent=None):
super().__init__(parent)
self.idd = i
self.started.connect(self.starttt)
self.finished.connect(self.finisheddd)
#pyqtSlot()
def starttt(self):
print('started signal from thread emitted')
self.startedx.emit(self.idd)
#pyqtSlot()
def finisheddd(self):
print('finished signal from thread emitted')
self.finishedx.emit(self.idd)
class Form(QWidget):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
self.initUI()
self.worker={}
self.threadx={}
self.i=0
i=0
#Establish the maximum number of threads the machine can optimally handle
#Generally relates to the number of processors
self.threadtest = QThread(self)
self.idealthreadcount = self.threadtest.idealThreadCount()
print("This machine can handle {} threads optimally".format(self.idealthreadcount))
while i <self.idealthreadcount:
self.setupThread(i)
i+=1
i=0
while i<self.idealthreadcount:
self.startThread(i)
i+=1
print("Main Gui running in thread {}.".format(self.thread()))
def setupThread(self,i):
self.worker[i]= worker.Worker(i) # no parent!
#print("Worker object runningt in thread {} prior to movetothread".format(self.worker[i].thread()) )
self.threadx[i] = Thread(i,parent=self) # if parent isn't specified then need to be careful to destroy thread
self.threadx[i].setObjectName("python thread{}"+str(i))
#print("Thread object runningt in thread {} prior to movetothread".format(self.threadx[i].thread()) )
self.threadx[i].startedx.connect(self.threadStarted)
self.threadx[i].finishedx.connect(self.threadFinished)
self.worker[i].finished.connect(self.workerFinished)
self.worker[i].intReady.connect(self.workerResultReady)
#The next line is optional, you may want to start the threads again without having to create all the code again.
self.worker[i].finished.connect(self.threadx[i].quit)
self.threadx[i].started.connect(self.worker[i].procCounter)
self.destroyed.connect(self.threadx[i].deleteLater)
self.destroyed.connect(self.worker[i].deleteLater)
#This is the key code that actually get the worker code onto another processor or thread.
self.worker[i].moveToThread(self.threadx[i])
def startThread(self,i):
self.threadx[i].start()
#pyqtSlot(int)
def threadStarted(self,i):
print('Thread {} started'.format(i))
print("Thread priority is {}".format(self.threadx[i].priority()))
#pyqtSlot(int)
def threadFinished(self,i):
print('Thread {} finished'.format(i))
#pyqtSlot(int)
def threadTerminated(self,i):
print("Thread {} terminated".format(i))
#pyqtSlot(int,int)
def workerResultReady(self,j,i):
print('Worker {} result returned'.format(i))
if i ==0:
self.label1.setText("{}".format(j))
if i ==1:
self.label2.setText("{}".format(j))
if i ==2:
self.label3.setText("{}".format(j))
if i ==3:
self.label4.setText("{}".format(j))
#print('Thread {} has started'.format(self.threadx[i].currentThreadId()))
#pyqtSlot(int)
def workerFinished(self,i):
print('Worker {} finished'.format(i))
def initUI(self):
self.label1 = QLabel("0")
self.label2= QLabel("0")
self.label3= QLabel("0")
self.label4 = QLabel("0")
grid = QGridLayout(self)
self.setLayout(grid)
grid.addWidget(self.label1,0,0)
grid.addWidget(self.label2,0,1)
grid.addWidget(self.label3,0,2)
grid.addWidget(self.label4,0,3) #Layout parents the self.labels
self.move(300, 150)
self.setGeometry(0,0,300,300)
#self.size(300,300)
self.setWindowTitle('thread test')
self.show()
def closeEvent(self, event):
print('Closing')
#this tells the threads to stop running
i=0
while i <self.idealthreadcount:
self.threadx[i].quit()
i+=1
#this ensures window cannot be closed until the threads have finished.
i=0
while i <self.idealthreadcount:
self.threadx[i].wait()
i+=1
event.accept()
if __name__=='__main__':
app = QApplication(sys.argv)
form = Form()
sys.exit(app.exec_())
And the worker code below
#!/usr/bin/env python3
#coding:utf-8
# Author: --<>
# Purpose: Stack Overflow
# Created: 19/12/15
import sys
import unittest
from PyQt4.QtCore import QThread, QObject, pyqtSignal, pyqtSlot
import time
import random
class Worker(QObject):
finished = pyqtSignal(int)
intReady = pyqtSignal(int,int)
def __init__(self, i=0):
'''__init__ is called while the worker is still in the Gui thread. Do not put slow or CPU intensive code in the __init__ method'''
super().__init__()
self.idd = i
#pyqtSlot()
def procCounter(self): # This slot takes no params
for j in range(1, 10):
random_time = random.weibullvariate(1,2)
time.sleep(random_time)
self.intReady.emit(j,self.idd)
print('Worker {0} in thread {1}'.format(self.idd, self.thread().idd))
self.finished.emit(self.idd)
if __name__=='__main__':
unittest.main()
PySide2 Solution:
Unlike in PyQt5, in PySide2 the QThread.started signal is received/handled on the original thread, not the worker thread! Luckily it still receives all other signals on the worker thread.
In order to match PyQt5's behavior, you have to create the started signal yourself.
Here is an easy solution:
# Use this class instead of QThread
class QThread2(QThread):
# Use this signal instead of "started"
started2 = Signal()
def __init__(self):
QThread.__init__(self)
self.started.connect(self.onStarted)
def onStarted(self):
self.started2.emit()

Select method to execute inside thread before starting thread

I created a small flask app to download images and text from pages, this can take verly long time, so
I would like to execute my requests in parell. I create threaded tasks. I would like this tasks to be able to download text or images from sites. I keep my tasks in a list of workers.
However I would like to select a method which thread will execute and then start whole thread.
How can I pass my method to thread run method()? Will this be a sub daemon thread?
import threading
import time
workers = []
class SavePage:
def get_text(self):
print("Getting text")
def get_images(self):
print("Getting images")
class Task(threading.Thread):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
self.save_page = SavePage()
def get_text_from_page(self):
self.save_page.get_text()
def get_images_from_page(self):
self.save_page.get_images()
if __name__ == '__main__':
task = Task()
task.get_images_from_page() # Why this executes, when I didn't put task.start() ?
# Moreover, is this really threaded? or just uses a method from class Task?
workers.append(task) # I want this list to be empty, after job is finished
print("".join(str(worker.is_alive()) for worker in workers)) #
print(workers)
task.get_images_from_page() # Why this executes, when I didn't put task.start() ?
# Moreover, is this really threaded? or just uses a method from class Task?
It's not threaded. It's just a normal method call in the main thread.
Thread.start is the method that will start Thread.run function inside another thread.
You could set some state in __init__ to choose which function to execute:
class Task(threading.Thread):
def __init__(self, action):
super().__init__()
self.save_page = SavePage()
self.action = action
def get_text_from_page(self):
self.save_page.get_text()
def get_images_from_page(self):
self.save_page.get_images()
def run(self):
if self.action == "text":
self.get_text_from_page()
elif self.action == "images":
self.get_images_from_page()
Keep in mind that threads can be run in simpler way by passing target function:
def target_func():
save_page = SavePage()
save_page.get_images()
t = threading.Thread(target=target_func)
t.start()
# or in this simple case:
save_page = SavePage()
t = threading.Thread(target=save_page.get_images)
t.start()

Proper PySide QThread use in Maya to avoid hard crash

I'm attempting to use QThreads to update my custom tool's Qt-based UI inside of Maya. I have a thread that executes arbitrary methods and returns the result via an emitted signal, which I then use to update my UI. Here's my custom QThread class:
from PySide import QtCore
class Thread(QtCore.QThread):
result = QtCore.Signal(object)
def __init__(self, parent, method, **kwargs):
super(Thread, self).__init__(parent)
self.parent = parent
self.method = method
self.kwargs = kwargs
def run(self):
result = self.method(**self.kwargs)
self.result.emit(result)
The methods I'm passing to the thread are basic requests for getting serialized data from a web address, for example:
import requests
def request_method(address):
request = requests.get(address)
return request.json()
And here is how I use the thread in my custom tool to dynamically update my UI:
...
thread = Thread(parent=self, method=request_method, address='http://www.example.com/')
thread.result.connect(self._slot_result)
thread.start()
def _slot_result(self, result):
# Use the resulting data to update some UI element:
self.label.setText(result)
...
This workflow works in other DCCs like Nuke, but for some reason it causes Maya to sometimes crash inconsistently. No error message, no log, just a hard crash.
This makes me think that my QThread workflow design is obviously not Maya-friendly. Any ideas how best to avoid crashing Maya when using QThreads and what may be causing this particular issue?
This doesn't answer directly what's going on with your QThread, but to show you another way to go about threading with guis in Maya.
Here's a simple example of a gui that has a progress bar and a button. When the user clicks the button it will create a bunch of worker objects on a different thread to do a time.sleep(), and will update the progress bar as they finish. Since they're on a different thread it won't lock the user from the gui so they can still interact with it as it updates:
from functools import partial
import traceback
import time
from PySide2 import QtCore
from PySide2 import QtWidgets
class Window(QtWidgets.QWidget):
"""
Your main gui class that contains a progress bar and a button.
"""
def __init__(self, parent=None):
super(Window, self).__init__(parent)
# Create our main thread pool object that will handle all the workers and communication back to this gui.
self.thread_pool = ThreadPool(max_thread_count=5) # Change this number to have more workers running at the same time. May need error checking to make sure enough threads are available though!
self.thread_pool.pool_started.connect(self.thread_pool_on_start)
self.thread_pool.pool_finished.connect(self.thread_pool_on_finish)
self.thread_pool.worker_finished.connect(self.worker_on_finish)
self.progress_bar = QtWidgets.QProgressBar()
self.button = QtWidgets.QPushButton("Run it")
self.button.clicked.connect(partial(self.thread_pool.start, 30)) # This is the number of iterations we want to process.
self.main_layout = QtWidgets.QVBoxLayout()
self.main_layout.addWidget(self.progress_bar)
self.main_layout.addWidget(self.button)
self.setLayout(self.main_layout)
self.setWindowTitle("Thread example")
self.resize(500, 0)
def thread_pool_on_start(self, count):
# Triggers right before workers are about to be created. Start preparing the gui to be in a "processing" state.
self.progress_bar.setValue(0)
self.progress_bar.setMaximum(count)
def thread_pool_on_finish(self):
# Triggers when all workers are done. At this point you can do a clean-up on your gui to restore it to it's normal idle state.
if self.thread_pool._has_errors:
print "Pool finished with no errors!"
else:
print "Pool finished successfully!"
def worker_on_finish(self, status):
# Triggers when a worker is finished, where we can update the progress bar.
self.progress_bar.setValue(self.progress_bar.value() + 1)
class ThreadSignals(QtCore.QObject):
"""
Signals must inherit from QObject, so this is a workaround to signal from a QRunnable object.
We will use signals to communicate from the Worker class back to the ThreadPool.
"""
finished = QtCore.Signal(int)
class Worker(QtCore.QRunnable):
"""
Executes code in a seperate thread.
Communicates with the ThreadPool it spawned from via signals.
"""
StatusOk = 0
StatusError = 1
def __init__(self):
super(Worker, self).__init__()
self.signals = ThreadSignals()
def run(self):
status = Worker.StatusOk
try:
time.sleep(1) # Process something big here.
except Exception as e:
print traceback.format_exc()
status = Worker.StatusError
self.signals.finished.emit(status)
class ThreadPool(QtCore.QObject):
"""
Manages all Worker objects.
This will receive signals from workers then communicate back to the main gui.
"""
pool_started = QtCore.Signal(int)
pool_finished = QtCore.Signal()
worker_finished = QtCore.Signal(int)
def __init__(self, max_thread_count=1):
QtCore.QObject.__init__(self)
self._count = 0
self._processed = 0
self._has_errors = False
self.pool = QtCore.QThreadPool()
self.pool.setMaxThreadCount(max_thread_count)
def worker_on_finished(self, status):
self._processed += 1
# If a worker fails, indicate that an error happened.
if status == Worker.StatusError:
self._has_errors = True
if self._processed == self._count:
# Signal to gui that all workers are done.
self.pool_finished.emit()
def start(self, count):
# Reset values.
self._count = count
self._processed = 0
self._has_errors = False
# Signal to gui that workers are about to begin. You can prepare your gui at this point.
self.pool_started.emit(count)
# Create workers and connect signals to gui so we can update it as they finish.
for i in range(count):
worker = Worker()
worker.signals.finished.connect(self.worker_finished)
worker.signals.finished.connect(self.worker_on_finished)
self.pool.start(worker)
def launch():
global inst
inst = Window()
inst.show()
Aside from the main gui, there's 3 different classes.
ThreadPool: This is responsible to create and manage all worker objects. This class is also responsible to communicate back to the gui with signals so it can react accordingly while workers are completing.
Worker: This is what does the actual heavy lifting and whatever you want to process in the thread.
ThreadSignals: This is used inside the worker to be able to communicate back to the pool when it's done. The worker class isn't inherited by QObject, which means it can't emit signals in itself, so this is used as a work around.
I know this all looks long winded, but it seems to be working fine in a bunch of different tools without any hard crashes.
One of the engineers at our studio discovered a few bugs related to the use of Python threads and PyQt/PySide. Please refer to:
[PySide 1.x] https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/PYSIDE-810
[PySide 2.x] https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/PYSIDE-813
Notes from the reporter:
Although QObject is reentrant, the GUI classes, notably QWidget and all its subclasses, are not reentrant. They can only be used from the main thread.

Categories