Represents a running thread.
An instance of this class can only be obtained with create(), self(), or wrap(GThread*). It's not possible to delete a Thread object. If the thread is not joinable, its resources will be freed automatically when it exits. Otherwise, if the thread is joinable, you must call join() to avoid a memory leak.
- Note
- g_thread_exit() is not wrapped, because that function exits a thread without any cleanup. That's especially dangerous in C++ code, since the destructors of automatic objects won't be invoked. Instead, you can throw a Thread::Exit exception, which will be caught by the internal thread entry function.
-
You might have noticed that the thread entry slot doesn't have the usual void* return value. If you want to return any data from your thread you can pass an additional output argument to the thread's entry slot.
- Deprecated:
- Use Glib::Threads::Thread instead.
static Thread * Glib::Thread::create |
( |
const sigc::slot< void > & |
slot, |
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|
bool |
joinable = true |
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) |
| |
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static |
Creates a new thread with the priority THREAD_PRIORITY_NORMAL
.
If joinable is true
, you can wait for this thread's termination by calling join(). Otherwise the thread will just disappear, when ready.
The new thread executes the function or method slot points to. You can pass additional arguments using sigc::bind(). If the thread was created successfully, it is returned, otherwise a ThreadError exception is thrown.
Because sigc::trackable is not thread safe, if the slot represents a non-static class method (that is, it is created by sigc::mem_fun()), the class concerned should not derive from sigc::trackable.
- Parameters
-
slot | A slot to execute in the new thread. |
joinable | This parameter is now ignored because Threads are now always joinable. |
- Returns
- The new Thread* on success.
- Exceptions
-
static Thread * Glib::Thread::create |
( |
const sigc::slot< void > & |
slot, |
|
|
unsigned long |
stack_size, |
|
|
bool |
joinable, |
|
|
bool |
bound, |
|
|
ThreadPriority |
priority |
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) |
| |
|
static |
Creates a new thread with the priority priority.
The stack gets the size stack_size or the default value for the current platform, if stack_size is 0
.
If joinable is true
, you can wait for this thread's termination by calling join(). Otherwise the thread will just disappear, when ready. If bound is true
, this thread will be scheduled in the system scope, otherwise the implementation is free to do scheduling in the process scope. The first variant is more expensive resource-wise, but generally faster. On some systems (e.g. Linux) all threads are bound.
The new thread executes the function or method slot points to. You can pass additional arguments using sigc::bind(). If the thread was created successfully, it is returned.
Because sigc::trackable is not thread safe, if the slot represents a non-static class method (that is, it is created by sigc::mem_fun()), the class concerned should not derive from sigc::trackable.
- Note
- It is not guaranteed, that threads with different priorities really behave accordingly. On some systems (e.g. Linux) only root can increase priorities. On other systems (e.g. Solaris) there doesn't seem to be different scheduling for different priorities. All in all try to avoid being dependent on priorities. Use
Glib::THREAD_PRIORITY_NORMAL
here as a default.
-
Only use the extended create(const sigc::slot<void>&, unsigned long, bool, bool, ThreadPriority) function, when you really can't use the simple create(const sigc::slot<void>&, bool) instead. The latter overload does not take stack_size, bound and priority as arguments, as they should only be used for cases, where it is inevitable.
- Parameters
-
slot | A slot to execute in the new thread. |
stack_size | A stack size for the new thread, or 0 . |
joinable | Should this thread be joinable? |
bound | Should this thread be bound to a system thread? |
priority | A priority for the thread. |
- Returns
- The new Thread* on success.
- Exceptions
-
- Deprecated:
- Use the simpler create() method instead, because all Threads are now joinable, and bounds and priority parameters now have no effect.