/**************************************************************************** ** ** Copyright (C) 2016 The Qt Company Ltd. ** Copyright (C) 2016 Intel Corporation. ** Contact: https://www.qt.io/licensing/ ** ** This file is part of the QtCore module of the Qt Toolkit. ** ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$ ** Commercial License Usage ** Licensees holding valid commercial Qt licenses may use this file in ** accordance with the commercial license agreement provided with the ** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in ** a written agreement between you and The Qt Company. For licensing terms ** and conditions see https://www.qt.io/terms-conditions. For further ** information use the contact form at https://www.qt.io/contact-us. ** ** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser ** General Public License version 3 as published by the Free Software ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL3 included in the ** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to ** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 3 requirements ** will be met: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/lgpl-3.0.html. ** ** GNU General Public License Usage ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU ** General Public License version 2.0 or (at your option) the GNU General ** Public license version 3 or any later version approved by the KDE Free ** Qt Foundation. The licenses are as published by the Free Software ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL2 and LICENSE.GPL3 ** included in the packaging of this file. Please review the following ** information to ensure the GNU General Public License requirements will ** be met: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html and ** https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html. ** ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ ** ****************************************************************************/ #include "qcoreapplication.h" #include "qcoreapplication_p.h" #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT #include "qabstracteventdispatcher.h" #include "qcoreevent.h" #include "qeventloop.h" #endif #include "qcorecmdlineargs_p.h" #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT #include #include #include #if QT_CONFIG(thread) #include #endif #endif #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT #if defined(Q_OS_UNIX) # if defined(Q_OS_DARWIN) # include "qeventdispatcher_cf_p.h" # else # if !defined(QT_NO_GLIB) # include "qeventdispatcher_glib_p.h" # endif # endif # include "qeventdispatcher_unix_p.h" #endif #ifdef Q_OS_WIN # ifdef Q_OS_WINRT # include "qeventdispatcher_winrt_p.h" # include "qfunctions_winrt.h" # include # include using namespace ABI::Windows::ApplicationModel::Core; using namespace Microsoft::WRL; # else # include "qeventdispatcher_win_p.h" # endif #endif #endif // QT_NO_QOBJECT #if defined(Q_OS_ANDROID) && !defined(Q_OS_ANDROID_EMBEDDED) # include # include #endif #ifdef Q_OS_MAC # include "qcore_mac_p.h" #endif #include #ifdef Q_OS_UNIX # include # include # include #endif #ifdef Q_OS_VXWORKS # include #endif #ifdef Q_OS_WASM #include #endif #ifdef QT_BOOTSTRAPPED #include #else #include #endif #include QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT class QMutexUnlocker { public: inline explicit QMutexUnlocker(QMutex *m) : mtx(m) { } inline ~QMutexUnlocker() { unlock(); } inline void unlock() { if (mtx) mtx->unlock(); mtx = 0; } private: Q_DISABLE_COPY(QMutexUnlocker) QMutex *mtx; }; #endif #if defined(Q_OS_WIN) || defined(Q_OS_MAC) extern QString qAppFileName(); #endif #if QT_VERSION >= 0x060000 # error "Bump QCoreApplicatoinPrivate::app_compile_version to 0x060000" #endif int QCoreApplicationPrivate::app_compile_version = 0x050000; //we don't know exactly, but it's at least 5.0.0 bool QCoreApplicationPrivate::setuidAllowed = false; #if !defined(Q_OS_WIN) #ifdef Q_OS_DARWIN QString QCoreApplicationPrivate::infoDictionaryStringProperty(const QString &propertyName) { QString bundleName; QCFString cfPropertyName = propertyName.toCFString(); CFTypeRef string = CFBundleGetValueForInfoDictionaryKey(CFBundleGetMainBundle(), cfPropertyName); if (string) bundleName = QString::fromCFString(static_cast(string)); return bundleName; } #endif QString QCoreApplicationPrivate::appName() const { QString applicationName; #ifdef Q_OS_DARWIN applicationName = infoDictionaryStringProperty(QStringLiteral("CFBundleName")); #endif if (applicationName.isEmpty() && argv[0]) { char *p = strrchr(argv[0], '/'); applicationName = QString::fromLocal8Bit(p ? p + 1 : argv[0]); } return applicationName; } QString QCoreApplicationPrivate::appVersion() const { QString applicationVersion; #ifndef QT_BOOTSTRAPPED # ifdef Q_OS_DARWIN applicationVersion = infoDictionaryStringProperty(QStringLiteral("CFBundleVersion")); # elif defined(Q_OS_ANDROID) && !defined(Q_OS_ANDROID_EMBEDDED) QJNIObjectPrivate context(QtAndroidPrivate::context()); if (context.isValid()) { QJNIObjectPrivate pm = context.callObjectMethod( "getPackageManager", "()Landroid/content/pm/PackageManager;"); QJNIObjectPrivate pn = context.callObjectMethod("getPackageName"); if (pm.isValid() && pn.isValid()) { QJNIObjectPrivate packageInfo = pm.callObjectMethod( "getPackageInfo", "(Ljava/lang/String;I)Landroid/content/pm/PackageInfo;", pn.object(), 0); if (packageInfo.isValid()) { QJNIObjectPrivate versionName = packageInfo.getObjectField( "versionName", "Ljava/lang/String;"); if (versionName.isValid()) return versionName.toString(); } } } # endif #endif return applicationVersion; } #endif QString *QCoreApplicationPrivate::cachedApplicationFilePath = 0; bool QCoreApplicationPrivate::checkInstance(const char *function) { bool b = (QCoreApplication::self != 0); if (!b) qWarning("QApplication::%s: Please instantiate the QApplication object first", function); return b; } void QCoreApplicationPrivate::processCommandLineArguments() { int j = argc ? 1 : 0; for (int i = 1; i < argc; ++i) { if (!argv[i]) continue; if (*argv[i] != '-') { argv[j++] = argv[i]; continue; } const char *arg = argv[i]; if (arg[1] == '-') // startsWith("--") ++arg; if (strncmp(arg, "-qmljsdebugger=", 15) == 0) { qmljs_debug_arguments = QString::fromLocal8Bit(arg + 15); } else if (strcmp(arg, "-qmljsdebugger") == 0 && i < argc - 1) { ++i; qmljs_debug_arguments = QString::fromLocal8Bit(argv[i]); } else { argv[j++] = argv[i]; } } if (j < argc) { argv[j] = 0; argc = j; } } // Support for introspection #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT QSignalSpyCallbackSet Q_CORE_EXPORT qt_signal_spy_callback_set = { 0, 0, 0, 0 }; void qt_register_signal_spy_callbacks(const QSignalSpyCallbackSet &callback_set) { qt_signal_spy_callback_set = callback_set; } #endif extern "C" void Q_CORE_EXPORT qt_startup_hook() { } typedef QList QStartUpFuncList; Q_GLOBAL_STATIC(QStartUpFuncList, preRList) typedef QList QVFuncList; Q_GLOBAL_STATIC(QVFuncList, postRList) static QBasicMutex globalRoutinesMutex; /*! \internal Adds a global routine that will be called from the QCoreApplication constructor. The public API is Q_COREAPP_STARTUP_FUNCTION. */ void qAddPreRoutine(QtStartUpFunction p) { QStartUpFuncList *list = preRList(); if (!list) return; if (QCoreApplication::instance()) p(); // Due to C++11 parallel dynamic initialization, this can be called // from multiple threads. QMutexLocker locker(&globalRoutinesMutex); list->prepend(p); // in case QCoreApplication is re-created, see qt_call_pre_routines } void qAddPostRoutine(QtCleanUpFunction p) { QVFuncList *list = postRList(); if (!list) return; QMutexLocker locker(&globalRoutinesMutex); list->prepend(p); } void qRemovePostRoutine(QtCleanUpFunction p) { QVFuncList *list = postRList(); if (!list) return; QMutexLocker locker(&globalRoutinesMutex); list->removeAll(p); } static void qt_call_pre_routines() { if (!preRList.exists()) return; QVFuncList list; { QMutexLocker locker(&globalRoutinesMutex); // Unlike qt_call_post_routines, we don't empty the list, because // Q_COREAPP_STARTUP_FUNCTION is a macro, so the user expects // the function to be executed every time QCoreApplication is created. list = *preRList; } for (int i = 0; i < list.count(); ++i) list.at(i)(); } void Q_CORE_EXPORT qt_call_post_routines() { if (!postRList.exists()) return; forever { QVFuncList list; { // extract the current list and make the stored list empty QMutexLocker locker(&globalRoutinesMutex); qSwap(*postRList, list); } if (list.isEmpty()) break; for (QtCleanUpFunction f : qAsConst(list)) f(); } } // initialized in qcoreapplication and in qtextstream autotest when setlocale is called. static bool qt_locale_initialized = false; #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT // app starting up if false bool QCoreApplicationPrivate::is_app_running = false; // app closing down if true bool QCoreApplicationPrivate::is_app_closing = false; Q_CORE_EXPORT uint qGlobalPostedEventsCount() { QThreadData *currentThreadData = QThreadData::current(); return currentThreadData->postEventList.size() - currentThreadData->postEventList.startOffset; } QAbstractEventDispatcher *QCoreApplicationPrivate::eventDispatcher = 0; #endif // QT_NO_QOBJECT QCoreApplication *QCoreApplication::self = 0; uint QCoreApplicationPrivate::attribs = (1 << Qt::AA_SynthesizeMouseForUnhandledTouchEvents) | (1 << Qt::AA_SynthesizeMouseForUnhandledTabletEvents); struct QCoreApplicationData { QCoreApplicationData() Q_DECL_NOTHROW { applicationNameSet = false; applicationVersionSet = false; } ~QCoreApplicationData() { #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT // cleanup the QAdoptedThread created for the main() thread if (QCoreApplicationPrivate::theMainThread) { QThreadData *data = QThreadData::get2(QCoreApplicationPrivate::theMainThread); data->deref(); // deletes the data and the adopted thread } #endif } QString orgName, orgDomain; QString application; // application name, initially from argv[0], can then be modified. QString applicationVersion; bool applicationNameSet; // true if setApplicationName was called bool applicationVersionSet; // true if setApplicationVersion was called #if QT_CONFIG(library) QScopedPointer app_libpaths; QScopedPointer manual_libpaths; #endif }; Q_GLOBAL_STATIC(QCoreApplicationData, coreappdata) #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT static bool quitLockRefEnabled = true; #endif #if defined(Q_OS_WIN) && !defined(Q_OS_WINRT) // Check whether the command line arguments match those passed to main() // by comparing to the global __argv/__argc (MS extension). // Deep comparison is required since argv/argc is rebuilt by WinMain for // GUI apps or when using MinGW due to its globbing. static inline bool isArgvModified(int argc, char **argv) { if (__argc != argc || !__argv /* wmain() */) return true; if (__argv == argv) return false; for (int a = 0; a < argc; ++a) { if (argv[a] != __argv[a] && strcmp(argv[a], __argv[a])) return true; } return false; } static inline bool contains(int argc, char **argv, const char *needle) { for (int a = 0; a < argc; ++a) { if (!strcmp(argv[a], needle)) return true; } return false; } #endif // Q_OS_WIN && !Q_OS_WINRT QCoreApplicationPrivate::QCoreApplicationPrivate(int &aargc, char **aargv, uint flags) : #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT QObjectPrivate(), #endif argc(aargc) , argv(aargv) #if defined(Q_OS_WIN) && !defined(Q_OS_WINRT) , origArgc(0) , origArgv(nullptr) #endif , application_type(QCoreApplicationPrivate::Tty) #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT , in_exec(false) , aboutToQuitEmitted(false) , threadData_clean(false) #else , q_ptr(0) #endif { app_compile_version = flags & 0xffffff; static const char *const empty = ""; if (argc == 0 || argv == 0) { argc = 0; argv = const_cast(&empty); } #if defined(Q_OS_WIN) && !defined(Q_OS_WINRT) if (!isArgvModified(argc, argv)) { origArgc = argc; origArgv = new char *[argc]; std::copy(argv, argv + argc, QT_MAKE_CHECKED_ARRAY_ITERATOR(origArgv, argc)); } #endif // Q_OS_WIN && !Q_OS_WINRT #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT QCoreApplicationPrivate::is_app_closing = false; # if defined(Q_OS_UNIX) if (Q_UNLIKELY(!setuidAllowed && (geteuid() != getuid()))) qFatal("FATAL: The application binary appears to be running setuid, this is a security hole."); # endif // Q_OS_UNIX #ifdef Q_OS_WINRT QThreadData::setMainThread(); #endif QThread *cur = QThread::currentThread(); // note: this may end up setting theMainThread! if (cur != theMainThread) qWarning("WARNING: QApplication was not created in the main() thread."); #endif } QCoreApplicationPrivate::~QCoreApplicationPrivate() { #ifdef Q_OS_WASM EM_ASM( // unmount persistent directory as IDBFS // see also QTBUG-70002 FS.unmount('/home/web_user'); ); #endif #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT cleanupThreadData(); #endif #if defined(Q_OS_WIN) && !defined(Q_OS_WINRT) delete [] origArgv; #endif QCoreApplicationPrivate::clearApplicationFilePath(); } #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT void QCoreApplicationPrivate::cleanupThreadData() { if (threadData && !threadData_clean) { #if QT_CONFIG(thread) void *data = &threadData->tls; QThreadStorageData::finish((void **)data); #endif // need to clear the state of the mainData, just in case a new QCoreApplication comes along. QMutexLocker locker(&threadData->postEventList.mutex); for (int i = 0; i < threadData->postEventList.size(); ++i) { const QPostEvent &pe = threadData->postEventList.at(i); if (pe.event) { --pe.receiver->d_func()->postedEvents; pe.event->posted = false; delete pe.event; } } threadData->postEventList.clear(); threadData->postEventList.recursion = 0; threadData->quitNow = false; threadData_clean = true; } } void QCoreApplicationPrivate::createEventDispatcher() { Q_Q(QCoreApplication); QThreadData *data = QThreadData::current(); Q_ASSERT(!data->hasEventDispatcher()); eventDispatcher = data->createEventDispatcher(); eventDispatcher->setParent(q); } void QCoreApplicationPrivate::eventDispatcherReady() { } QBasicAtomicPointer QCoreApplicationPrivate::theMainThread = Q_BASIC_ATOMIC_INITIALIZER(0); QThread *QCoreApplicationPrivate::mainThread() { Q_ASSERT(theMainThread.load() != 0); return theMainThread.load(); } bool QCoreApplicationPrivate::threadRequiresCoreApplication() { QThreadData *data = QThreadData::current(false); if (!data) return true; // default setting return data->requiresCoreApplication; } void QCoreApplicationPrivate::checkReceiverThread(QObject *receiver) { QThread *currentThread = QThread::currentThread(); QThread *thr = receiver->thread(); Q_ASSERT_X(currentThread == thr || !thr, "QCoreApplication::sendEvent", QString::asprintf("Cannot send events to objects owned by a different thread. " "Current thread 0x%p. Receiver '%ls' (of type '%s') was created in thread 0x%p", currentThread, qUtf16Printable(receiver->objectName()), receiver->metaObject()->className(), thr) .toLocal8Bit().data()); Q_UNUSED(currentThread); Q_UNUSED(thr); } #endif // QT_NO_QOBJECT void QCoreApplicationPrivate::appendApplicationPathToLibraryPaths() { #if QT_CONFIG(library) QStringList *app_libpaths = coreappdata()->app_libpaths.data(); if (!app_libpaths) coreappdata()->app_libpaths.reset(app_libpaths = new QStringList); QString app_location = QCoreApplication::applicationFilePath(); app_location.truncate(app_location.lastIndexOf(QLatin1Char('/'))); #ifdef Q_OS_WINRT if (app_location.isEmpty()) app_location.append(QLatin1Char('/')); #endif app_location = QDir(app_location).canonicalPath(); if (QFile::exists(app_location) && !app_libpaths->contains(app_location)) app_libpaths->append(app_location); #endif } QString qAppName() { if (!QCoreApplicationPrivate::checkInstance("qAppName")) return QString(); return QCoreApplication::instance()->d_func()->appName(); } void QCoreApplicationPrivate::initLocale() { if (qt_locale_initialized) return; qt_locale_initialized = true; #if defined(Q_OS_UNIX) && !defined(QT_BOOTSTRAPPED) setlocale(LC_ALL, ""); #endif } /*! \class QCoreApplication \inmodule QtCore \brief The QCoreApplication class provides an event loop for Qt applications without UI. This class is used by non-GUI applications to provide their event loop. For non-GUI application that uses Qt, there should be exactly one QCoreApplication object. For GUI applications, see QGuiApplication. For applications that use the Qt Widgets module, see QApplication. QCoreApplication contains the main event loop, where all events from the operating system (e.g., timer and network events) and other sources are processed and dispatched. It also handles the application's initialization and finalization, as well as system-wide and application-wide settings. \section1 The Event Loop and Event Handling The event loop is started with a call to exec(). Long-running operations can call processEvents() to keep the application responsive. In general, we recommend that you create a QCoreApplication, QGuiApplication or a QApplication object in your \c main() function as early as possible. exec() will not return until the event loop exits; e.g., when quit() is called. Several static convenience functions are also provided. The QCoreApplication object is available from instance(). Events can be sent with sendEvent() or posted to an event queue with postEvent(). Pending events can be removed with removePostedEvents() or dispatched with sendPostedEvents(). The class provides a quit() slot and an aboutToQuit() signal. \section1 Application and Library Paths An application has an applicationDirPath() and an applicationFilePath(). Library paths (see QLibrary) can be retrieved with libraryPaths() and manipulated by setLibraryPaths(), addLibraryPath(), and removeLibraryPath(). \section1 Internationalization and Translations Translation files can be added or removed using installTranslator() and removeTranslator(). Application strings can be translated using translate(). The QObject::tr() and QObject::trUtf8() functions are implemented in terms of translate(). \section1 Accessing Command Line Arguments The command line arguments which are passed to QCoreApplication's constructor should be accessed using the arguments() function. \note QCoreApplication removes option \c -qmljsdebugger="...". It parses the argument of \c qmljsdebugger, and then removes this option plus its argument. For more advanced command line option handling, create a QCommandLineParser. \section1 Locale Settings On Unix/Linux Qt is configured to use the system locale settings by default. This can cause a conflict when using POSIX functions, for instance, when converting between data types such as floats and strings, since the notation may differ between locales. To get around this problem, call the POSIX function \c{setlocale(LC_NUMERIC,"C")} right after initializing QApplication, QGuiApplication or QCoreApplication to reset the locale that is used for number formatting to "C"-locale. \sa QGuiApplication, QAbstractEventDispatcher, QEventLoop, {Semaphores Example}, {Wait Conditions Example} */ /*! \fn static QCoreApplication *QCoreApplication::instance() Returns a pointer to the application's QCoreApplication (or QGuiApplication/QApplication) instance. If no instance has been allocated, \c null is returned. */ /*! \internal */ QCoreApplication::QCoreApplication(QCoreApplicationPrivate &p) #ifdef QT_NO_QOBJECT : d_ptr(&p) #else : QObject(p, 0) #endif { d_func()->q_ptr = this; // note: it is the subclasses' job to call // QCoreApplicationPrivate::eventDispatcher->startingUp(); } #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT /*! \deprecated This function is equivalent to calling \c {QCoreApplication::eventDispatcher()->flush()}, which also is deprecated, see QAbstractEventDispatcher::flush(). Use sendPostedEvents() and processEvents() for more fine-grained control of the event loop instead. Historically this functions was used to flush the platform-specific native event queues. \sa sendPostedEvents(), processEvents(), QAbstractEventDispatcher::flush() */ #if QT_DEPRECATED_SINCE(5, 9) void QCoreApplication::flush() { if (self && self->d_func()->eventDispatcher) self->d_func()->eventDispatcher->flush(); } #endif #endif /*! Constructs a Qt core application. Core applications are applications without a graphical user interface. Such applications are used at the console or as server processes. The \a argc and \a argv arguments are processed by the application, and made available in a more convenient form by the arguments() function. \warning The data referred to by \a argc and \a argv must stay valid for the entire lifetime of the QCoreApplication object. In addition, \a argc must be greater than zero and \a argv must contain at least one valid character string. */ QCoreApplication::QCoreApplication(int &argc, char **argv #ifndef Q_QDOC , int _internal #endif ) #ifdef QT_NO_QOBJECT : d_ptr(new QCoreApplicationPrivate(argc, argv, _internal)) #else : QObject(*new QCoreApplicationPrivate(argc, argv, _internal)) #endif { d_func()->q_ptr = this; d_func()->init(); #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT QCoreApplicationPrivate::eventDispatcher->startingUp(); #endif } /*! \enum QCoreApplication::anonymous \internal \value ApplicationFlags QT_VERSION */ void QCoreApplicationPrivate::init() { Q_TRACE(QCoreApplicationPrivate_init_entry); #if defined(Q_OS_MACOS) QMacAutoReleasePool pool; #endif Q_Q(QCoreApplication); initLocale(); Q_ASSERT_X(!QCoreApplication::self, "QCoreApplication", "there should be only one application object"); QCoreApplication::self = q; #ifdef Q_OS_WASM EM_ASM( // mount and sync persistent filesystem to sandbox FS.mount(IDBFS, {}, '/home/web_user'); FS.syncfs(true, function(err) { if (err) Module.print(err); }); ); #endif // Store app name/version (so they're still available after QCoreApplication is destroyed) if (!coreappdata()->applicationNameSet) coreappdata()->application = appName(); if (!coreappdata()->applicationVersionSet) coreappdata()->applicationVersion = appVersion(); #if defined(Q_OS_ANDROID) // We've deferred initializing the logging registry due to not being // able to guarantee that logging happened on the same thread as the // Qt main thread, but now that the Qt main thread is set up, we can // enable categorized logging. QLoggingRegistry::instance()->initializeRules(); #endif #if QT_CONFIG(library) // Reset the lib paths, so that they will be recomputed, taking the availability of argv[0] // into account. If necessary, recompute right away and replay the manual changes on top of the // new lib paths. QStringList *appPaths = coreappdata()->app_libpaths.take(); QStringList *manualPaths = coreappdata()->manual_libpaths.take(); if (appPaths) { if (manualPaths) { // Replay the delta. As paths can only be prepended to the front or removed from // anywhere in the list, we can just linearly scan the lists and find the items that // have been removed. Once the original list is exhausted we know all the remaining // items have been added. QStringList newPaths(q->libraryPaths()); for (int i = manualPaths->length(), j = appPaths->length(); i > 0 || j > 0; qt_noop()) { if (--j < 0) { newPaths.prepend((*manualPaths)[--i]); } else if (--i < 0) { newPaths.removeAll((*appPaths)[j]); } else if ((*manualPaths)[i] != (*appPaths)[j]) { newPaths.removeAll((*appPaths)[j]); ++i; // try again with next item. } } delete manualPaths; coreappdata()->manual_libpaths.reset(new QStringList(newPaths)); } delete appPaths; } #endif #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT // use the event dispatcher created by the app programmer (if any) Q_ASSERT(!eventDispatcher); eventDispatcher = threadData->eventDispatcher.load(); // otherwise we create one if (!eventDispatcher) createEventDispatcher(); Q_ASSERT(eventDispatcher); if (!eventDispatcher->parent()) { eventDispatcher->moveToThread(threadData->thread); eventDispatcher->setParent(q); } threadData->eventDispatcher = eventDispatcher; eventDispatcherReady(); #endif #ifdef QT_EVAL extern void qt_core_eval_init(QCoreApplicationPrivate::Type); qt_core_eval_init(application_type); #endif processCommandLineArguments(); qt_call_pre_routines(); qt_startup_hook(); #ifndef QT_BOOTSTRAPPED if (Q_UNLIKELY(qtHookData[QHooks::Startup])) reinterpret_cast(qtHookData[QHooks::Startup])(); #endif #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT is_app_running = true; // No longer starting up. #endif Q_TRACE(QCoreApplicationPrivate_init_exit); } /*! Destroys the QCoreApplication object. */ QCoreApplication::~QCoreApplication() { qt_call_post_routines(); self = 0; #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT QCoreApplicationPrivate::is_app_closing = true; QCoreApplicationPrivate::is_app_running = false; #endif #if QT_CONFIG(thread) // Synchronize and stop the global thread pool threads. QThreadPool *globalThreadPool = 0; QT_TRY { globalThreadPool = QThreadPool::globalInstance(); } QT_CATCH (...) { // swallow the exception, since destructors shouldn't throw } if (globalThreadPool) globalThreadPool->waitForDone(); #endif #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT d_func()->threadData->eventDispatcher = 0; if (QCoreApplicationPrivate::eventDispatcher) QCoreApplicationPrivate::eventDispatcher->closingDown(); QCoreApplicationPrivate::eventDispatcher = 0; #endif #if QT_CONFIG(library) coreappdata()->app_libpaths.reset(); coreappdata()->manual_libpaths.reset(); #endif } /*! \since 5.3 Allows the application to run setuid on UNIX platforms if \a allow is true. If \a allow is false (the default) and Qt detects the application is running with an effective user id different than the real user id, the application will be aborted when a QCoreApplication instance is created. Qt is not an appropriate solution for setuid programs due to its large attack surface. However some applications may be required to run in this manner for historical reasons. This flag will prevent Qt from aborting the application when this is detected, and must be set before a QCoreApplication instance is created. \note It is strongly recommended not to enable this option since it introduces security risks. */ void QCoreApplication::setSetuidAllowed(bool allow) { QCoreApplicationPrivate::setuidAllowed = allow; } /*! \since 5.3 Returns true if the application is allowed to run setuid on UNIX platforms. \sa QCoreApplication::setSetuidAllowed() */ bool QCoreApplication::isSetuidAllowed() { return QCoreApplicationPrivate::setuidAllowed; } /*! Sets the attribute \a attribute if \a on is true; otherwise clears the attribute. \sa testAttribute() */ void QCoreApplication::setAttribute(Qt::ApplicationAttribute attribute, bool on) { if (on) QCoreApplicationPrivate::attribs |= 1 << attribute; else QCoreApplicationPrivate::attribs &= ~(1 << attribute); } /*! Returns \c true if attribute \a attribute is set; otherwise returns \c false. \sa setAttribute() */ bool QCoreApplication::testAttribute(Qt::ApplicationAttribute attribute) { return QCoreApplicationPrivate::testAttribute(attribute); } #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT /*! \property QCoreApplication::quitLockEnabled \brief Whether the use of the QEventLoopLocker feature can cause the application to quit. The default is \c true. \sa QEventLoopLocker */ bool QCoreApplication::isQuitLockEnabled() { return quitLockRefEnabled; } static bool doNotify(QObject *, QEvent *); void QCoreApplication::setQuitLockEnabled(bool enabled) { quitLockRefEnabled = enabled; } /*! \internal \deprecated This function is here to make it possible for Qt extensions to hook into event notification without subclassing QApplication */ bool QCoreApplication::notifyInternal(QObject *receiver, QEvent *event) { return notifyInternal2(receiver, event); } /*! \internal \since 5.6 This function is here to make it possible for Qt extensions to hook into event notification without subclassing QApplication. */ bool QCoreApplication::notifyInternal2(QObject *receiver, QEvent *event) { bool selfRequired = QCoreApplicationPrivate::threadRequiresCoreApplication(); if (!self && selfRequired) return false; // Make it possible for Qt Script to hook into events even // though QApplication is subclassed... bool result = false; void *cbdata[] = { receiver, event, &result }; if (QInternal::activateCallbacks(QInternal::EventNotifyCallback, cbdata)) { return result; } // Qt enforces the rule that events can only be sent to objects in // the current thread, so receiver->d_func()->threadData is // equivalent to QThreadData::current(), just without the function // call overhead. QObjectPrivate *d = receiver->d_func(); QThreadData *threadData = d->threadData; QScopedScopeLevelCounter scopeLevelCounter(threadData); if (!selfRequired) return doNotify(receiver, event); return self->notify(receiver, event); } /*! \internal \since 5.10 Forwards the \a event to the \a receiver, using the spontaneous state of the \a originatingEvent if specified. */ bool QCoreApplication::forwardEvent(QObject *receiver, QEvent *event, QEvent *originatingEvent) { if (event && originatingEvent) event->spont = originatingEvent->spont; return notifyInternal2(receiver, event); } /*! Sends \a event to \a receiver: \a {receiver}->event(\a event). Returns the value that is returned from the receiver's event handler. Note that this function is called for all events sent to any object in any thread. For certain types of events (e.g. mouse and key events), the event will be propagated to the receiver's parent and so on up to the top-level object if the receiver is not interested in the event (i.e., it returns \c false). There are five different ways that events can be processed; reimplementing this virtual function is just one of them. All five approaches are listed below: \list 1 \li Reimplementing \l {QWidget::}{paintEvent()}, \l {QWidget::}{mousePressEvent()} and so on. This is the most common, easiest, and least powerful way. \li Reimplementing this function. This is very powerful, providing complete control; but only one subclass can be active at a time. \li Installing an event filter on QCoreApplication::instance(). Such an event filter is able to process all events for all widgets, so it's just as powerful as reimplementing notify(); furthermore, it's possible to have more than one application-global event filter. Global event filters even see mouse events for \l{QWidget::isEnabled()}{disabled widgets}. Note that application event filters are only called for objects that live in the main thread. \li Reimplementing QObject::event() (as QWidget does). If you do this you get Tab key presses, and you get to see the events before any widget-specific event filters. \li Installing an event filter on the object. Such an event filter gets all the events, including Tab and Shift+Tab key press events, as long as they do not change the focus widget. \endlist \b{Future direction:} This function will not be called for objects that live outside the main thread in Qt 6. Applications that need that functionality should find other solutions for their event inspection needs in the meantime. The change may be extended to the main thread, causing this function to be deprecated. \warning If you override this function, you must ensure all threads that process events stop doing so before your application object begins destruction. This includes threads started by other libraries that you may be using, but does not apply to Qt's own threads. \sa QObject::event(), installNativeEventFilter() */ bool QCoreApplication::notify(QObject *receiver, QEvent *event) { // no events are delivered after ~QCoreApplication() has started if (QCoreApplicationPrivate::is_app_closing) return true; return doNotify(receiver, event); } static bool doNotify(QObject *receiver, QEvent *event) { if (receiver == 0) { // serious error qWarning("QCoreApplication::notify: Unexpected null receiver"); return true; } #ifndef QT_NO_DEBUG QCoreApplicationPrivate::checkReceiverThread(receiver); #endif return receiver->isWidgetType() ? false : QCoreApplicationPrivate::notify_helper(receiver, event); } bool QCoreApplicationPrivate::sendThroughApplicationEventFilters(QObject *receiver, QEvent *event) { // We can't access the application event filters outside of the main thread (race conditions) Q_ASSERT(receiver->d_func()->threadData->thread == mainThread()); if (extraData) { // application event filters are only called for objects in the GUI thread for (int i = 0; i < extraData->eventFilters.size(); ++i) { QObject *obj = extraData->eventFilters.at(i); if (!obj) continue; if (obj->d_func()->threadData != threadData) { qWarning("QCoreApplication: Application event filter cannot be in a different thread."); continue; } if (obj->eventFilter(receiver, event)) return true; } } return false; } bool QCoreApplicationPrivate::sendThroughObjectEventFilters(QObject *receiver, QEvent *event) { if (receiver != QCoreApplication::instance() && receiver->d_func()->extraData) { for (int i = 0; i < receiver->d_func()->extraData->eventFilters.size(); ++i) { QObject *obj = receiver->d_func()->extraData->eventFilters.at(i); if (!obj) continue; if (obj->d_func()->threadData != receiver->d_func()->threadData) { qWarning("QCoreApplication: Object event filter cannot be in a different thread."); continue; } if (obj->eventFilter(receiver, event)) return true; } } return false; } /*! \internal Helper function called by QCoreApplicationPrivate::notify() and qapplication.cpp */ bool QCoreApplicationPrivate::notify_helper(QObject *receiver, QEvent * event) { // Note: when adjusting the tracepoints in here // consider adjusting QApplicationPrivate::notify_helper too. Q_TRACE(QCoreApplication_notify_entry, receiver, event, event->type()); // send to all application event filters (only does anything in the main thread) if (QCoreApplication::self && receiver->d_func()->threadData->thread == mainThread() && QCoreApplication::self->d_func()->sendThroughApplicationEventFilters(receiver, event)) { Q_TRACE(QCoreApplication_notify_event_filtered, receiver, event, event->type()); return true; } // send to all receiver event filters if (sendThroughObjectEventFilters(receiver, event)) { Q_TRACE(QCoreApplication_notify_event_filtered, receiver, event, event->type()); return true; } Q_TRACE(QCoreApplication_notify_before_delivery, receiver, event, event->type()); // deliver the event const bool consumed = receiver->event(event); Q_TRACE(QCoreApplication_notify_after_delivery, receiver, event, event->type(), consumed); return consumed; } /*! Returns \c true if an application object has not been created yet; otherwise returns \c false. \sa closingDown() */ bool QCoreApplication::startingUp() { return !QCoreApplicationPrivate::is_app_running; } /*! Returns \c true if the application objects are being destroyed; otherwise returns \c false. \sa startingUp() */ bool QCoreApplication::closingDown() { return QCoreApplicationPrivate::is_app_closing; } /*! Processes all pending events for the calling thread according to the specified \a flags until there are no more events to process. You can call this function occasionally when your program is busy performing a long operation (e.g. copying a file). In the event that you are running a local loop which calls this function continuously, without an event loop, the \l{QEvent::DeferredDelete}{DeferredDelete} events will not be processed. This can affect the behaviour of widgets, e.g. QToolTip, that rely on \l{QEvent::DeferredDelete}{DeferredDelete} events to function properly. An alternative would be to call \l{QCoreApplication::sendPostedEvents()}{sendPostedEvents()} from within that local loop. Calling this function processes events only for the calling thread, and returns after all available events have been processed. Available events are events queued before the function call. This means that events that are posted while the function runs will be queued until a later round of event processing. \threadsafe \sa exec(), QTimer, QEventLoop::processEvents(), flush(), sendPostedEvents() */ void QCoreApplication::processEvents(QEventLoop::ProcessEventsFlags flags) { QThreadData *data = QThreadData::current(); if (!data->hasEventDispatcher()) return; data->eventDispatcher.load()->processEvents(flags); } /*! \overload processEvents() Processes pending events for the calling thread for \a ms milliseconds or until there are no more events to process, whichever is shorter. You can call this function occasionally when your program is busy doing a long operation (e.g. copying a file). Calling this function processes events only for the calling thread. \note Unlike the \l{QCoreApplication::processEvents(QEventLoop::ProcessEventsFlags flags)}{processEvents()} overload, this function also processes events that are posted while the function runs. \threadsafe \sa exec(), QTimer, QEventLoop::processEvents() */ void QCoreApplication::processEvents(QEventLoop::ProcessEventsFlags flags, int ms) { // ### Qt 6: consider splitting this method into a public and a private // one, so that a user-invoked processEvents can be detected // and handled properly. QThreadData *data = QThreadData::current(); if (!data->hasEventDispatcher()) return; QElapsedTimer start; start.start(); while (data->eventDispatcher.load()->processEvents(flags & ~QEventLoop::WaitForMoreEvents)) { if (start.elapsed() > ms) break; } } /***************************************************************************** Main event loop wrappers *****************************************************************************/ /*! Enters the main event loop and waits until exit() is called. Returns the value that was passed to exit() (which is 0 if exit() is called via quit()). It is necessary to call this function to start event handling. The main event loop receives events from the window system and dispatches these to the application widgets. To make your application perform idle processing (by executing a special function whenever there are no pending events), use a QTimer with 0 timeout. More advanced idle processing schemes can be achieved using processEvents(). We recommend that you connect clean-up code to the \l{QCoreApplication::}{aboutToQuit()} signal, instead of putting it in your application's \c{main()} function because on some platforms the exec() call may not return. For example, on Windows when the user logs off, the system terminates the process after Qt closes all top-level windows. Hence, there is no guarantee that the application will have time to exit its event loop and execute code at the end of the \c{main()} function after the exec() call. \sa quit(), exit(), processEvents(), QApplication::exec() */ int QCoreApplication::exec() { if (!QCoreApplicationPrivate::checkInstance("exec")) return -1; QThreadData *threadData = self->d_func()->threadData; if (threadData != QThreadData::current()) { qWarning("%s::exec: Must be called from the main thread", self->metaObject()->className()); return -1; } if (!threadData->eventLoops.isEmpty()) { qWarning("QCoreApplication::exec: The event loop is already running"); return -1; } threadData->quitNow = false; QEventLoop eventLoop; self->d_func()->in_exec = true; self->d_func()->aboutToQuitEmitted = false; int returnCode = eventLoop.exec(); threadData->quitNow = false; if (self) self->d_func()->execCleanup(); return returnCode; } // Cleanup after eventLoop is done executing in QCoreApplication::exec(). // This is for use cases in which QCoreApplication is instantiated by a // library and not by an application executable, for example, Active X // servers. void QCoreApplicationPrivate::execCleanup() { threadData->quitNow = false; in_exec = false; if (!aboutToQuitEmitted) emit q_func()->aboutToQuit(QCoreApplication::QPrivateSignal()); aboutToQuitEmitted = true; QCoreApplication::sendPostedEvents(0, QEvent::DeferredDelete); } /*! Tells the application to exit with a return code. After this function has been called, the application leaves the main event loop and returns from the call to exec(). The exec() function returns \a returnCode. If the event loop is not running, this function does nothing. By convention, a \a returnCode of 0 means success, and any non-zero value indicates an error. It's good practice to always connect signals to this slot using a \l{Qt::}{QueuedConnection}. If a signal connected (non-queued) to this slot is emitted before control enters the main event loop (such as before "int main" calls \l{QCoreApplication::}{exec()}), the slot has no effect and the application never exits. Using a queued connection ensures that the slot will not be invoked until after control enters the main event loop. Note that unlike the C library function of the same name, this function \e does return to the caller -- it is event processing that stops. \sa quit(), exec() */ void QCoreApplication::exit(int returnCode) { if (!self) return; QThreadData *data = self->d_func()->threadData; data->quitNow = true; for (int i = 0; i < data->eventLoops.size(); ++i) { QEventLoop *eventLoop = data->eventLoops.at(i); eventLoop->exit(returnCode); } } /***************************************************************************** QCoreApplication management of posted events *****************************************************************************/ #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT /*! \fn bool QCoreApplication::sendEvent(QObject *receiver, QEvent *event) Sends event \a event directly to receiver \a receiver, using the notify() function. Returns the value that was returned from the event handler. The event is \e not deleted when the event has been sent. The normal approach is to create the event on the stack, for example: \snippet code/src_corelib_kernel_qcoreapplication.cpp 0 \sa postEvent(), notify() */ bool QCoreApplication::sendEvent(QObject *receiver, QEvent *event) { Q_TRACE(QCoreApplication_sendEvent, receiver, event, event->type()); if (event) event->spont = false; return notifyInternal2(receiver, event); } /*! \internal */ bool QCoreApplication::sendSpontaneousEvent(QObject *receiver, QEvent *event) { Q_TRACE(QCoreApplication_sendSpontaneousEvent, receiver, event, event->type()); if (event) event->spont = true; return notifyInternal2(receiver, event); } #endif // QT_NO_QOBJECT /*! \since 4.3 Adds the event \a event, with the object \a receiver as the receiver of the event, to an event queue and returns immediately. The event must be allocated on the heap since the post event queue will take ownership of the event and delete it once it has been posted. It is \e {not safe} to access the event after it has been posted. When control returns to the main event loop, all events that are stored in the queue will be sent using the notify() function. Events are sorted in descending \a priority order, i.e. events with a high \a priority are queued before events with a lower \a priority. The \a priority can be any integer value, i.e. between INT_MAX and INT_MIN, inclusive; see Qt::EventPriority for more details. Events with equal \a priority will be processed in the order posted. \threadsafe \sa sendEvent(), notify(), sendPostedEvents(), Qt::EventPriority */ void QCoreApplication::postEvent(QObject *receiver, QEvent *event, int priority) { Q_TRACE(QCoreApplication_postEvent_entry, receiver, event, event->type()); if (receiver == 0) { qWarning("QCoreApplication::postEvent: Unexpected null receiver"); delete event; return; } QThreadData * volatile * pdata = &receiver->d_func()->threadData; QThreadData *data = *pdata; if (!data) { // posting during destruction? just delete the event to prevent a leak delete event; return; } // lock the post event mutex data->postEventList.mutex.lock(); // if object has moved to another thread, follow it while (data != *pdata) { data->postEventList.mutex.unlock(); data = *pdata; if (!data) { // posting during destruction? just delete the event to prevent a leak delete event; return; } data->postEventList.mutex.lock(); } QMutexUnlocker locker(&data->postEventList.mutex); // if this is one of the compressible events, do compression if (receiver->d_func()->postedEvents && self && self->compressEvent(event, receiver, &data->postEventList)) { Q_TRACE(QCoreApplication_postEvent_event_compressed, receiver, event); return; } if (event->type() == QEvent::DeferredDelete) receiver->d_ptr->deleteLaterCalled = true; if (event->type() == QEvent::DeferredDelete && data == QThreadData::current()) { // remember the current running eventloop for DeferredDelete // events posted in the receiver's thread. // Events sent by non-Qt event handlers (such as glib) may not // have the scopeLevel set correctly. The scope level makes sure that // code like this: // foo->deleteLater(); // qApp->processEvents(); // without passing QEvent::DeferredDelete // will not cause "foo" to be deleted before returning to the event loop. // If the scope level is 0 while loopLevel != 0, we are called from a // non-conformant code path, and our best guess is that the scope level // should be 1. (Loop level 0 is special: it means that no event loops // are running.) int loopLevel = data->loopLevel; int scopeLevel = data->scopeLevel; if (scopeLevel == 0 && loopLevel != 0) scopeLevel = 1; static_cast(event)->level = loopLevel + scopeLevel; } // delete the event on exceptions to protect against memory leaks till the event is // properly owned in the postEventList QScopedPointer eventDeleter(event); Q_TRACE(QCoreApplication_postEvent_event_posted, receiver, event, event->type()); data->postEventList.addEvent(QPostEvent(receiver, event, priority)); eventDeleter.take(); event->posted = true; ++receiver->d_func()->postedEvents; data->canWait = false; locker.unlock(); QAbstractEventDispatcher* dispatcher = data->eventDispatcher.loadAcquire(); if (dispatcher) dispatcher->wakeUp(); } /*! \internal Returns \c true if \a event was compressed away (possibly deleted) and should not be added to the list. */ bool QCoreApplication::compressEvent(QEvent *event, QObject *receiver, QPostEventList *postedEvents) { #ifdef Q_OS_WIN Q_ASSERT(event); Q_ASSERT(receiver); Q_ASSERT(postedEvents); // compress posted timers to this object. if (event->type() == QEvent::Timer && receiver->d_func()->postedEvents > 0) { int timerId = ((QTimerEvent *) event)->timerId(); for (int i=0; isize(); ++i) { const QPostEvent &e = postedEvents->at(i); if (e.receiver == receiver && e.event && e.event->type() == QEvent::Timer && ((QTimerEvent *) e.event)->timerId() == timerId) { delete event; return true; } } return false; } #endif if (event->type() == QEvent::DeferredDelete) { if (receiver->d_ptr->deleteLaterCalled) { // there was a previous DeferredDelete event, so we can drop the new one delete event; return true; } // deleteLaterCalled is set to true in postedEvents when queueing the very first // deferred deletion event. return false; } if (event->type() == QEvent::Quit && receiver->d_func()->postedEvents > 0) { for (int i = 0; i < postedEvents->size(); ++i) { const QPostEvent &cur = postedEvents->at(i); if (cur.receiver != receiver || cur.event == 0 || cur.event->type() != event->type()) continue; // found an event for this receiver delete event; return true; } } return false; } /*! Immediately dispatches all events which have been previously queued with QCoreApplication::postEvent() and which are for the object \a receiver and have the event type \a event_type. Events from the window system are \e not dispatched by this function, but by processEvents(). If \a receiver is \nullptr, the events of \a event_type are sent for all objects. If \a event_type is 0, all the events are sent for \a receiver. \note This method must be called from the thread in which its QObject parameter, \a receiver, lives. \sa flush(), postEvent() */ void QCoreApplication::sendPostedEvents(QObject *receiver, int event_type) { // ### Qt 6: consider splitting this method into a public and a private // one, so that a user-invoked sendPostedEvents can be detected // and handled properly. QThreadData *data = QThreadData::current(); QCoreApplicationPrivate::sendPostedEvents(receiver, event_type, data); } void QCoreApplicationPrivate::sendPostedEvents(QObject *receiver, int event_type, QThreadData *data) { if (event_type == -1) { // we were called by an obsolete event dispatcher. event_type = 0; } if (receiver && receiver->d_func()->threadData != data) { qWarning("QCoreApplication::sendPostedEvents: Cannot send " "posted events for objects in another thread"); return; } ++data->postEventList.recursion; QMutexLocker locker(&data->postEventList.mutex); // by default, we assume that the event dispatcher can go to sleep after // processing all events. if any new events are posted while we send // events, canWait will be set to false. data->canWait = (data->postEventList.size() == 0); if (data->postEventList.size() == 0 || (receiver && !receiver->d_func()->postedEvents)) { --data->postEventList.recursion; return; } data->canWait = true; // okay. here is the tricky loop. be careful about optimizing // this, it looks the way it does for good reasons. int startOffset = data->postEventList.startOffset; int &i = (!event_type && !receiver) ? data->postEventList.startOffset : startOffset; data->postEventList.insertionOffset = data->postEventList.size(); // Exception-safe cleaning up without the need for a try/catch block struct CleanUp { QObject *receiver; int event_type; QThreadData *data; bool exceptionCaught; inline CleanUp(QObject *receiver, int event_type, QThreadData *data) : receiver(receiver), event_type(event_type), data(data), exceptionCaught(true) {} inline ~CleanUp() { if (exceptionCaught) { // since we were interrupted, we need another pass to make sure we clean everything up data->canWait = false; } --data->postEventList.recursion; if (!data->postEventList.recursion && !data->canWait && data->hasEventDispatcher()) data->eventDispatcher.load()->wakeUp(); // clear the global list, i.e. remove everything that was // delivered. if (!event_type && !receiver && data->postEventList.startOffset >= 0) { const QPostEventList::iterator it = data->postEventList.begin(); data->postEventList.erase(it, it + data->postEventList.startOffset); data->postEventList.insertionOffset -= data->postEventList.startOffset; Q_ASSERT(data->postEventList.insertionOffset >= 0); data->postEventList.startOffset = 0; } } }; CleanUp cleanup(receiver, event_type, data); while (i < data->postEventList.size()) { // avoid live-lock if (i >= data->postEventList.insertionOffset) break; const QPostEvent &pe = data->postEventList.at(i); ++i; if (!pe.event) continue; if ((receiver && receiver != pe.receiver) || (event_type && event_type != pe.event->type())) { data->canWait = false; continue; } if (pe.event->type() == QEvent::DeferredDelete) { // DeferredDelete events are sent either // 1) when the event loop that posted the event has returned; or // 2) if explicitly requested (with QEvent::DeferredDelete) for // events posted by the current event loop; or // 3) if the event was posted before the outermost event loop. int eventLevel = static_cast(pe.event)->loopLevel(); int loopLevel = data->loopLevel + data->scopeLevel; const bool allowDeferredDelete = (eventLevel > loopLevel || (!eventLevel && loopLevel > 0) || (event_type == QEvent::DeferredDelete && eventLevel == loopLevel)); if (!allowDeferredDelete) { // cannot send deferred delete if (!event_type && !receiver) { // we must copy it first; we want to re-post the event // with the event pointer intact, but we can't delay // nulling the event ptr until after re-posting, as // addEvent may invalidate pe. QPostEvent pe_copy = pe; // null out the event so if sendPostedEvents recurses, it // will ignore this one, as it's been re-posted. const_cast(pe).event = 0; // re-post the copied event so it isn't lost data->postEventList.addEvent(pe_copy); } continue; } } // first, we diddle the event so that we can deliver // it, and that no one will try to touch it later. pe.event->posted = false; QEvent *e = pe.event; QObject * r = pe.receiver; --r->d_func()->postedEvents; Q_ASSERT(r->d_func()->postedEvents >= 0); // next, update the data structure so that we're ready // for the next event. const_cast(pe).event = 0; struct MutexUnlocker { QMutexLocker &m; MutexUnlocker(QMutexLocker &m) : m(m) { m.unlock(); } ~MutexUnlocker() { m.relock(); } }; MutexUnlocker unlocker(locker); QScopedPointer event_deleter(e); // will delete the event (with the mutex unlocked) // after all that work, it's time to deliver the event. QCoreApplication::sendEvent(r, e); // careful when adding anything below this point - the // sendEvent() call might invalidate any invariants this // function depends on. } cleanup.exceptionCaught = false; } /*! \since 4.3 Removes all events of the given \a eventType that were posted using postEvent() for \a receiver. The events are \e not dispatched, instead they are removed from the queue. You should never need to call this function. If you do call it, be aware that killing events may cause \a receiver to break one or more invariants. If \a receiver is \nullptr, the events of \a eventType are removed for all objects. If \a eventType is 0, all the events are removed for \a receiver. You should never call this function with \a eventType of 0. \threadsafe */ void QCoreApplication::removePostedEvents(QObject *receiver, int eventType) { QThreadData *data = receiver ? receiver->d_func()->threadData : QThreadData::current(); QMutexLocker locker(&data->postEventList.mutex); // the QObject destructor calls this function directly. this can // happen while the event loop is in the middle of posting events, // and when we get here, we may not have any more posted events // for this object. if (receiver && !receiver->d_func()->postedEvents) return; //we will collect all the posted events for the QObject //and we'll delete after the mutex was unlocked QVarLengthArray events; int n = data->postEventList.size(); int j = 0; for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) { const QPostEvent &pe = data->postEventList.at(i); if ((!receiver || pe.receiver == receiver) && (pe.event && (eventType == 0 || pe.event->type() == eventType))) { --pe.receiver->d_func()->postedEvents; pe.event->posted = false; events.append(pe.event); const_cast(pe).event = 0; } else if (!data->postEventList.recursion) { if (i != j) qSwap(data->postEventList[i], data->postEventList[j]); ++j; } } #ifdef QT_DEBUG if (receiver && eventType == 0) { Q_ASSERT(!receiver->d_func()->postedEvents); } #endif if (!data->postEventList.recursion) { // truncate list data->postEventList.erase(data->postEventList.begin() + j, data->postEventList.end()); } locker.unlock(); qDeleteAll(events); } /*! Removes \a event from the queue of posted events, and emits a warning message if appropriate. \warning This function can be \e really slow. Avoid using it, if possible. \threadsafe */ void QCoreApplicationPrivate::removePostedEvent(QEvent * event) { if (!event || !event->posted) return; QThreadData *data = QThreadData::current(); QMutexLocker locker(&data->postEventList.mutex); if (data->postEventList.size() == 0) { #if defined(QT_DEBUG) qDebug("QCoreApplication::removePostedEvent: Internal error: %p %d is posted", (void*)event, event->type()); return; #endif } for (int i = 0; i < data->postEventList.size(); ++i) { const QPostEvent & pe = data->postEventList.at(i); if (pe.event == event) { #ifndef QT_NO_DEBUG qWarning("QCoreApplication::removePostedEvent: Event of type %d deleted while posted to %s %s", event->type(), pe.receiver->metaObject()->className(), pe.receiver->objectName().toLocal8Bit().data()); #endif --pe.receiver->d_func()->postedEvents; pe.event->posted = false; delete pe.event; const_cast(pe).event = 0; return; } } } /*!\reimp */ bool QCoreApplication::event(QEvent *e) { if (e->type() == QEvent::Quit) { quit(); return true; } return QObject::event(e); } /*! \enum QCoreApplication::Encoding \obsolete This enum type used to define the 8-bit encoding of character string arguments to translate(). This enum is now obsolete and UTF-8 will be used in all cases. \value UnicodeUTF8 UTF-8. \omitvalue Latin1 \omitvalue DefaultCodec \omit UTF-8. \endomit \omitvalue CodecForTr \sa QObject::tr(), QString::fromUtf8() */ void QCoreApplicationPrivate::ref() { quitLockRef.ref(); } void QCoreApplicationPrivate::deref() { if (!quitLockRef.deref()) maybeQuit(); } void QCoreApplicationPrivate::maybeQuit() { if (quitLockRef.load() == 0 && in_exec && quitLockRefEnabled && shouldQuit()) QCoreApplication::postEvent(QCoreApplication::instance(), new QEvent(QEvent::Quit)); } /*! Tells the application to exit with return code 0 (success). Equivalent to calling QCoreApplication::exit(0). It's common to connect the QGuiApplication::lastWindowClosed() signal to quit(), and you also often connect e.g. QAbstractButton::clicked() or signals in QAction, QMenu, or QMenuBar to it. It's good practice to always connect signals to this slot using a \l{Qt::}{QueuedConnection}. If a signal connected (non-queued) to this slot is emitted before control enters the main event loop (such as before "int main" calls \l{QCoreApplication::}{exec()}), the slot has no effect and the application never exits. Using a queued connection ensures that the slot will not be invoked until after control enters the main event loop. Example: \snippet code/src_corelib_kernel_qcoreapplication.cpp 1 \sa exit(), aboutToQuit(), QGuiApplication::lastWindowClosed() */ void QCoreApplication::quit() { exit(0); } /*! \fn void QCoreApplication::aboutToQuit() This signal is emitted when the application is about to quit the main event loop, e.g. when the event loop level drops to zero. This may happen either after a call to quit() from inside the application or when the user shuts down the entire desktop session. The signal is particularly useful if your application has to do some last-second cleanup. Note that no user interaction is possible in this state. \sa quit() */ #endif // QT_NO_QOBJECT #ifndef QT_NO_TRANSLATION /*! Adds the translation file \a translationFile to the list of translation files to be used for translations. Multiple translation files can be installed. Translations are searched for in the reverse order in which they were installed, so the most recently installed translation file is searched first and the first translation file installed is searched last. The search stops as soon as a translation containing a matching string is found. Installing or removing a QTranslator, or changing an installed QTranslator generates a \l{QEvent::LanguageChange}{LanguageChange} event for the QCoreApplication instance. A QApplication instance will propagate the event to all toplevel widgets, where a reimplementation of changeEvent can re-translate the user interface by passing user-visible strings via the tr() function to the respective property setters. User-interface classes generated by Qt Designer provide a \c retranslateUi() function that can be called. The function returns \c true on success and false on failure. \sa removeTranslator(), translate(), QTranslator::load(), {Dynamic Translation} */ bool QCoreApplication::installTranslator(QTranslator *translationFile) { if (!translationFile) return false; if (!QCoreApplicationPrivate::checkInstance("installTranslator")) return false; QCoreApplicationPrivate *d = self->d_func(); { QWriteLocker locker(&d->translateMutex); d->translators.prepend(translationFile); } #ifndef QT_NO_TRANSLATION_BUILDER if (translationFile->isEmpty()) return false; #endif #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT QEvent ev(QEvent::LanguageChange); QCoreApplication::sendEvent(self, &ev); #endif return true; } /*! Removes the translation file \a translationFile from the list of translation files used by this application. (It does not delete the translation file from the file system.) The function returns \c true on success and false on failure. \sa installTranslator(), translate(), QObject::tr() */ bool QCoreApplication::removeTranslator(QTranslator *translationFile) { if (!translationFile) return false; if (!QCoreApplicationPrivate::checkInstance("removeTranslator")) return false; QCoreApplicationPrivate *d = self->d_func(); QWriteLocker locker(&d->translateMutex); if (d->translators.removeAll(translationFile)) { #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT locker.unlock(); if (!self->closingDown()) { QEvent ev(QEvent::LanguageChange); QCoreApplication::sendEvent(self, &ev); } #endif return true; } return false; } static void replacePercentN(QString *result, int n) { if (n >= 0) { int percentPos = 0; int len = 0; while ((percentPos = result->indexOf(QLatin1Char('%'), percentPos + len)) != -1) { len = 1; if (percentPos + len == result->length()) break; QString fmt; if (result->at(percentPos + len) == QLatin1Char('L')) { ++len; if (percentPos + len == result->length()) break; fmt = QLatin1String("%L1"); } else { fmt = QLatin1String("%1"); } if (result->at(percentPos + len) == QLatin1Char('n')) { fmt = fmt.arg(n); ++len; result->replace(percentPos, len, fmt); len = fmt.length(); } } } } /*! \threadsafe Returns the translation text for \a sourceText, by querying the installed translation files. The translation files are searched from the most recently installed file back to the first installed file. QObject::tr() provides this functionality more conveniently. \a context is typically a class name (e.g., "MyDialog") and \a sourceText is either English text or a short identifying text. \a disambiguation is an identifying string, for when the same \a sourceText is used in different roles within the same context. By default, it is \nullptr. See the \l QTranslator and \l QObject::tr() documentation for more information about contexts, disambiguations and comments. \a n is used in conjunction with \c %n to support plural forms. See QObject::tr() for details. If none of the translation files contain a translation for \a sourceText in \a context, this function returns a QString equivalent of \a sourceText. This function is not virtual. You can use alternative translation techniques by subclassing \l QTranslator. \sa QObject::tr(), installTranslator(), removeTranslator(), translate() */ QString QCoreApplication::translate(const char *context, const char *sourceText, const char *disambiguation, int n) { QString result; if (!sourceText) return result; if (self) { QCoreApplicationPrivate *d = self->d_func(); QReadLocker locker(&d->translateMutex); if (!d->translators.isEmpty()) { QList::ConstIterator it; QTranslator *translationFile; for (it = d->translators.constBegin(); it != d->translators.constEnd(); ++it) { translationFile = *it; result = translationFile->translate(context, sourceText, disambiguation, n); if (!result.isNull()) break; } } } if (result.isNull()) result = QString::fromUtf8(sourceText); replacePercentN(&result, n); return result; } /*! \fn static QString QCoreApplication::translate(const char *context, const char *key, const char *disambiguation, Encoding encoding, int n = -1) \obsolete */ // Declared in qglobal.h QString qtTrId(const char *id, int n) { return QCoreApplication::translate(0, id, 0, n); } bool QCoreApplicationPrivate::isTranslatorInstalled(QTranslator *translator) { if (!QCoreApplication::self) return false; QCoreApplicationPrivate *d = QCoreApplication::self->d_func(); QReadLocker locker(&d->translateMutex); return d->translators.contains(translator); } #else QString QCoreApplication::translate(const char *context, const char *sourceText, const char *disambiguation, int n) { Q_UNUSED(context) Q_UNUSED(disambiguation) QString ret = QString::fromUtf8(sourceText); if (n >= 0) ret.replace(QLatin1String("%n"), QString::number(n)); return ret; } #endif //QT_NO_TRANSLATION // Makes it possible to point QCoreApplication to a custom location to ensure // the directory is added to the patch, and qt.conf and deployed plugins are // found from there. This is for use cases in which QGuiApplication is // instantiated by a library and not by an application executable, for example, // Active X servers. void QCoreApplicationPrivate::setApplicationFilePath(const QString &path) { if (QCoreApplicationPrivate::cachedApplicationFilePath) *QCoreApplicationPrivate::cachedApplicationFilePath = path; else QCoreApplicationPrivate::cachedApplicationFilePath = new QString(path); } /*! Returns the directory that contains the application executable. For example, if you have installed Qt in the \c{C:\Qt} directory, and you run the \c{regexp} example, this function will return "C:/Qt/examples/tools/regexp". On \macos and iOS this will point to the directory actually containing the executable, which may be inside an application bundle (if the application is bundled). \warning On Linux, this function will try to get the path from the \c {/proc} file system. If that fails, it assumes that \c {argv[0]} contains the absolute file name of the executable. The function also assumes that the current directory has not been changed by the application. \sa applicationFilePath() */ QString QCoreApplication::applicationDirPath() { if (!self) { qWarning("QCoreApplication::applicationDirPath: Please instantiate the QApplication object first"); return QString(); } QCoreApplicationPrivate *d = self->d_func(); if (d->cachedApplicationDirPath.isNull()) d->cachedApplicationDirPath = QFileInfo(applicationFilePath()).path(); return d->cachedApplicationDirPath; } /*! Returns the file path of the application executable. For example, if you have installed Qt in the \c{/usr/local/qt} directory, and you run the \c{regexp} example, this function will return "/usr/local/qt/examples/tools/regexp/regexp". \warning On Linux, this function will try to get the path from the \c {/proc} file system. If that fails, it assumes that \c {argv[0]} contains the absolute file name of the executable. The function also assumes that the current directory has not been changed by the application. \sa applicationDirPath() */ QString QCoreApplication::applicationFilePath() { if (!self) { qWarning("QCoreApplication::applicationFilePath: Please instantiate the QApplication object first"); return QString(); } QCoreApplicationPrivate *d = self->d_func(); if (d->argc) { static QByteArray procName = QByteArray(d->argv[0]); if (procName != d->argv[0]) { // clear the cache if the procname changes, so we reprocess it. QCoreApplicationPrivate::clearApplicationFilePath(); procName = QByteArray(d->argv[0]); } } if (QCoreApplicationPrivate::cachedApplicationFilePath) return *QCoreApplicationPrivate::cachedApplicationFilePath; #if defined(Q_OS_WIN) QCoreApplicationPrivate::setApplicationFilePath(QFileInfo(qAppFileName()).filePath()); return *QCoreApplicationPrivate::cachedApplicationFilePath; #elif defined(Q_OS_MAC) QString qAppFileName_str = qAppFileName(); if(!qAppFileName_str.isEmpty()) { QFileInfo fi(qAppFileName_str); if (fi.exists()) { QCoreApplicationPrivate::setApplicationFilePath(fi.canonicalFilePath()); return *QCoreApplicationPrivate::cachedApplicationFilePath; } } #endif #if defined( Q_OS_UNIX ) # if defined(Q_OS_LINUX) && (!defined(Q_OS_ANDROID) || defined(Q_OS_ANDROID_EMBEDDED)) // Try looking for a /proc//exe symlink first which points to // the absolute path of the executable QFileInfo pfi(QString::fromLatin1("/proc/%1/exe").arg(getpid())); if (pfi.exists() && pfi.isSymLink()) { QCoreApplicationPrivate::setApplicationFilePath(pfi.canonicalFilePath()); return *QCoreApplicationPrivate::cachedApplicationFilePath; } # endif if (!arguments().isEmpty()) { QString argv0 = QFile::decodeName(arguments().at(0).toLocal8Bit()); QString absPath; if (!argv0.isEmpty() && argv0.at(0) == QLatin1Char('/')) { /* If argv0 starts with a slash, it is already an absolute file path. */ absPath = argv0; } else if (argv0.contains(QLatin1Char('/'))) { /* If argv0 contains one or more slashes, it is a file path relative to the current directory. */ absPath = QDir::current().absoluteFilePath(argv0); } else { /* Otherwise, the file path has to be determined using the PATH environment variable. */ absPath = QStandardPaths::findExecutable(argv0); } absPath = QDir::cleanPath(absPath); QFileInfo fi(absPath); if (fi.exists()) { QCoreApplicationPrivate::setApplicationFilePath(fi.canonicalFilePath()); return *QCoreApplicationPrivate::cachedApplicationFilePath; } } #endif return QString(); } /*! \since 4.4 Returns the current process ID for the application. */ qint64 QCoreApplication::applicationPid() { #if defined(Q_OS_WIN) return GetCurrentProcessId(); #elif defined(Q_OS_VXWORKS) return (pid_t) taskIdCurrent; #else return getpid(); #endif } /*! \since 4.1 Returns the list of command-line arguments. Usually arguments().at(0) is the program name, arguments().at(1) is the first argument, and arguments().last() is the last argument. See the note below about Windows. Calling this function is slow - you should store the result in a variable when parsing the command line. \warning On Unix, this list is built from the argc and argv parameters passed to the constructor in the main() function. The string-data in argv is interpreted using QString::fromLocal8Bit(); hence it is not possible to pass, for example, Japanese command line arguments on a system that runs in a Latin1 locale. Most modern Unix systems do not have this limitation, as they are Unicode-based. On Windows, the list is built from the argc and argv parameters only if modified argv/argc parameters are passed to the constructor. In that case, encoding problems might occur. Otherwise, the arguments() are constructed from the return value of \l{http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms683156(VS.85).aspx}{GetCommandLine()}. As a result of this, the string given by arguments().at(0) might not be the program name on Windows, depending on how the application was started. \sa applicationFilePath(), QCommandLineParser */ QStringList QCoreApplication::arguments() { QStringList list; if (!self) { qWarning("QCoreApplication::arguments: Please instantiate the QApplication object first"); return list; } const int ac = self->d_func()->argc; char ** const av = self->d_func()->argv; list.reserve(ac); #if defined(Q_OS_WIN) && !defined(Q_OS_WINRT) // On Windows, it is possible to pass Unicode arguments on // the command line. To restore those, we split the command line // and filter out arguments that were deleted by derived application // classes by index. QString cmdline = QString::fromWCharArray(GetCommandLine()); const QCoreApplicationPrivate *d = self->d_func(); if (d->origArgv) { const QStringList allArguments = qWinCmdArgs(cmdline); Q_ASSERT(allArguments.size() == d->origArgc); for (int i = 0; i < d->origArgc; ++i) { if (contains(ac, av, d->origArgv[i])) list.append(allArguments.at(i)); } return list; } // Fall back to rebuilding from argv/argc when a modified argv was passed. #endif // defined(Q_OS_WIN) && !defined(Q_OS_WINRT) for (int a = 0; a < ac; ++a) { list << QString::fromLocal8Bit(av[a]); } return list; } /*! \property QCoreApplication::organizationName \brief the name of the organization that wrote this application The value is used by the QSettings class when it is constructed using the empty constructor. This saves having to repeat this information each time a QSettings object is created. On Mac, QSettings uses \l {QCoreApplication::}{organizationDomain()} as the organization if it's not an empty string; otherwise it uses organizationName(). On all other platforms, QSettings uses organizationName() as the organization. \sa organizationDomain, applicationName */ /*! \fn void QCoreApplication::organizationNameChanged() \internal While not useful from C++ due to how organizationName is normally set once on startup, this is still needed for QML so that bindings are reevaluated after that initial change. */ void QCoreApplication::setOrganizationName(const QString &orgName) { if (coreappdata()->orgName == orgName) return; coreappdata()->orgName = orgName; #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT if (QCoreApplication::self) emit QCoreApplication::self->organizationNameChanged(); #endif } QString QCoreApplication::organizationName() { return coreappdata()->orgName; } /*! \property QCoreApplication::organizationDomain \brief the Internet domain of the organization that wrote this application The value is used by the QSettings class when it is constructed using the empty constructor. This saves having to repeat this information each time a QSettings object is created. On Mac, QSettings uses organizationDomain() as the organization if it's not an empty string; otherwise it uses organizationName(). On all other platforms, QSettings uses organizationName() as the organization. \sa organizationName, applicationName, applicationVersion */ /*! \fn void QCoreApplication::organizationDomainChanged() \internal Primarily for QML, see organizationNameChanged. */ void QCoreApplication::setOrganizationDomain(const QString &orgDomain) { if (coreappdata()->orgDomain == orgDomain) return; coreappdata()->orgDomain = orgDomain; #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT if (QCoreApplication::self) emit QCoreApplication::self->organizationDomainChanged(); #endif } QString QCoreApplication::organizationDomain() { return coreappdata()->orgDomain; } /*! \property QCoreApplication::applicationName \brief the name of this application The value is used by the QSettings class when it is constructed using the empty constructor. This saves having to repeat this information each time a QSettings object is created. If not set, the application name defaults to the executable name (since 5.0). \sa organizationName, organizationDomain, applicationVersion, applicationFilePath() */ /*! \fn void QCoreApplication::applicationNameChanged() \internal Primarily for QML, see organizationNameChanged. */ void QCoreApplication::setApplicationName(const QString &application) { coreappdata()->applicationNameSet = !application.isEmpty(); QString newAppName = application; if (newAppName.isEmpty() && QCoreApplication::self) newAppName = QCoreApplication::self->d_func()->appName(); if (coreappdata()->application == newAppName) return; coreappdata()->application = newAppName; #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT if (QCoreApplication::self) emit QCoreApplication::self->applicationNameChanged(); #endif } QString QCoreApplication::applicationName() { return coreappdata() ? coreappdata()->application : QString(); } // Exported for QDesktopServices (Qt4 behavior compatibility) Q_CORE_EXPORT QString qt_applicationName_noFallback() { return coreappdata()->applicationNameSet ? coreappdata()->application : QString(); } /*! \property QCoreApplication::applicationVersion \since 4.4 \brief the version of this application If not set, the application version defaults to a platform-specific value determined from the main application executable or package (since Qt 5.9): \table \header \li Platform \li Source \row \li Windows (classic desktop) \li PRODUCTVERSION parameter of the VERSIONINFO resource \row \li Universal Windows Platform \li version attribute of the application package manifest \row \li macOS, iOS, tvOS, watchOS \li CFBundleVersion property of the information property list \row \li Android \li android:versionName property of the AndroidManifest.xml manifest element \endtable On other platforms, the default is the empty string. \sa applicationName, organizationName, organizationDomain */ /*! \fn void QCoreApplication::applicationVersionChanged() \internal Primarily for QML, see organizationNameChanged. */ void QCoreApplication::setApplicationVersion(const QString &version) { coreappdata()->applicationVersionSet = !version.isEmpty(); QString newVersion = version; if (newVersion.isEmpty() && QCoreApplication::self) newVersion = QCoreApplication::self->d_func()->appVersion(); if (coreappdata()->applicationVersion == newVersion) return; coreappdata()->applicationVersion = newVersion; #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT if (QCoreApplication::self) emit QCoreApplication::self->applicationVersionChanged(); #endif } QString QCoreApplication::applicationVersion() { return coreappdata() ? coreappdata()->applicationVersion : QString(); } #if QT_CONFIG(library) Q_GLOBAL_STATIC_WITH_ARGS(QMutex, libraryPathMutex, (QMutex::Recursive)) /*! Returns a list of paths that the application will search when dynamically loading libraries. The return value of this function may change when a QCoreApplication is created. It is not recommended to call it before creating a QCoreApplication. The directory of the application executable (\b not the working directory) is part of the list if it is known. In order to make it known a QCoreApplication has to be constructed as it will use \c {argv[0]} to find it. Qt provides default library paths, but they can also be set using a \l{Using qt.conf}{qt.conf} file. Paths specified in this file will override default values. Note that if the qt.conf file is in the directory of the application executable, it may not be found until a QCoreApplication is created. If it is not found when calling this function, the default library paths will be used. The list will include the installation directory for plugins if it exists (the default installation directory for plugins is \c INSTALL/plugins, where \c INSTALL is the directory where Qt was installed). The colon separated entries of the \c QT_PLUGIN_PATH environment variable are always added. The plugin installation directory (and its existence) may change when the directory of the application executable becomes known. If you want to iterate over the list, you can use the \l foreach pseudo-keyword: \snippet code/src_corelib_kernel_qcoreapplication.cpp 2 \sa setLibraryPaths(), addLibraryPath(), removeLibraryPath(), QLibrary, {How to Create Qt Plugins} */ QStringList QCoreApplication::libraryPaths() { QMutexLocker locker(libraryPathMutex()); if (coreappdata()->manual_libpaths) return *(coreappdata()->manual_libpaths); if (!coreappdata()->app_libpaths) { QStringList *app_libpaths = new QStringList; coreappdata()->app_libpaths.reset(app_libpaths); QString libPathEnv = qEnvironmentVariable("QT_PLUGIN_PATH"); if (!libPathEnv.isEmpty()) { QStringList paths = libPathEnv.split(QDir::listSeparator(), QString::SkipEmptyParts); for (QStringList::const_iterator it = paths.constBegin(); it != paths.constEnd(); ++it) { QString canonicalPath = QDir(*it).canonicalPath(); if (!canonicalPath.isEmpty() && !app_libpaths->contains(canonicalPath)) { app_libpaths->append(canonicalPath); } } } #ifdef Q_OS_DARWIN // Check the main bundle's PlugIns directory as this is a standard location for Apple OSes. // Note that the QLibraryInfo::PluginsPath below will coincidentally be the same as this value // but with a different casing, so it can't be relied upon when the underlying filesystem // is case sensitive (and this is always the case on newer OSes like iOS). if (CFBundleRef bundleRef = CFBundleGetMainBundle()) { if (QCFType urlRef = CFBundleCopyBuiltInPlugInsURL(bundleRef)) { if (QCFType absoluteUrlRef = CFURLCopyAbsoluteURL(urlRef)) { if (QCFString path = CFURLCopyFileSystemPath(absoluteUrlRef, kCFURLPOSIXPathStyle)) { if (QFile::exists(path)) { path = QDir(path).canonicalPath(); if (!app_libpaths->contains(path)) app_libpaths->append(path); } } } } } #endif // Q_OS_DARWIN QString installPathPlugins = QLibraryInfo::location(QLibraryInfo::PluginsPath); if (QFile::exists(installPathPlugins)) { // Make sure we convert from backslashes to slashes. installPathPlugins = QDir(installPathPlugins).canonicalPath(); if (!app_libpaths->contains(installPathPlugins)) app_libpaths->append(installPathPlugins); } // If QCoreApplication is not yet instantiated, // make sure we add the application path when we construct the QCoreApplication if (self) self->d_func()->appendApplicationPathToLibraryPaths(); } return *(coreappdata()->app_libpaths); } /*! Sets the list of directories to search when loading libraries to \a paths. All existing paths will be deleted and the path list will consist of the paths given in \a paths. The library paths are reset to the default when an instance of QCoreApplication is destructed. \sa libraryPaths(), addLibraryPath(), removeLibraryPath(), QLibrary */ void QCoreApplication::setLibraryPaths(const QStringList &paths) { QMutexLocker locker(libraryPathMutex()); // setLibraryPaths() is considered a "remove everything and then add some new ones" operation. // When the application is constructed it should still amend the paths. So we keep the originals // around, and even create them if they don't exist, yet. if (!coreappdata()->app_libpaths) libraryPaths(); if (coreappdata()->manual_libpaths) *(coreappdata()->manual_libpaths) = paths; else coreappdata()->manual_libpaths.reset(new QStringList(paths)); locker.unlock(); QFactoryLoader::refreshAll(); } /*! Prepends \a path to the beginning of the library path list, ensuring that it is searched for libraries first. If \a path is empty or already in the path list, the path list is not changed. The default path list consists of a single entry, the installation directory for plugins. The default installation directory for plugins is \c INSTALL/plugins, where \c INSTALL is the directory where Qt was installed. The library paths are reset to the default when an instance of QCoreApplication is destructed. \sa removeLibraryPath(), libraryPaths(), setLibraryPaths() */ void QCoreApplication::addLibraryPath(const QString &path) { if (path.isEmpty()) return; QString canonicalPath = QDir(path).canonicalPath(); if (canonicalPath.isEmpty()) return; QMutexLocker locker(libraryPathMutex()); QStringList *libpaths = coreappdata()->manual_libpaths.data(); if (libpaths) { if (libpaths->contains(canonicalPath)) return; } else { // make sure that library paths are initialized libraryPaths(); QStringList *app_libpaths = coreappdata()->app_libpaths.data(); if (app_libpaths->contains(canonicalPath)) return; coreappdata()->manual_libpaths.reset(libpaths = new QStringList(*app_libpaths)); } libpaths->prepend(canonicalPath); locker.unlock(); QFactoryLoader::refreshAll(); } /*! Removes \a path from the library path list. If \a path is empty or not in the path list, the list is not changed. The library paths are reset to the default when an instance of QCoreApplication is destructed. \sa addLibraryPath(), libraryPaths(), setLibraryPaths() */ void QCoreApplication::removeLibraryPath(const QString &path) { if (path.isEmpty()) return; QString canonicalPath = QDir(path).canonicalPath(); if (canonicalPath.isEmpty()) return; QMutexLocker locker(libraryPathMutex()); QStringList *libpaths = coreappdata()->manual_libpaths.data(); if (libpaths) { if (libpaths->removeAll(canonicalPath) == 0) return; } else { // make sure that library paths is initialized libraryPaths(); QStringList *app_libpaths = coreappdata()->app_libpaths.data(); if (!app_libpaths->contains(canonicalPath)) return; coreappdata()->manual_libpaths.reset(libpaths = new QStringList(*app_libpaths)); libpaths->removeAll(canonicalPath); } locker.unlock(); QFactoryLoader::refreshAll(); } #endif // QT_CONFIG(library) #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT /*! Installs an event filter \a filterObj for all native events received by the application in the main thread. The event filter \a filterObj receives events via its \l {QAbstractNativeEventFilter::}{nativeEventFilter()} function, which is called for all native events received in the main thread. The QAbstractNativeEventFilter::nativeEventFilter() function should return true if the event should be filtered, i.e. stopped. It should return false to allow normal Qt processing to continue: the native event can then be translated into a QEvent and handled by the standard Qt \l{QEvent} {event} filtering, e.g. QObject::installEventFilter(). If multiple event filters are installed, the filter that was installed last is activated first. \note The filter function set here receives native messages, i.e. MSG or XCB event structs. \note Native event filters will be disabled in the application when the Qt::AA_PluginApplication attribute is set. For maximum portability, you should always try to use QEvent and QObject::installEventFilter() whenever possible. \sa QObject::installEventFilter() \since 5.0 */ void QCoreApplication::installNativeEventFilter(QAbstractNativeEventFilter *filterObj) { if (QCoreApplication::testAttribute(Qt::AA_PluginApplication)) { qWarning("Native event filters are not applied when the Qt::AA_PluginApplication attribute is set"); return; } QAbstractEventDispatcher *eventDispatcher = QAbstractEventDispatcher::instance(QCoreApplicationPrivate::theMainThread); if (!filterObj || !eventDispatcher) return; eventDispatcher->installNativeEventFilter(filterObj); } /*! Removes an event \a filterObject from this object. The request is ignored if such an event filter has not been installed. All event filters for this object are automatically removed when this object is destroyed. It is always safe to remove an event filter, even during event filter activation (i.e. from the nativeEventFilter() function). \sa installNativeEventFilter() \since 5.0 */ void QCoreApplication::removeNativeEventFilter(QAbstractNativeEventFilter *filterObject) { QAbstractEventDispatcher *eventDispatcher = QAbstractEventDispatcher::instance(); if (!filterObject || !eventDispatcher) return; eventDispatcher->removeNativeEventFilter(filterObject); } /*! \deprecated This function returns \c true if there are pending events; otherwise returns \c false. Pending events can be either from the window system or posted events using postEvent(). \note this function is not thread-safe. It may only be called in the main thread and only if there are no other threads running in the application (including threads Qt starts for its own purposes). \sa QAbstractEventDispatcher::hasPendingEvents() */ #if QT_DEPRECATED_SINCE(5, 3) bool QCoreApplication::hasPendingEvents() { QAbstractEventDispatcher *eventDispatcher = QAbstractEventDispatcher::instance(); if (eventDispatcher) return eventDispatcher->hasPendingEvents(); return false; } #endif /*! Returns a pointer to the event dispatcher object for the main thread. If no event dispatcher exists for the thread, this function returns 0. */ QAbstractEventDispatcher *QCoreApplication::eventDispatcher() { if (QCoreApplicationPrivate::theMainThread) return QCoreApplicationPrivate::theMainThread.load()->eventDispatcher(); return 0; } /*! Sets the event dispatcher for the main thread to \a eventDispatcher. This is only possible as long as there is no event dispatcher installed yet. That is, before QCoreApplication has been instantiated. This method takes ownership of the object. */ void QCoreApplication::setEventDispatcher(QAbstractEventDispatcher *eventDispatcher) { QThread *mainThread = QCoreApplicationPrivate::theMainThread; if (!mainThread) mainThread = QThread::currentThread(); // will also setup theMainThread mainThread->setEventDispatcher(eventDispatcher); } #endif // QT_NO_QOBJECT /*! \macro Q_COREAPP_STARTUP_FUNCTION(QtStartUpFunction ptr) \since 5.1 \relates QCoreApplication \reentrant Adds a global function that will be called from the QCoreApplication constructor. This macro is normally used to initialize libraries for program-wide functionality, without requiring the application to call into the library for initialization. The function specified by \a ptr should take no arguments and should return nothing. For example: \snippet code/src_corelib_kernel_qcoreapplication.cpp 3 Note that the startup function will run at the end of the QCoreApplication constructor, before any GUI initialization. If GUI code is required in the function, use a timer (or a queued invocation) to perform the initialization later on, from the event loop. If QCoreApplication is deleted and another QCoreApplication is created, the startup function will be invoked again. \note This macro is not suitable for use in library code that is then statically linked into an application since the function may not be called at all due to being eliminated by the linker. */ /*! \fn void qAddPostRoutine(QtCleanUpFunction ptr) \threadsafe \relates QCoreApplication Adds a global routine that will be called from the QCoreApplication destructor. This function is normally used to add cleanup routines for program-wide functionality. The cleanup routines are called in the reverse order of their addition. The function specified by \a ptr should take no arguments and should return nothing. For example: \snippet code/src_corelib_kernel_qcoreapplication.cpp 4 Note that for an application- or module-wide cleanup, qAddPostRoutine() is often not suitable. For example, if the program is split into dynamically loaded modules, the relevant module may be unloaded long before the QCoreApplication destructor is called. In such cases, if using qAddPostRoutine() is still desirable, qRemovePostRoutine() can be used to prevent a routine from being called by the QCoreApplication destructor. For example, if that routine was called before the module was unloaded. For modules and libraries, using a reference-counted initialization manager or Qt's parent-child deletion mechanism may be better. Here is an example of a private class that uses the parent-child mechanism to call a cleanup function at the right time: \snippet code/src_corelib_kernel_qcoreapplication.cpp 5 By selecting the right parent object, this can often be made to clean up the module's data at the right moment. \note This function has been thread-safe since Qt 5.10. \sa qRemovePostRoutine() */ /*! \fn void qRemovePostRoutine(QtCleanUpFunction ptr) \threadsafe \relates QCoreApplication \since 5.3 Removes the cleanup routine specified by \a ptr from the list of routines called by the QCoreApplication destructor. The routine must have been previously added to the list by a call to qAddPostRoutine(), otherwise this function has no effect. \note This function has been thread-safe since Qt 5.10. \sa qAddPostRoutine() */ /*! \macro Q_DECLARE_TR_FUNCTIONS(context) \relates QCoreApplication The Q_DECLARE_TR_FUNCTIONS() macro declares and implements two translation functions, \c tr() and \c trUtf8(), with these signatures: \snippet code/src_corelib_kernel_qcoreapplication.cpp 6 This macro is useful if you want to use QObject::tr() or QObject::trUtf8() in classes that don't inherit from QObject. Q_DECLARE_TR_FUNCTIONS() must appear at the very top of the class definition (before the first \c{public:} or \c{protected:}). For example: \snippet code/src_corelib_kernel_qcoreapplication.cpp 7 The \a context parameter is normally the class name, but it can be any text. \sa Q_OBJECT, QObject::tr(), QObject::trUtf8() */ QT_END_NAMESPACE #ifndef QT_NO_QOBJECT #include "moc_qcoreapplication.cpp" #endif