Thread Support
The thread support commands are for specifying the level of support for multithreaded programming in a class or function. There are three levels of support: threadsafe
, reentrant
and nonreentrant
.
The default is nonreentrant
which means that the associated class or function cannot be called by multiple threads. Reentrant
and threadsafe
are levels primarily used for classes.
Reentrant
means that all the functions in the referenced class can be called simultaneously by multiple threads, provided that each invocation of the functions reference unique data. While threadsafe
means that all the functions in the referenced class can be called simultaneously by multiple threads even when each invocation references shared data.
When a class is marked \reentrant or \threadsafe, functions in that class can be marked nonreentrant
using the \nonreentrant command.
Example
/*! \class QLocale \brief The QLocale class converts between numbers and their string representations in various languages. \reentrant \ingroup i18n \ingroup text QLocale is initialized with a language/country pair in its constructor and offers number-to-string and string-to-number conversion functions similar to those in QString. ... \nonreentrant Sets the global default locale to \a locale. These values are used when a QLocale object is constructed with no arguments. If this function is not called, the system's locale is used. \warning In a multithreaded application, the default locale should be set at application startup, before any non-GUI threads are created. \sa system(), c() */ void QLocale::setDefault(const QLocale &locale) { default_d = locale.d; }
QDoc generates a notification when a class is declared reentrant, and lists the exceptions (the declared nonreentrant functions). A link to the general documentation on reentrancy and thread-safety is included. In addition a warning, "Warning: This function is not reentrant.", is generated in the nonreentrant functions' documentation.
QDoc will generate the same notification and warnings when a class is declared threadsafe.
For more information see the general documentation on reentrancy and thread-safety.
Commands
\threadsafe
The \threadsafe command includes a line in the documentation to indicate that the associated class or function is threadsafe and can be called simultaneously by multiple threads, even when separate invocations reference shared data.
The command must stand on its own line.
The documentation generated from this command will be similar to the what is generated for the \reentrant command. See the example above in the introduction.
See also \reentrant and \nonreentrant.
\reentrant
The \reentrant command indicates that the associated class or function can be called simultaneously by multiple threads, provided that each invocation references its own data. See the example above.
The command must stand on its own line.
See also \nonreentrant and \threadsafe.
\nonreentrant
The \nonreentrant command indicates that the associated class or function cannot be called by multiple threads. Nonreentrant is the default case.
The command must stand on its own line.
When a class is marked \reentrant or \threadsafe, functions in that class can be marked nonreentrant
using this command in the \fn comment of the functions to be excluded.
See also \reentrant and \threadsafe.