/**************************************************************************** ** ** Copyright (C) 2010 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). ** All rights reserved. ** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com) ** ** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit. ** ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:FDL$ ** Commercial Usage ** Licensees holding valid Qt Commercial licenses may use this file in ** accordance with the Qt Commercial License Agreement provided with the ** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in a ** written agreement between you and Nokia. ** ** GNU Free Documentation License ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Free ** Documentation License version 1.3 as published by the Free Software ** Foundation and appearing in the file included in the packaging of this ** file. ** ** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact ** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com. ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ ** ****************************************************************************/ /*! \example network/threadedfortuneserver \title Threaded Fortune Server Example The Threaded Fortune Server example shows how to create a server for a simple network service that uses threads to handle requests from different clients. It is intended to be run alongside the Fortune Client example. \image threadedfortuneserver-example.png The implementation of this example is similar to that of the \l{network/fortuneserver}{Fortune Server} example, but here we will implement a subclass of QTcpServer that starts each connection in a different thread. For this we need two classes: FortuneServer, a QTcpServer subclass, and FortuneThread, which inherits QThread. \snippet examples/network/threadedfortuneserver/fortuneserver.h 0 FortuneServer inherits QTcpServer and reimplements QTcpServer::incomingConnection(). We also use it for storing the list of random fortunes. \snippet examples/network/threadedfortuneserver/fortuneserver.cpp 0 We use FortuneServer's constructor to simply generate the list of fortunes. \snippet examples/network/threadedfortuneserver/fortuneserver.cpp 1 Our implementation of QTcpServer::incomingConnection() creates a FortuneThread object, passing the incoming socket descriptor and a random fortune to FortuneThread's constructor. By connecting FortuneThread's finished() signal to QObject::deleteLater(), we ensure that the thread gets deleted once it has finished. We can then call QThread::start(), which starts the thread. \snippet examples/network/threadedfortuneserver/fortunethread.h 0 Moving on to the FortuneThread class, this is a QThread subclass whose job is to write the fortune to the connected socket. The class reimplements QThread::run(), and it has a signal for reporting errors. \snippet examples/network/threadedfortuneserver/fortunethread.cpp 0 FortuneThread's constructor simply stores the socket descriptor and fortune text, so that they are available for run() later on. \snippet examples/network/threadedfortuneserver/fortunethread.cpp 1 The first thing our run() function does is to create a QTcpSocket object on the stack. What's worth noticing is that we are creating this object inside the thread, which automatically associates the socket to the thread's event loop. This ensures that Qt will not try to deliver events to our socket from the main thread while we are accessing it from FortuneThread::run(). \snippet examples/network/threadedfortuneserver/fortunethread.cpp 2 The socket is initialized by calling QTcpSocket::setSocketDescriptor(), passing our socket descriptor as an argument. We expect this to succeed, but just to be sure, (although unlikely, the system may run out of resources,) we catch the return value and report any error. \snippet examples/network/threadedfortuneserver/fortunethread.cpp 3 As with the \l{network/fortuneserver}{Fortune Server} example, we encode the fortune into a QByteArray using QDataStream. \snippet examples/network/threadedfortuneserver/fortunethread.cpp 4 But unlike the previous example, we finish off by calling QTcpSocket::waitForDisconnected(), which blocks the calling thread until the socket has disconnected. Because we are running in a separate thread, the GUI will remain responsive. \sa {Fortune Server Example}, {Fortune Client Example}, {Blocking Fortune Client Example} */