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QProcess and Ctrl-Z + BG on Linux

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  • S Sameer
    14 Jun 2023, 15:23

    I have a Qt gui application that runs on Linux.

    It is a QApplication that uses QProcess to do some work when a button is clicked. The finished signal on the QProcess is connected to a slot.

    connect(workerProcess, SIGNAL(finished(int,QProcess::ExitStatus)), this, SLOT(onWorkerFinished(int,QProcess::ExitStatus)));

    Things work fine when I run the program normally on commandline
    % myProgram

    or run it in the background
    % myProgram&

    However, if I run it normally, then suspend it using Ctrl-Z and put it in the background, things stop working
    % myprogram
    Ctrl+Z
    bg

    The GUI still responds. But when I click the button, it seems to start the QProcess but the slot connected to the "finished" signal never gets called.

    Not sure what's going on. Does suspending the application and putting it in the background somehow mess the signal/slot connection?

    Would appreciate any help to fix this?

    Thanks

    J Online
    J Online
    JonB
    wrote on 15 Jun 2023, 08:45 last edited by JonB
    #6

    @Sameer , @jsulm , @kkoehne
    To make up for my earlier misunderstanding, have tried following standalone code:

    #include <QApplication>
    #include <QDebug>
    #include <QLayout>
    #include <QObject>
    #include <QProcess>
    #include <QPushButton>
    #include <QWidget>
    
    class MyWidget : public QWidget
    {
    private:
        QProcess *proc;
    
    public slots:
        void onClicked()
        {
            proc = new QProcess;
            QObject::connect(proc, &QProcess::started, this, []() { qDebug() << "Process started"; } );
            QObject::connect(proc, QOverload<int, QProcess::ExitStatus>::of(&QProcess::finished), this, []() { qDebug() << "Process finished"; } );
            proc->start("sleep", { "10"} );
        }
    };
    
    int main(int argc, char *argv[])
    {
        QApplication a(argc, argv);
        MyWidget w;
        w.setLayout(new QVBoxLayout);
        QPushButton *pb = new QPushButton("QProcess");
        w.layout()->addWidget(pb);
        w.show();
    
        QObject::connect(pb, &QPushButton::clicked, &w, &MyWidget::onClicked);
    
        return a.exec();
    }
    

    Qt 5.15 (I don't have Qt6), Ubuntu 22.04. Run from terminal. Press Ctrl+Z there after launching, then bg. Then press the button. I do see in the terminal from the debug output Process started followed by Process finished 10 seconds later. So it works normally.

    Suggest you first try this, does it work for you? If it does compare against your code to find a difference.

    S 1 Reply Last reply 19 Jul 2023, 06:02
    2
    • J JonB
      15 Jun 2023, 07:25

      @jsulm
      Sorry, but you are incorrect :) [See my EDIT at end, where I correct myself and apologise, I had not seen that the OP had used bg after Ctrl+Z.] Been using Ctrl+Z from terminal processes since (probably) before you were born ;-)

      ctrl+z stops the process and returns you to the current shell. You can now type fg to continue process, or type bg to continue the process in the background.

      See here:

      jon@ubuntu-22:~$ sleep 500
      ^Z
      [1]+  Stopped                 sleep 500
      jon@ubuntu-22:~$ ps -lu jon  | grep sleep
      0 T  1000    2967    2424  0  80   0 -  4256 do_sig pts/0    00:00:00 sleep
      jon@ubuntu-22:~$ bg
      [1]+ sleep 500 &
      jon@ubuntu-22:~$ ps -lu jon  | grep sleep
      0 S  1000    2967    2424  0  80   0 -  4256 do_sys pts/0    00:00:00 sleep
      jon@ubuntu-22:~$ 
      

      Note the following:

      • After pressing Ctrl+Z the shell responds with Stopped. Stopped means ... stopped! Not running.
      • The ps shows T for the state of the sleep. That is for "stopped".
      • It is only when I type bg ("background") that the process is put into the background and at that point allowed to continue. It is only now that it will run but pause if it tries to do input or output. Note the ps now shows the process on S, which is for "sleeping", i.e. running but happening to be sleeping at present.

      The OP mentioned nothing about asking the shell to put it into the background after pressing Ctrl+Z.

      Try the following:

      • From a terminal run gedit. At this point you can type characters into it.
      • Now press Ctrl+Z. Shell reports gedit is "Stopped". Now try typing into its window: nothing happens, the characters are not even echoed. The gedit is stopped and does not accept any input! (After a while Ubuntu/desktop manager reports "program is not responding".)
      • Now type bg. You can interact with the gedit again :)

      EDIT
      Ohhh, I never saw the OP typed bg! That's the trouble with people not using Code to mark this. Now I see it in the title too. Sorry!

      OK, my apologies, we are talking about after typing bg here, right? That changes things!

      @Sameer
      I might investigate this behaviour. As you say, in principle Ctrl+Z followed by bg ought be the same as running it with & from the start. However, one difference is that it receives two Linux signals in the former case, might depend how they were handled.

      Could you make two things clear:

      • Your code includes workerProcess. Is this just the name for your QProcess, what I want to know is whether your code here involves any threads? I will assume/hope not.
      • You press the button which runs QProcess::start() after you have done the suspend/background, right?

      Also, for the record, what is the process you are spawning from QProcess? Is is a non-UI program which (might do) stdin/stdout (like gcc), or is it a process that will use the desktop windowing system (like gedit)?

      S Offline
      S Offline
      SameerK
      wrote on 18 Jul 2023, 23:29 last edited by
      #7

      @JonB OP here. My apologies. I didn't have notifications on. So didn't see these useful responses till today.

      I am still trying to solve this problem.
      To answer your questions

      • workerProcess is just the name of the QProcess. No threads involved?
      • I DO press the button which starts the workerProcess AFTER the suspend/background
      • The worker process is doing non UI stuff.

      Hope this answers your questions. Desperately seeking help on this.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • J JonB
        15 Jun 2023, 08:45

        @Sameer , @jsulm , @kkoehne
        To make up for my earlier misunderstanding, have tried following standalone code:

        #include <QApplication>
        #include <QDebug>
        #include <QLayout>
        #include <QObject>
        #include <QProcess>
        #include <QPushButton>
        #include <QWidget>
        
        class MyWidget : public QWidget
        {
        private:
            QProcess *proc;
        
        public slots:
            void onClicked()
            {
                proc = new QProcess;
                QObject::connect(proc, &QProcess::started, this, []() { qDebug() << "Process started"; } );
                QObject::connect(proc, QOverload<int, QProcess::ExitStatus>::of(&QProcess::finished), this, []() { qDebug() << "Process finished"; } );
                proc->start("sleep", { "10"} );
            }
        };
        
        int main(int argc, char *argv[])
        {
            QApplication a(argc, argv);
            MyWidget w;
            w.setLayout(new QVBoxLayout);
            QPushButton *pb = new QPushButton("QProcess");
            w.layout()->addWidget(pb);
            w.show();
        
            QObject::connect(pb, &QPushButton::clicked, &w, &MyWidget::onClicked);
        
            return a.exec();
        }
        

        Qt 5.15 (I don't have Qt6), Ubuntu 22.04. Run from terminal. Press Ctrl+Z there after launching, then bg. Then press the button. I do see in the terminal from the debug output Process started followed by Process finished 10 seconds later. So it works normally.

        Suggest you first try this, does it work for you? If it does compare against your code to find a difference.

        S Offline
        S Offline
        SameerK
        wrote on 19 Jul 2023, 06:02 last edited by SameerK
        #8

        @JonB
        I tried your simple example and it works as expected. I see both the started and finished slots being called even after suspending the application with ctrl+Z and putting it in background.

        However same thing doesn't seem to happen in my code. Unfortunately my code is too complex to put here. But I tried the following experiment.

        Where I start my process, I also started a test process similar to your example.

        m_testProcess = new QProcess;
        QObject::connect(m_testProcess, &QProcess::started, this, []() { qDebug() << "m_testProcess started"; } );
        QObject::connect(m_testProcess, QOverload<int, QProcess::ExitStatus>::of(&QProcess::finished), this, []() { qDebug() << "m_testProcess finished"; } );
        m_testProcess->start("sleep", { "1"} );
        

        Before Ctrl-Z + bg, I see both started and finished messages.
        After Ctrl-Z + bg, I see the started message but not the finished message.

        Any idea what might be going on?

        J 1 Reply Last reply 19 Jul 2023, 08:54
        0
        • S SameerK
          19 Jul 2023, 06:02

          @JonB
          I tried your simple example and it works as expected. I see both the started and finished slots being called even after suspending the application with ctrl+Z and putting it in background.

          However same thing doesn't seem to happen in my code. Unfortunately my code is too complex to put here. But I tried the following experiment.

          Where I start my process, I also started a test process similar to your example.

          m_testProcess = new QProcess;
          QObject::connect(m_testProcess, &QProcess::started, this, []() { qDebug() << "m_testProcess started"; } );
          QObject::connect(m_testProcess, QOverload<int, QProcess::ExitStatus>::of(&QProcess::finished), this, []() { qDebug() << "m_testProcess finished"; } );
          m_testProcess->start("sleep", { "1"} );
          

          Before Ctrl-Z + bg, I see both started and finished messages.
          After Ctrl-Z + bg, I see the started message but not the finished message.

          Any idea what might be going on?

          J Online
          J Online
          JonB
          wrote on 19 Jul 2023, 08:54 last edited by
          #9

          @SameerK said in QProcess and Ctrl-Z + BG on Linux:

          However same thing doesn't seem to happen in my code. Unfortunately my code is too complex to put here.

          I think you know the likely response here! If code works in simple case but not in your "complex" case then probably nobody can guess. You really need to comment out swathes of code till you can find where the different behaviour seems to emanate from.

          A couple of tests here. I don't know what we will make of the answers, but let's gather the information:

          • Where you do your test you say you do this sleep() as well as your process. Eliminate your process for a while, just in case that somehow interferes.
          • Instead of going bg after the Ctrl+Z try fg instead. Any difference?
          • When you do not get the QProcess::finished signal, use ps to find the current state of the sub-process. Is it running? Suspended? Zombied? Removed from running processes and no longer found?
          • Attach slot to signal void QProcess::stateChanged(QProcess::ProcessState newState). What state changes do you get?
          • When setting off sub-process start a QTimer for, say, once per second. Have it report QProcess::ProcessState QProcess::state() const. What state does that repeatedly report?
          S 2 Replies Last reply 19 Jul 2023, 17:44
          1
          • J JonB
            19 Jul 2023, 08:54

            @SameerK said in QProcess and Ctrl-Z + BG on Linux:

            However same thing doesn't seem to happen in my code. Unfortunately my code is too complex to put here.

            I think you know the likely response here! If code works in simple case but not in your "complex" case then probably nobody can guess. You really need to comment out swathes of code till you can find where the different behaviour seems to emanate from.

            A couple of tests here. I don't know what we will make of the answers, but let's gather the information:

            • Where you do your test you say you do this sleep() as well as your process. Eliminate your process for a while, just in case that somehow interferes.
            • Instead of going bg after the Ctrl+Z try fg instead. Any difference?
            • When you do not get the QProcess::finished signal, use ps to find the current state of the sub-process. Is it running? Suspended? Zombied? Removed from running processes and no longer found?
            • Attach slot to signal void QProcess::stateChanged(QProcess::ProcessState newState). What state changes do you get?
            • When setting off sub-process start a QTimer for, say, once per second. Have it report QProcess::ProcessState QProcess::state() const. What state does that repeatedly report?
            S Offline
            S Offline
            SameerK
            wrote on 19 Jul 2023, 17:44 last edited by
            #10

            @JonB Will try out your sugeestions.

            Just wanna say that I really appreciate you responding to this "help me find a needle in the haystack" kind of question :)

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • J JonB
              19 Jul 2023, 08:54

              @SameerK said in QProcess and Ctrl-Z + BG on Linux:

              However same thing doesn't seem to happen in my code. Unfortunately my code is too complex to put here.

              I think you know the likely response here! If code works in simple case but not in your "complex" case then probably nobody can guess. You really need to comment out swathes of code till you can find where the different behaviour seems to emanate from.

              A couple of tests here. I don't know what we will make of the answers, but let's gather the information:

              • Where you do your test you say you do this sleep() as well as your process. Eliminate your process for a while, just in case that somehow interferes.
              • Instead of going bg after the Ctrl+Z try fg instead. Any difference?
              • When you do not get the QProcess::finished signal, use ps to find the current state of the sub-process. Is it running? Suspended? Zombied? Removed from running processes and no longer found?
              • Attach slot to signal void QProcess::stateChanged(QProcess::ProcessState newState). What state changes do you get?
              • When setting off sub-process start a QTimer for, say, once per second. Have it report QProcess::ProcessState QProcess::state() const. What state does that repeatedly report?
              S Offline
              S Offline
              SameerK
              wrote on 19 Jul 2023, 18:19 last edited by
              #11

              @JonB said in QProcess and Ctrl-Z + BG on Linux:

              These were very useful suggestions.

              • Where you do your test you say you do this sleep() as well as your process. Eliminate your process for a while, just in case that somehow interferes.
                Did this. Still the same result.
              • Instead of going bg after the Ctrl+Z try fg instead. Any difference?
                Doing fg instead bg produces same result.
              • When you do not get the QProcess::finished signal, use ps to find the current state of the sub-process. Is it running? Suspended? Zombied? Removed from running processes and no longer found?
                Shows up as follows withps - [sleep] <defunct>
              • Attach slot to signal void QProcess::stateChanged(QProcess::ProcessState newState). What state changes do you get?
                I get Starting and Running, nothing afterwards.
                Debug: m_runProcess stateChanged - QProcess::Starting
                Debug: m_runProcess stateChanged - QProcess::Running
                Debug: m_runProcess started
              • When setting off sub-process start a QTimer for, say, once per second. Have it report QProcess::ProcessState QProcess::state() const. What state does that repeatedly report?
                Tried this. It reports the process as "Running"
              J 1 Reply Last reply 19 Jul 2023, 20:06
              1
              • S SameerK
                19 Jul 2023, 18:19

                @JonB said in QProcess and Ctrl-Z + BG on Linux:

                These were very useful suggestions.

                • Where you do your test you say you do this sleep() as well as your process. Eliminate your process for a while, just in case that somehow interferes.
                  Did this. Still the same result.
                • Instead of going bg after the Ctrl+Z try fg instead. Any difference?
                  Doing fg instead bg produces same result.
                • When you do not get the QProcess::finished signal, use ps to find the current state of the sub-process. Is it running? Suspended? Zombied? Removed from running processes and no longer found?
                  Shows up as follows withps - [sleep] <defunct>
                • Attach slot to signal void QProcess::stateChanged(QProcess::ProcessState newState). What state changes do you get?
                  I get Starting and Running, nothing afterwards.
                  Debug: m_runProcess stateChanged - QProcess::Starting
                  Debug: m_runProcess stateChanged - QProcess::Running
                  Debug: m_runProcess started
                • When setting off sub-process start a QTimer for, say, once per second. Have it report QProcess::ProcessState QProcess::state() const. What state does that repeatedly report?
                  Tried this. It reports the process as "Running"
                J Online
                J Online
                JonB
                wrote on 19 Jul 2023, 20:06 last edited by
                #12

                @SameerK said in QProcess and Ctrl-Z + BG on Linux:

                Shows up as follows withps - [sleep] <defunct>

                Not sure. From what you say I think the sleep sub-process has exited but not been waited on by its parent. Qt parent still thinks process is running, hence no finished.

                Really I'm afraid as you know we have demonstrated in a small test program that it behaves OK there. I think you will have to find out what differs in your real program.

                S 1 Reply Last reply 19 Jul 2023, 21:41
                0
                • J JonB
                  19 Jul 2023, 20:06

                  @SameerK said in QProcess and Ctrl-Z + BG on Linux:

                  Shows up as follows withps - [sleep] <defunct>

                  Not sure. From what you say I think the sleep sub-process has exited but not been waited on by its parent. Qt parent still thinks process is running, hence no finished.

                  Really I'm afraid as you know we have demonstrated in a small test program that it behaves OK there. I think you will have to find out what differs in your real program.

                  S Offline
                  S Offline
                  SameerK
                  wrote on 19 Jul 2023, 21:41 last edited by SameerK
                  #13

                  @JonB

                  Yes that's what seems to be happening.

                  Another thing I discovered. This happens only with an explicit Ctrl+Z.
                  If I send a SIGSTOP to the main application process from another terminal and then put it into background, things are fine.

                  J 1 Reply Last reply 20 Jul 2023, 07:06
                  0
                  • S SameerK
                    19 Jul 2023, 21:41

                    @JonB

                    Yes that's what seems to be happening.

                    Another thing I discovered. This happens only with an explicit Ctrl+Z.
                    If I send a SIGSTOP to the main application process from another terminal and then put it into background, things are fine.

                    J Online
                    J Online
                    JonB
                    wrote on 20 Jul 2023, 07:06 last edited by
                    #14

                    @SameerK
                    I had meant to mention testing that. That's ridiculous. But again I'm afraid I don't know what it tells us, nor what you can do about it. I reiterate that since it does not happen on my small test program you are going to have to find out what is different in your complex situation, somehow.

                    S 2 Replies Last reply 20 Jul 2023, 15:19
                    0
                    • J JonB
                      20 Jul 2023, 07:06

                      @SameerK
                      I had meant to mention testing that. That's ridiculous. But again I'm afraid I don't know what it tells us, nor what you can do about it. I reiterate that since it does not happen on my small test program you are going to have to find out what is different in your complex situation, somehow.

                      S Offline
                      S Offline
                      SameerK
                      wrote on 20 Jul 2023, 15:19 last edited by
                      #15

                      @JonB Doing that now.

                      But once again wanna mention that I truly appreciate you spending time helping me debug this.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • J JonB
                        20 Jul 2023, 07:06

                        @SameerK
                        I had meant to mention testing that. That's ridiculous. But again I'm afraid I don't know what it tells us, nor what you can do about it. I reiterate that since it does not happen on my small test program you are going to have to find out what is different in your complex situation, somehow.

                        S Offline
                        S Offline
                        SameerK
                        wrote on 20 Jul 2023, 17:33 last edited by
                        #16

                        @JonB I went back to your small test program and ran another experiment and now I can get that to fail too!!!

                        Invoke test application
                        Ctrl-Z
                        bg
                        Press button
                        Things work fine (Get both started and finished signals)

                        Invoke test application
                        Press button
                        Things work fine (Get both started and finished signals)
                        Ctrl-Z
                        bg
                        Press button
                        Things don't work anymore (Get started signal but no finished signal!!!)

                        Btw, I am using Qt5.12 and on RedHat Enterprise Linux 8.6

                        J 1 Reply Last reply 20 Jul 2023, 17:39
                        0
                        • S SameerK
                          20 Jul 2023, 17:33

                          @JonB I went back to your small test program and ran another experiment and now I can get that to fail too!!!

                          Invoke test application
                          Ctrl-Z
                          bg
                          Press button
                          Things work fine (Get both started and finished signals)

                          Invoke test application
                          Press button
                          Things work fine (Get both started and finished signals)
                          Ctrl-Z
                          bg
                          Press button
                          Things don't work anymore (Get started signal but no finished signal!!!)

                          Btw, I am using Qt5.12 and on RedHat Enterprise Linux 8.6

                          J Online
                          J Online
                          JonB
                          wrote on 20 Jul 2023, 17:39 last edited by
                          #17

                          @SameerK
                          If it's repeatable you can raise a bug report for it. They will want as small a piece of code for the UI as possible. Pick something standard under Linux for the command (sleep might be suitable).

                          1 Reply Last reply
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