Threads & Concurrency

Operations which could potentially block should not be executed in the main loop. The main loop is in charge of input processing and drawing and blocking it results in the user interface freezing. For the user this means not getting any feedback and not being able to pause or abort the operation which causes the problem.

Such an operation might be:

  • Loading external resources like an image file on the web

  • Searching the local file system

  • Writing, reading and copying files

  • Calculations where the runtime depends on some external factor

The following examples show

  • how Python threads, running in parallel to GTK, can interact with the UI

  • how to use and control asynchronous I/O operations in glib

Threads

The first example uses a Python thread to execute code in the background while still showing feedback on the progress in a window.

import threading
import time
import gi

gi.require_version('Gtk', '4.0')
from gi.repository import GLib, Gtk, GObject


class Application(Gtk.Application):

    def do_activate(self):
        window = Gtk.ApplicationWindow(application=self)
        self.progress = Gtk.ProgressBar(show_text=True)

        window.set_child(self.progress)
        window.present()

        thread = threading.Thread(target=self.example_target)
        thread.daemon = True
        thread.start()

    def update_progress(self, i):
        self.progress.pulse()
        self.progress.set_text(str(i))
        return False

    def example_target(self):
        for i in range(50):
            GLib.idle_add(self.update_progress, i)
            time.sleep(0.2)


app = Application()
app.run()

The example shows a simple window containing a progress bar. After everything is set up it constructs a Python thread, passes it a function to execute, starts the thread and the GTK main loop. After the main loop is started it is possible to see the window and interact with it.

In the background example_target() gets executed and calls GLib.idle_add() and time.sleep() in a loop. In this example time.sleep() represents the blocking operation. GLib.idle_add() takes the update_progress() function and arguments that will get passed to the function and asks the main loop to schedule its execution in the main thread. This is needed because GTK isn’t thread safe; only one thread, the main thread, is allowed to call GTK code at all times.

Threads: FAQ

  • I’m porting code from pygtk (GTK 2) to PyGObject (GTK 3). Has anything changed regarding threads?

    Short answer: No.

    Long answer: gtk.gdk.threads_init(), gtk.gdk.threads_enter() and gtk.gdk.threads_leave() are now Gdk.threads_init(), Gdk.threads_enter() and Gdk.threads_leave(). gobject.threads_init() can be removed.

  • I’m using Gdk.threads_init() and want to get rid of it. What do I need to do?

  • What about signals and threads?

    Signals get executed in the context they are emitted from. In which context the object is created or where connect() is called from doesn’t matter. In GStreamer, for example, some signals can be called from a different thread, see the respective signal documentation for when this is the case. In case you connect to such a signal you have to make sure to not call any GTK code or use GLib.idle_add() accordingly.

  • What if I need to call GTK code in signal handlers emitted from a thread?

    In case you have a signal that is emitted from another thread and you need to call GTK code during and not after signal handling, you can push the operation with an threading.Event object to the main loop and wait in the signal handler until the operation gets scheduled and the result is available. Be aware that if the signal is emitted from the main loop this will deadlock. See the following example

    # [...]
    
    toggle_button = Gtk.ToggleButton()
    
    def signal_handler_in_thread():
    
        def function_calling_gtk(event, result):
            result.append(toggle_button.get_active())
            event.set()
    
        event = threading.Event()
        result = []
        GLib.idle_add(function_calling_gtk, event, result)
        event.wait()
        toggle_button_is_active = result[0]
        print(toggle_button_is_active)
    
    # [...]
    
  • What about the Python GIL ?

    Similar to I/O operations in Python, all PyGObject calls release the GIL during their execution and other Python threads can be executed during that time.

Asynchronous Operations

In addition to functions for blocking I/O glib also provides corresponding asynchronous versions, usually with the same name plus a _async suffix. These functions do the same operation as the synchronous ones but don’t block during their execution. Instead of blocking they execute the operation in the background and call a callback once the operation is finished or got canceled.

The following example shows how to download a web page and display the source in a text field. In addition it’s possible to abort the running operation.

import time
import gi

gi.require_version('Gtk', '4.0')
from gi.repository import Gio, GLib, Gtk


class DownloadWindow(Gtk.ApplicationWindow):

    def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        super().__init__(*args, **kwargs, default_width=500, default_height=400,
                         title="Async I/O Example")

        self.cancellable = Gio.Cancellable()

        self.cancel_button = Gtk.Button(label="Cancel")
        self.cancel_button.connect("clicked", self.on_cancel_clicked)
        self.cancel_button.set_sensitive(False)

        self.start_button = Gtk.Button(label="Load")
        self.start_button.connect("clicked", self.on_start_clicked)

        textview = Gtk.TextView(vexpand=True)
        self.textbuffer = textview.get_buffer()
        scrolled = Gtk.ScrolledWindow()
        scrolled.set_child(textview)

        box = Gtk.Box(orientation=Gtk.Orientation.VERTICAL, spacing=6,
                      margin_start=12, margin_end=12, margin_top=12, margin_bottom=12)
        box.append(self.start_button)
        box.append(self.cancel_button)
        box.append(scrolled)

        self.set_child(box)

    def append_text(self, text):
        iter_ = self.textbuffer.get_end_iter()
        self.textbuffer.insert(iter_, f"[{time.time()}] {text}\n")

    def on_start_clicked(self, button):
        button.set_sensitive(False)
        self.cancel_button.set_sensitive(True)
        self.append_text("Start clicked...")

        file_ = Gio.File.new_for_uri(
            "http://python-gtk-3-tutorial.readthedocs.org/")
        file_.load_contents_async(
            self.cancellable, self.on_ready_callback, None)

    def on_cancel_clicked(self, button):
        self.append_text("Cancel clicked...")
        self.cancellable.cancel()

    def on_ready_callback(self, source_object, result, user_data):
        try:
            succes, content, etag = source_object.load_contents_finish(result)
        except GLib.GError as e:
            self.append_text(f"Error: {e.message}")
        else:
            content_text = content[:100].decode("utf-8")
            self.append_text(f"Got content: {content_text}...")
        finally:
            self.cancellable.reset()
            self.cancel_button.set_sensitive(False)
            self.start_button.set_sensitive(True)


class Application(Gtk.Application):

    def do_activate(self):
        window = DownloadWindow(application=self)
        window.present()


app = Application()
app.run()

The example uses the asynchronous version of Gio.File.load_contents() to load the content of an URI pointing to a web page, but first we look at the simpler blocking alternative:

We create a Gio.File instance for our URI and call Gio.File.load_contents(), which, if it doesn’t raise an error, returns the content of the web page we wanted.

file = Gio.File.new_for_uri("https://developer.gnome.org/documentation/tutorials/beginners.html")
try:
    status, contents, etag_out = file.load_contents(None)
except GLib.GError:
    print("Error!")
else:
    print(contents)

In the asynchronous variant we need two more things:

  • A Gio.Cancellable, which we can use during the operation to abort or cancel it.

  • And a Gio.AsyncReadyCallback() callback function, which gets called once the operation is finished and we can collect the result.

The window contains two buttons for which we register clicked signal handlers:

Once the operation is finished, either because the result is available, an error occurred or the operation was canceled, on_ready_callback() will be called with the Gio.File instance and a Gio.AsyncResult instance which holds the result.

To get the result we now have to call Gio.File.load_contents_finish() which returns the same things as Gio.File.load_contents() except in this case the result is already there and it will return immediately without blocking.

After all this is done we call Gio.Cancellable.reset() so the Gio.Cancellable can be re-used for new operations and we can click the “Load” button again. This works since we made sure that only one operation can be active at any time by deactivating the “Load” button using Gtk.Widget.set_sensitive().