Update-Installer/external/win32cpp/include/thread.h

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// Win32++ Version 7.2
// Released: 5th AUgust 2011
//
// David Nash
// email: dnash@bigpond.net.au
// url: https://sourceforge.net/projects/win32-framework
//
//
// Copyright (c) 2005-2011 David Nash
//
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to
// any person obtaining a copy of this software and
// associated documentation files (the "Software"),
// to deal in the Software without restriction, including
// without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify,
// merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
// copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom
// the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the
// following conditions:
//
// The above copyright notice and this permission notice
// shall be included in all copies or substantial portions
// of the Software.
//
// THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF
// ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED
// TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A
// PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT
// SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR
// ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN
// ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
// OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE
// OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
//
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// The CThread class simplifies the use of threads with Win32++.
// To use threads in your Win32++ application, inherit a class from
// CThread, and override InitInstance. When your class is instanciated,
// a new thread is started, and the InitInstance function is called to
// run in the new thread.
// If your thread is used to run one or more windows, InitInstance should
// return TRUE, causing the MessageLoop function to be called. If your
// thread doesn't require a MessageLoop, it should return FALSE. Threads
// which don't run a message loop as sometimes referred to as "worker" threads.
// Note: It is your job to end the thread before CThread ends!
// To end a thread with a message loop, use PostQuitMessage on the thread.
// To end a thread without a message loop, set an event, and end the thread
// when the event is received.
// Hint: It is never a good idea to use things like TerminateThread or ExitThread to
// end your thread. These represent poor programming techniques, and are likely
// to leak memory and resources.
// More Hints for thread programming:
// 1) Avoid using SendMessage between threads, as this will cause one thread to wait for
// the other to respond. Use PostMessage between threads to avoid this problem.
// 2) Access to variables and resources shared between threads need to be made thread safe.
// Having one thread modify a resouce or variable while another thread is accessing it is
// a recipe for disaster.
// 3) Thread Local Storage (TLS) can be used to replace global variables to make them thread
// safe. With TLS, each thread gets its own copy of the variable.
// 4) Critical Sections can be used to make shared resources thread safe.
// 5) Window messages (including user defined messages) can be posted between GUI threads to
// communicate information between them.
// 6) Events (created by CreateEvent) can be used to comunicate information between threads
// (both GUI and worker threads).
// 7) Avoid using sleep to synchronise threads. Generally speaking, the various wait
// functions (e.g. WaitForSingleObject) will be better for this.
// About Threads:
// Each program that executes has a "process" allocated to it. A process has one or more
// threads. Threads run independantly of each other. It is the job of the operating system
// to manage the running of the threads, and do the task switching between threads as required.
// Systems with multiple CPUs will be able to run as many threads simultaneously as there are
// CPUs.
// Threads behave like a program within a program. When the main thread starts, the application
// runs the WinMain function and ends when WinMain ends. When another thread starts, it too
// will run the function provided to it, and end when that function ends.
#ifndef _WIN32XX_WINTHREAD_H_
#define _WIN32XX_WINTHREAD_H_
#include <process.h>
namespace Win32xx
{
//////////////////////////////////////
// Declaration of the CThread class
//
class CThread
{
public:
CThread();
CThread(LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES pSecurityAttributes, unsigned stack_size, unsigned initflag);
virtual ~CThread();
// Overridables
virtual BOOL InitInstance();
virtual int MessageLoop();
// Operations
HANDLE GetThread() const;
int GetThreadID() const;
int GetThreadPriority() const;
DWORD ResumeThread() const;
BOOL SetThreadPriority(int nPriority) const;
DWORD SuspendThread() const;
private:
CThread(const CThread&); // Disable copy construction
CThread& operator = (const CThread&); // Disable assignment operator
void CreateThread(LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES pSecurityAttributes, unsigned stack_size, unsigned initflag);
static UINT WINAPI StaticThreadCallback(LPVOID pCThread);
HANDLE m_hThread; // Handle of this thread
UINT m_nThreadID; // ID of this thread
};
}
//~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
namespace Win32xx
{
///////////////////////////////////////
// Definitions for the CThread class
//
inline CThread::CThread() : m_hThread(0), m_nThreadID(0)
{
CreateThread(0, 0, CREATE_SUSPENDED);
}
inline CThread::CThread(LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES pSecurityAttributes, unsigned stack_size, unsigned initflag)
: m_hThread(0), m_nThreadID(0)
{
// Valid argument values:
// pSecurityAttributes Either a pointer to SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES or 0
// stack_size Either the stack size or 0
// initflag Either CREATE_SUSPENDED or 0
CreateThread(pSecurityAttributes, stack_size, initflag);
}
inline CThread::~CThread()
{
// A thread's state is set to signalled when the thread terminates.
// If your thread is still running at this point, you have a bug.
if (0 != WaitForSingleObject(m_hThread, 0))
TRACE(_T("*** Error *** Ending CThread before ending its thread\n"));
// Close the thread's handle
::CloseHandle(m_hThread);
}
inline void CThread::CreateThread(LPSECURITY_ATTRIBUTES pSecurityAttributes, unsigned stack_size, unsigned initflag)
{
// NOTE: By default, the thread is created in the default state.
m_hThread = (HANDLE)_beginthreadex(pSecurityAttributes, stack_size, CThread::StaticThreadCallback, (LPVOID) this, initflag, &m_nThreadID);
if (0 == m_hThread)
throw CWinException(_T("Failed to create thread"));
}
inline HANDLE CThread::GetThread() const
{
assert(m_hThread);
return m_hThread;
}
inline int CThread::GetThreadID() const
{
assert(m_hThread);
return m_nThreadID;
}
inline int CThread::GetThreadPriority() const
{
assert(m_hThread);
return ::GetThreadPriority(m_hThread);
}
inline BOOL CThread::InitInstance()
{
// Override this function to perform tasks when the thread starts.
// return TRUE to run a message loop, otherwise return FALSE.
// A thread with a window must run a message loop.
return FALSE;
}
inline int CThread::MessageLoop()
{
// Override this function if your thread needs a different message loop
return GetApp()->MessageLoop();
}
inline DWORD CThread::ResumeThread() const
{
assert(m_hThread);
return ::ResumeThread(m_hThread);
}
inline DWORD CThread::SuspendThread() const
{
assert(m_hThread);
return ::SuspendThread(m_hThread);
}
inline BOOL CThread::SetThreadPriority(int nPriority) const
{
assert(m_hThread);
return ::SetThreadPriority(m_hThread, nPriority);
}
inline UINT WINAPI CThread::StaticThreadCallback(LPVOID pCThread)
// When the thread starts, it runs this function.
{
// Get the pointer for this CMyThread object
CThread* pThread = (CThread*)pCThread;
if (pThread->InitInstance())
return pThread->MessageLoop();
return 0;
}
}
#endif // #define _WIN32XX_WINTHREAD_H_