Inter-Process Communication#
An overview of Qt’s inter-process communication functionality
Qt supports many ways of communicating with other processes running in the same system or in different systems. There are basically three types of inter-process communication mechanisms:
Synchronization primitives
Exchanging of arbitrary byte-level data
Passing structured messages
Synchronization primitives#
Qt only provides one class for explicit inter-process synchronization: QSystemSemaphore
. A QSystemSemaphore
is like a QSemaphore
that is accessible by multiple processes in the same system. It is globally identified by a “key”, which in Qt is represented by the QNativeIpcKey
class. Additionally, depending on the OS, Qt may support multiple different backends for sharing memory; see the Native IPC Keys documentation for more information and limitations.
It is possible to use regular thread-synchronization primitives such as mutexes, wait conditions, and read-write locks, located in memory that is shared between processes. Qt does not provide any class to support this, but applications can use low-level operations on certain operating systems.
Other Qt classes may be used to provide higher-level locking, like QLockFile
, or by acquiring a unique, system-wide resource. Such techniques include TCP or UDP ports or well-known names in D-Bus.
Byte-level data sharing#
Using byte-level data, applications can implement any communication protocol they may choose. Sharing of byte data can be stream-oriented (serialized) or can allow random access (a similar condition to isSequential()
).
For serial communication, Qt provides a number of different classes and even full modules:
Pipes and FIFOs:
QFile
Child processes:
QProcess
Sockets: QTcpSocket, QUdpSocket (in Qt Network)
HTTP(S): QNetworkAccessManager (in Qt Network) and QHttpServer (in Qt HTTP Server)
CoAP(S): QCoapClient (in Qt CoAP)
For random-access data sharing within the same system, Qt provides QSharedMemory
. See the Shared Memory documentation for detailed information.
Structured message passing#
Qt also provides a number of techniques to exchange structured messages with other processes. Applications can build on top of the byte-level solutions above, such as by using QJsonDocument
or QXmlStreamReader
/ QXmlStreamWriter
over HTTP to perform JSONRPC or XMLRPC, respectively, or QCborValue
with QtCoAP.
Dedicated Qt modules for structured messages and remote procedure-calling include:
Qt D-Bus
Qt Remote Objects
Qt WebSockets