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qt-creator/src/plugins/cppeditor/cppprojectinfogenerator.cpp

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// Copyright (C) 2017 The Qt Company Ltd.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: LicenseRef-Qt-Commercial OR GPL-3.0+ OR GPL-3.0 WITH Qt-GPL-exception-1.0
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
#include "cppprojectinfogenerator.h"
#include "cppprojectfilecategorizer.h"
#include <projectexplorer/headerpath.h>
#include <projectexplorer/projectexplorerconstants.h>
#include <projectexplorer/taskhub.h>
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
#include <utils/qtcassert.h>
#include <QTimer>
#include <set>
using namespace ProjectExplorer;
using namespace Utils;
namespace CppEditor::Internal {
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
ProjectInfoGenerator::ProjectInfoGenerator(
const QFutureInterface<ProjectInfo::ConstPtr> &futureInterface,
const ProjectUpdateInfo &projectUpdateInfo)
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
: m_futureInterface(futureInterface)
, m_projectUpdateInfo(projectUpdateInfo)
{
}
ProjectInfo::ConstPtr ProjectInfoGenerator::generate()
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
{
QVector<ProjectPart::ConstPtr> projectParts;
for (const RawProjectPart &rpp : m_projectUpdateInfo.rawProjectParts) {
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
if (m_futureInterface.isCanceled())
return {};
for (const ProjectPart::ConstPtr &part : createProjectParts(
rpp, m_projectUpdateInfo.projectFilePath)) {
projectParts << part;
}
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
}
const auto projectInfo = ProjectInfo::create(m_projectUpdateInfo, projectParts);
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
static const auto showWarning = [](const QString &message) {
QTimer::singleShot(0, TaskHub::instance(), [message] {
TaskHub::addTask(BuildSystemTask(Task::Warning, message));
});
};
if (m_cToolchainMissing) {
showWarning(QCoreApplication::translate("CppEditor",
"The project contains C source files, but the currently active kit "
"has no C compiler. The code model will not be fully functional."));
}
if (m_cxxToolchainMissing) {
showWarning(QCoreApplication::translate("CppEditor",
"The project contains C++ source files, but the currently active kit "
"has no C++ compiler. The code model will not be fully functional."));
}
return projectInfo;
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
}
const QVector<ProjectPart::ConstPtr> ProjectInfoGenerator::createProjectParts(
const RawProjectPart &rawProjectPart, const FilePath &projectFilePath)
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
{
QVector<ProjectPart::ConstPtr> result;
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
ProjectFileCategorizer cat(rawProjectPart.displayName,
rawProjectPart.files,
rawProjectPart.fileIsActive,
rawProjectPart.getMimeType);
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
if (!cat.hasParts())
return result;
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
if (m_projectUpdateInfo.cxxToolChainInfo.isValid()) {
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
if (cat.hasCxxSources()) {
result << createProjectPart(projectFilePath,
rawProjectPart,
cat.cxxSources(),
cat.partName("C++"),
Language::Cxx,
LanguageExtension::None);
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
}
if (cat.hasObjcxxSources()) {
result << createProjectPart(projectFilePath,
rawProjectPart,
cat.objcxxSources(),
cat.partName("Obj-C++"),
Language::Cxx,
LanguageExtension::ObjectiveC);
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
}
} else if (cat.hasCxxSources() || cat.hasObjcxxSources()) {
m_cxxToolchainMissing = true;
}
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
if (m_projectUpdateInfo.cToolChainInfo.isValid()) {
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
if (cat.hasCSources()) {
result << createProjectPart(projectFilePath,
rawProjectPart,
cat.cSources(),
cat.partName("C"),
Language::C,
LanguageExtension::None);
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
}
if (cat.hasObjcSources()) {
result << createProjectPart(projectFilePath,
rawProjectPart,
cat.objcSources(),
cat.partName("Obj-C"),
Language::C,
LanguageExtension::ObjectiveC);
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
}
} else if (cat.hasCSources() || cat.hasObjcSources()) {
m_cToolchainMissing = true;
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
}
return result;
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
}
ProjectPart::ConstPtr ProjectInfoGenerator::createProjectPart(
const FilePath &projectFilePath,
const RawProjectPart &rawProjectPart,
const ProjectFiles &projectFiles,
const QString &partName,
Language language,
LanguageExtensions languageExtensions)
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
{
RawProjectPartFlags flags;
ToolChainInfo tcInfo;
if (language == Language::C) {
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
flags = rawProjectPart.flagsForC;
tcInfo = m_projectUpdateInfo.cToolChainInfo;
}
// Use Cxx toolchain for C projects without C compiler in kit and for C++ code
if (!tcInfo.isValid()) {
flags = rawProjectPart.flagsForCxx;
tcInfo = m_projectUpdateInfo.cxxToolChainInfo;
}
QString explicitTarget;
if (!tcInfo.targetTripleIsAuthoritative) {
for (int i = 0; i < flags.commandLineFlags.size(); ++i) {
const QString &flag = flags.commandLineFlags.at(i);
if (flag == "-target") {
if (i + 1 < flags.commandLineFlags.size())
explicitTarget = flags.commandLineFlags.at(i + 1);
break;
} else if (flag.startsWith("--target=")) {
explicitTarget = flag.mid(9);
break;
}
}
}
if (!explicitTarget.isEmpty()) {
tcInfo.targetTriple = explicitTarget;
tcInfo.targetTripleIsAuthoritative = true;
if (const Abi abi = Abi::fromString(tcInfo.targetTriple); abi.isValid())
tcInfo.abi = abi;
}
return ProjectPart::create(projectFilePath, rawProjectPart, partName, projectFiles,
language, languageExtensions, flags, tcInfo);
CppTools/ProjectManagers: Reduce ui blocking when loading projects ${AnyProject}::updateCppCodeModel() did two potentially not that cheap operations in the ui thread: (1) Querying the MimeDatabase for the mime type for the source files of the project. In 99.9% of the cases no files need to be read for this as the file extension will resolve the type. The expensiveness comes from the sheer number of files that can occur. (2) Calling compilers with the "(sub)project's compiler command line" to determine the macros. While the caches avoid redundant calls, the number of the unique compiler calls makes this still a ui-freezing experience. These two operations are moved into a worker thread. For this, the expensive compiler calls are encapsulated in thread safe lambdas ("runners") in order to keep the "mutexed" data minimal. The original API calls of the toolchains are implemented in terms of the runners. While adapting the project managers, remove also the calls to setProjectLanguage(). These are redundant because all of the project managers already set a proper value in the constructor. Also, currently there is no need (client) to report back detection of C sources in project parts. This also keeps CppProjectUpdater simple. There is still room for improvement: * Run the compiler calls in parallel instead of sequence. * Ensure that the mime type for a file is determined exactly once. Change-Id: I2efc4e132ee88e3c8f264012ec8fafe3d86c404f Reviewed-by: Tobias Hunger <tobias.hunger@qt.io>
2017-02-06 16:59:53 +01:00
}
} // namespace CppEditor::Internal