Under windows, the GUI thread usually call GetMessage to waiting for message, when another thread use PoseMessage put a message into the queue, then the GUI thread will return GetMessage (quit blocking).

Does anyone can tell me, when I use XNextEvent under XWindows to waiting for event, how can I "wakeup" the GUI thread in another thread. Is there some API like PoseMessage I can use ?.

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2 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

No. This is why most UI frameworks (Gtk, KDE, etc) use custom main loops to be able to listen for more event sources.

Internally, XNextEvent uses a socket, so it calls select() to know when input is available. So can you: Call ConnectionNumber(display) to get the file descriptor that you need to pass select()

That allows you to listen for several file descriptors.

Sample code from http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/showthread.php?p=2431345#post2431345

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <X11/Xlib.h>
#include <X11/Xutil.h>

Display *dis;
Window win;
int x11_fd;
fd_set in_fds;

struct timeval tv;
XEvent ev;

int main() {
    dis = XOpenDisplay(NULL);
    win = XCreateSimpleWindow(dis, RootWindow(dis, 0), 1, 1, 256, 256, \
        0, BlackPixel (dis, 0), BlackPixel(dis, 0));

    // You don't need all of these. Make the mask as you normally would.
    XSelectInput(dis, win, 
        ExposureMask | KeyPressMask | KeyReleaseMask | PointerMotionMask |
        ButtonPressMask | ButtonReleaseMask  | StructureNotifyMask 
        );

    XMapWindow(dis, win);
    XFlush(dis);

    // This returns the FD of the X11 display (or something like that)
    x11_fd = ConnectionNumber(dis);

    // Main loop
    while(1) {
        // Create a File Description Set containing x11_fd
        FD_ZERO(&in_fds);
        FD_SET(x11_fd, &in_fds);

        // Set our timer.  One second sounds good.
        tv.tv_usec = 0;
        tv.tv_sec = 1;

        // Wait for X Event or a Timer
        if (select(x11_fd+1, &in_fds, 0, 0, &tv))
            printf("Event Received!\n");
        else
            // Handle timer here
            printf("Timer Fired!\n");

        // Handle XEvents and flush the input 
        while(XPending(dis))
            XNextEvent(dis, &ev);
    }
    return(0);
}
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You can quit the blocking XNextEvent, by sending yourself a dummy event.

Window interClientCommunicationWindow;
Bool x11EventLoopActive = True;

// create a dummy window, that we can use to end the blocking XNextEvent call
interClientCommunicationWindow = XCreateSimpleWindow(dpy, root, 10, 10, 10, 10, 0, 0, 0);
XSelectInput(dpy, interClientCommunicationWindow, StructureNotifyMask);

XEvent event;
while(x11EventLoopActive) {
  XNextEvent(dpy, &event);
  ...
}

In another thread you can do this to end the loop:

x11EventLoopActive = False;
// push a dummy event into the queue so that the event loop has a chance to stop
XClientMessageEvent dummyEvent;
memset(&dummyEvent, 0, sizeof(XClientMessageEvent));
dummyEvent.type = ClientMessage;
dummyEvent.window = interClientCommunicationWindow;
dummyEvent.format = 32;
XSendEvent(dpy, interClientCommunicationWindow, 0, 0, (XEvent*)&dummyEvent);
XFlush(dpy);
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