40

I have a thread which extends Thread. The code looks a little like this;

class MyThread(Thread):
    def run(self):
        # Do stuff

my_threads = []
while has_jobs() and len(my_threads) < 5:
    new_thread = MyThread(next_job_details())
    new_thread.run()
    my_threads.append(new_thread)

for my_thread in my_threads
    my_thread.join()
    # Do stuff

So here in my pseudo code I check to see if there is any jobs (like a db etc) and if there is some jobs, and if there is less than 5 threads running, create new threads.

So from here, I then check over my threads and this is where I get stuck, I can use .join() but my understanding is that - this then waits until it's finished so if the first thread it checks is still in progress, it then waits till it's done - even if the other threads are finished....

so is there a way to check if a thread is done, then remove it if so?

eg

for my_thread in my_threads:
    if my_thread.done():
        # process results
        del (my_threads[my_thread]) ?? will that work...

6 Answers 6

71

As TokenMacGuy says, you should use thread.is_alive() to check if a thread is still running. To remove no longer running threads from your list you can use a list comprehension:

for t in my_threads:
    if not t.is_alive():
        # get results from thread
        t.handled = True
my_threads = [t for t in my_threads if not t.handled]

This avoids the problem of removing items from a list while iterating over it.

8
  • Thanks, but does that mean a result could be lost? If a thread is no longer Alive then I need to get the results out.
    – Wizzard
    Nov 1, 2010 at 19:20
  • That's true. I have modified my answer to take this into account.
    – Arlaharen
    Nov 2, 2010 at 6:13
  • 14
    is_alive() in Python 2.6+
    – trim
    Apr 28, 2015 at 0:35
  • This is surprisingly amazingly faster than I had assumed. Thank you.
    – omgimdrunk
    Aug 9, 2017 at 7:24
  • 1
    @erm3nda It's not the same. Using list comprehension on is_alive() may remove a thread before the "get results" block executes for that thread.
    – Donnie
    Apr 27, 2019 at 19:44
14
mythreads = threading.enumerate()

Enumerate returns a list of all Thread objects still alive. https://docs.python.org/3.6/library/threading.html

11

you need to call thread.isAlive()to find out if the thread is still running

2
  • 13
    thread.isAlive() is depricated now, use thread.is_alive() instead.
    – Shravan40
    Oct 21, 2020 at 14:29
  • this is useful...but what to do when i have multiple inactive cild threads in java? is there a way to dispose them
    – ronit
    Jun 13, 2021 at 9:25
8

The answer has been covered, but for simplicity...

# To filter out finished threads
threads = [t for t in threads if t.is_alive()]

# Same thing but for QThreads (if you are using PyQt)
threads = [t for t in threads if t.isRunning()]
7

Better way is to use Queue class: http://docs.python.org/library/queue.html

Look at the good example code in the bottom of documentation page:

def worker():
    while True:
        item = q.get()
        do_work(item)
        q.task_done()

q = Queue()
for i in range(num_worker_threads):
     t = Thread(target=worker)
     t.daemon = True
     t.start()

for item in source():
    q.put(item)

q.join()       # block until all tasks are done
1
  • 1
    Thanks, but can I run into the same issue with q.join()? if I have 20 jobs that need doing but only want to run at most 4 at a time. If 3 are done and one isn't done then I don't want to slow the program while it waits for that 1 result...
    – Wizzard
    Nov 1, 2010 at 19:21
0

A easy solution to check thread finished or not. It is thread safe

Install pyrvsignal

pip install pyrvsignal

Example:

import time
from threading import Thread
from pyrvsignal import Signal


class MyThread(Thread):
    started = Signal()
    finished = Signal()

    def __init__(self, target, args):
        self.target = target
        self.args = args
        Thread.__init__(self)

    def run(self) -> None:
        self.started.emit()
        self.target(*self.args)
        self.finished.emit()


def do_my_work(details):
    print(f"Doing work: {details}")
    time.sleep(10)

def started_work():
    print("Started work")
    
def finished_work():
    print("Work finished")

thread = MyThread(target=do_my_work, args=("testing",))
thread.started.connect(started_work)
thread.finished.connect(finished_work)
thread.start()

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