I am learning Rust and trying to make a simple egui GUI app that polls a telnet host in a seperate thread, to avoid the main thread locking the GUI. I am using the telnet crate for the client.
Here is the code where I am having issues:
struct TelnetApp {
gui_status: AppView,
telnet_ip: String,
telnet_port: String,
telnet_connect_failed_display: bool,
telnet_connect_failed_message: String,
telnet_client: Arc<Mutex<Option<Telnet>>>,
telnet_result : Arc<Mutex<String>>,
}
impl TelnetApp {
// Called from gui after successfully connecting to Telnet host
fn start_telnet_loop(&mut self) {
let arc_telnet_result = self.telnet_result.clone();
let arc_telnet_client = self.telnet_client.clone();
let time = SystemTime::now();
thread::spawn(move || { // <---- ERROR: `(dyn Stream + 'static)` cannot be sent between threads safely
loop {
thread::sleep(Duration::from_millis(1000));
arc_telnet_client.lock().unwrap().unwrap().read(); // <--- This line causes error
{
// I can read and modify the String, presumably because it implements Send?
*arc_telnet_result.lock().unwrap() = String::from(format!("Time {}", time.elapsed().unwrap().as_micros()));
}
}
});
}
}
As i marked with a comment, the thread spawn line gives me an error, which seems to stem from the fact that arc_telnet_client does not implement the trait "Send", as the error goes away when removing the line:
arc_telnet_client.lock().unwrap().unwrap().read()
I read that wrapping in Arc<Mutex<>>
is the recommended way to handle multithreading, but this does still not give the trait Send.
Why is my approach not allowed, even when I am using a mutex to lock it? How would you implement a simple polling thread like this?