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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?

1 Answer 1

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Why is my approach not allowed, even when I am using a mutex to lock it?

Because !Send means the object is not safe to move to a different thread at all. It doesn't matter how you protect it, it's just not valid.

For instance it might be using threadlocal data, or kernel task resources, or some sort of unprotected global or shared state, or affinity mechanics. No matter how or why, if it's !Send, it can only be accessed from and by the thread where it was created, doesn't matter what you wrap it in. An example of that is MutexGuard:

impl<T: ?Sized> !Send for MutexGuard<'_, T>

That is because it's common for mutexes to only be unlockable from the thread which locked them (it's UB in posix, the release fails on windows)

As its traits describe, a Mutex is Sync (so can be shared between threads) if an object is Send:

impl<T: ?Sized + Send> Sync for Mutex<T>

That is because semantically, having a mutex around a Send is equivalent to moving the wrapped object from one thread to the next through a channel (the wrapped object will always be used from one thread at a time).

RwLock, on the other hand, requires Sync since the wrapped object can be concurrently accessed from different threads (in read mode):

impl<T: ?Sized + Send + Sync> Sync for RwLock<T>
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  • Good answer! This makes me understand why a lot better. But I am still unsure about how it would be best to implement this for Rust. I assume the only way to accomplish this would be to create the client on the thread where it is used then? And how would I best to send the results back and forth between the threads? By modifyng a String like i do for self.telnet_result or should I preferably look into mpsc, or something else even? Oct 11, 2022 at 15:48
  • 2
    @SofusØvretveit Yes, could use two channels to exchange info between the thread that runs telnet and anyone else interested in the results. Your TelnetApp would then contain the channel endpoints rather than Telnet itself. Oct 11, 2022 at 15:50
  • It took a bit of head scratching for me to understand why this is the case, but I think this bit of code demonstrates pretty well why Arc<Mutex<T: !Send>> doesn't implement Send
    – YthanZhang
    Oct 11, 2022 at 16:28

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