import functools import threading from cura.CuraApplication import CuraApplication # # HACK: # # In project loading, when override the existing machine is selected, the stacks and containers that are currently # active in the system will be overridden at runtime. Because the project loading is done in a different thread than # the Qt thread, something else can kick in the middle of the process. One of them is the rendering. It will access # the current stacks and container, which have not completely been updated yet, so Cura will crash in this case. # # This "@call_on_qt_thread" decorator makes sure that a function will always be called on the Qt thread (blocking). # It is applied to the read() function of project loading so it can be guaranteed that only after the project loading # process is completely done, everything else that needs to occupy the QT thread will be executed. # class InterCallObject: def __init__(self): self.finish_event = threading.Event() self.result = None def call_on_qt_thread(func): @functools.wraps(func) def _call_on_qt_thread_wrapper(*args, **kwargs): # If the current thread is the main thread, which is the Qt thread, directly call the function. current_thread = threading.current_thread() if isinstance(current_thread, threading._MainThread): return func(*args, **kwargs) def _handle_call(ico, *args, **kwargs): ico.result = func(*args, **kwargs) ico.finish_event.set() inter_call_object = InterCallObject() new_args = tuple([inter_call_object] + list(args)[:]) CuraApplication.getInstance().callLater(_handle_call, *new_args, **kwargs) inter_call_object.finish_event.wait() return inter_call_object.result return _call_on_qt_thread_wrapper