[Tutor] help with Tkinter, please
wesley chun
wescpy at gmail.com
Tue Nov 28 21:15:21 CET 2006
> What exactly is the advantage of a daemon thread over a normal
> one in that case - other than that the application will end while
> daemons are still running? In fact that might be the advantage.
> But in that case daemons would only be useful for endless
> loop type threads?
for example, they can be worker threads, those that take some service
request, perform some work, produces results, then goes back to wait
for more work -- your endless loop scenario. if the main thread is
taking user input and pawning off service requests to worker threads,
then exits, meaning no more possible work for the worker threads, they
should then be killed off along with the main thread. here's a snippet
from the 1st link i sent:
"Daemon threads are designed as low-level background threads that
perform useful work. However, it is not essential that they be allowed
to complete before an application terminates. One example of a daemon
thread is the garbage collector thread."
if the main (and other non-daemon) threads exit, there is no more code
allocating memory (thus no longer a need to GC memory... IOW, there's
no more work to be done), so there really isn't a reason for them
(daemon threads) to stay up and running.
the bottom line is that they can do work when work is available, but
other than that, are pretty useless without some non-daemon threads
providing that work for them; thus it's relatively harmless to kill
them off.
FWIW, when i first learned about daemon threads, i was also confused
at the naming and their relationship (if any) with daemon/server
processes even though they do similar things. i guess that's what
makes it easy to reboot your *nix servers... you shutdown and/or
reboot without explicitly killing each server right? it sure would
take a long time... can you imagine how many "/etc/init.d/XXX stop"
calls you'd have to make in your shell? :-)
HTH,
-- wesley
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
"Core Python Programming", Prentice Hall, (c)2007,2001
http://corepython.com
wesley.j.chun :: wescpy-at-gmail.com
python training and technical consulting
cyberweb.consulting : silicon valley, ca
http://cyberwebconsulting.com
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