Question

Question: What I'm looking for is the most typical or best practice way to use a separate thread to receive data using an IdTCPClient in Indy 10.

Background: The below code is a sample of what I'm trying to do with the actual data processing parts removed for clarity. The Idea of the Thread is to receive all data (Variable size with a header declaring the rest of the message length) and to then to parse it (That's what the HandleData procedure does) and trigger an Event Handler depending on the command.

The TIdIOHandlerSocket is passed to the thread by the main application which also Writes data to the socket as and when it is required.

TScktReceiveThread = class(TThread)
  private
    { Private declarations }
    procedure HandleData;
  protected
    procedure Execute; override;
  public
    FSocket: TIdIOHandlerSocket;
    constructor Create(CreateSuspended: boolean);
  end;


procedure TScktReceiveThread.Execute;
var
  FixedHeader: TBytes;
begin
  Assert(FSocket <> nil, 'You must assign the connected socket to the receiving thread');
  SetLength(FixedHeader, 2);
   while not Terminated do
    begin
      if not FSocket.Connected then
        Suspend
      else
        begin
          FSocket.CheckForDataOnSource(10);
          if not FSocket.InputBufferIsEmpty then
           begin
            FSocket.ReadBytes(FixedHeader, SizeOf(FixedHeader), false);
            // Removed the rest of the reading and parsing code for clarity
            Synchronize(HandleData);
           end;
        end;
    end;
end;

As a prefix, I have used another StackOverflow question which deals with the server components of Indy: "Delphi 2009, Indy 10, TIdTCPServer.OnExecute, how to grab all the bytes in the InputBuffer" to get the basis of what I have so far.

Thanks for any help!

Was it helpful?

Solution

If you want to avoid the overhead imposed by creating thread classes for each and every client-server data exchange, you could create a motile threading class as described in

http://delphidicas.blogspot.com/2008/08/anonymous-methods-when-should-they-be.html

I had the same problem a few days ago and I just wrote me a class TMotileThreading which has static functions that let me create threads using the new anonymous method feature of D2009. Looks something like this:

type
  TExecuteFunc = reference to procedure;

  TMotileThreading = class
  public
    class procedure Execute (Func : TExecuteFunc);
    class procedure ExecuteThenCall (Func : TExecuteFunc; ThenFunc : TExecuteFunc);
  end;

The second procedure allows me to perform a client-server communication like in your case and do some stuff whenever the data has arrived. The nice thing about anonymous methods is that you can use the local variables of the calling context. So a communication looks something like this:

var
  NewData  : String;
begin
  TMotileThreading.ExecuteThenCall (
    procedure
    begin
      NewData := IdTCPClient.IOHandler.Readln;
    end,
    procedure
    begin
      GUIUpdate (NewData);
    end);
 end;

The Execute and ExecuteThenCall method simply create a worker thread, set FreeOnTerminate to true to simplify memory management and execute the provided functions in the worker thread's Execute and OnTerminate procedures.

Hope that helps.

EDIT (as requested the full implementation of class TMotileThreading)

type
  TExecuteFunc = reference to procedure;

  TMotileThreading = class
  protected
    constructor Create;
  public
    class procedure Execute (Func : TExecuteFunc);
    class procedure ExecuteAndCall (Func : TExecuteFunc; OnTerminateFunc : TExecuteFunc;
                                SyncTerminateFunc : Boolean = False);
  end;

  TMotile = class (TThread)
  private
    ExecFunc             : TExecuteFunc;
    TerminateHandler     : TExecuteFunc;
    SyncTerminateHandler : Boolean;
  public
    constructor Create (Func : TExecuteFunc); overload;
    constructor Create (Func : TExecuteFunc; OnTerminateFunc : TExecuteFunc;
                        SyncTerminateFunc : Boolean); overload;
    procedure OnTerminateHandler (Sender : TObject);
    procedure Execute; override;
  end;

implementation

constructor TMotileThreading.Create;
begin
  Assert (False, 'Class TMotileThreading shouldn''t be used as an instance');
end;

class procedure TMotileThreading.Execute (Func : TExecuteFunc);
begin
  TMotile.Create (Func);
end;

class procedure TMotileThreading.ExecuteAndCall (Func : TExecuteFunc;
                                                 OnTerminateFunc : TExecuteFunc;
                                                 SyncTerminateFunc : Boolean = False);
begin
  TMotile.Create (Func, OnTerminateFunc, SyncTerminateFunc);
end;

constructor TMotile.Create (Func : TExecuteFunc);
begin
  inherited Create (True);
  ExecFunc := Func;
  TerminateHandler := nil;
  FreeOnTerminate := True;
  Resume;
end;

constructor TMotile.Create (Func : TExecuteFunc; OnTerminateFunc : TExecuteFunc;
                            SyncTerminateFunc : Boolean);
begin
  inherited Create (True);
  ExecFunc := Func;
  TerminateHandler := OnTerminateFunc;
  SyncTerminateHandler := SyncTerminateFunc;
  OnTerminate := OnTerminateHandler;
  FreeOnTerminate := True;
  Resume;
end;

procedure TMotile.Execute;
begin
  ExecFunc;
end;

procedure TMotile.OnTerminateHandler (Sender : TObject);
begin
  if Assigned (TerminateHandler) then
    if SyncTerminateHandler then
      Synchronize (procedure
                   begin
                     TerminateHandler;
                   end)
    else
      TerminateHandler;
end;

OTHER TIPS

You're on the right track. Indy is intended to be used like that. It uses blocking sockets, so the ReadBytes call doesn't return until it's read what you've asked for. Contrast that with non-blocking sockets, where a call may return early, so you either poll or get notified asynchronously to determine when a request has been filled.

Indy is designed with the expectation that the socket objects have their own threads (or fibers). Indy comes with TIdAntifreeze for the folks who want to drag and drop socket components onto their forms and data modules and use the Indy components from the main GUI thread, but that's not generally a good idea if you can avoid it.

Since your thread cannot work without FSocket being assigned, I advise you to simply receive that value in the class's constructor. Assert in the constructor if it's not assigned. Furthermore, it is an error to create your thread non-suspended, so why even give the option? (If the thread is not created suspended, then it will start running, check whether FSocket is assigned, and fail because the creating thread hasn't gotten to assign that field yet.)

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