[Qgis-developer] QGIS Multi-threaded Rendering

Jonathan Moules jonathanmoules at warwickshire.gov.uk
Thu Dec 12 04:39:16 PST 2013


Hi Martin,
Just a minor thing, probably an accidental omission. Your list of
data-providers that don't work doen't include the Oracle native one but I
suspect probably should.
>From a non-dev's perspective it looks quite promising. :-)
Cheers,
Jonathan


On 12 December 2013 12:14, Martin Dobias <wonder.sk at gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi everyone!
>
> [attention: long text ahead]
>
> In recent weeks I have been working on moving map rendering into
> background worker threads and all related infrastructure changes.
> There is still quite a lot of work to do, but finally I think it is a
> time for a preview and a broader discussion about the whole thing. Not
> every little QGIS feature is working yet, but things work fine with
> most commonly used data sources (GDAL/OGR, PostGIS, SpatiaLite).
> Please give it a try! The code is available in my QGIS repository on
> GitHub, the branch is called threading-revival:
> https://github.com/wonder-sk/QGIS/tree/threading-revival
>
> The plan is to continue working on the project in the following weeks
> to reintroduce support for features and data providers currently not
> supported (e.g. WMS, WFS). Hopefully by the time of feature freeze in
> late January the code will in condition to be merged to master, so the
> multi-threaded rendering can appear in QGIS 2.2 release.
>
> The project has already quite some history: it started as my GSoC
> project in summer of 2010, unfortunately it was not merged back to
> master branch because the code never get into production level
> quality. The scope of the project is not just about moving rendering
> into background: it is mostly about updating various pieces of QGIS
> core library and data providers to behave correctly in the case that
> more threads simultaneously try to access the same resource - until
> now the assumption always was that there was only one thread. Back in
> 2010, QGIS code was much less ready to change those assumptions. Now,
> after the release of 2.0, the code is much closer to what we need for
> multi-threaded rendering: both vector and raster layer code went
> through a major overhaul in the preparation for 2.0.
>
> What to expect from the project:
> 1. better user experience. Browsing the map in canvas gets much
> snappier - pan and zoom map smoothly with instant preview, without
> having to wait until rendering of the previous view is finished,
> without flickers or other annyoances. Even if the map takes longer to
> render, you are free to do any actions in the meanwhile. It is a bit
> hard to describe the difference of the overall feel, one needs to try
> it out :)
>
> 2. faster rendering of projects with more layers. Finally, it is
> possible to use the full power of your CPU. The rendering of map
> layers can be done in parallel: layers will be rendered separately at
> the same time and then composited together to form the final map
> image. In theory, rendering of two layers can get twice as fast. The
> speedup depends a lot on your data.
>
> 3. starting point for more asynchronous operations. With safe access
> to map layers from worker threads, more user actions could be
> processed in background without blocking GUI, e.g. opening of
> attribute table, running analyses, layer identification or change of
> selection.
>
> What not to expect from the project:
> - faster rendering of one individual layer. A project with one layer
> that took five seconds to render will still take five seconds to
> render. The parallelization happens at the level of map layers. With
> one map layer QGIS will still use just one core. Optimizing the
> rendering performance of an individual layer is outside of the scope
> of this project.
>
> What to expect from the project *right now*: things should generally
> work, except for the following:
> - data providers: delimited text, gpx, grass, mssql, sql anywhere, wfs,
> wms, wcs
> - QGIS server
> - point displacement renderer
>
> For testing, simply use QGIS as you would usually do and see if you
> feel a difference when browsing the map. In Options dialog, Rendering
> tab, there are few new configuration options for you to play with: 1.
> parallel or sequential rendering, 2. map update interval. The parallel
> rendering may use all your CPU power, while sequential (currently
> being the default) will use just one CPU core. The default map preview
> update interval is now set to 250ms - feel free to experiment with
> other values. Lower values will bring faster updates, at the expense
> of wasting more time doing just updates instead of real work. Parallel
> rendering can be switched on/off also directly in the map canvas by
> pressing 'P' key - useful when you want to quickly compare the
> difference between sequential and parallel rendering. There is another
> magical shortcut, 'S' key, that will show very simple stats about the
> rendering (currently just total rendering time), so you can again
> quickly compare the impact of various factors (antialiasing, parallel
> rendering, caching etc). These shortcuts are likely to be removed from
> the final version, so make sure to use them while they are still
> there!
>
> Now, it is time for some details about the design decisions I took and
> their justifications. Non-developers can happily stop reading now,
> developers are encouraged to read that thoroughly :-) I would be very
> happy to hear what other devs think about the changes. Nothing is set
> into stone yet and any critical review will help.
>
> - QgsMapRenderer class got deprecated (but do not worry, it still
> works). The problem with the class is that does two things at once: it
> stores configuration of the map and it also acts as a rendering
> engine. This is impractical, because very often it is just necessary
> to query or change the configuration without actually using the
> rendering engine. Another problem is the fact that the rendering is
> started by passing a pointer to arbitrary QPainter - it is fine for
> sequential rendering, but not for parallel rendering where the
> rendering happens to temporary images which are composited at any
> point later. My solution was moving the map configuration (extent,
> size, DPI, layers, ...) to a new class called QgsMapSettings. The
> rendering engine got abstracted into a new class QgsMapRendererJob -
> it is a base class with three implementations (sequential and parallel
> rendering to QImage, sequential rendering to any QPainter). The class
> has asynchronous API: after calling start(), the rendering will start
> in the background and emit finished() signal once done. The client can
> cancel() the job at any time, or call waitForFinished() to block until
> the rendering is done.
>
> - render caching has been modified. Cached images of layers used to be
> stored directly in the QgsMapLayer class, however there was no context
> about the stored images (what extent etc). Also, the solution does not
> scale if there is more than one map renderer. Now there is a new
> class, QgsMapRendererCache which keeps all cached images inside and
> can be used by map renderer jobs. This encapsulation should also allow
> easier modifications to the way how caching of rendered layers is
> done.
>
> - map canvas uses the new map renderer job API. Anytime the background
> rendering is started, it will start periodically update the preview of
> the new map (before the updates were achieved by calls to
> qApp->processEvents() while rendering, with various ugly side effects
> and hacks). The canvas item showing the map has become ordinary canvas
> item that just stores the rendered georeferenced map image. The map
> configuration is internally kept in QgsMapSettings class, which is
> accessible from API. It is still possible to access QgsMapRenderer
> from map canvas - there is a compatibility layer that keeps
> QgsMapSettings and QgsMapRenderer in sync, so all plugins should still
> work.
>
> - rendering of a map layer has changed. Previously, it would be done
> by calling QgsMapLayer::draw(...). I have found this insufficient for
> safe rendering in worker thread. The issue is that during the
> rendering, the user may do some changes to the internal state of the
> layer which would cause fatal problems to the whole application. For
> example, by changing vector layer's renderer, the old renderer would
> get deleted while the worker thread is still using it. There are
> generally two ways of avoiding such situations: 1. protect the shared
> resource from simultaneous access by locking or 2. make a copy of the
> resource. I have decided to go for the latter because: 1. there are
> potentially many small resources to protect, 2. locking/waiting may
> severely degrade the performance, 3. it is easy to get the locking
> wrong, ending up with deadlocks or crashes, 4. copying of resources
> does not need to be memory and time consuming, especially when using
> implicit sharing of data (copy-on-write). I have created a new class
> called QgsMapLayerRenderer. Its use case is following: when the
> rendering is starting, QgsMapLayer::createMapRenderer() is called
> (still in the main thread) and it will return a new instance of
> QgsMapLayerRenderer. The instance has to store any data of the layer
> that are required by the rendering routine. Then, in a worker thread,
> its render() method is called that will do the actual rendering. Like
> this, any intermediate changes to the state of the layer (or its
> provider) will not affect the rendering.
>
> - concept of feature sources. For rendering of vectors in worker
> thread, we need to make sure that any data used by feature iterators
> stay unchanged. For example, if the user changes the provider's query
> or encoding, we are in a trouble. Feature sources abstract providers:
> they represent anything that can return QgsFeatureIterator (after
> being given QgsFeatureRequest). A vector data provider is able to
> return an implementation of a feature source which is a snapshot of
> information (stored within the provider class) required to iterate
> over features. For example, in OGR provider, that is layer's file
> name, encoding, subset string etc, in PostGIS it is connection
> information, primary key column, geometry column and other stuff.
> Feature iterators of vector data providers have been updated to deal
> with provider feature source instead of provider itself. Even if the
> provider is deleted while we are iterating over its data in a
> different thread, everything is still working smoothly because the
> iterator's source is independent from the provider. Vector layer map
> renderer class therefore creates vector layer's feature source, which
> in turn creates a copy of layer's edit buffer and creates a provider
> feature source. From that point, QgsVectorLayer class is not used
> anywhere during the rendering of the layer. Remember that most of the
> copied stuff are either small bits of data or classes supporting
> copy-on-write technique, so there should not be any noticeable
> performance hit resulting from the copying.
>
> - rendering of raster layers is handled by first cloning their raster
> pipe and then using the cloned raster pipe for rendering. Any changes
> to the raster layer state will not affect the rendering in progress.
>
> - update to scale factors. I have always found the "scale" and "raster
> scale" factors from QgsRenderContext confusing and did not properly
> understand their real meaning because in various contexts (composer vs
> canvas) they had different meaning and value. There were also various
> rendering bugs due to wrong or no usage of these factors. By scaling
> of painter before rendering and setup of correct DPI, these factors
> are now always equal to one. In the future, we will be able to remove
> them altogether.
>
> - composer has also been updated to use QgsMapSettings + QgsMapRendererJob.
>
> - labeling engine has seen some changes: it is created when starting
> rendering and deleted when rendering has finished. The final labeling
> is stored in a new QgsLabelingResults class, which is then propagated
> (up to map canvas). Also, it is possible to cancel computation and
> drawing of labeling.
>
> - the API remained the same with only tiny changes within the
> internals of labeling, diagrams, renderers and symbols, mainly due to
> the fact that QgsVectorLayer is not used in the vector rendering
> pipeline anymore. Callers should not see any difference (unless using
> some exotic calls).
>
> Finally, some further thoughts/questions:
>
> - rasters - currently we do not have API to cancel requests for raster
> blocks. This means that currently we need to wait until the raster
> block is fully read even when we cancel the rendering job. GDAL has
> some support for asynchronous requests - anyone has some experience
> with it?
>
> - rasters (again) - there are no intermediate updates of the raster
> layer when rendering. What that means is that until the raster layer
> is fully rendered, the preview is completely blank. There is a way to
> constrain the raster block requests to smaller tiles, but what would
> be the performance consequences? I am not that familiar with the way
> how raster drivers are implemented in GDAL... anyone to bring some
> wisdom?
>
> - PostGIS - I had to disable reuse of connections to servers because
> it is not safe use one connection from multiple threads. If reusing of
> the connections is an important optimization, we will probably need to
> implement some kind of connection pool from which connections would be
> taken and then returned.
>
> Okay, I think that's it. Sorry for the long mail to all the people who
> read it until the end. Please give it a try - I will welcome any
> feedback from the testing.
>
> Regards
> Martin
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