Book Image

Hands-On High Performance Programming with Qt 5

By : Marek Krajewski
5 (1)
Book Image

Hands-On High Performance Programming with Qt 5

5 (1)
By: Marek Krajewski

Overview of this book

Achieving efficient code through performance tuning is one of the key challenges faced by many programmers. This book looks at Qt programming from a performance perspective. You'll explore the performance problems encountered when using the Qt framework and means and ways to resolve them and optimize performance. The book highlights performance improvements and new features released in Qt 5.9, Qt 5.11, and 5.12 (LTE). You'll master general computer performance best practices and tools, which can help you identify the reasons behind low performance, and the most common performance pitfalls experienced when using the Qt framework. In the following chapters, you’ll explore multithreading and asynchronous programming with C++ and Qt and learn the importance and efficient use of data structures. You'll also get the opportunity to work through techniques such as memory management and design guidelines, which are essential to improve application performance. Comprehensive sections that cover all these concepts will prepare you for gaining hands-on experience of some of Qt's most exciting application fields - the mobile and embedded development domains. By the end of this book, you'll be ready to build Qt applications that are more efficient, concurrent, and performance-oriented in nature
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

More about operating system interactions

We have seen that, when it comes to I/O, we must keep a close eye on what the operating system is doing under the covers. Let's close this chapter with a discussion about some relevant performance OS concepts that we haven't been able to discuss yet.

Paging, swapping, and the TLB

As we have seen in the Caching Files section, when we discussed caching entire files in memory, there is another leaky abstraction related to memory besides processor level caching that we haven't discussed yet, namely the virtual memory concept that's implemented by the OS.

You probably know that OS provides an illusion of having the entire address space of the computer at its disposal...