I am trying to execute an asynchronous request as part of a search result updater in my app.
I wrote the following code
func updateSearchResults(for searchController: UISearchController) {
guard let text = searchController.searchBar.text else {return}
let threadingContext = NSManagedObjectContext(concurrencyType: .privateQueueConcurrencyType)
threadingContext.parent = self.context
DispatchQueue.global(qos: .userInitiated).async {
let fetchRequest = MyObject.fetchRequest() as NSFetchRequest<MyObject>
fetchRequest.predicate = get_predicate(text)
do {
let objects = try threadingContext.fetch(fetchRequest).map({ object in
return object.objectID
})
}
catch {return}
DispatchQueue.main.async {
// Pass results to the search view controller
}
}
}
but the UI is still slow (even if I don't do any display update), and looking at the Time profiler, I see that my main thread is spending 80% of its time on the following:
So it seems that my request is still being dispatched onto the main thread, which I don't understand. Would anyone see my mistake?
(I tried a few various on the above e.g. using threadingContext.perform
but for the same result)