Nagram/TMessagesProj/jni/webrtc/base/sequenced_task_runner.h

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// Copyright (c) 2012 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file.
#ifndef BASE_SEQUENCED_TASK_RUNNER_H_
#define BASE_SEQUENCED_TASK_RUNNER_H_
#include <memory>
#include "base/base_export.h"
#include "base/callback.h"
#include "base/sequenced_task_runner_helpers.h"
#include "base/task_runner.h"
namespace base {
// A SequencedTaskRunner is a subclass of TaskRunner that provides
// additional guarantees on the order that tasks are started, as well
// as guarantees on when tasks are in sequence, i.e. one task finishes
// before the other one starts.
//
// Summary
// -------
// Non-nested tasks with the same delay will run one by one in FIFO
// order.
//
// Detailed guarantees
// -------------------
//
// SequencedTaskRunner also adds additional methods for posting
// non-nestable tasks. In general, an implementation of TaskRunner
// may expose task-running methods which are themselves callable from
// within tasks. A non-nestable task is one that is guaranteed to not
// be run from within an already-running task. Conversely, a nestable
// task (the default) is a task that can be run from within an
// already-running task.
//
// The guarantees of SequencedTaskRunner are as follows:
//
// - Given two tasks T2 and T1, T2 will start after T1 starts if:
//
// * T2 is posted after T1; and
// * T2 has equal or higher delay than T1; and
// * T2 is non-nestable or T1 is nestable.
//
// - If T2 will start after T1 starts by the above guarantee, then
// T2 will start after T1 finishes and is destroyed if:
//
// * T2 is non-nestable, or
// * T1 doesn't call any task-running methods.
//
// - If T2 will start after T1 finishes by the above guarantee, then
// all memory changes in T1 and T1's destruction will be visible
// to T2.
//
// - If T2 runs nested within T1 via a call to the task-running
// method M, then all memory changes in T1 up to the call to M
// will be visible to T2, and all memory changes in T2 will be
// visible to T1 from the return from M.
//
// Note that SequencedTaskRunner does not guarantee that tasks are run
// on a single dedicated thread, although the above guarantees provide
// most (but not all) of the same guarantees. If you do need to
// guarantee that tasks are run on a single dedicated thread, see
// SingleThreadTaskRunner (in single_thread_task_runner.h).
//
// Some corollaries to the above guarantees, assuming the tasks in
// question don't call any task-running methods:
//
// - Tasks posted via PostTask are run in FIFO order.
//
// - Tasks posted via PostNonNestableTask are run in FIFO order.
//
// - Tasks posted with the same delay and the same nestable state
// are run in FIFO order.
//
// - A list of tasks with the same nestable state posted in order of
// non-decreasing delay is run in FIFO order.
//
// - A list of tasks posted in order of non-decreasing delay with at
// most a single change in nestable state from nestable to
// non-nestable is run in FIFO order. (This is equivalent to the
// statement of the first guarantee above.)
//
// Some theoretical implementations of SequencedTaskRunner:
//
// - A SequencedTaskRunner that wraps a regular TaskRunner but makes
// sure that only one task at a time is posted to the TaskRunner,
// with appropriate memory barriers in between tasks.
//
// - A SequencedTaskRunner that, for each task, spawns a joinable
// thread to run that task and immediately quit, and then
// immediately joins that thread.
//
// - A SequencedTaskRunner that stores the list of posted tasks and
// has a method Run() that runs each runnable task in FIFO order
// that can be called from any thread, but only if another
// (non-nested) Run() call isn't already happening.
class BASE_EXPORT SequencedTaskRunner : public TaskRunner {
public:
// The two PostNonNestable*Task methods below are like their
// nestable equivalents in TaskRunner, but they guarantee that the
// posted task will not run nested within an already-running task.
//
// A simple corollary is that posting a task as non-nestable can
// only delay when the task gets run. That is, posting a task as
// non-nestable may not affect when the task gets run, or it could
// make it run later than it normally would, but it won't make it
// run earlier than it normally would.
// TODO(akalin): Get rid of the boolean return value for the methods
// below.
bool PostNonNestableTask(const Location& from_here, OnceClosure task);
virtual bool PostNonNestableDelayedTask(const Location& from_here,
OnceClosure task,
base::TimeDelta delay) = 0;
// Submits a non-nestable task to delete the given object. Returns
// true if the object may be deleted at some point in the future,
// and false if the object definitely will not be deleted.
template <class T>
bool DeleteSoon(const Location& from_here, const T* object) {
return DeleteOrReleaseSoonInternal(from_here, &DeleteHelper<T>::DoDelete,
object);
}
template <class T>
bool DeleteSoon(const Location& from_here, std::unique_ptr<T> object) {
return DeleteSoon(from_here, object.release());
}
// Submits a non-nestable task to release the given object.
//
// ReleaseSoon makes sure that the object it the scoped_refptr points to gets
// properly released on the correct thread.
// We apply ReleaseSoon to the rvalue as the side-effects can be unclear to
// the caller if an lvalue is used. That being so, the scoped_refptr should
// always be std::move'd.
// Example use:
//
// scoped_refptr<T> foo_scoped_refptr;
// ...
// task_runner->ReleaseSoon(std::move(foo_scoped_refptr));
template <class T>
void ReleaseSoon(const Location& from_here, scoped_refptr<T>&& object) {
if (!object)
return;
DeleteOrReleaseSoonInternal(from_here, &ReleaseHelper<T>::DoRelease,
object.release());
}
// Returns true iff tasks posted to this TaskRunner are sequenced
// with this call.
//
// In particular:
// - Returns true if this is a SequencedTaskRunner to which the
// current task was posted.
// - Returns true if this is a SequencedTaskRunner bound to the
// same sequence as the SequencedTaskRunner to which the current
// task was posted.
// - Returns true if this is a SingleThreadTaskRunner bound to
// the current thread.
virtual bool RunsTasksInCurrentSequence() const = 0;
protected:
~SequencedTaskRunner() override = default;
private:
bool DeleteOrReleaseSoonInternal(const Location& from_here,
void (*deleter)(const void*),
const void* object);
};
// Sample usage with std::unique_ptr :
// std::unique_ptr<Foo, base::OnTaskRunnerDeleter> ptr(
// new Foo, base::OnTaskRunnerDeleter(my_task_runner));
//
// For RefCounted see base::RefCountedDeleteOnSequence.
struct BASE_EXPORT OnTaskRunnerDeleter {
explicit OnTaskRunnerDeleter(scoped_refptr<SequencedTaskRunner> task_runner);
~OnTaskRunnerDeleter();
OnTaskRunnerDeleter(OnTaskRunnerDeleter&&);
OnTaskRunnerDeleter& operator=(OnTaskRunnerDeleter&&);
// For compatibility with std:: deleters.
template <typename T>
void operator()(const T* ptr) {
if (ptr)
task_runner_->DeleteSoon(FROM_HERE, ptr);
}
scoped_refptr<SequencedTaskRunner> task_runner_;
};
} // namespace base
#endif // BASE_SEQUENCED_TASK_RUNNER_H_