/* * Copyright 2011 The WebRTC Project Authors. All rights reserved. * * Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license * that can be found in the LICENSE file in the root of the source * tree. An additional intellectual property rights grant can be found * in the file PATENTS. All contributing project authors may * be found in the AUTHORS file in the root of the source tree. */ // Originally these classes are from Chromium. // http://src.chromium.org/viewvc/chrome/trunk/src/base/memory/ref_counted.h?view=markup // // A smart pointer class for reference counted objects. Use this class instead // of calling AddRef and Release manually on a reference counted object to // avoid common memory leaks caused by forgetting to Release an object // reference. Sample usage: // // class MyFoo : public RefCounted { // ... // }; // // void some_function() { // scoped_refptr foo = new MyFoo(); // foo->Method(param); // // `foo` is released when this function returns // } // // void some_other_function() { // scoped_refptr foo = new MyFoo(); // ... // foo = nullptr; // explicitly releases `foo` // ... // if (foo) // foo->Method(param); // } // // The above examples show how scoped_refptr acts like a pointer to T. // Given two scoped_refptr classes, it is also possible to exchange // references between the two objects, like so: // // { // scoped_refptr a = new MyFoo(); // scoped_refptr b; // // b.swap(a); // // now, `b` references the MyFoo object, and `a` references null. // } // // To make both `a` and `b` in the above example reference the same MyFoo // object, simply use the assignment operator: // // { // scoped_refptr a = new MyFoo(); // scoped_refptr b; // // b = a; // // now, `a` and `b` each own a reference to the same MyFoo object. // } // #ifndef API_SCOPED_REFPTR_H_ #define API_SCOPED_REFPTR_H_ #include #include namespace rtc { template class scoped_refptr { public: typedef T element_type; scoped_refptr() : ptr_(nullptr) {} scoped_refptr(T* p) : ptr_(p) { // NOLINT(runtime/explicit) if (ptr_) ptr_->AddRef(); } scoped_refptr(const scoped_refptr& r) : ptr_(r.ptr_) { if (ptr_) ptr_->AddRef(); } template scoped_refptr(const scoped_refptr& r) : ptr_(r.get()) { if (ptr_) ptr_->AddRef(); } // Move constructors. scoped_refptr(scoped_refptr&& r) noexcept : ptr_(r.release()) {} template scoped_refptr(scoped_refptr&& r) noexcept : ptr_(r.release()) {} ~scoped_refptr() { if (ptr_) ptr_->Release(); } T* get() const { return ptr_; } operator T*() const { return ptr_; } T& operator*() const { return *ptr_; } T* operator->() const { return ptr_; } // Returns the (possibly null) raw pointer, and makes the scoped_refptr hold a // null pointer, all without touching the reference count of the underlying // pointed-to object. The object is still reference counted, and the caller of // release() is now the proud owner of one reference, so it is responsible for // calling Release() once on the object when no longer using it. T* release() { T* retVal = ptr_; ptr_ = nullptr; return retVal; } scoped_refptr& operator=(T* p) { // AddRef first so that self assignment should work if (p) p->AddRef(); if (ptr_) ptr_->Release(); ptr_ = p; return *this; } scoped_refptr& operator=(const scoped_refptr& r) { return *this = r.ptr_; } template scoped_refptr& operator=(const scoped_refptr& r) { return *this = r.get(); } scoped_refptr& operator=(scoped_refptr&& r) noexcept { scoped_refptr(std::move(r)).swap(*this); return *this; } template scoped_refptr& operator=(scoped_refptr&& r) noexcept { scoped_refptr(std::move(r)).swap(*this); return *this; } void swap(T** pp) noexcept { T* p = ptr_; ptr_ = *pp; *pp = p; } void swap(scoped_refptr& r) noexcept { swap(&r.ptr_); } protected: T* ptr_; }; } // namespace rtc #endif // API_SCOPED_REFPTR_H_