// Copyright 2014 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_SCOPED_GENERIC_H_ #define BASE_SCOPED_GENERIC_H_ #include #include #include "base/compiler_specific.h" #include "base/logging.h" #include "base/macros.h" namespace base { // This class acts like unique_ptr with a custom deleter (although is slightly // less fancy in some of the more escoteric respects) except that it keeps a // copy of the object rather than a pointer, and we require that the contained // object has some kind of "invalid" value. // // Defining a scoper based on this class allows you to get a scoper for // non-pointer types without having to write custom code for set, reset, and // move, etc. and get almost identical semantics that people are used to from // unique_ptr. // // It is intended that you will typedef this class with an appropriate deleter // to implement clean up tasks for objects that act like pointers from a // resource management standpoint but aren't, such as file descriptors and // various types of operating system handles. Using unique_ptr for these // things requires that you keep a pointer to the handle valid for the lifetime // of the scoper (which is easy to mess up). // // For an object to be able to be put into a ScopedGeneric, it must support // standard copyable semantics and have a specific "invalid" value. The traits // must define a free function and also the invalid value to assign for // default-constructed and released objects. // // struct FooScopedTraits { // // It's assumed that this is a fast inline function with little-to-no // // penalty for duplicate calls. This must be a static function even // // for stateful traits. // static int InvalidValue() { // return 0; // } // // // This free function will not be called if f == InvalidValue()! // static void Free(int f) { // ::FreeFoo(f); // } // }; // // typedef ScopedGeneric ScopedFoo; // // A Traits type may choose to track ownership of objects in parallel with // ScopedGeneric. To do so, it must implement the Acquire and Release methods, // which will be called by ScopedGeneric during ownership transfers and extend // the ScopedGenericOwnershipTracking tag type. // // struct BarScopedTraits : public ScopedGenericOwnershipTracking { // using ScopedGenericType = ScopedGeneric; // static int InvalidValue() { // return 0; // } // // static void Free(int b) { // ::FreeBar(b); // } // // static void Acquire(const ScopedGenericType& owner, int b) { // ::TrackAcquisition(b, owner); // } // // static void Release(const ScopedGenericType& owner, int b) { // ::TrackRelease(b, owner); // } // }; // // typedef ScopedGeneric ScopedBar; struct ScopedGenericOwnershipTracking {}; template class ScopedGeneric { private: // This must be first since it's used inline below. // // Use the empty base class optimization to allow us to have a D // member, while avoiding any space overhead for it when D is an // empty class. See e.g. http://www.cantrip.org/emptyopt.html for a good // discussion of this technique. struct Data : public Traits { explicit Data(const T& in) : generic(in) {} Data(const T& in, const Traits& other) : Traits(other), generic(in) {} T generic; }; public: typedef T element_type; typedef Traits traits_type; ScopedGeneric() : data_(traits_type::InvalidValue()) {} // Constructor. Takes responsibility for freeing the resource associated with // the object T. explicit ScopedGeneric(const element_type& value) : data_(value) { TrackAcquire(data_.generic); } // Constructor. Allows initialization of a stateful traits object. ScopedGeneric(const element_type& value, const traits_type& traits) : data_(value, traits) { TrackAcquire(data_.generic); } // Move constructor. Allows initialization from a ScopedGeneric rvalue. ScopedGeneric(ScopedGeneric&& rvalue) : data_(rvalue.release(), rvalue.get_traits()) { TrackAcquire(data_.generic); } virtual ~ScopedGeneric() { CHECK(!receiving_) << "ScopedGeneric destroyed with active receiver"; FreeIfNecessary(); } // operator=. Allows assignment from a ScopedGeneric rvalue. ScopedGeneric& operator=(ScopedGeneric&& rvalue) { reset(rvalue.release()); return *this; } // Frees the currently owned object, if any. Then takes ownership of a new // object, if given. Self-resets are not allowd as on unique_ptr. See // http://crbug.com/162971 void reset(const element_type& value = traits_type::InvalidValue()) { if (data_.generic != traits_type::InvalidValue() && data_.generic == value) abort(); FreeIfNecessary(); data_.generic = value; TrackAcquire(value); } void swap(ScopedGeneric& other) { if (&other == this) { return; } TrackRelease(data_.generic); other.TrackRelease(other.data_.generic); // Standard swap idiom: 'using std::swap' ensures that std::swap is // present in the overload set, but we call swap unqualified so that // any more-specific overloads can be used, if available. using std::swap; swap(static_cast(data_), static_cast(other.data_)); swap(data_.generic, other.data_.generic); TrackAcquire(data_.generic); other.TrackAcquire(other.data_.generic); } // Release the object. The return value is the current object held by this // object. After this operation, this object will hold a null value, and // will not own the object any more. element_type release() WARN_UNUSED_RESULT { element_type old_generic = data_.generic; data_.generic = traits_type::InvalidValue(); TrackRelease(old_generic); return old_generic; } // A helper class that provides a T* that can be used to take ownership of // a value returned from a function via out-parameter. When the Receiver is // destructed (which should usually be at the end of the statement in which // receive is called), ScopedGeneric::reset() will be called with the // Receiver's value. // // In the simple case of a function that assigns the value before it returns, // C++'s lifetime extension can be used as follows: // // ScopedFoo foo; // bool result = GetFoo(ScopedFoo::Receiver(foo).get()); // // Note that the lifetime of the Receiver is extended until the semicolon, // and ScopedGeneric is assigned the value upon destruction of the Receiver, // so the following code would not work: // // // BROKEN! // ScopedFoo foo; // UseFoo(&foo, GetFoo(ScopedFoo::Receiver(foo).get())); // // In more complicated scenarios, you may need to provide an explicit scope // for the Receiver, as in the following: // // std::vector foos(64); // // { // std::vector foo_receivers; // for (auto foo : foos) { // foo_receivers_.emplace_back(foo); // } // for (auto receiver : foo_receivers) { // SubmitGetFooRequest(receiver.get()); // } // WaitForFooRequests(); // } // UseFoos(foos); class Receiver { public: explicit Receiver(ScopedGeneric& parent) : scoped_generic_(&parent) { CHECK(!scoped_generic_->receiving_) << "attempted to construct Receiver for ScopedGeneric with existing " "Receiver"; scoped_generic_->receiving_ = true; } ~Receiver() { if (scoped_generic_) { CHECK(scoped_generic_->receiving_); scoped_generic_->reset(value_); scoped_generic_->receiving_ = false; } } Receiver(Receiver&& move) { CHECK(!used_) << "moving into already-used Receiver"; CHECK(!move.used_) << "moving from already-used Receiver"; scoped_generic_ = move.scoped_generic_; move.scoped_generic_ = nullptr; } Receiver& operator=(Receiver&& move) { CHECK(!used_) << "moving into already-used Receiver"; CHECK(!move.used_) << "moving from already-used Receiver"; scoped_generic_ = move.scoped_generic_; move.scoped_generic_ = nullptr; } // We hand out a pointer to a field in Receiver instead of directly to // ScopedGeneric's internal storage in order to make it so that users can't // accidentally silently break ScopedGeneric's invariants. This way, an // incorrect use-after-scope-exit is more detectable by ASan or static // analysis tools, as the pointer is only valid for the lifetime of the // Receiver, not the ScopedGeneric. T* get() { used_ = true; return &value_; } private: T value_ = Traits::InvalidValue(); ScopedGeneric* scoped_generic_; bool used_ = false; DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(Receiver); }; const element_type& get() const { return data_.generic; } // Returns true if this object doesn't hold the special null value for the // associated data type. bool is_valid() const { return data_.generic != traits_type::InvalidValue(); } bool operator==(const element_type& value) const { return data_.generic == value; } bool operator!=(const element_type& value) const { return data_.generic != value; } Traits& get_traits() { return data_; } const Traits& get_traits() const { return data_; } private: void FreeIfNecessary() { if (data_.generic != traits_type::InvalidValue()) { TrackRelease(data_.generic); data_.Free(data_.generic); data_.generic = traits_type::InvalidValue(); } } template typename std::enable_if_t< std::is_base_of::value, Void> TrackAcquire(const T& value) { if (value != traits_type::InvalidValue()) { data_.Acquire(static_cast(*this), value); } } template typename std::enable_if_t< !std::is_base_of::value, Void> TrackAcquire(const T& value) {} template typename std::enable_if_t< std::is_base_of::value, Void> TrackRelease(const T& value) { if (value != traits_type::InvalidValue()) { data_.Release(static_cast(*this), value); } } template typename std::enable_if_t< !std::is_base_of::value, Void> TrackRelease(const T& value) {} // Forbid comparison. If U != T, it totally doesn't make sense, and if U == // T, it still doesn't make sense because you should never have the same // object owned by two different ScopedGenerics. template bool operator==( const ScopedGeneric& p2) const; template bool operator!=( const ScopedGeneric& p2) const; Data data_; bool receiving_ = false; DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(ScopedGeneric); }; template void swap(const ScopedGeneric& a, const ScopedGeneric& b) { a.swap(b); } template bool operator==(const T& value, const ScopedGeneric& scoped) { return value == scoped.get(); } template bool operator!=(const T& value, const ScopedGeneric& scoped) { return value != scoped.get(); } } // namespace base #endif // BASE_SCOPED_GENERIC_H_