// // Copyright (C) 2014 The Android Open Source Project // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. // You may obtain a copy of the License at // // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 // // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and // limitations under the License. // #ifndef UPDATE_ENGINE_UPDATE_MANAGER_BOXED_VALUE_H_ #define UPDATE_ENGINE_UPDATE_MANAGER_BOXED_VALUE_H_ #include #include #include namespace chromeos_update_manager { // BoxedValue is a class to hold pointers of a given type that deletes them when // the instance goes out of scope, as std::unique_ptr does. The main // difference with it is that the type T is not part of the class, i.e., this // isn't a parametric class. The class has a parametric constructor that accepts // a const T* which will define the type of the object passed on delete. // // It is safe to use this class in linked containers such as std::list and // std::map but the object can't be copied. This means that you need to // construct the BoxedValue in place using a container method like emplace() // or move it with std::move(). // // list lst; // lst.emplace_back(new const int(42)); // lst.emplace_back(new const string("Hello world!")); // // map m; // m.emplace(123, std::move(BoxedValue(new const string("Hola mundo!")))); // // auto it = m.find(42); // if (it != m.end()) // cout << "m[42] points to " << it->second.value() << endl; // cout << "m[33] points to " << m[33].value() << endl; // // Since copy and assign are not allowed, you can't create a copy of the // BoxedValue which means that you can only use a reference to it. // class BoxedValue { public: // Creates an empty BoxedValue. Since the pointer can't be assigned from other // BoxedValues or pointers, this is only useful in places where a default // constructor is required, such as std::map::operator[]. BoxedValue() : value_(nullptr), deleter_(nullptr), printer_(nullptr) {} // Creates a BoxedValue for the passed pointer |value|. The BoxedValue keeps // the ownership of this pointer and can't be released. template explicit BoxedValue(const T* value) : value_(static_cast(value)), deleter_(ValueDeleter), printer_(ValuePrinter) {} // The move constructor takes ownership of the pointer since the semantics of // it allows to render the passed BoxedValue undefined. You need to use the // move constructor explicitly preventing it from accidental references, // like in: // BoxedValue new_box(std::move(other_box)); BoxedValue(BoxedValue&& other) noexcept : value_(other.value_), deleter_(other.deleter_), printer_(other.printer_) { other.value_ = nullptr; other.deleter_ = nullptr; other.printer_ = nullptr; } // Deletes the |value| passed on construction using the delete for the passed // type. ~BoxedValue() { if (deleter_) deleter_(value_); } const void* value() const { return value_; } std::string ToString() const { if (!printer_) return "(no printer)"; if (!value_) return "(no value)"; return printer_(value_); } // Static method to call the destructor of the right type. template static void ValueDeleter(const void* value) { delete reinterpret_cast(value); } // Static method to print a type. See boxed_value.cc for common // instantiations. template static std::string ValuePrinter(const void* value); private: // A pointer to the cached value. const void* value_; // A function that calls delete for the right type of value_. void (*deleter_)(const void*); // A function that converts value_ to a string. std::string (*printer_)(const void*); DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(BoxedValue); }; } // namespace chromeos_update_manager #endif // UPDATE_ENGINE_UPDATE_MANAGER_BOXED_VALUE_H_