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Vitaly Bukacbed2062015-08-17 12:54:05 -07001// Copyright (c) 2012 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
2// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
3// found in the LICENSE file.
4
5#ifndef BASE_MOVE_H_
6#define BASE_MOVE_H_
7
8#include "base/compiler_specific.h"
9
10// Macro with the boilerplate that makes a type move-only in C++03.
11//
12// USAGE
13//
14// This macro should be used instead of DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN to create
15// a "move-only" type. Unlike DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN, this macro should be
16// the first line in a class declaration.
17//
18// A class using this macro must call .Pass() (or somehow be an r-value already)
19// before it can be:
20//
21// * Passed as a function argument
22// * Used as the right-hand side of an assignment
23// * Returned from a function
24//
25// Each class will still need to define their own "move constructor" and "move
26// operator=" to make this useful. Here's an example of the macro, the move
27// constructor, and the move operator= from the scoped_ptr class:
28//
29// template <typename T>
30// class scoped_ptr {
31// MOVE_ONLY_TYPE_FOR_CPP_03(scoped_ptr, RValue)
32// public:
33// scoped_ptr(RValue& other) : ptr_(other.release()) { }
34// scoped_ptr& operator=(RValue& other) {
35// swap(other);
36// return *this;
37// }
38// };
39//
40// Note that the constructor must NOT be marked explicit.
41//
42// For consistency, the second parameter to the macro should always be RValue
43// unless you have a strong reason to do otherwise. It is only exposed as a
44// macro parameter so that the move constructor and move operator= don't look
45// like they're using a phantom type.
46//
47//
48// HOW THIS WORKS
49//
50// For a thorough explanation of this technique, see:
51//
52// http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/More_C%2B%2B_Idioms/Move_Constructor
53//
54// The summary is that we take advantage of 2 properties:
55//
56// 1) non-const references will not bind to r-values.
57// 2) C++ can apply one user-defined conversion when initializing a
58// variable.
59//
60// The first lets us disable the copy constructor and assignment operator
61// by declaring private version of them with a non-const reference parameter.
62//
63// For l-values, direct initialization still fails like in
64// DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN because the copy constructor and assignment
65// operators are private.
66//
67// For r-values, the situation is different. The copy constructor and
68// assignment operator are not viable due to (1), so we are trying to call
69// a non-existent constructor and non-existing operator= rather than a private
70// one. Since we have not committed an error quite yet, we can provide an
71// alternate conversion sequence and a constructor. We add
72//
73// * a private struct named "RValue"
74// * a user-defined conversion "operator RValue()"
75// * a "move constructor" and "move operator=" that take the RValue& as
76// their sole parameter.
77//
78// Only r-values will trigger this sequence and execute our "move constructor"
79// or "move operator=." L-values will match the private copy constructor and
80// operator= first giving a "private in this context" error. This combination
81// gives us a move-only type.
82//
83// For signaling a destructive transfer of data from an l-value, we provide a
84// method named Pass() which creates an r-value for the current instance
85// triggering the move constructor or move operator=.
86//
87// Other ways to get r-values is to use the result of an expression like a
88// function call.
89//
90// Here's an example with comments explaining what gets triggered where:
91//
92// class Foo {
93// MOVE_ONLY_TYPE_FOR_CPP_03(Foo, RValue);
94//
95// public:
96// ... API ...
97// Foo(RValue other); // Move constructor.
98// Foo& operator=(RValue rhs); // Move operator=
99// };
100//
101// Foo MakeFoo(); // Function that returns a Foo.
102//
103// Foo f;
104// Foo f_copy(f); // ERROR: Foo(Foo&) is private in this context.
105// Foo f_assign;
106// f_assign = f; // ERROR: operator=(Foo&) is private in this context.
107//
108//
109// Foo f(MakeFoo()); // R-value so alternate conversion executed.
110// Foo f_copy(f.Pass()); // R-value so alternate conversion executed.
111// f = f_copy.Pass(); // R-value so alternate conversion executed.
112//
113//
114// IMPLEMENTATION SUBTLETIES WITH RValue
115//
116// The RValue struct is just a container for a pointer back to the original
117// object. It should only ever be created as a temporary, and no external
118// class should ever declare it or use it in a parameter.
119//
120// It is tempting to want to use the RValue type in function parameters, but
121// excluding the limited usage here for the move constructor and move
122// operator=, doing so would mean that the function could take both r-values
123// and l-values equially which is unexpected. See COMPARED To Boost.Move for
124// more details.
125//
126// An alternate, and incorrect, implementation of the RValue class used by
127// Boost.Move makes RValue a fieldless child of the move-only type. RValue&
128// is then used in place of RValue in the various operators. The RValue& is
129// "created" by doing *reinterpret_cast<RValue*>(this). This has the appeal
130// of never creating a temporary RValue struct even with optimizations
131// disabled. Also, by virtue of inheritance you can treat the RValue
132// reference as if it were the move-only type itself. Unfortunately,
133// using the result of this reinterpret_cast<> is actually undefined behavior
134// due to C++98 5.2.10.7. In certain compilers (e.g., NaCl) the optimizer
135// will generate non-working code.
136//
137// In optimized builds, both implementations generate the same assembly so we
138// choose the one that adheres to the standard.
139//
140//
141// WHY HAVE typedef void MoveOnlyTypeForCPP03
142//
143// Callback<>/Bind() needs to understand movable-but-not-copyable semantics
144// to call .Pass() appropriately when it is expected to transfer the value.
145// The cryptic typedef MoveOnlyTypeForCPP03 is added to make this check
146// easy and automatic in helper templates for Callback<>/Bind().
147// See IsMoveOnlyType template and its usage in base/callback_internal.h
148// for more details.
149//
150//
151// COMPARED TO C++11
152//
153// In C++11, you would implement this functionality using an r-value reference
154// and our .Pass() method would be replaced with a call to std::move().
155//
156// This emulation also has a deficiency where it uses up the single
157// user-defined conversion allowed by C++ during initialization. This can
158// cause problems in some API edge cases. For instance, in scoped_ptr, it is
159// impossible to make a function "void Foo(scoped_ptr<Parent> p)" accept a
160// value of type scoped_ptr<Child> even if you add a constructor to
161// scoped_ptr<> that would make it look like it should work. C++11 does not
162// have this deficiency.
163//
164//
165// COMPARED TO Boost.Move
166//
167// Our implementation similar to Boost.Move, but we keep the RValue struct
168// private to the move-only type, and we don't use the reinterpret_cast<> hack.
169//
170// In Boost.Move, RValue is the boost::rv<> template. This type can be used
171// when writing APIs like:
172//
173// void MyFunc(boost::rv<Foo>& f)
174//
175// that can take advantage of rv<> to avoid extra copies of a type. However you
176// would still be able to call this version of MyFunc with an l-value:
177//
178// Foo f;
179// MyFunc(f); // Uh oh, we probably just destroyed |f| w/o calling Pass().
180//
181// unless someone is very careful to also declare a parallel override like:
182//
183// void MyFunc(const Foo& f)
184//
185// that would catch the l-values first. This was declared unsafe in C++11 and
186// a C++11 compiler will explicitly fail MyFunc(f). Unfortunately, we cannot
187// ensure this in C++03.
188//
189// Since we have no need for writing such APIs yet, our implementation keeps
190// RValue private and uses a .Pass() method to do the conversion instead of
191// trying to write a version of "std::move()." Writing an API like std::move()
192// would require the RValue struct to be public.
193//
194//
195// CAVEATS
196//
197// If you include a move-only type as a field inside a class that does not
198// explicitly declare a copy constructor, the containing class's implicit
199// copy constructor will change from Containing(const Containing&) to
200// Containing(Containing&). This can cause some unexpected errors.
201//
202// http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=11528
203//
204// The workaround is to explicitly declare your copy constructor.
205//
206#define MOVE_ONLY_TYPE_FOR_CPP_03(type, rvalue_type) \
207 private: \
208 struct rvalue_type { \
209 explicit rvalue_type(type* object) : object(object) {} \
210 type* object; \
211 }; \
212 type(type&); \
213 void operator=(type&); \
214 public: \
215 operator rvalue_type() { return rvalue_type(this); } \
216 type Pass() WARN_UNUSED_RESULT { return type(rvalue_type(this)); } \
217 typedef void MoveOnlyTypeForCPP03; \
218 private:
219
220#define MOVE_ONLY_TYPE_WITH_MOVE_CONSTRUCTOR_FOR_CPP_03(type) \
221 private: \
222 type(const type&); \
223 void operator=(const type&); \
224 public: \
225 type&& Pass() WARN_UNUSED_RESULT { return static_cast<type&&>(*this); } \
226 typedef void MoveOnlyTypeForCPP03; \
227 private:
228
229#define TYPE_WITH_MOVE_CONSTRUCTOR_FOR_CPP_03(type) \
230 public: \
231 type&& Pass() WARN_UNUSED_RESULT { return static_cast<type&&>(*this); } \
232 private:
233
234#endif // BASE_MOVE_H_