[scope] Adding scope_exit (#2875)

* initial commit

* is this enough?

* is this enough docs? I'm not great at writing docs

---------

Co-authored-by: pf <pf@me>
Co-authored-by: pf <pf@pf>
pull/2878/head
pfeatherstone 12 months ago committed by GitHub
parent afede571cb
commit 3624bf9f05
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GPG Key ID: 4AEE18F83AFDEB23

@ -0,0 +1,89 @@
// Copyright (C) 2023 Davis E. King (davis@dlib.net)
// License: Boost Software License See LICENSE.txt for the full license.
#ifndef DLIB_SCOPE_H_
#define DLIB_SCOPE_H_
#include <utility>
#include <functional>
#include <type_traits>
namespace dlib
{
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
template<class Fn>
class scope_exit
{
/*!
WHAT THIS OBJECT REPRESENTS
This is a standard's compliant backport of std::experimental::scope_exit that works with C++14.
Therefore, refer to https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/experimental/scope_exit for docs on the
interface of scope_exit.
!*/
private:
Fn f_;
bool active_{true};
public:
constexpr scope_exit() = delete;
constexpr scope_exit(const scope_exit &) = delete;
constexpr scope_exit &operator=(const scope_exit &) = delete;
constexpr scope_exit &operator=(scope_exit &&) = delete;
constexpr scope_exit(scope_exit &&other) noexcept(std::is_nothrow_move_constructible<Fn>::value)
: f_{std::move(other.f_)}, active_{std::exchange(other.active_, false)}
{}
template<
class F,
std::enable_if_t<!std::is_same<std::decay_t<F>, scope_exit>::value, bool> = true
>
explicit scope_exit(F&& f) noexcept(std::is_nothrow_constructible<Fn,F>::value)
: f_{std::forward<F>(f)}, active_{true}
{}
~scope_exit() noexcept
{
if (active_)
f_();
}
void release() noexcept { active_ = false; }
};
template<class Fn>
auto make_scope_exit(Fn&& f)
/*!
ensures:
- This is factory function that wraps the callback in a scope_exit object.
!*/
{
return scope_exit<std::decay_t<Fn>>(std::forward<Fn>(f));
}
#ifdef __cpp_deduction_guides
template<class Fn>
scope_exit(Fn) -> scope_exit<Fn>;
#endif
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
using scope_exit_erased = scope_exit<std::function<void()>>;
/*!
WHAT THIS OBJECT REPRESENTS
This is a type erased version of scope_exit. I.e. there is no template parameter.
Use this object if you wish to hide the exact function signature, for example
if splitting a declaration and definition across a header file and cpp file.
This does come at a slight performance penalty since it may incur a heap allocation
and due to a pointer indirection, the compiler may not inline your callback.
!*/
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
}
#endif //DLIB_SCOPE_H_

@ -162,6 +162,7 @@ add_executable(${target_name} main.cpp tester.cpp
te.cpp
ffmpeg.cpp
optional.cpp
scope.cpp
)
get_filename_component(DLIB_FFMPEG_DATA ${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/ffmpeg_data/details.cfg REALPATH)

@ -0,0 +1,171 @@
// Copyright (C) 2023 Davis E. King (davis@dlib.net)
// License: Boost Software License See LICENSE.txt for the full license.
#include <cstdlib>
#include <cstring>
#include <dlib/scope.h>
#include "tester.h"
namespace
{
using namespace test;
using namespace dlib;
logger dlog("test.scope");
// ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
void test_scope_exit()
{
int counter{0};
{
auto s1 = make_scope_exit([&]{++counter;});
static_assert(!std::is_copy_constructible<decltype(s1)>::value, "bad");
static_assert(!std::is_copy_assignable<decltype(s1)>::value, "bad");
static_assert(!std::is_move_assignable<decltype(s1)>::value, "bad");
static_assert(std::is_move_constructible<decltype(s1)>::value, "bad");
auto s2 = std::move(s1);
auto s3 = std::move(s2);
auto s4 = std::move(s3);
}
DLIB_TEST(counter == 1);
const auto fn_inner = [&]
{
auto s = make_scope_exit([&]{++counter;});
return s;
};
const auto fn_outer = [&]
{
auto s = fn_inner();
return s;
};
{
auto s = fn_outer();
}
DLIB_TEST(counter == 2);
#ifdef __cpp_deduction_guides
{
scope_exit s{[&]{++counter;}};
}
DLIB_TEST(counter == 3);
#endif
}
// ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
void test_scope_exit_erased()
{
int counter{0};
{
scope_exit_erased s1([&]{++counter;});
static_assert(!std::is_copy_constructible<decltype(s1)>::value, "bad");
static_assert(!std::is_copy_assignable<decltype(s1)>::value, "bad");
static_assert(!std::is_move_assignable<decltype(s1)>::value, "bad");
static_assert(std::is_move_constructible<decltype(s1)>::value, "bad");
auto s2 = std::move(s1);
auto s3 = std::move(s2);
auto s4 = std::move(s3);
}
DLIB_TEST(counter == 1);
const auto fn_inner = [&]
{
scope_exit_erased s([&]{++counter;});
return s;
};
const auto fn_outer = [&]
{
auto s = fn_inner();
return s;
};
{
auto s = fn_outer();
}
DLIB_TEST(counter == 2);
}
struct results_with_delayed_C_library_resource_management
{
int ndata{0};
char* data{nullptr};
scope_exit_erased s;
};
void test_composition()
{
int counter{0};
const auto fn = [&]
{
// Pretend you're in a cpp file using a C library which isn't exposed to the API via the header.
// You want to return some results, but those results are only valid so long as something returned by the C library is still alive
// You want to delay releasing any resources allocated by the C library until after you've returned your results and the caller is done using them.
// You could return a std::unique_ptr<results> object with a custom deleter which deletes that resource but because all types in std::unique_ptr
// must be complete types, you would have to pollute the header. You can use std::shared_ptr with a custom deleter, defined at runtime,
// but this is less efficient.
// You can use a scope_exit_erased object to wrap the resouce management function from the C library and delay the call further up the stack,
// all behind a type erased callback.
// pretend malloc() is a fancy function from some exotic C library.
// pretend free() is another fancy function which you don't want users to have to manually call, and you want to delay calling it until after the results are used
// pretend cstdlib is a fancy header you don't want to expose in your own header file.
char* data = (char*)std::malloc(100);
std::memset(data, 0, 100);
std::snprintf(data, 100, "hello there!");
scope_exit_erased s{[=, &counter] {free(data); ++counter;}};
results_with_delayed_C_library_resource_management results{100, data, std::move(s)};
return results;
};
{
// Oh, look at me. I'm using these results, blissfully unaware that some super complicated function in a C library will get called when i'm done using results.
const auto results = fn();
DLIB_TEST(results.ndata == 100);
DLIB_TEST(std::strcmp(results.data, "hello there!") == 0);
DLIB_TEST(counter == 0);
}
DLIB_TEST(counter == 1);
}
// ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
class scope_tester : public tester
{
public:
scope_tester (
) :
tester ("test_scope",
"Runs tests on the scope_exit and related objects")
{}
void perform_test (
)
{
test_scope_exit();
test_scope_exit_erased();
test_composition();
}
} a;
// ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
}
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