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1 // This file was GENERATED by command: | |
2 // pump.py uber_callback.h.pump | |
3 // DO NOT EDIT BY HAND!!! | |
4 | |
5 | |
6 // Copyright (c) 2011 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. | |
7 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be | |
8 // found in the LICENSE file. | |
9 | |
10 #ifndef BASE_UBER_CALLBACK_H_ | |
11 #define BASE_UBER_CALLBACK_H_ | |
12 #pragma once | |
13 | |
14 #include "base/uber_callback_helpers.h" | |
15 | |
16 // New, super-duper, unified Callback system. This will eventually replace | |
17 // NewRunnableMethod, NewRunnableFunction, CreateFunctor, and CreateCallback | |
18 // systems currently in the Chromium code base. | |
19 // | |
20 // WHAT IS THIS: | |
21 // | |
22 // The templated Callback class is a generalized funciton object. Together | |
23 // with the Prebind() function in prebind.h, they provide a type-safe method | |
24 // for performing currying of arguments, and createing a "closure." | |
25 // | |
26 // In programing languages, a closure is a first-class function where all its | |
27 // parameters have been bound (usually via currying). Closures are well | |
28 // suited for representing, and passing around a unit of delayed execution. | |
29 // They are used in Chromium code to schedule tasks on different MessageLoops. | |
30 // | |
31 // EXAMPLE USAGE: | |
32 // | |
33 // /* Binding a class method. */ | |
34 // class Ref : public RefCountedThreadSafe<Ref> { | |
willchan no longer on Chromium
2011/02/07 23:50:02
Add a public: section.
awong
2011/02/08 18:52:26
Done.
| |
35 // int Foo() { return 3; } | |
36 // }; | |
37 // scoped_refptr<Ref> ref = new Ref(); | |
38 // Callback<int(void)> ref_cb = Prebind(&Ref::Foo, ref.get()); | |
39 // LOG(INFO) << ref_cb.Run(); // Prints out 3. | |
40 // | |
41 // /* Binding a class method in a non-refcounted class. */ | |
42 // class NoRef { | |
willchan no longer on Chromium
2011/02/07 23:50:02
public:
awong
2011/02/08 18:52:26
Done.
| |
43 // int Foo() { return 4; } | |
44 // }; | |
45 // NoRef no_ref; | |
46 // Callback<int(void)> no_ref_cb = Prebind(&NoRef::Foo, Unretained(&no_ref)); | |
willchan no longer on Chromium
2011/02/07 23:50:02
Please prepend the base:: namespace as needed, sin
awong
2011/02/08 18:52:26
Done.
| |
47 // LOG(INFO) << ref_cb.Run(); // Prints out 4. | |
48 // | |
49 // /* Binding a normal function. */ | |
50 // int Return5() { return 5; } | |
51 // Callback<int(int)> func_cb = Prebind(&Return5); | |
52 // LOG(INFO) << func_cb.Run(5); // Prints 5. | |
53 // | |
54 // /* Binding a reference. */ | |
55 // int Identity(int n) { return n; } | |
56 // int value = 1; | |
57 // Callback<int(void)> bound_copy_cb = Prebind(&Identity, value); | |
58 // Callback<int(void)> bound_ref_cb = Prebind(&Identity, ConstRef(value)); | |
willchan no longer on Chromium
2011/02/07 23:50:02
I wonder if it's appropriate here to post a scary
awong
2011/02/08 18:52:26
Scary note added.
| |
59 // LOG(INFO) << bound_copy_cb.Run(); // Prints 1. | |
60 // LOG(INFO) << bound_ref_cb.Run(); // Prints 1. | |
61 // value = 2; | |
62 // LOG(INFO) << bound_copy_cb.Run(); // Prints 1. | |
63 // LOG(INFO) << bound_ref_cb.Run(); // Prints 2. | |
64 // | |
65 // | |
willchan no longer on Chromium
2011/02/07 23:50:02
Include an example for Closure. I suspect that wil
awong
2011/02/08 18:52:26
Good call. I added a couple.
| |
66 // WHERE IS THIS DESIGN FROM: | |
67 // | |
68 // The design Callback and Prebind is heavily influenced by C++'s | |
69 // tr1::function/tr1::bind, and by the "Google Callback" system used inside | |
70 // Google. | |
71 // | |
72 // | |
73 // HOW THE IMPLEMENTATION WORKS: | |
74 // | |
75 // There are three main components to the system: | |
76 // 1) The Callback classes. | |
77 // 2) The Prebind() functions. | |
78 // 3) The arguments wrappers (eg., Unretained() and ConstRef()). | |
79 // | |
80 // The Callback classes represent a generic function pointer. Internally, | |
81 // it stores a refcounted piece of state that represents the target function | |
82 // and all its bound parameters. Each Callback specialization has a templated | |
83 // constructor that takes an InvokerStorageHolder<> object. In the context of | |
84 // the constructor, the static type of this InvokerStorageHolder<> object | |
85 // uniquely identifies the function it is representing, all its bound | |
86 // parameters, and a DoInvoke that is capable of invoking the target. | |
87 // | |
88 // Callback's constructor is takes the InvokerStorageHolder<> that has the | |
89 // full static type and erases the target function type, and the bound | |
90 // parameters. It does this by storing a pointer to the specific DoInvoke | |
91 // function, and upcasting the state of InvokerStorageHolder<> to a | |
92 // InvokerStorageBase. This is safe as long as this InvokerStorageBase pointer | |
93 // is only used with the stored DoInvoke pointer. | |
94 // | |
95 // To create InvokerStorageHolder<> objects, we use the Prebind() functions. | |
96 // These functions, along with a set of internal templates, are reponsible for | |
97 // | |
98 // - Unwrapping the function signature into return type, and parameters | |
99 // - Determining the number of parameters that are bound | |
100 // - Creating the storage for the bound parameters | |
101 // - Performing compile-time asserts to avoid error-prone behavior | |
102 // - Returning an InvokerStorageHolder<> with an DoInvoke that has an arity | |
103 // matching the number of unbound parameters, and knows the correct | |
104 // refcounting semantics for the target object if we are binding a class | |
105 // method. | |
106 // | |
107 // The Prebind functions do the above using type-inference, and template | |
108 // specializations. | |
109 // | |
110 // By default Prebind() will store copies of all bound parameters, and attempt | |
111 // to refcount a target object if the function being bound is a class method. | |
112 // | |
113 // To change this behavior, we introduce a set of argument wrappers | |
114 // (eg. Unretained(), and ConstRef()). These are simple container templates | |
115 // that are passed by value, and wrap a pointer to argument. | |
116 // | |
117 // ConstRef() allows Prebind()'s storage to preserve copy-semantics even if we | |
118 // wish to pass the invoked object a reference to the bound parameter. | |
119 // | |
120 // Unretained() allows us to tag an object for different refcounting semantics. | |
121 // | |
122 // These types are passed to the Unwrap() functions, and the MaybeRefcount() | |
123 // functions respectively to modify the behavior of Prebind(). The Unwrap() | |
124 // and MaybeRefcount() functions change behavior by doing partial | |
125 // specialization based on whether or not a parameter is a wrapper type. | |
126 // | |
127 // ConstRef() is similar to tr1::cref. Unretained() is specific to Chromium. | |
128 // | |
129 // | |
130 // WHY NOT TR1 FUNCTION/BIND? | |
131 // | |
132 // Direct use of tr1::function and tr1::bind was considered, but ultimately | |
133 // rejected because of the number of copy constructors invocations involved | |
134 // in the binding of arguments during construction, and the forwarding of | |
135 // arguments during invocation. These copies will no longer be an issue in | |
136 // C++0x because C++0x will support rvalue reference allowing for the compiler | |
137 // to avoid these copies. However, waiting for C++0x is not an option. | |
138 // | |
139 // Measured with valgrind on gcc version 4.4.3 (Ubuntu 4.4.3-4ubuntu5), the | |
140 // tr1::bind call itself will invoke a non-trivial copy constructor three times | |
141 // for each bound parameter. Also, each when passing a tr1::function, each | |
142 // bound argument will be copied again. | |
143 // | |
144 // In addition to the copies taken at binding and invocation, copying a | |
145 // tr1::function causes a copy to be made of all the bound parameters and | |
146 // state. | |
147 // | |
148 // Furthermore, in Chromium, it is desirable for the Callback to take a | |
149 // reference on a target object when representing a class method call. This | |
150 // is not supported by tr1. | |
151 // | |
152 // Lastly, tr1::function and tr1::bind has a more general and flexible API. | |
153 // This includes things like argument reordering by use of | |
154 // tr1::bind::placeholder, support for non-const reference parameters, and some | |
155 // limited amount of subtyping of the tr1::function object (eg., | |
156 // tr1::function<int(int)> is convertable to tr1::function<void(int)>). | |
157 // | |
158 // These are not features that are required in Chromium. Some of them, such as | |
159 // allowing for reference parameters, and subtyping of functions, may actually | |
160 // because a source of errors. Removing support for these features actually | |
161 // allows for a simpler implementation, and a terser Currying API. | |
162 // | |
163 // | |
164 // WHY NOT GOOGLE CALLBACKS? | |
165 // | |
166 // The Google callback system also does not support refcounting. Furthermore, | |
167 // its implementation has a number of strange edge cases with respect to type | |
168 // convesrion of its arguments. In particular, the argument's constness must | |
169 // at times match exactly the function signature, or the type-inference might | |
170 // break. Given the above, writing a custom solution was easier. | |
171 // | |
172 // | |
173 // MISSING FUNCTIONALITY | |
174 // - Invoking the return of Prebind. Prebind(&foo).Run() does not work; | |
175 // - Binding arrays to functions that take a non-const pointer. | |
176 // Example: | |
177 // void Foo(const char* ptr); | |
178 // void Bar(char* ptr); | |
179 // Prebind(&Foo, "test"); | |
180 // Prebind(&Bar, "tesT"); // This fails because ptr is not const. | |
181 | |
182 namespace base { | |
183 | |
184 // First, we forward declare the Callback class template. This informs the | |
185 // compiler that the template only has 1 type parameter which is the function | |
186 // signature that the Callback is representing. | |
187 // | |
188 // After this, create template specializations for 0-6 parameters. Note that | |
189 // even though the template typelist grows, the specialization still | |
190 // only has one type: the function signature. | |
191 // | |
192 // Also, note that the templated constructor should *not* be explicit. This is | |
193 // to allow for a natural assignment syntax from the result of Prebind(), which | |
194 // is not the same type as Callback(). See the description of Prebind for | |
195 // details. | |
196 template <typename Sig> | |
197 class Callback; | |
198 | |
199 template <typename R> | |
200 class Callback<R(void)> { | |
201 public: | |
202 Callback() : polymorphic_invoke_(NULL) { } | |
willchan no longer on Chromium
2011/02/06 10:26:50
When is this ever used? Can this be private?
willchan no longer on Chromium
2011/02/07 23:25:15
Oops, I see now that this is the equivalent of std
awong
2011/02/08 18:52:26
Yeah...I initially left it out too. The my unitte
| |
203 | |
204 typedef R(*PolymorphicInvoke)(internal::InvokerStorageBase*); | |
willchan no longer on Chromium
2011/02/06 10:26:50
Move the typedef before the constructor.
awong
2011/02/08 18:52:26
Done.
| |
205 | |
206 template <typename T> | |
207 Callback(const internal::InvokerStorageHolder<T>& invoker_holder) | |
willchan no longer on Chromium
2011/02/07 20:51:48
Why is this const if we're calling swap on its mem
willchan no longer on Chromium
2011/02/07 23:25:15
I just noticed this constructor is implicit. Can y
awong
2011/02/08 18:52:26
No...unfortunately not without increasing the numb
awong
2011/02/08 18:52:26
This is to avoid an Addref/Unref pair. I'll add
| |
208 : polymorphic_invoke_(&T::FunctionTraits::DoInvoke) { | |
209 invoker_storage_.swap(invoker_holder.invoker_storage_); | |
210 } | |
211 | |
212 R Run(void) { | |
213 return polymorphic_invoke_(invoker_storage_.get()); | |
214 } | |
215 | |
216 private: | |
217 scoped_refptr<internal::InvokerStorageBase> invoker_storage_; | |
218 PolymorphicInvoke polymorphic_invoke_; | |
219 }; | |
220 | |
221 template <typename R, typename A1> | |
222 class Callback<R(A1)> { | |
223 public: | |
224 Callback() : polymorphic_invoke_(NULL) { } | |
225 | |
226 typedef R(*PolymorphicInvoke)(internal::InvokerStorageBase*, const A1&); | |
227 | |
228 template <typename T> | |
229 Callback(const internal::InvokerStorageHolder<T>& invoker_holder) | |
230 : polymorphic_invoke_(&T::FunctionTraits::DoInvoke) { | |
231 invoker_storage_.swap(invoker_holder.invoker_storage_); | |
232 } | |
233 | |
234 R Run(const A1& a1) { | |
235 return polymorphic_invoke_(invoker_storage_.get(), a1); | |
236 } | |
237 | |
238 private: | |
239 scoped_refptr<internal::InvokerStorageBase> invoker_storage_; | |
240 PolymorphicInvoke polymorphic_invoke_; | |
241 }; | |
242 | |
243 template <typename R, typename A1, typename A2> | |
244 class Callback<R(A1, A2)> { | |
245 public: | |
246 Callback() : polymorphic_invoke_(NULL) { } | |
247 | |
248 typedef R(*PolymorphicInvoke)(internal::InvokerStorageBase*, const A1&, | |
249 const A2&); | |
250 | |
251 template <typename T> | |
252 Callback(const internal::InvokerStorageHolder<T>& invoker_holder) | |
253 : polymorphic_invoke_(&T::FunctionTraits::DoInvoke) { | |
254 invoker_storage_.swap(invoker_holder.invoker_storage_); | |
255 } | |
256 | |
257 R Run(const A1& a1, const A2& a2) { | |
258 return polymorphic_invoke_(invoker_storage_.get(), a1, a2); | |
259 } | |
260 | |
261 private: | |
262 scoped_refptr<internal::InvokerStorageBase> invoker_storage_; | |
263 PolymorphicInvoke polymorphic_invoke_; | |
264 }; | |
265 | |
266 template <typename R, typename A1, typename A2, typename A3> | |
267 class Callback<R(A1, A2, A3)> { | |
268 public: | |
269 Callback() : polymorphic_invoke_(NULL) { } | |
270 | |
271 typedef R(*PolymorphicInvoke)(internal::InvokerStorageBase*, const A1&, | |
272 const A2&, const A3&); | |
273 | |
274 template <typename T> | |
275 Callback(const internal::InvokerStorageHolder<T>& invoker_holder) | |
276 : polymorphic_invoke_(&T::FunctionTraits::DoInvoke) { | |
277 invoker_storage_.swap(invoker_holder.invoker_storage_); | |
278 } | |
279 | |
280 R Run(const A1& a1, const A2& a2, const A3& a3) { | |
281 return polymorphic_invoke_(invoker_storage_.get(), a1, a2, a3); | |
282 } | |
283 | |
284 private: | |
285 scoped_refptr<internal::InvokerStorageBase> invoker_storage_; | |
286 PolymorphicInvoke polymorphic_invoke_; | |
287 }; | |
288 | |
289 template <typename R, typename A1, typename A2, typename A3, typename A4> | |
290 class Callback<R(A1, A2, A3, A4)> { | |
291 public: | |
292 Callback() : polymorphic_invoke_(NULL) { } | |
293 | |
294 typedef R(*PolymorphicInvoke)(internal::InvokerStorageBase*, const A1&, | |
295 const A2&, const A3&, const A4&); | |
296 | |
297 template <typename T> | |
298 Callback(const internal::InvokerStorageHolder<T>& invoker_holder) | |
299 : polymorphic_invoke_(&T::FunctionTraits::DoInvoke) { | |
300 invoker_storage_.swap(invoker_holder.invoker_storage_); | |
301 } | |
302 | |
303 R Run(const A1& a1, const A2& a2, const A3& a3, const A4& a4) { | |
304 return polymorphic_invoke_(invoker_storage_.get(), a1, a2, a3, a4); | |
305 } | |
306 | |
307 private: | |
308 scoped_refptr<internal::InvokerStorageBase> invoker_storage_; | |
309 PolymorphicInvoke polymorphic_invoke_; | |
310 }; | |
311 | |
312 template <typename R, typename A1, typename A2, typename A3, typename A4, | |
313 typename A5> | |
314 class Callback<R(A1, A2, A3, A4, A5)> { | |
315 public: | |
316 Callback() : polymorphic_invoke_(NULL) { } | |
317 | |
318 typedef R(*PolymorphicInvoke)(internal::InvokerStorageBase*, const A1&, | |
319 const A2&, const A3&, const A4&, const A5&); | |
320 | |
321 template <typename T> | |
322 Callback(const internal::InvokerStorageHolder<T>& invoker_holder) | |
323 : polymorphic_invoke_(&T::FunctionTraits::DoInvoke) { | |
324 invoker_storage_.swap(invoker_holder.invoker_storage_); | |
325 } | |
326 | |
327 R Run(const A1& a1, const A2& a2, const A3& a3, const A4& a4, const A5& a5) { | |
328 return polymorphic_invoke_(invoker_storage_.get(), a1, a2, a3, a4, a5); | |
329 } | |
330 | |
331 private: | |
332 scoped_refptr<internal::InvokerStorageBase> invoker_storage_; | |
333 PolymorphicInvoke polymorphic_invoke_; | |
334 }; | |
335 | |
336 template <typename R, typename A1, typename A2, typename A3, typename A4, | |
337 typename A5, typename A6> | |
338 class Callback<R(A1, A2, A3, A4, A5, A6)> { | |
339 public: | |
340 Callback() : polymorphic_invoke_(NULL) { } | |
341 | |
342 typedef R(*PolymorphicInvoke)(internal::InvokerStorageBase*, const A1&, | |
willchan no longer on Chromium
2011/02/06 10:26:50
Nit: you should probably change the pump to emit a
awong
2011/02/08 18:52:26
Fixed...but I wonder if we're trading pump-file re
| |
343 const A2&, const A3&, const A4&, const A5&, const A6&); | |
344 | |
345 template <typename T> | |
346 Callback(const internal::InvokerStorageHolder<T>& invoker_holder) | |
347 : polymorphic_invoke_(&T::FunctionTraits::DoInvoke) { | |
348 invoker_storage_.swap(invoker_holder.invoker_storage_); | |
349 } | |
350 | |
351 R Run(const A1& a1, const A2& a2, const A3& a3, const A4& a4, const A5& a5, | |
willchan no longer on Chromium
2011/02/06 10:26:50
Ditto on the line per argument to avoid the format
awong
2011/02/08 18:52:26
Done.
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352 const A6& a6) { | |
353 return polymorphic_invoke_(invoker_storage_.get(), a1, a2, a3, a4, a5, a6); | |
354 } | |
355 | |
356 private: | |
357 scoped_refptr<internal::InvokerStorageBase> invoker_storage_; | |
358 PolymorphicInvoke polymorphic_invoke_; | |
359 }; | |
360 | |
361 | |
362 // Syntactic sugar to make Callbacks<void(void)> easier to declare since it | |
363 // will be used in a lot of APIs with delayed execution. | |
364 typedef Callback<void(void)> Closure; | |
365 | |
366 } // namespace base | |
367 | |
368 #endif // BASE_UBER_CALLBACK_H | |
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