Chromium Code Reviews| Index: base/stl_util.h |
| diff --git a/base/stl_util.h b/base/stl_util.h |
| new file mode 100644 |
| index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..299c595c51ddd76a1eb4984315c870dde0a47e8f |
| --- /dev/null |
| +++ b/base/stl_util.h |
| @@ -0,0 +1,205 @@ |
| +// Copyright (c) 2011 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. |
| + |
| +// Derived from google3/util/gtl/stl_util.h |
| + |
| +#ifndef BASE_STL_UTIL_H_ |
| +#define BASE_STL_UTIL_H_ |
| +#pragma once |
| + |
| +#include <assert.h> |
| +#include <string.h> // for memcpy |
|
joth
2011/07/20 11:38:48
we don't actually call memcpy anymore.
Denis Lagno
2011/07/20 12:01:13
thanks for noticing.
And BTW we do not call asser
|
| + |
| +#include <string> |
| +#include <vector> |
| + |
| +// Clear internal memory of an STL object. |
| +// STL clear()/reserve(0) does not always free internal memory allocated |
| +// This function uses swap/destructor to ensure the internal memory is freed. |
| +template<class T> void STLClearObject(T* obj) { |
| + T tmp; |
| + tmp.swap(*obj); |
| + // Sometimes "T tmp" allocates objects with memory (arena implementation?). |
| + // Hence using additional reserve(0) even if it doesn't always work. |
| + obj->reserve(0); |
| +} |
| + |
| +// STLDeleteContainerPointers() |
| +// For a range within a container of pointers, calls delete |
| +// (non-array version) on these pointers. |
| +// NOTE: for these three functions, we could just implement a DeleteObject |
| +// functor and then call for_each() on the range and functor, but this |
| +// requires us to pull in all of algorithm.h, which seems expensive. |
| +// For hash_[multi]set, it is important that this deletes behind the iterator |
| +// because the hash_set may call the hash function on the iterator when it is |
| +// advanced, which could result in the hash function trying to deference a |
| +// stale pointer. |
| +template <class ForwardIterator> |
| +void STLDeleteContainerPointers(ForwardIterator begin, ForwardIterator end) { |
| + while (begin != end) { |
| + ForwardIterator temp = begin; |
| + ++begin; |
| + delete *temp; |
| + } |
| +} |
| + |
| +// STLDeleteContainerPairPointers() |
| +// For a range within a container of pairs, calls delete |
| +// (non-array version) on BOTH items in the pairs. |
| +// NOTE: Like STLDeleteContainerPointers, it is important that this deletes |
| +// behind the iterator because if both the key and value are deleted, the |
| +// container may call the hash function on the iterator when it is advanced, |
| +// which could result in the hash function trying to dereference a stale |
| +// pointer. |
| +template <class ForwardIterator> |
| +void STLDeleteContainerPairPointers(ForwardIterator begin, |
| + ForwardIterator end) { |
| + while (begin != end) { |
| + ForwardIterator temp = begin; |
| + ++begin; |
| + delete temp->first; |
| + delete temp->second; |
| + } |
| +} |
| + |
| +// STLDeleteContainerPairFirstPointers() |
| +// For a range within a container of pairs, calls delete (non-array version) |
| +// on the FIRST item in the pairs. |
| +// NOTE: Like STLDeleteContainerPointers, deleting behind the iterator. |
| +template <class ForwardIterator> |
| +void STLDeleteContainerPairFirstPointers(ForwardIterator begin, |
| + ForwardIterator end) { |
| + while (begin != end) { |
| + ForwardIterator temp = begin; |
| + ++begin; |
| + delete temp->first; |
| + } |
| +} |
| + |
| +// STLDeleteContainerPairSecondPointers() |
| +// For a range within a container of pairs, calls delete |
| +// (non-array version) on the SECOND item in the pairs. |
| +template <class ForwardIterator> |
| +void STLDeleteContainerPairSecondPointers(ForwardIterator begin, |
| + ForwardIterator end) { |
| + while (begin != end) { |
| + delete begin->second; |
| + ++begin; |
| + } |
| +} |
|
joth
2011/07/20 11:38:48
fwiw server now has this as
while (begin != end)
Denis Lagno
2011/07/20 12:01:13
yes, it looks better to sync with server.
|
| + |
| +// To treat a possibly-empty vector as an array, use these functions. |
| +// If you know the array will never be empty, you can use &*v.begin() |
| +// directly, but that is undefined behaviour if v is empty. |
| + |
| +template<typename T> |
| +inline T* vector_as_array(std::vector<T>* v) { |
| +# ifdef NDEBUG |
| + return &*v->begin(); |
|
joth
2011/07/20 11:38:48
this always seems to me to be a quite obscure non-
Denis Lagno
2011/07/20 12:54:36
agree, chromium (client) and server differs in tha
|
| +# else |
| + return v->empty() ? NULL : &*v->begin(); |
| +# endif |
| +} |
| + |
| +template<typename T> |
| +inline const T* vector_as_array(const std::vector<T>* v) { |
| +# ifdef NDEBUG |
| + return &*v->begin(); |
| +# else |
| + return v->empty() ? NULL : &*v->begin(); |
| +# endif |
| +} |
| + |
| +// Return a mutable char* pointing to a string's internal buffer, |
| +// which may not be null-terminated. Writing through this pointer will |
| +// modify the string. |
| +// |
| +// string_as_array(&str)[i] is valid for 0 <= i < str.size() until the |
| +// next call to a string method that invalidates iterators. |
| +// |
| +// As of 2006-04, there is no standard-blessed way of getting a |
| +// mutable reference to a string's internal buffer. However, issue 530 |
| +// (http://www.open-std.org/JTC1/SC22/WG21/docs/lwg-active.html#530) |
| +// proposes this as the method. According to Matt Austern, this should |
| +// already work on all current implementations. |
|
joth
2011/07/20 11:38:48
FWIW, C++ 2008 does now clarify this:
21.3.1 basi
|
| +inline char* string_as_array(std::string* str) { |
| + // DO NOT USE const_cast<char*>(str->data()) |
| + return str->empty() ? NULL : &*str->begin(); |
| +} |
| + |
| +// The following functions are useful for cleaning up STL containers |
| +// whose elements point to allocated memory. |
| + |
| +// STLDeleteElements() deletes all the elements in an STL container and clears |
| +// the container. This function is suitable for use with a vector, set, |
| +// hash_set, or any other STL container which defines sensible begin(), end(), |
| +// and clear() methods. |
| +// |
| +// If container is NULL, this function is a no-op. |
| +// |
| +// As an alternative to calling STLDeleteElements() directly, consider |
| +// STLElementDeleter (defined below), which ensures that your container's |
| +// elements are deleted when the STLElementDeleter goes out of scope. |
| +template <class T> |
| +void STLDeleteElements(T *container) { |
| + if (!container) return; |
| + STLDeleteContainerPointers(container->begin(), container->end()); |
| + container->clear(); |
| +} |
| + |
| +// Given an STL container consisting of (key, value) pairs, STLDeleteValues |
| +// deletes all the "value" components and clears the container. Does nothing |
| +// in the case it's given a NULL pointer. |
| + |
| +template <class T> |
| +void STLDeleteValues(T *v) { |
| + if (!v) return; |
| + for (typename T::iterator i = v->begin(); i != v->end(); ++i) { |
| + delete i->second; |
| + } |
| + v->clear(); |
| +} |
| + |
| + |
| +// The following classes provide a convenient way to delete all elements or |
| +// values from STL containers when they goes out of scope. This greatly |
| +// simplifies code that creates temporary objects and has multiple return |
| +// statements. Example: |
| +// |
| +// vector<MyProto *> tmp_proto; |
| +// STLElementDeleter<vector<MyProto *> > d(&tmp_proto); |
| +// if (...) return false; |
| +// ... |
| +// return success; |
| + |
| +// Given a pointer to an STL container this class will delete all the element |
| +// pointers when it goes out of scope. |
| + |
| +template<class STLContainer> class STLElementDeleter { |
| + public: |
| + STLElementDeleter<STLContainer>(STLContainer *ptr) : container_ptr_(ptr) {} |
| + ~STLElementDeleter<STLContainer>() { STLDeleteElements(container_ptr_); } |
| + private: |
| + STLContainer *container_ptr_; |
| +}; |
| + |
| +// Given a pointer to an STL container this class will delete all the value |
| +// pointers when it goes out of scope. |
| + |
| +template<class STLContainer> class STLValueDeleter { |
| + public: |
| + STLValueDeleter<STLContainer>(STLContainer *ptr) : container_ptr_(ptr) {} |
| + ~STLValueDeleter<STLContainer>() { STLDeleteValues(container_ptr_); } |
| + private: |
| + STLContainer *container_ptr_; |
| +}; |
| + |
| +// Test to see if a set, map, hash_set or hash_map contains a particular key. |
| +// Returns true if the key is in the collection. |
| +template <typename Collection, typename Key> |
| +bool ContainsKey(const Collection& collection, const Key& key) { |
| + return collection.find(key) != collection.end(); |
| +} |
| + |
| +#endif // BASE_STL_UTIL_H_ |