// 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. // This file contains utility functions and classes that help the // implementation, and management of the Callback objects. #ifndef BASE_CALLBACK_INTERNAL_H_ #define BASE_CALLBACK_INTERNAL_H_ #pragma once #include <stddef.h> #include "base/base_api.h" #include "base/memory/ref_counted.h" namespace base { namespace internal { // InvokerStorageBase is used to provide an opaque handle that the Callback // class can use to represent a function object with bound arguments. It // behaves as an existential type that is used by a corresponding // DoInvoke function to perform the function execution. This allows // us to shield the Callback class from the types of the bound argument via // "type erasure." class InvokerStorageBase : public RefCountedThreadSafe<InvokerStorageBase> { protected: friend class RefCountedThreadSafe<InvokerStorageBase>; virtual ~InvokerStorageBase() {} }; // This structure exists purely to pass the returned |invoker_storage_| from // Bind() to Callback while avoiding an extra AddRef/Release() pair. // // To do this, the constructor of Callback<> must take a const-ref. The // reference must be to a const object otherwise the compiler will emit a // warning about taking a reference to a temporary. // // Unfortunately, this means that the internal |invoker_storage_| field must // be made mutable. template <typename T> struct InvokerStorageHolder { explicit InvokerStorageHolder(T* invoker_storage) : invoker_storage_(invoker_storage) { } mutable scoped_refptr<InvokerStorageBase> invoker_storage_; }; template <typename T> InvokerStorageHolder<T> MakeInvokerStorageHolder(T* o) { return InvokerStorageHolder<T>(o); } // Holds the Callback methods that don't require specialization to reduce // template bloat. class BASE_API CallbackBase { public: // Returns true if Callback is null (doesn't refer to anything). bool is_null() const; // Returns the Callback into an uninitalized state. void Reset(); bool Equals(const CallbackBase& other) const; protected: // In C++, it is safe to cast function pointers to function pointers of // another type. It is not okay to use void*. We create a InvokeFuncStorage // that that can store our function pointer, and then cast it back to // the original type on usage. typedef void(*InvokeFuncStorage)(void); CallbackBase(InvokeFuncStorage polymorphic_invoke, scoped_refptr<InvokerStorageBase>* invoker_storage); // Force the destructor to be instaniated inside this translation unit so // that our subclasses will not get inlined versions. Avoids more template // bloat. ~CallbackBase(); scoped_refptr<InvokerStorageBase> invoker_storage_; InvokeFuncStorage polymorphic_invoke_; }; // This is a typetraits object that's used to take an argument type, and // extract a suitable type for storing and forwarding arguments. // // In particular, it strips off references, and converts arrays to // pointers for storage; and it avoids accidentally trying to create a // "reference of a reference" if the argument is a reference type. // // This array type becomes an issue for storage because we are passing bound // parameters by const reference. In this case, we end up passing an actual // array type in the initializer list which C++ does not allow. This will // break passing of C-string literals. template <typename T> struct ParamTraits { typedef const T& ForwardType; typedef T StorageType; }; // The Storage should almost be impossible to trigger unless someone manually // specifies type of the bind parameters. However, in case they do, // this will guard against us accidentally storing a reference parameter. // // The ForwardType should only be used for unbound arguments. template <typename T> struct ParamTraits<T&> { typedef T& ForwardType; typedef T StorageType; }; // Note that for array types, we implicitly add a const in the conversion. This // means that it is not possible to bind array arguments to functions that take // a non-const pointer. Trying to specialize the template based on a "const // T[n]" does not seem to match correctly, so we are stuck with this // restriction. template <typename T, size_t n> struct ParamTraits<T[n]> { typedef const T* ForwardType; typedef const T* StorageType; }; // See comment for ParamTraits<T[n]>. template <typename T> struct ParamTraits<T[]> { typedef const T* ForwardType; typedef const T* StorageType; }; } // namespace internal } // namespace base #endif // BASE_CALLBACK_INTERNAL_H_