1 | /* |
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2 | * ORXONOX - the hottest 3D action shooter ever to exist |
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3 | * > www.orxonox.net < |
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4 | * |
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5 | * |
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6 | * License notice: |
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7 | * |
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8 | * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or |
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9 | * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License |
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10 | * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 |
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11 | * of the License, or (at your option) any later version. |
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12 | * |
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13 | * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
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14 | * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
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15 | * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
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16 | * GNU General Public License for more details. |
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17 | * |
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18 | * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
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19 | * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software |
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20 | * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. |
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21 | * |
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22 | * Author: |
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23 | * Fabian 'x3n' Landau |
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24 | * Co-authors: |
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25 | * ... |
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26 | * |
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27 | */ |
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28 | |
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29 | /** |
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30 | @defgroup SharedPtr SharedPtr<T> |
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31 | @ingroup Util |
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32 | */ |
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33 | |
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34 | /** |
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35 | @file |
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36 | @ingroup SharedPtr |
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37 | @brief Definition of the SharedPtr template that is used to manage pointers. |
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38 | |
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39 | @anchor SharedPtrExample |
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40 | |
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41 | The orxonox::SharedPtr template can be used to manage a pointer to an object |
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42 | that was created with new. The SharedPtr acts like the pointer itself, but it |
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43 | keeps track of the number of references to it. If all references are removed, |
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44 | SharedPtr deletes the managed object automatically. |
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45 | |
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46 | Example: |
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47 | |
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48 | Classic implementation using new and delete: |
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49 | @code |
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50 | void someFunction() |
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51 | { |
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52 | MyClass* object = new MyClass(); // Create a new instance of MyClass |
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53 | |
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54 | object->myFunction(); // Calls MyClass::myFunction() |
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55 | |
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56 | delete object; // Delete the object at the end of the scope |
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57 | } |
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58 | @endcode |
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59 | |
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60 | The same function using SharedPtr: |
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61 | @code |
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62 | void someFunction() |
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63 | { |
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64 | SharedPtr<MyClass> object = new MyClass(); // Create a new instance of MyClass and store its pointer in a SharedPtr |
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65 | |
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66 | object->myFunction(); // Calls MyClass::myFunction() |
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67 | |
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68 | } // At the end of the scope, the SharedPtr is destroyed. Because no other SharedPtrs |
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69 | // point at the object, the object itself is also destroyed automatically |
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70 | @endcode |
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71 | |
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72 | This is especially handy if you do not know what will happen with an object that was |
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73 | created with new, for example if you pass it to another object. If multiple instances |
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74 | share a pointer to the same object, none of these instances can delete the object |
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75 | without interfering with the other instances. But if none of the instances destroy the |
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76 | object, it will never be destroyed and results in a memory leak. With a SharedPtr |
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77 | however you don't have to think about destroying the object, because the SharedPtr |
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78 | itself keeps track of the references. |
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79 | |
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80 | Example: |
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81 | |
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82 | Classic implementation using new and delete: |
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83 | @code |
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84 | class OtherClass // Declaration of some class |
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85 | { |
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86 | public: |
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87 | OtherClass(MyClass* object) // Constructor |
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88 | { |
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89 | this->object_ = object; // Assigns the pointer to the member variable object_ |
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90 | } |
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91 | |
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92 | ~OtherClass() // Destructor |
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93 | { |
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94 | ??? // What to do with object_? |
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95 | } |
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96 | |
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97 | private: |
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98 | MyClass* object_; // A pointer to the object |
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99 | }; |
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100 | |
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101 | void someFunction() |
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102 | { |
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103 | MyClass* object = new MyClass(); // Create a new instance of MyClass |
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104 | |
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105 | OtherClass* other1 = new OtherClass(object); // Create an instance of OtherClass and pass the object pointer |
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106 | OtherClass* other2 = new OtherClass(object); // " |
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107 | OtherClass* other3 = new OtherClass(object); // " |
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108 | |
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109 | ??? // What happens with object now? |
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110 | } |
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111 | @endcode |
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112 | |
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113 | If you use SharedPtr<MyClass> instead of a classic MyClass* pointer, the instance of |
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114 | MyClass would be automatically destroyed if all instances of OtherClass are destroyed. |
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115 | You don't need any code in the destructor and you can completely forget about the |
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116 | object, because its managed by the SharedPtr. |
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117 | |
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118 | The same code using SharedPtr: |
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119 | @code |
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120 | class OtherClass // Declaration of some class |
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121 | { |
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122 | public: |
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123 | OtherClass(const SharedPtr<MyClass>& object) // Constructor |
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124 | { |
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125 | this->object_ = object; // Assigns the pointer to the member variable object_ |
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126 | } |
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127 | |
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128 | private: |
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129 | SharedPtr<MyClass> object_; // A SharedPtr to the object |
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130 | }; |
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131 | |
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132 | void someFunction() |
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133 | { |
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134 | SharedPtr<MyClass> object = new MyClass(); // Create a new instance of MyClass |
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135 | |
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136 | OtherClass* other1 = new OtherClass(object); // Create an instance of OtherClass and pass the object pointer |
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137 | OtherClass* other2 = new OtherClass(object); // " |
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138 | OtherClass* other3 = new OtherClass(object); // " |
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139 | |
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140 | } // The SmartPtr "object" is destroyed at the end of the scope, |
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141 | // but the three instances of OtherClass keep the object alive |
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142 | // until they are all destroyed. |
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143 | @endcode |
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144 | */ |
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145 | |
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146 | #ifndef _SharedPtr_H__ |
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147 | #define _SharedPtr_H__ |
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148 | |
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149 | #include "UtilPrereqs.h" |
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150 | |
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151 | #include <algorithm> |
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152 | #include <cassert> |
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153 | |
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154 | #include "SmallObjectAllocator.h" |
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155 | |
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156 | namespace orxonox |
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157 | { |
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158 | namespace detail |
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159 | { |
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160 | /// BaseClass of SharedCounterImpl, has a counter that is initialized with 1 |
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161 | class SharedCounter |
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162 | { |
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163 | public: |
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164 | SharedCounter() : count_(1) {} |
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165 | virtual void destroy() = 0; |
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166 | |
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167 | int count_; |
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168 | }; |
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169 | |
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170 | /// Child class of SharedCounter, keeps a pointer to an object of type T that can be destroyed with destroy() |
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171 | template <class T> |
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172 | class SharedCounterImpl : public SharedCounter |
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173 | { |
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174 | public: |
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175 | SharedCounterImpl(T* pointer) : pointer_(pointer) {} |
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176 | |
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177 | void destroy() |
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178 | { |
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179 | delete this->pointer_; |
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180 | } |
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181 | |
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182 | private: |
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183 | T* pointer_; |
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184 | }; |
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185 | |
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186 | _UtilExport SmallObjectAllocator& createSharedCounterPool(); |
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187 | |
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188 | FORCEINLINE SmallObjectAllocator& getSharedCounterPool() |
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189 | { |
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190 | static SmallObjectAllocator& instance = createSharedCounterPool(); |
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191 | return instance; |
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192 | } |
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193 | } |
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194 | |
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195 | /** |
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196 | @brief The SharedPtr template is a utility to manage pointers to an object. |
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197 | @param T The type of the managed object |
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198 | |
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199 | SharedPtr acts like a real pointer, except that it keeps track of the number of |
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200 | references to the object. If the the number of references drops to zero, the |
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201 | object is destroyed automatically. |
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202 | |
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203 | @see See @ref SharedPtrExample "this description" for some examples and more information. |
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204 | |
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205 | @note The number of references is stored in a separate object that is shared |
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206 | among all instances of SharedPtr that point to the same pointer. This object is |
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207 | also responsible for destroying the pointer if the reference counter becomes zero. |
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208 | */ |
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209 | template <class T> |
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210 | class SharedPtr |
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211 | { |
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212 | template <class O> |
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213 | friend class SharedPtr; |
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214 | |
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215 | public: |
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216 | /// Default constructor, the pointer is set to NULL. |
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217 | inline SharedPtr() : pointer_(0), counter_(0) |
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218 | { |
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219 | } |
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220 | |
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221 | /// Constructor, creates a SharedPtr that points to @a pointer, increments the counter. |
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222 | inline SharedPtr(T* pointer) : pointer_(pointer), counter_(0) |
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223 | { |
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224 | if (this->pointer_) |
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225 | { |
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226 | void* chunk = detail::getSharedCounterPool().alloc(); |
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227 | this->counter_ = new (chunk) detail::SharedCounterImpl<T>(this->pointer_); |
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228 | } |
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229 | } |
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230 | |
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231 | /// Copy-constructor, this SharedPtr now points to the same object like the other SharedPtr, increments the counter. |
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232 | inline SharedPtr(const SharedPtr& other) : pointer_(other.pointer_), counter_(other.counter_) |
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233 | { |
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234 | if (this->pointer_) |
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235 | ++this->counter_->count_; |
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236 | } |
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237 | |
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238 | /// Copy-constructor for SharedPtr with another template agument, increments the counter. |
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239 | template <class O> |
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240 | inline SharedPtr(const SharedPtr<O>& other) : pointer_(other.pointer_), counter_(other.counter_) |
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241 | { |
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242 | if (this->pointer_) |
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243 | ++this->counter_->count_; |
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244 | } |
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245 | |
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246 | /// Destructor, decrements the counter and deletes the object if the counter becomes zero. |
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247 | inline ~SharedPtr() |
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248 | { |
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249 | if (this->pointer_) |
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250 | { |
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251 | --this->counter_->count_; |
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252 | |
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253 | if (this->counter_->count_ == 0) |
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254 | { |
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255 | this->counter_->destroy(); |
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256 | detail::getSharedCounterPool().free(this->counter_); |
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257 | } |
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258 | } |
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259 | } |
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260 | |
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261 | /// Assigns a new object, decrements the counter of the old object, increments the counter of the new object. |
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262 | inline SharedPtr& operator=(const SharedPtr& other) |
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263 | { |
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264 | SharedPtr(other).swap(*this); |
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265 | return *this; |
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266 | } |
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267 | |
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268 | /// Assigns a new object with another template argument, decrements the counter of the old object, increments the counter of the new object. |
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269 | template <class O> |
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270 | inline SharedPtr& operator=(const SharedPtr<O>& other) |
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271 | { |
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272 | SharedPtr(other).swap(*this); |
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273 | return *this; |
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274 | } |
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275 | |
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276 | /// Casts the pointer to another type |
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277 | template <class O> |
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278 | inline SharedPtr<O> cast() const |
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279 | { |
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280 | O* temp = static_cast<O*>(this->pointer_); // temp value for prettier compiler error in case of an invalid static_cast |
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281 | return SharedPtr<O>(temp, this->counter_); |
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282 | } |
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283 | |
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284 | /// Overloaded -> operator, returns the pointer to the managed object. |
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285 | inline T* operator->() const |
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286 | { |
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287 | assert(this->pointer_ != 0); |
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288 | return this->pointer_; |
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289 | } |
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290 | |
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291 | /// Overloaded * operator, returns a reference ot the managed object. |
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292 | inline T& operator*() const |
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293 | { |
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294 | assert(this->pointer_ != 0); |
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295 | return *this->pointer_; |
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296 | } |
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297 | |
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298 | /// Returns the pointer to the managed object. |
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299 | inline T* get() const |
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300 | { |
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301 | return this->pointer_; |
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302 | } |
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303 | |
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304 | /// Returns true if the pointer is not NULL. |
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305 | inline operator bool() const |
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306 | { |
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307 | return (this->pointer_ != 0); |
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308 | } |
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309 | |
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310 | /// Swaps the pointer and the counter of two instances of SharedPtr with the same template argument. |
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311 | inline void swap(SharedPtr& other) |
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312 | { |
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313 | std::swap(this->pointer_, other.pointer_); |
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314 | std::swap(this->counter_, other.counter_); |
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315 | } |
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316 | |
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317 | private: |
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318 | /// Private constructor, used by the cast() function. |
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319 | inline SharedPtr(T* pointer, detail::SharedCounter* counter) : pointer_(pointer), counter_(counter) |
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320 | { |
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321 | if (this->pointer_) |
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322 | ++this->counter_->count_; |
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323 | } |
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324 | |
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325 | T* pointer_; ///< A pointer to the managed object of type @a T |
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326 | detail::SharedCounter* counter_; ///< A pointer to the shared reference counter |
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327 | }; |
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328 | |
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329 | /** |
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330 | @brief A child class of SharedPtr, used to reflect the hierarchy of the underlying class @a T. |
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331 | @param T The type of the managed object |
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332 | @param Parent The type of the SharedPtr that manages the parent class of @a T |
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333 | |
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334 | This class is used to reflect the hierarchy of the underlying class @a T. |
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335 | For example the @c Functor classes: While a @c Functor* pointer would be managed by |
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336 | @c SharedPtr<Functor>, the child class @c FunctorStatic is managed by the class |
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337 | <tt>SharedChildPtr<FunctorStatic, SharedPtr<Functor> ></tt>. |
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338 | |
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339 | The second template argument @a Parent is used as the parent class of |
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340 | SharedChildPtr. This means that each instance of <tt>SharedChildPtr<T, Parent></tt> |
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341 | can be upcasted to @c Parent. |
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342 | |
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343 | So for example this works: |
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344 | @code |
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345 | SharedChildPtr<FunctorStatic, SharedPtr<Functor> > functorStatic = createFunctor(&MyClass::myStaticFunction); |
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346 | SharedPtr<Functor> functor = functorStatic; |
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347 | @endcode |
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348 | |
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349 | @note There are some typedefs and more to make the usage of SharedChildPtr easier |
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350 | for the classes Functor and Executor. See FunctorPtr.h and ExecutorPtr.h. The above |
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351 | example could thus be simplified the following way: |
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352 | @code |
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353 | FunctorStaticPtr functorStatic = createFunctor(&MyClass::myStaticFunction); |
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354 | FunctorPtr functor = functorStatic; |
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355 | @endcode |
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356 | |
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357 | @see See SharedPtr for more information about the base class SharedPtr. |
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358 | @see See @ref SharedPtrExample "this description" for some examples about how to use SharedPtr. |
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359 | */ |
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360 | template <class T, class Parent> |
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361 | class SharedChildPtr : public Parent |
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362 | { |
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363 | public: |
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364 | inline SharedChildPtr() : Parent() {} |
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365 | inline SharedChildPtr(T* pointer) : Parent(pointer) {} |
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366 | inline SharedChildPtr(const SharedPtr<T>& other) : Parent(other) {} |
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367 | |
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368 | inline T* operator->() const { return static_cast<T*>(Parent::operator->()); } |
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369 | inline T& operator*() const { return *static_cast<T*>(Parent::operator->()); } |
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370 | }; |
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371 | |
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372 | } |
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373 | |
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374 | #endif /* _SharedPtr_H__ */ |
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