/* * Copyright 2018 Google LLC * * Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be * found in the LICENSE file. */ #ifndef SkNoDestructor_DEFINED #define SkNoDestructor_DEFINED #include #include #include // IWYU pragma: keep #include // Helper type to create a function-local static variable of type `T` when `T` // has a non-trivial destructor. Storing a `T` in a `SkNoDestructor` will // prevent `~T()` from running, even when the variable goes out of scope. This // code is adapted from `base::NoDestructor` in Chromium. // // Useful when a variable has static storage duration but its type has a // non-trivial destructor. Chromium (and transitively, Skia) bans global // constructors and destructors: using a function-local static variable prevents // the former, while using `SkNoDestructor` prevents the latter. // // ## Caveats // // - Must not be used for locals or fields; by definition, this does not run // destructors, and this will likely lead to memory leaks and other // surprising and undesirable behaviour. // // - If `T` is not constexpr constructible, must be a function-local static // variable, since a global `NoDestructor` will still generate a static // initializer. // // - If `T` is constinit constructible, may be used as a global, but mark the // global `constinit` (once C++20 is available) // // - If the data is rarely used, consider creating it on demand rather than // caching it for the lifetime of the program. Though `SkNoDestructor` // does not heap allocate, the compiler still reserves space in bss for // storing `T`, which costs memory at runtime. // // - If `T` is trivially destructible, do not use `SkNoDestructor`: // // const uint64_t GetUnstableSessionSeed() { // // No need to use `SkNoDestructor` as `uint64_t` is trivially // // destructible and does not require a global destructor. // static const uint64_t kSessionSeed = GetRandUint64(); // return kSessionSeed; // } // // ## Example Usage // // const std::string& GetDefaultText() { // // Required since `static const std::string` requires a global destructor. // static const SkNoDestructor s("Hello world!"); // return *s; // } // // More complex initialization using a lambda: // // const std::string& GetRandomNonce() { // // `nonce` is initialized with random data the first time this function is // // called, but its value is fixed thereafter. // static const SkNoDestructor nonce([] { // std::string s(16); // GetRandString(s.data(), s.size()); // return s; // }()); // return *nonce; // } // // ## Thread safety // // Initialization of function-local static variables is thread-safe since C++11. // The standard guarantees that: // // - function-local static variables will be initialised the first time // execution passes through the declaration. // // - if another thread's execution concurrently passes through the declaration // in the middle of initialisation, that thread will wait for the in-progress // initialisation to complete. template class SkNoDestructor { public: static_assert(!(std::is_trivially_constructible_v && std::is_trivially_destructible_v), "T is trivially constructible and destructible; please use a constinit object of " "type T directly instead"); static_assert(!std::is_trivially_destructible_v, "T is trivially destructible; please use a function-local static of type T " "directly instead"); // Not constexpr; just write static constexpr T x = ...; if the value should be a constexpr. template explicit SkNoDestructor(Args&&... args) { new (fStorage) T(std::forward(args)...); } // Allows copy and move construction of the contained type, to allow construction from an // initializer list, e.g. for std::vector. explicit SkNoDestructor(const T& x) { new (fStorage) T(x); } explicit SkNoDestructor(T&& x) { new (fStorage) T(std::move(x)); } SkNoDestructor(const SkNoDestructor&) = delete; SkNoDestructor& operator=(const SkNoDestructor&) = delete; ~SkNoDestructor() = default; const T& operator*() const { return *get(); } T& operator*() { return *get(); } const T* operator->() const { return get(); } T* operator->() { return get(); } const T* get() const { return reinterpret_cast(fStorage); } T* get() { return reinterpret_cast(fStorage); } private: alignas(T) std::byte fStorage[sizeof(T)]; #if defined(__clang__) && defined(__has_feature) #if __has_feature(leak_sanitizer) || __has_feature(address_sanitizer) // TODO(https://crbug.com/812277): This is a hack to work around the fact that LSan doesn't seem // to treat SkNoDestructor as a root for reachability analysis. This means that code like this: // static SkNoDestructor> v({1, 2, 3}); // is considered a leak. Using the standard leak sanitizer annotations to suppress leaks doesn't // work: std::vector is implicitly constructed before calling the SkNoDestructor constructor. // // Unfortunately, I haven't been able to demonstrate this issue in simpler reproductions: until // that's resolved, hold an explicit pointer to the placement-new'd object in leak sanitizer // mode to help LSan realize that objects allocated by the contained type are still reachable. T* fStoragePtr = reinterpret_cast(fStorage); #endif // leak_sanitizer/address_sanitizer #endif // __has_feature }; #endif // SkNoDestructor_DEFINED