You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
tdelibs/tdecore/kstaticdeleter.h

140 lines
4.6 KiB

/*
* This file is part of the KDE Libraries
* Copyright (C) 2000 Stephan Kulow <coolo@kde.org>
* 2001 KDE Team
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
* version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* Library General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public License
* along with this library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If not, write to
* the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
* Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
*
*/
#ifndef _KSTATIC_DELETER_H_
#define _KSTATIC_DELETER_H_
#include <kglobal.h>
/**
* Static deleters are used to manage static resources. They can register
* themselves with KGlobal. KGlobal will call destructObject() when
* KGlobal::deleteStaticDeleters() is called or when it the process
* finishes.
*
* @see KStaticDeleter
* @see KGlobal::registerStaticDeleter()
* @see KGlobal::unregisterStaticDeleter()
* @see KGlobal::deleteStaticDeleters()
*/
class TDECORE_EXPORT KStaticDeleterBase {
public:
virtual ~KStaticDeleterBase() { }
/**
* Should destruct the resources managed by this KStaticDeleterBase.
* Usually you also want to call it in your destructor.
* @see KGlobal::deleteStaticDeleters()
*/
virtual void destructObject();
};
/**
* Little helper class to clean up static objects that are
* held as pointer.
* When the library is unloaded, or the app terminated, all static deleters
* are destroyed, which in turn destroys those static objects properly.
* There are some rules which you should accept in the KStaticDeleter managed
* class:
* @li Don't rely on the global reference variable in the destructor of the
* object, it will be '0' at destruction time.
* @li Don't rely on other KStaticDeleter managed objects in the destructor
* of the object, because it may be destroyed before your destructor get called.
* This one can be tricky, because you might not know that you actually use a
* KStaticDeleter managed class. So try to keep your destructor simple.
*
* A typical use is
* \code
* static KStaticDeleter<MyClass> sd;
*
* MyClass &MyClass::self() {
* if (!_self) { sd.setObject(_self, new MyClass()); }
* return *_self;
* }
* \endcode
*/
template<class type> class KStaticDeleter : public KStaticDeleterBase {
public:
KStaticDeleter() { deleteit = 0; globalReference = 0; array = false; }
/**
* Sets the object to delete and registers the object to be
* deleted to KGlobal. If the given object is 0, the former
* registration is unregistered.
* @param obj the object to delete
* @param isArray tells the destructor to delete an array instead of an object
* @deprecated See the other setObject variant.
**/
KDE_DEPRECATED type *setObject( type *obj, bool isArray = false) {
deleteit = obj;
globalReference = 0;
array = isArray;
if (obj)
KGlobal::registerStaticDeleter(this);
else
KGlobal::unregisterStaticDeleter(this);
return obj;
}
/**
* Sets the object to delete and registers the object to be
* deleted to KGlobal. If the given object is 0, the former
* registration is unregistered.
* @param globalRef the static pointer where this object is stored
* This pointer will be reset to 0 after deletion of the object.
* @param obj the object to delete
* @param isArray tells the destructor to delete an array instead of an object
**/
type *setObject( type* & globalRef, type *obj, bool isArray = false) {
globalReference = &globalRef;
deleteit = obj;
array = isArray;
if (obj)
KGlobal::registerStaticDeleter(this);
else
KGlobal::unregisterStaticDeleter(this);
globalRef = obj;
return obj;
}
/**
* Destructs the object. This has the same effect as deleting
* the KStaticDeleter.
*/
virtual void destructObject() {
if (globalReference)
*globalReference = 0;
if (array)
delete [] deleteit;
else
delete deleteit;
deleteit = 0;
}
virtual ~KStaticDeleter() {
KGlobal::unregisterStaticDeleter(this);
destructObject();
}
private:
type *deleteit;
type **globalReference;
bool array;
};
#endif