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author | Nat Goodspeed <nat@lindenlab.com> | 2024-07-18 13:29:34 -0400 |
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committer | Nat Goodspeed <nat@lindenlab.com> | 2024-07-18 13:29:34 -0400 |
commit | f2f0fa7fd0efc221f1358dd4e440b5d51a5fb8b4 (patch) | |
tree | 4410b8b9e87350e244acf8fb738a93bbd211e267 /indra/newview/llurlfloaterdispatchhandler.h | |
parent | 35ee96709ef2704a2636a11c67d61190dd6bdd50 (diff) |
Ditch `LLEventTrackable` aka `boost::signals2::trackable`.
Remove documented `LLEventPump` support for `LLEventTrackable`. That claimed
support was always a little bit magical/fragile. IF:
* a class included `LLEventTrackable` as a base class AND
* an instance of that class was managed by `boost::shared_ptr` AND
* you passed one of that class's methods and the `boost::shared_ptr`
specifically to `boost::bind()` AND
* the resulting `boost::bind()` object was passed into `LLEventPump::listen()`
THEN the promise was that on destruction of that object, that listener would
automatically be disconnected -- instead of leaving a dangling pointer bound
into the `LLEventPump`, causing a crash on the next `LLEventPump::post()` call.
The only existing code in the viewer code base that exercised `LLEventTrackable`
functionality was in test programs. When the viewer calls `LLEventPump::listen()`,
it typically stores the resulting connection object in an `LLTempBoundListener`
variable, which guarantees disconnection on destruction of that variable.
The fact that `LLEventTrackable` support is specific to `boost::bind()`, that it
silently fails to keep its promise with `std::bind()` or a lambda or any other
form of C++ callable, makes it untrustworthy for new code.
Note that the code base still uses `boost::signals2::trackable` for other
`boost::signals2::signal` instances not associated with `LLEventPump`. We are
not changing those at this time.
Diffstat (limited to 'indra/newview/llurlfloaterdispatchhandler.h')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions