Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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logs are set to be saved
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changeset: 0d43d9754b79
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VS 2013 thought we were storing an initialization-list.
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An exception in the LLSingleton subclass constructor, or in its
initSingleton() method, could leave the LLSingleton machinery in a bad state:
the failing instance would remain in the MasterList, also on the stack of
initializing LLSingletons. Catch exceptions in either and perform relevant
cleanup.
This problem is highlighted by test programs, in which LL_ERRS throws an
exception rather than crashing the whole process.
In the relevant catch clauses, clean up the initializing stack BEFORE logging.
Otherwise we get tangled up recording bogus dependencies.
Move capture_dependency() out of finishInitializing(): it must be called by
every valid getInstance() call, both from LLSingleton and LLParamSingleton.
Introduce new CONSTRUCTED EInitState value to distinguish "have called the
constructor but not yet the initSingleton() method" from "currently within
initSingleton() method." This is transient, but we execute the 'switch' on
state within that moment. One could argue that the previous enum used
INITIALIZING for current CONSTRUCTED, and INITIALIZED meant INITIALIZING too,
but this is clearer.
Introduce template LLSingletonBase::classname() helper methods to clarify
verbose demangle(typeid(stuff).name()) calls.
Similarly, introduce LLSingleton::pop_initializing() shorthand method.
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Add try/catch clauses to constructSingleton() (to catch exceptions in the
subclass constructor) and finishInitializing() (to catch exceptions in the
subclass initSingleton() method). Each of these catch clauses rethrows the
exception -- they're for cleanup, not for ultimate handling.
Introduce LLSingletonBase::reset_initializing(list_t::size_t). The idea is
that since we can't know whether the exception happened before or after the
push_initializing() call in LLSingletonBase's constructor, we can't just pop
the stack. Instead, constructSingleton() captures the stack size before
attempting to construct the new LLSingleton subclass. On exception, it calls
reset_initializing() to restore the stack to that size.
Naturally that requires a corresponding LLSingleton_manage_master method,
whose MasterList specialization is a no-op.
finishInitializing()'s exception handling is a bit simpler because it has a
constructed LLSingleton subclass instance in hand, therefore
push_initializing() has definitely been called, therefore it can call
pop_initializing().
Break out new static capture_dependency() method from finishInitializing()
because, in the previous LLSingleton::getInstance() implementation, the logic
now wrapped in capture_dependency() was reached even in the INITIALIZED case.
TODO: Add a new EInitState to differentiate "have been constructed, now
calling initSingleton()" from "fully initialized, normal case" -- in the
latter control path we should not be calling capture_dependency().
The LLSingleton_manage_master<LLSingletonBase::MasterList> specialization's
get_initializing() function (which called get_initializing_from()) was
potentially dangerous. get_initializing() is called by push_initializing(),
which (in the general case) is called by LLSingletonBase's constructor. If
somehow the MasterList's LLSingletonBase constructor ended up calling
get_initializing(), it would have called get_initializing_from(), passing an
LLSingletonBase which had not yet been constructed into the MasterList. In
particular, its mInitializing map would not yet have been initialized at all.
Since the MasterList must not, by design, depend on any other LLSingletons,
LLSingleton_manage_master<LLSingletonBase::MasterList>::get_initializing()
need not return a list from the official mInitializing map anyway. It can, and
should, and now does, return a static dummy list. That obviates
get_initializing_from(), which is removed.
That in turn means we no longer need to pass get_initializing() an
LLSingletonBase*. Remove that parameter.
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property setting
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LLParamSingleton contained a static member mutex. Unfortunately that wasn't
guaranteed to be initialized by the time its getInstance() was entered. Use a
function-local static instead.
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from LLParamSingleton::initSingleton().
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This was forbidden, but AndreyK points out cases in which LLParamSingleton::
initSingleton() should in fact be allowed to circle back to its own instance()
method. Use a recursive_mutex instead of plain mutex to permit that; remove
LL_ERRS preventing it.
Add LLParamSingleton::instance() method that calls
LLParamSingleton::getInstance(). Inheriting LLSingleton::instance() called
LLSingleton::getInstance() -- not at all what we want.
Add LLParamSingleton unit tests.
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avoid crash
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Simplify LLSingleton::SingletonLifetimeManager to SingletonInitializer: that
struct has not been responsible for deletion ever since LLSingletonBase
acquired dependency-ordered deleteAll().
Move SingletonData::mInitState changes from SingletonLifetimeManager to
constructSingleton() method. Similarly, constructSingleton() now sets
SingletonData::mInstance instead of making its caller store the pointer.
Add variadic arguments to LLSingleton::constructSingleton() so we can reuse it
for LLParamSingleton.
Add finishInitializing() method to encapsulate logic reused for
getInstance()'s INITIALIZING and DELETED cases.
Make LLParamSingleton a subclass of LLSingleton, just as LLLockedSingleton is
a subclass of LLParamSingleton. Make LLParamSingleton a friend of LLSingleton,
so it can access private members of LLSingleton without also granting access
to any DERIVED_CLASS subclass. This eliminates the need for protected
getInitState().
LLParamSingleton::initParamSingleton() reuses LLSingleton::constructSingleton()
and finishInitializing(). Its getInstance() method completely replaces
LLSingleton::getInstance(): in most EInitStates, LLParamSingleton::getInstance()
is an error.
Use a std::mutex to serialize calls to LLParamSingleton::initParamSingleton()
and getInstance(). While LLSingleton::getInstance() relies on the "initialized
exactly once" guarantee for block-scope static declarations, LLParamSingleton
cannot rely on the same mechanism.
LLLockedSingleton is now a very succinct subclass of LLParamSingleton -- they
have very similar functionality.
Giving the LLSINGLETON() macro variadic arguments eliminates the need for a
separate LLPARAMSINGLETON() macro, while continuing to support existing usage.
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Use them in place of awkward try/catch test boilerplate.
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