/usr/include/thunderbird/mozilla/Move.h is in thunderbird-dev 1:38.6.0+build1-0ubuntu1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 | /* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 8; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */
/* vim: set ts=8 sts=2 et sw=2 tw=80: */
/* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
* License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
* file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */
/* C++11-style, but C++98-usable, "move references" implementation. */
#ifndef mozilla_Move_h
#define mozilla_Move_h
#include "mozilla/TypeTraits.h"
namespace mozilla {
/*
* "Move" References
*
* Some types can be copied much more efficiently if we know the original's
* value need not be preserved --- that is, if we are doing a "move", not a
* "copy". For example, if we have:
*
* Vector<T> u;
* Vector<T> v(u);
*
* the constructor for v must apply a copy constructor to each element of u ---
* taking time linear in the length of u. However, if we know we will not need u
* any more once v has been initialized, then we could initialize v very
* efficiently simply by stealing u's dynamically allocated buffer and giving it
* to v --- a constant-time operation, regardless of the size of u.
*
* Moves often appear in container implementations. For example, when we append
* to a vector, we may need to resize its buffer. This entails moving each of
* its extant elements from the old, smaller buffer to the new, larger buffer.
* But once the elements have been migrated, we're just going to throw away the
* old buffer; we don't care if they still have their values. So if the vector's
* element type can implement "move" more efficiently than "copy", the vector
* resizing should by all means use a "move" operation. Hash tables should also
* use moves when resizing their internal array as entries are added and
* removed.
*
* The details of the optimization, and whether it's worth applying, vary
* from one type to the next: copying an 'int' is as cheap as moving it, so
* there's no benefit in distinguishing 'int' moves from copies. And while
* some constructor calls for complex types are moves, many really have to
* be copies, and can't be optimized this way. So we need:
*
* 1) a way for a type (like Vector) to announce that it can be moved more
* efficiently than it can be copied, and provide an implementation of that
* move operation; and
*
* 2) a way for a particular invocation of a copy constructor to say that it's
* really a move, not a copy, and that the value of the original isn't
* important afterwards (although it must still be safe to destroy).
*
* If a constructor has a single argument of type 'T&&' (an 'rvalue reference
* to T'), that indicates that it is a 'move constructor'. That's 1). It should
* move, not copy, its argument into the object being constructed. It may leave
* the original in any safely-destructible state.
*
* If a constructor's argument is an rvalue, as in 'C(f(x))' or 'C(x + y)', as
* opposed to an lvalue, as in 'C(x)', then overload resolution will prefer the
* move constructor, if there is one. The 'mozilla::Move' function, defined in
* this file, is an identity function you can use in a constructor invocation to
* make any argument into an rvalue, like this: C(Move(x)). That's 2). (You
* could use any function that works, but 'Move' indicates your intention
* clearly.)
*
* Where we might define a copy constructor for a class C like this:
*
* C(const C& rhs) { ... copy rhs to this ... }
*
* we would declare a move constructor like this:
*
* C(C&& rhs) { .. move rhs to this ... }
*
* And where we might perform a copy like this:
*
* C c2(c1);
*
* we would perform a move like this:
*
* C c2(Move(c1));
*
* Note that 'T&&' implicitly converts to 'T&'. So you can pass a 'T&&' to an
* ordinary copy constructor for a type that doesn't support a special move
* constructor, and you'll just get a copy. This means that templates can use
* Move whenever they know they won't use the original value any more, even if
* they're not sure whether the type at hand has a specialized move constructor.
* If it doesn't, the 'T&&' will just convert to a 'T&', and the ordinary copy
* constructor will apply.
*
* A class with a move constructor can also provide a move assignment operator.
* A generic definition would run this's destructor, and then apply the move
* constructor to *this's memory. A typical definition:
*
* C& operator=(C&& rhs) {
* MOZ_ASSERT(&rhs != this, "self-moves are prohibited");
* this->~C();
* new(this) C(Move(rhs));
* return *this;
* }
*
* With that in place, one can write move assignments like this:
*
* c2 = Move(c1);
*
* This destroys c2, moves c1's value to c2, and leaves c1 in an undefined but
* destructible state.
*
* As we say, a move must leave the original in a "destructible" state. The
* original's destructor will still be called, so if a move doesn't
* actually steal all its resources, that's fine. We require only that the
* move destination must take on the original's value; and that destructing
* the original must not break the move destination.
*
* (Opinions differ on whether move assignment operators should deal with move
* assignment of an object onto itself. It seems wise to either handle that
* case, or assert that it does not occur.)
*
* Forwarding:
*
* Sometimes we want copy construction or assignment if we're passed an ordinary
* value, but move construction if passed an rvalue reference. For example, if
* our constructor takes two arguments and either could usefully be a move, it
* seems silly to write out all four combinations:
*
* C::C(X& x, Y& y) : x(x), y(y) { }
* C::C(X& x, Y&& y) : x(x), y(Move(y)) { }
* C::C(X&& x, Y& y) : x(Move(x)), y(y) { }
* C::C(X&& x, Y&& y) : x(Move(x)), y(Move(y)) { }
*
* To avoid this, C++11 has tweaks to make it possible to write what you mean.
* The four constructor overloads above can be written as one constructor
* template like so[0]:
*
* template <typename XArg, typename YArg>
* C::C(XArg&& x, YArg&& y) : x(Forward<XArg>(x)), y(Forward<YArg>(y)) { }
*
* ("'Don't Repeat Yourself'? What's that?")
*
* This takes advantage of two new rules in C++11:
*
* - First, when a function template takes an argument that is an rvalue
* reference to a template argument (like 'XArg&& x' and 'YArg&& y' above),
* then when the argument is applied to an lvalue, the template argument
* resolves to 'T&'; and when it is applied to an rvalue, the template
* argument resolves to 'T'. Thus, in a call to C::C like:
*
* X foo(int);
* Y yy;
*
* C(foo(5), yy)
*
* XArg would resolve to 'X', and YArg would resolve to 'Y&'.
*
* - Second, Whereas C++ used to forbid references to references, C++11 defines
* 'collapsing rules': 'T& &', 'T&& &', and 'T& &&' (that is, any combination
* involving an lvalue reference) now collapse to simply 'T&'; and 'T&& &&'
* collapses to 'T&&'.
*
* Thus, in the call above, 'XArg&&' is 'X&&'; and 'YArg&&' is 'Y& &&', which
* collapses to 'Y&'. Because the arguments are declared as rvalue references
* to template arguments, the lvalue-ness "shines through" where present.
*
* Then, the 'Forward<T>' function --- you must invoke 'Forward' with its type
* argument --- returns an lvalue reference or an rvalue reference to its
* argument, depending on what T is. In our unified constructor definition, that
* means that we'll invoke either the copy or move constructors for x and y,
* depending on what we gave C's constructor. In our call, we'll move 'foo()'
* into 'x', but copy 'yy' into 'y'.
*
* This header file defines Move and Forward in the mozilla namespace. It's up
* to individual containers to annotate moves as such, by calling Move; and it's
* up to individual types to define move constructors and assignment operators
* when valuable.
*
* (C++11 says that the <utility> header file should define 'std::move' and
* 'std::forward', which are just like our 'Move' and 'Forward'; but those
* definitions aren't available in that header on all our platforms, so we
* define them ourselves here.)
*
* 0. This pattern is known as "perfect forwarding". Interestingly, it is not
* actually perfect, and it can't forward all possible argument expressions!
* There is a C++11 issue: you can't form a reference to a bit-field. As a
* workaround, assign the bit-field to a local variable and use that:
*
* // C is as above
* struct S { int x : 1; } s;
* C(s.x, 0); // BAD: s.x is a reference to a bit-field, can't form those
* int tmp = s.x;
* C(tmp, 0); // OK: tmp not a bit-field
*/
/**
* Identical to std::Move(); this is necessary until our stlport supports
* std::move().
*/
template<typename T>
inline typename RemoveReference<T>::Type&&
Move(T&& aX)
{
return static_cast<typename RemoveReference<T>::Type&&>(aX);
}
/**
* These two overloads are identical to std::forward(); they are necessary until
* our stlport supports std::forward().
*/
template<typename T>
inline T&&
Forward(typename RemoveReference<T>::Type& aX)
{
return static_cast<T&&>(aX);
}
template<typename T>
inline T&&
Forward(typename RemoveReference<T>::Type&& aX)
{
static_assert(!IsLvalueReference<T>::value,
"misuse of Forward detected! try the other overload");
return static_cast<T&&>(aX);
}
/** Swap |aX| and |aY| using move-construction if possible. */
template<typename T>
inline void
Swap(T& aX, T& aY)
{
T tmp(Move(aX));
aX = Move(aY);
aY = Move(tmp);
}
} // namespace mozilla
#endif /* mozilla_Move_h */
|