template <typename T, typename Lock>
class Singleton
{
public:
static T * getInstance()
{
if (obj == 0)
{
lock.lock();
if (obj == 0)
{
obj = new T;
}
lock.unlock();
}
return obj;
}
void deleteInstance()
{
delete obj;
obj = 0;
}
private:
volatile static T * obj = 0;
static Lock lock; // some sort of mutex
Singleton();
~Singleton();
Singleton(const Singleton &);
Singleton & operator=(const Singleton &);
};
Is it necessary that the obj has to be volatile? If the first thread, creates the T instance and lets say the 2nd thread already loaded obj with 0 in the cache before that, will the modern processors cache gets invalidated or is it possible the 2nd thread might use the 0 value of obj and create T 2nd time? assuming that both threads are running in different cores.
Also please let me know any issues that can come up with using static T * instead of static T as the singleton data.