Managed types have their references counted and when the count drops to zero, they are finalized. If you have a local variable, then when it goes out of scope, its reference count will drop to zero.
So, you can create a descendent of TInterfacedObject
which you refer to using an interface. Something like this:
type
TLifetimeWatcher = class(TInterfacedObject)
private
FDestroyProc: TProc;
public
constructor Create(const DestroyProc: TProc);
destructor Destroy; override;
end;
constructor TLifetimeWatcher.Create(const DestroyProc: TProc);
begin
inherited Create;
FDestroyProc := DestroyProc;
end;
destructor TLifetimeWatcher.Destroy;
begin
if Assigned(FDestroyProc) then
FDestroyProc();
inherited;
end;
You can then use it like this:
procedure MyProcedure;
var
MyPointer: Pointer;
LifetimeWatcher: IInterface;
begin
MyPointer := VirtualAlloc (NIL, 1024, MEM_COMMIT or MEM_RESERVE,
PAGE_EXECUTE_READWRITE);
LifetimeWatcher := TLifetimeWatcher.Create(
procedure
begin
VirtualFree(MyPointer, 0, MEM_RELEASE);
end;
)
FillMemory(MyPointer);
end;
When LifetimeWatcher
leaves scope, the implementing object is destroyed and the procedure that you passed to TLifetimeWatcher.Create
is executed.
It would be easy enough to specialise this idea to be dedicated to your use case. And that would make the code at the call site more concise.
That would look like this:
function VirtualAllocAutoRelease(Size: SIZE_T; Protect: DWORD;
out LifetimeCookie: IInterface): Pointer;
var
Ptr: Pointer;
begin
Ptr := VirtualAlloc(nil, Size, MEM_COMMIT or MEM_RESERVE, Protect);
Win32Check(Ptr<>nil);
LifetimeCookie := TLifetimeWatcher.Create(
procedure
begin
VirtualFree(Ptr, 0, MEM_RELEASE);
end
);
Result := Ptr;
end;
And you'd use it like this:
procedure MyProcedure;
var
MyPointer: Pointer;
LifetimeWatcher: IInterface;
begin
MyPointer := VirtualAllocAutoRelease(1024, PAGE_EXECUTE_READWRITE,
LifetimeWatcher);
FillMemory(MyPointer);
end;
array of byte
, in later (2009+?) Delphi versions this is predefined as TBytes (docwiki.embarcadero.com/Libraries/XE4/en/System.SysUtils.TBytes)TInterfacedObject
,IUnknown
and such. RAII pattern, yes ? look at pastebin.com/YFkSNn7M