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In a project of mine, I created classes that handles file I/O. I have a FileReader and a FileWriter. The FileReader can read data from a file, the FileWriter can write data to a file. A new class is introduced in my project that needs the ability to read and write in the same file. For this class I need to combine the FileReader and the FileWriter class.

#include "Read.h"
#include "Write.h"

class ReadWrite : public Read, public Write
{

};

With this approach reading and writing can be done at the same time. As far as I know you cannot read and write at the same time. The only solution that I have is creating a proxy class:

#include "Read.h"
#include "Write.h"

#include <mutex>

class ReadWrite : private Read, private Write
{
private:
    std::mutex lock;

public:

    int readData() {
        std::lock_guard<mutex> guard(lock);
        return readX();
    }

    void writeData(int x) {
        std::lock_guard<mutex> guard(lock);
        writeX(x);
    }
};

Are there other solutions to solve this problem? The problem with this solution is that readX and writeX do not need to be fully synchronized. How can I design a file I/O system that has a separate read, write and readwrite class without having much synchronization overhead.

5
  • Could you provide a decent code sample of what you have. It's a bit unclear and also may depend on your primary use case, what's the best way to do it. May 14, 2014 at 14:39
  • 1
    Also is there any particular reason you're reinventing iostream? If you're after thread safety, wouldn't it be much simpler to simply lock access to the iostream rather than trying to make individually thread-safe read and write operations?
    – aruisdante
    May 14, 2014 at 15:02
  • You also can use shared_lock if you foresee multiple reads at same time.
    – Gonmator
    May 14, 2014 at 15:04
  • I miss some features in fstream that I need and I do not want to keep track of files that are not closed. May 14, 2014 at 15:06
  • When Read and Write has a base class with public methods, then a call to the public method will become ambiguous. The compiler does not know which base class method you want to call.
    – Laurence
    May 20, 2014 at 6:14

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