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.
iostream
? If you're after thread safety, wouldn't it be much simpler to simply lock access to theiostream
rather than trying to make individually thread-safe read and write operations?shared_lock
if you foresee multiple reads at same time.