4

I am using an exported class

class __declspec(dllexport) myclass  
{  
private:  
template __declspec(dllexport) class std::map<myclass*,int>;    
std::map<myclass*,int>m_map;  
//something  
};    

When I do this, I get a warning C4251 saying m_map:class 'std::map<_Kty,_Ty>' needs to have dll-interface to be used by clients of class myclass.
Any ideas about how i can resolve this ?
Atul

2 Answers 2

6

You should not be using __declspec(dllexport) into the header files that code using your DLL will be using, as they need to be using __declspec(dllimport).

Therefore you should create a macro that uses dllexport if a particular other define is set, and dllimport if it is not.

In a common header somewhere:

#ifdef EXPORTING_FOO
#define FOO_API __declspec(dllexport)
#else
#define FOO_API __declspec(dllimport)
#endif

You can instantiate a template:

extern template class FOO_API Templ<MyClass, int >;

within an included header. Note the extern here. Within one compilation unit declare the same but without the extern and without the FOO_API, thus:

template class Templ<MyClass, int >;

This will mean that the code using your library will not instantiate the template but will be using the one in your library. This is particularly useful when the template has virtual members.

If the template is one from the standard library or boost, the code using yours will have to be using the same version as yours or there could be a serious problem.

Given that in your own example it appears in the private area suggests you want to refactor it out of the interface for your library. Ideally your library should only expose public methods and members other than forward declarations. Private copy-constructors and assignments in order to make a class non-copyable and non-assignable are fine - they are not really part of the implementation they are part of the interface of your class (you are saying that you cannot copy or assign them).

1
  • That is how I used to do it back in 2010 but now actually I have a stdafx.h file or similar which is included by all project source but not by external user source and that defines FOO_API or whatever. The header then simply does #ifndef FOO_API and will do a #pragma commment lib too.
    – CashCow
    Jan 20, 2014 at 10:28
2

You can not export a class with members that are not exported. A possible solution would be using the Pimpl idiom. With Pimpl the members of the class are not known to the user. So no stl classes need to be exported. For further reading about pimpl check the following: http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?PimplIdiom or http://www.gamedev.net/reference/articles/article1794.asp

Example:

myclass.h:

class __declspec(dllexport) myclass
{
public:
    myclass();
    virtual ~myclass();
private:
    myclass(const myclass& other) {}
    myclass& operator=(const myclass& rhs) {return *this;}
    myclassImpl* m_Pimpl;
};

myclass.cpp:

#include "myclass.h"
#include "myclassImpl.h"


myclass::myclass()
    :m_Pimpl(new myclassImpl())
{}

myclass::~myclass() {
    delete m_Pimpl;
}

myclassImpl.h:

class myclassImpl {
private:
    std::map<myclass*,int>m_map;
};
3
  • @ David, Can you please elaborate this Pimpl idiom ?
    – Atul
    Nov 23, 2010 at 8:25
  • Good but you are causing yourself more problems making the destructor virtual. Nobody is going to derive from them because if you want polymorphism you put that into the pImpl. You should also make your class non-copyable and not assignable.
    – CashCow
    Nov 23, 2010 at 9:57
  • @CashCow you are right - the code does not take proper care of assigning and copying. But it can be inherited by the user of the library. Nov 23, 2010 at 10:33

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