Can C++ objects be copied using bitwise copy? I mean using memcopy_s? Is there a scenario in which that can go wrong?
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If they're Plain Old Data (POD) types, then this should work. Any class that has instances of other classes inside it will potentially fail, since you're copying them without invoking their copy constructors. The most likely way it will fail is one of their destructors will free some memory, but you've duplicated pointers that point to it, so you then try to use it from one of your copied objects and get a segfault. In short, don't do it unless it's a POD and you're sure it will always be a POD. |
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If it is a single object, why not use assignment operator (I suppose the compiler-generated assignment operator could be implemented in terms of If you want to copy an array of objects, you can use std::copy. Depending on the implementation, this may end up using |
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In addition to the problem of unbalanced resource management calls in the two instance you end up with after a memcopy (as @JaredPar and @rmeador pointed), if the object supports a notion of an instance ID doing a memcopy will leave you with two instances with the same ID. This can lead to all sorts of "interesting" problems to hunt later on, especially if your objects are mapped to a database. |
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In general if your structure contains pointers, you can't memcpy it because the structure would most likely allocate new memory spaces and point to those. A memcpy can't handle that. If however your class only has primitive, non-pointer types, you should be able to. |
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It depends on the implementation of the C++ object you are trying to copy. In general the owner of the C++ object's memory is the object itself, so trying to "move" or "copy" it with something like memcopy_s is going behind its back which is going to get you in trouble more often than not. Usually if a C++ object is intended to be copied or moved, there are APIs within the class itself that facilitate this. |
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No, doing so can cause a lot of problems. You should always copy C++ types by using the assignment operator or copy constructor. Using a bitwise copy breaks any kind of resource management because at the end of the day you are left with 2 objects for which 1 constructor has run and 2 destructors will run. Consider as an example a ref counted pointer.
Now both p1 and p2 are holding onto the same data yet the internal ref counting mechanism has not been notified. Both destructors will run thinking they are the sole owner of the data potentially causing the value to be destructed twice. |
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