V8's documentation explains how to create a Javascript object that wraps a C++ object. The Javascript object holds on to a pointer to a C++ object instance. My question is, let's say you create the C++ object on the heap, how can you get a notification when the Javascript object is collected by the gc, so you can free the heap allocated C++ object?
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The trick is to create a Persistent handle (second bullet point from the linked-to API reference: "Persistent handles are not held on a stack and are deleted only when you specifically remove them. ... Use a persistent handle when you need to keep a reference to an object for more than one function call, or when handle lifetimes do not correspond to C++ scopes."), and call MakeWeak() on it, passing a callback function that will do the necessary cleanup ("A persistent handle can be made weak, using Persistent::MakeWeak, to trigger a callback from the garbage collector when the only references to an object are from weak persistent handles." -- that is, when all "regular" handles have gone out of scope and when the garbage collector is about to delete the object). The Persistent::MakeWeak method signature is:
Where WeakReferenceCallback is defined as a pointer-to-function taking two parameters:
These are found in the v8.h header file distributed with V8 as the public API. You would want the function you pass to MakeWeak to clean up the Persistent object parameter that will get passed to it when it's called as a callback. The "void* parameter" parameter can be ignored (or the void* parameter can point to a C++ structure that holds the objects that need cleaning up):
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Do all your work in some closed scope (of object or function). Then you can safely remove the C++ object when you went out of scope. GC doesn't check pointers for existence of pointed objects. |
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In general, if a garbage-collected language can hold references to resources outside of the language engine (files, sockets, or in your case C++ objects), you should provide a 'close' method to release that resource ASAP, no point waiting until the GC thinks it's worthwhile to destroy your object. it gets worse if your C++ object is memory-hungry and the garbage-collected object is just a reference: you might allocate thousands of objects, and the GC only sees a few KB's of tiny objects, not enough to trigger collection; while the C++ side is struggling with tens of megabytes of stale objects. |
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