7

I had a strange problem ,

declare a static member variable whose name is B class in A class . And initialize in the cpp file. but the constructor of B class was never called. I try to use some small test , the test constructor could be called normally. so it is very strange for our production system.

The code like this , in hpp:

class Test
{
    public:
    Test()
    {
        ofstream file("/tmp/wup.txt",ios::app);
        file << "wup in test" << endl;
        file.close();
    }
};

//## An extended personality
class TsdNAExtPersonality : public TsdNAPersonality{
public:

  TsdNAExtPersonality(
        s_gg62_personRec * gg62Header,
                   TsdNAFunctionType requiredFunctionType);
private:
  static Test test;

public:
  TsdNAExtPersonality( string * personalityFile, TsdNAFunctionType requiredFunctionType);
};

And in another cpp file I initialize with

Test TsdNAExtPersonality::test;

I have tried in several way, but i found all of ways are unusefull.

  1. did not set the variable as member variable but as global variable ==> also can't output
  2. change the member variable as pointer and change the initialize way as using new ==> no

the environment is HP-UX ,and the compile is aCC

so my question are :

  1. is there any compile option will influence the variable ? in other words, all the static variable will not be initialized.

  2. from the standard of C++ it should be called when the library was load, right?

  3. I put another static int value using the same way, it could be initialized. but the class constructor is not called , very strange.

  4. is there any mistake in my code ?

11
  • SSCCE here gives the same result if you don't init. the variable. This SSCCE does indeed run the constructor for the static variable.
    – Chemistpp
    Sep 13, 2013 at 16:22
  • 3
    Are you sure the constructor is not called? Are you sure it's not just a matter of you not having permission to do what you are trying to do? What happens if you place the code from your constructor directly in your main function? Sep 13, 2013 at 16:25
  • @BenjaminLindley stole my comment - it's almost surely not that the constructor is being lost, but rather that you can't complete the particular file operation. Did you check for errors in your ofstream object [it's not listed in the sample]?
    – JoshG79
    Sep 13, 2013 at 16:27
  • Note that the constructor runs for the static variable before main, so if you're hoping that the constructor for the static variable will produce some effect on created objects' states in main, it will not happen like that.
    – Chemistpp
    Sep 13, 2013 at 16:27
  • @BenjaminLindley I'm sure the constructor was not called, as i set another variable for example i = 4, and i found i was still 0.
    – A New Star
    Sep 14, 2013 at 8:27

4 Answers 4

9

from the standard of C++ it should be called when the library was load, right?

No. Dynamic initialisation of an object with static storage duration is guaranteed to happen before execution of any function defined in the same translation unit. If there are no such functions, or your program never calls them, then there's no guarantee that it will ever be initialised.

I put another static int value using the same way, it could be initialized. but the class constructor is not called , very strange.

An int variable is initialised statically, before the program starts, as long as its initialiser is constant.

is there any compile option will influence the variable ?

Not that I know of, but I'm not familiar with your platform. You could give yourself more control over the object's creation by scoping it within a function:

static Test & test() {
    static Test test;
    return test;
}

Now it is guaranteed to be initialised the first time the function is called. Of course, you'll need to remember to call it at some point.

2
  • i did not put it into the method, as i will read the file content and it will cost time. So i want to initialized when the library was load.
    – A New Star
    Sep 14, 2013 at 8:40
  • As i did not find the best solution, i changed my code and put the variable into the function then it was initialized normally as i expect.
    – A New Star
    Sep 20, 2013 at 6:44
1

The startup and shutdown of a C++ program are sort of grey areas because it's not clear how much of your code you can already use (because it has been initialized) and how much is yet starting. At shutdown the same happens for destructor... it's not clear how many subsystems have been already shut down when your static instances are destroyed.

Moreover you should never use static initialization for anything that may fail, debugging before the start or after the end of main can be very difficult.

Note also that the order in which statics are initialized is not defined (except relative to other statics in the same compilation unit) and it may change from one compilation to the next. This means that you may live happy with a working program until for some strange reason you get a different initialization order and things stop working without any relevant change in the code.

Using static initialization for extremely simple things is ok, for anything else is not and you should do instead proper controlled initialization.

1
  • Just initialize the subsystems explicitly in main in a controlled order and shut down them orderly when quitting. Using implicit or lazy construction seems a nice approach and it may work for simple cases... if the project grows however it's a model that can bite back badly.
    – 6502
    Sep 14, 2013 at 9:16
0

I think there is a bug in your compiler.

Running this simple code on linux/g++ gives the expected results:

#include <iostream>

using namespace std;

class A
{
    public:
        A() { cout << "Hallo" << endl; }
};

class B
{
    public:
    static A a;
};

A B::a;    // < here the constructor must be called!

int main()
{
   cout << "Main runs" << endl;
   return 0;
}

Results in:

Hallo
Main runs

The constructor MUST be called when the static data member is constructed (commented line above).

1
  • yes, i also do the same test. the constructor was called normally.
    – A New Star
    Sep 14, 2013 at 8:23
0

Static initialization in C++ is:

  • Zero initialization
  • Constant initialization
  • Dynamic initialization

Hence your best bet is initialization at first function call:

int fn() {
    static int result = 42;
    return result;
}

EDIT:

If you want to initialize before main:

struct Initialize { 
    Initialize() { fn(); }
}

Initialize initialize;
1
  • thanks , but i need to speed up as i want to read some file in the constructor it will cost seconds. if i put into the function the production system will be influenced.
    – A New Star
    Sep 14, 2013 at 15:41

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