I posed a question not to long ago: C++ Runtime Knowledge of Classes and the answer I got back from a StackOverflow user "Denice" was a URL to a website Meatspace: C++ runtime class registration.
I think that is a really cool way to use templates and instantiate objects that are all derived from a base class, so that when I have 10 C++ files, they can all just add the AUTO_REGISTER_BASE() at the bottom, and when everything is all done and linked, only those classes/files that made it would be registered, so at runtime you can switch between the different classes that are available, and those that are not available are not registered and thus can't accidently be called.
There are many different OS dependant ways to do event notification (select(), kqueue(), /dev/epoll, Solaris has it's own thing, poll()), and I needed a way to have all of the class files exist in the directory, but depending on what OS the Makefile was run, it would only compile certain ones. I needed a way to know at runtime which ones were available, and have a way for the programmer using the library to select their preference, however if it was unavailable to just use the one that made the most logical sense for the platform (they each have weights assigned to them).
The code above helped me accomplish this goal, with some hefty modifications, but it helped me none-the-less!