shared_ptr
means that the ownership rules surrounding the resource are complicated. Understanding them requires tracking down the lifetime of all shared_ptr
s in the general case.
unique_ptr
means that the ownership rules surrounding the resource are dead easy.
Both enforce a set of ownership rules, but the rules for unique_ptr
are simple and local, the rules for shared_ptr
are complex and non-local. If you are in a situation where you are choosing between the two casually, then you aren't treating lifetime issues with the gravity they deserve.
If you have a pointer-like resource whose lifetime should be controlled simply, or even at some central location (type-wise) with complex logic around it, use unique_ptr
. The cost over a raw pointer is minimal, and it adds (enforced) documentation that this is the "owning" pointer to this resource.
If you must have a resource whose lifetime is the union of the lifetime of a bunch of other objects, all of whom have unrelated lifetimes, shared_ptr
can be considered. If your situation is so complex that a loop could possibly be formed, then naive shared_ptr
use is no longer a practical option.
shared_ptr
and weak_ptr
can also be used as a distributed lifetime notification system, where a central location stores a (mostly unique) shared_ptr
, and clients store weak_ptr
s. Local (non-stored) shared_ptr
s are created from the weak_ptr
s in order to check that the target resource still exists, then the resource is manipulated, then the local shared_ptr
is discarded. The goal here is to make (in a non-language enforced way) a unique_ptr
with weak shares, so reasoning about lifetime is only marginally harder than the unique_ptr
case.
shared_ptr
basically never "solves" the lifetime problem without you proving that it will solve your lifetime problems. It can make some parts of that proof marginally easier.
shared_ptr
if you need shared ownership. If not, there is no reason to use it.std::experimental::observer_ptr
is more of a matter of style.shared_ptr
in my code end up being mostlyweak_ptr
based, where I want decoupled notification of destruction of some token to change some other behavior. No real shared ownership, just an easy decoupled death-notification.