I'd consider wrapping ogg_stream_state
with a shared_ptr
with custom destructor.
class OggStreamState {
public:
shared_ptr<ogg_stream_state> state;
OggStreamState() :
state(new ogg_stream_state, &ogg_stream_clear)
{}
};
Your code would now look like this:
OggStreamState os;
ogg_stream_init(os.state.get(),ogg_page_serialno(&og));
Which is a little ugly, but this technique gives a logical place to start moving to an object oriented interface rather than a C function based one.
For example you could then move ogg_stream_init
into OggStreamState
so that it would become
OggStreamState os;
os.init(ogg_page_seialno(&og));
Take it one step further and repeat for the ogg_page, and you'd get
OggPage og = ...;
OggStreamState os;
os.stream_init(og.serialno());
You could even pull the init all the way into the constructor
OggStreamState os(og.serialno());
or at the extreme...
OggStreamState os(og);
Another advantage of this over a pure sentry RAII (like the solution from Lundin) is that you can pass the OggStreamState in and out of functions with out trouble. The compiler will determine when your last reference is destroyed and call the clear function for you. i.e. you can safely have a
OggStreamState oss = function_that_returns_a_stream_state(...);
Of course this technique does introduce other overheads, but usually they are minimal - also it does blur the ownership of the ogg stream slightly, which many or may not be a good thing...