Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I'm porting FastDelegate to C++0x using variadic templates.

    #include "FastDelegate.h"

    template<class R=fastdelegate::detail::DefaultVoid, class ...P>
    class fast_delegate_base {
    private:
        typedef typename fastdelegate::detail::DefaultVoidToVoid<R>::type desired_ret_t;
        typedef desired_ret_t (*static_func_ptr)(P...);
        typedef R (*unvoid_static_func_ptr)(P...);
        typedef R (fastdelegate::detail::GenericClass::*generic_mem_fn)(P...);
        typedef fastdelegate::detail::ClosurePtr<generic_mem_fn, static_func_ptr, unvoid_static_func_ptr> closure_t;
        closure_t closure_;
    public:
        // Typedefs to aid generic programming
        typedef fast_delegate_base type;

        // Construction and comparison functions
        fast_delegate_base() { clear(); }

        fast_delegate_base(const fast_delegate_base &x)
        {
            closure_.CopyFrom(this, x.closure_);
        }

        void operator = (const fast_delegate_base &x)
        {
            closure_.CopyFrom(this, x.closure_);
        }
        bool operator ==(const fast_delegate_base &x) const
        {
            return closure_.IsEqual(x.closure_);
        }
        bool operator !=(const fast_delegate_base &x) const
        {
            return !closure_.IsEqual(x.closure_);
        }
        bool operator <(const fast_delegate_base &x) const
        {
            return closure_.IsLess(x.closure_);
        }
        bool operator >(const fast_delegate_base &x) const
        {
            return x.closure_.IsLess(closure_);
        }

        // Binding to non-const member functions
        template<class X, class Y>
        fast_delegate_base(Y *pthis, desired_ret_t (X::* function_to_bind)(P...) )
        {
            closure_.bindmemfunc(fastdelegate::detail::implicit_cast<X*>(pthis), function_to_bind);
        }

        template<class X, class Y>
        inline void bind(Y *pthis, desired_ret_t (X::* function_to_bind)(P...))
        {
            closure_.bindmemfunc(fastdelegate::detail::implicit_cast<X*>(pthis), function_to_bind);
        }

        // Binding to const member functions.
        template<class X, class Y>
        fast_delegate_base(const Y *pthis, desired_ret_t (X::* function_to_bind)(P...) const)
        {
            closure_.bindconstmemfunc(fastdelegate::detail::implicit_cast<const X*>(pthis), function_to_bind);
        }

        template<class X, class Y>
        inline void bind(const Y *pthis, desired_ret_t (X::* function_to_bind)(P...) const)
        {
            closure_.bindconstmemfunc(fastdelegate::detail::implicit_cast<const X *>(pthis), function_to_bind);
        }

        // Static functions. We convert them into a member function call.
        // This constructor also provides implicit conversion
        fast_delegate_base(desired_ret_t (*function_to_bind)(P...) )
        {
            bind(function_to_bind);
        }

        // for efficiency, prevent creation of a temporary
        void operator = (desired_ret_t (*function_to_bind)(P...) )
        {
            bind(function_to_bind);
        }

        inline void bind(desired_ret_t (*function_to_bind)(P...))
        {
            closure_.bindstaticfunc(this, &fast_delegate_base::invoke_static_func, function_to_bind);
        }

        // Invoke the delegate
        template<typename ...A>
        R operator()(A&&... args) const
        {
            return (closure_.GetClosureThis()->*(closure_.GetClosureMemPtr()))(std::forward<A>(args)...);
        }
        // Implicit conversion to "bool" using the safe_bool idiom

    private:
        typedef struct safe_bool_struct
        {
            int a_data_pointer_to_this_is_0_on_buggy_compilers;
            static_func_ptr m_nonzero;
        } useless_typedef;
        typedef static_func_ptr safe_bool_struct::*unspecified_bool_type;
    public:
        operator unspecified_bool_type() const { return empty()? 0: &safe_bool_struct::m_nonzero; }
        // necessary to allow ==0 to work despite the safe_bool idiom
        inline bool operator==(static_func_ptr funcptr) { return closure_.IsEqualToStaticFuncPtr(funcptr); }
        inline bool operator!=(static_func_ptr funcptr) { return !closure_.IsEqualToStaticFuncPtr(funcptr); }
        // Is it bound to anything?
        inline bool operator ! () const { return !closure_; }
        inline bool empty() const { return !closure_; }
        void clear() { closure_.clear();}
        // Conversion to and from the DelegateMemento storage class
        const fastdelegate::DelegateMemento & GetMemento() { return closure_; }
        void SetMemento(const fastdelegate::DelegateMemento &any) { closure_.CopyFrom(this, any); }

    private:
        // Invoker for static functions
        R invoke_static_func(P... args) const
        {
            return (*(closure_.GetStaticFunction()))(args...);
        }
    };

    // fast_delegate<> is similar to std::function, but it has comparison operators.
    template<typename _Signature>
    class fast_delegate;

    template<typename R, typename ...P>
    class fast_delegate<R(P...)> : public fast_delegate_base<R, P...>
    {
    public:
        typedef fast_delegate_base<R, P...> BaseType;

        fast_delegate() : BaseType() { }

        template<class X, class Y>
        fast_delegate(Y * pthis, R (X::* function_to_bind)(P...))
            : BaseType(pthis, function_to_bind)
        { }

        template<class X, class Y>
        fast_delegate(const Y *pthis, R (X::* function_to_bind)(P...) const)
            : BaseType(pthis, function_to_bind)
        { }

        fast_delegate(R (*function_to_bind)(P...))
            : BaseType(function_to_bind)
        { }

        void operator = (const BaseType &x)
        {
            *static_cast<BaseType*>(this) = x;
        }
    };

But, one of the limitations of my implementation is, when using non-member functions, and in case that function accepts parameter(s) by value, an extra value copy for each parameters take place. I assume that this occurs between fast_delegate_base::operator()() and fast_delegate_base::invoke_static_func().

I tried to make fast_delegate_base::invoke_static_func() to accept Rvalue parameters, but failed.

For example:

class C1
{
public:
    C1() { printf("C1()\n"); }
    ~C1() { printf("~C1()\n"); }
    C1(const C1&)
    {
        printf("C1(const C1&)\n");
    }

    int test(int t) const
    {
        printf("C1::test(%d)\n", t);
        return 1;
    }
};

int test(C1 c)
{
    c.test(1234);
    return 1;
}

// ...

C1 c1;
fast_delegate<int(C1)> t1(test);
t1(c1);

Result of this code is:

C1()
C1(const C1&)
C1(const C1&)
C1::test(1234)
~C1()
~C1()
~C1()

Do you have any idea to avoid this extra value copy?

share|improve this question
The code isn't complete, as far as I can tell, i.e. I can't reproduce the issue easily. One copy is created for the value being passed. I suspect that the intermediate forwarding does the other one using the same signature as the function being called. That said: why not use std::function<Signature>? – Dietmar Kühl Feb 10 '12 at 23:26
Because std::function<> does not support comparison: operator ==(). – Daniel K. Feb 11 '12 at 0:18
Can you try boiling your code way down to a compact example of good C++98 working how you want and the C++11 version that does the extra copy? – John Zwinck Feb 11 '12 at 0:27
I see perfect forwarding implemented in fast_delegate_base::operator(), but not anywhere else -- is this intentional? From my (naive) view, it seems wrong. – ildjarn Feb 11 '12 at 0:53
@JohnZwinck I assumed, as you did, that this was a regression from the '98 implementation. But the '98 implementation actually takes 3 copies, as does std::function (w/gcc 4.6.1). This implementation avoids one copy, the first one, by using perfect forwarding on operator(), the original didn't. – je4d Feb 11 '12 at 1:51
show 3 more comments

1 Answer

up vote 1 down vote accepted

It looks to me like this copy is inherent in the design of the class, specifically the existence of invoke_static_func.

From what I can see, this is a proxy to normalize static functions and member functions into just member functions, so they every dispatch can be done as a member function call. The only difference is that the member is the fast_delegate_base instance rather than an instance of whatever class the target function is a member of.

So there's an extra call frame when calling static functions, and to get rid of that extra copy you would need to make the extra call frame (invoke_static_func) take its parameter by a reference (ignore for now the consequences of this if the argument type is not a value).

Unfortunately, invoke_static_func needs to be called via a function pointer which has an argument list containing value types, so operator() is forced to make a copy in order to invoke the function pointer (i.e. to invoke invoke_static_func). Making invoke_static_func take parameters by reference doesn't help, because it still has to be invoked via a function pointer that does not have reference argument types.

And there's no way invoke_static_func can avoid making a copy to call test(C1), that's just a simple call by value - so you need both copies to make this design work.


To explain it from a different perspective, thin of it in terms of pure C:

Operator() needs to call a function func (this_ptr, arg_1, arg_2, arg_3). The target function will expect these parameters to be in particular registers or particular stack locations depending on their position in the argument list and size.

But a static function does not have the magic first 'this' parameter, its signature is just func(arg_1, arg_2, arg_3). So it expects all the other arguments to be in different registers and/or stack locations than the corresponding member function does. So you need that copy to move the arguments into the right registers/stack locations to comply with the calling convention for the static function.

Which basically, means you can't avoid that second copy for a static function with this design.


However... you may be able to improve on this by some crafty template metaprogramming to apply std::move to value type arguments in the implementation of invoke_static_func, reducing your call overhead to a copy and a move, which is almost as good as just one copy.

I'll update this answer if and when I figure whether that's possible (and if so how).


Edit

Something like this should do the trick:

template <bool IsClass, class U>
struct move_if_class
{
    template <typename T>
    T&& operator()(const T& t) { return std::move(const_cast<T&>(t)); }
};

template <class T>
struct move_if_class<false,T>
{
    T&& operator()(typename std::remove_reference<T>::type& t) { return std::forward<T>(t); }
    T&& operator()(typename std::remove_reference<T>::type&& t) { return std::forward<T>(t); }
};

R invoke_static_func(P... args) const
{
    return (*(closure_.GetStaticFunction()))(move_if_class<std::is_class<P>::value,P>()(args)...);
}   

And after adding a move c'tor:

C1()
C1(const C1&)
C1(C1&&)
C1::test(1234)
~C1()
~C1()
~C1()
share|improve this answer
Much better in case passed objects support move semantic. Let me wait for others a little longer :D Thanks. – Daniel K. Feb 11 '12 at 7:59
@DanielK. Having given it a bit more thought, I think it may be possible to get rid of that copy - you'd have to do some magic on the signature of the internal function pointer to convert all class type arguments to const lvalue references, and introduce a invoke_member_func function with that modified signature that calls the target member function. That way the invoke_[member|static]_func functions never take a copy, and a single copy is always taken when calling the target. Good luck with it :-) – je4d Feb 11 '12 at 23:31

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.