Here's a quote from cppreference's implementation note section of std::shared_ptr
, which mentions that there are two different pointers(as shown in bold) : the one that can be returned by get()
, and the one holding the actual data within the control block.
In a typical implementation,
std::shared_ptr
holds only two pointers:
- the stored pointer (one returned by
get()
)- a pointer to control block
The control block is a dynamically-allocated object that holds:
- either a pointer to the managed object or the managed object itself
- the deleter (type-erased)
- the allocator (type-erased)
- the number of
shared_ptrs
that own the managed object- the number of
weak_ptrs
that refer to the managed objectThe pointer held by the
shared_ptr
directly is the one returned byget()
, while the pointer or object held by the control block is the one that will be deleted when the number of shared owners reaches zero. These pointers are not necessarily equal.
My question is, why are two different pointer(the two in bold) needed for the managed object (in addition to the pointer to the control block)? Doesn't the one returned by get()
suffice? And why aren't these pointers necessarily equal?