8

I'm trying to insert functions with inout parameter to append data received from async callback to an outside array. However, it does not work. And I tried everything I know to find out why - with no luck.

As advised by @AirspeedVelocity, I rewrote the code as follows to remove unnecessary dependencies. I also use an Int as the inout parameter to keep it simple.
The output is always:
c before: 0
c after: 1

I'm not able to figure out what goes wrong here.

func getUsers() {
    let u = ["bane", "LiweiZ", "rdtsc", "ssivark", "sparkzilla", "Wogef"]
    var a = UserData()
    a.userIds = u
    a.dataProcessor()
}

struct UserData {
    var userIds = [String]()
    var counter = 0
    mutating func dataProcessor() -> () {
        println("counter: \(counter)")
        for uId in userIds {
            getOneUserApiData(uriBase + "user/" + uId + ".json", &counter)
        }
    }
}

func getOneUserApiData(path: String, inout c: Int) {
    var req = NSURLRequest(URL: NSURL(string: path)!)
    var config = NSURLSessionConfiguration.ephemeralSessionConfiguration()
    var session = NSURLSession(configuration: config)
    var task = session.dataTaskWithRequest(req) {
        (data: NSData!, res: NSURLResponse!, err: NSError!) in
        println("c before: \(c)")
        c++
        println("c after: \(c)")
        println("thread on: \(NSThread.currentThread())")
    }

    task.resume()
}

Thanks.

3
  • 2
    You need to reduce your code to a much simpler case (preferably without using external libraries) and post it as part of the question. You probably won't get a good answer from anyone if they have to read through several pages of code to get what you're trying to do. Jan 31, 2015 at 0:53
  • @AirspeedVelocity Thanks. I'll revise it asap.
    – LiweiZ
    Jan 31, 2015 at 1:52
  • I just posted a question to learn the way to make the modification work. It's a further question I have after knowing inout would not work in this case. stackoverflow.com/questions/28254254/…
    – LiweiZ
    Jan 31, 2015 at 17:15

4 Answers 4

22

Sad to say, modifying inout parameter in async-callback is meaningless.

From the official document:

Parameters can provide default values to simplify function calls and can be passed as in-out parameters, which modify a passed variable once the function has completed its execution.

...

An in-out parameter has a value that is passed in to the function, is modified by the function, and is passed back out of the function to replace the original value.

Semantically, in-out parameter is not "call-by-reference", but "call-by-copy-restore".

In your case, counter is write-backed only when getOneUserApiData() returns, not in dataTaskWithRequest() callback.

Here is what happened in your code

  1. at getOneUserApiData() call, the value of counter 0 copied to c1
  2. the closure captures c1
  3. call dataTaskWithRequest()
  4. getOneUserApiData returns, and the value of - unmodified - c1 is write-backed to counter
  5. repeat 1-4 procedure for c2, c3, c4 ...
  6. ... fetching from the Internet ...
  7. callback is called and c1 is incremented.
  8. callback is called and c2 is incremented.
  9. callback is called and c3 is incremented.
  10. callback is called and c4 is incremented.
  11. ...

As a result counter is unmodified :(


Detailed explaination

Normally, in-out parameter is passed by reference, but it's just a result of compiler optimization. When closure captures inout parameter, "pass-by-reference" is not safe, because the compiler cannot guarantee the lifetime of the original value. For example, consider the following code:

func foo() -> () -> Void {
    var i = 0
    return bar(&i)
}

func bar(inout x:Int) -> () -> Void {
    return {
        x++
        return
    }
}

let closure = foo()
closure()

In this code, var i is freed when foo() returns. If x is a reference to i, x++ causes access violation. To prevent such race condition, Swift adopts "call-by-copy-restore" strategy here.

2
  • 1
    Thank you both for such nice answers. I wrote my reason to pick yours as comment under the other answer.
    – LiweiZ
    Jan 31, 2015 at 17:03
  • 1
    Great answer, but disappointing. Is there a different way we could structure the OP's example to achieve the goal? Mar 19, 2016 at 0:24
7

Essentially it looks like you’re trying to capture the “inout-ness” of an input variable in a closure, and you can’t do that – consider the following simpler case:

// f takes an inout variable and returns a closure
func f(inout i: Int) -> ()->Int {
    // this is the closure, which captures the inout var
    return {
        // in the closure, increment that var
        return ++i
    }

}

var x = 0
let c = f(&x)

c() // these increment i
c()
x   // but it's not the same i

At some point, the variable passed in ceases to be x and becomes a copy. This is probably happening at the point of capture.

edit: @rintaro’s answer nails it – inout is not in fact semantically pass by reference

If you think about it this makes sense. What if you did this:

// declare the variable for the closure
var c: ()->Int = { 99 }

if 2+2==4 {
    // declare x inside this block
    var x = 0
    c = f(&x)
}

// now call c() - but x is out of scope, would this crash?
c()

When closures capture variables, they need to be created in memory in such a way that they can stay alive even after the scope they were declared ends. But in the case of f above, it can’t do this – it’s too late to declare x in this way, x already exists. So I’m guessing it gets copied as part of the closure creation. That’s why incrementing the closure-captured version doesn’t actually increment x.

3
  • I upvoted both answers since they are all great. However, I can only choose one as the accepted answer. I'll pick the one by @rintaro since it's closer to the context (sample code) and it came with the detailed explanation. BTW, thanks for your blogs. I've read them many times and learned a lot from them.
    – LiweiZ
    Jan 31, 2015 at 16:58
  • No hard feelings @rintaro’s was a better answer :-) Jan 31, 2015 at 17:20
  • This is the answer for actually getting things done. It is a nice workaround. Thank you!
    – Paul Lehn
    Aug 31, 2016 at 15:55
0

I had a similar goal and ran into the same issue where results inside the closure were not being assigned to my global inout variables. @rintaro did a great job of explaining why this is the case in a previous answer.

I am going to include here a generalized example of how I worked around this. In my case I had several global arrays that I wanted to assign to within a closure, and then do something each time (without duplicating a bunch of code).

// global arrays that we want to assign to asynchronously
var array1 = [String]()
var array2 = [String]()
var array3 = [String]()

// kick everything off
loadAsyncContent()

func loadAsyncContent() {

    // function to handle the query result strings
    // note that outputArray is an inout parameter that will be a reference to one of our global arrays
    func resultsCallbackHandler(results: [String], inout outputArray: [String]) {

        // assign the results to the specified array
        outputArray = results

        // trigger some action every time a query returns it's strings
        reloadMyView() 
    }

    // kick off each query by telling it which database table to query and
    // we're also giving each call a function to run along with a reference to which array the results should be assigned to
    queryTable("Table1") {(results: [String]) -> Void in resultsCallbackHandler(results, outputArray: &self.array1)}
    queryTable("Table2") {(results: [String]) -> Void in resultsCallbackHandler(results, outputArray: &self.array2)}
    queryTable("Table3") {(results: [String]) -> Void in resultsCallbackHandler(results, outputArray: &self.array3)}
}

func queryTable(tableName: String, callback: (foundStrings: [String]) -> Void) {

    let query = Query(tableName: tableName)
    query.findStringsInBackground({ (results: [String]) -> Void in

        callback(results: results)
    })
}

// this will get called each time one of the global arrays have been updated with new results
func reloadMyView() {

    // do something with array1, array2, array3
}
0

@rintaro perfectly explained why it doesn't work, but if you really want to do that, using UnsafeMutablePointer will do the trick:

func getOneUserApiData(path: String, c: UnsafeMutablePointer<Int>) {
    var req = NSURLRequest(URL: NSURL(string: path)!)
    var config = NSURLSessionConfiguration.ephemeralSessionConfiguration()
    var session = NSURLSession(configuration: config)
    var task = session.dataTaskWithRequest(req) {
        (data: NSData!, res: NSURLResponse!, err: NSError!) in
        println("c before: \(c.memory)")
        c.memory++
        println("c after: \(c.memory)")
        println("thread on: \(NSThread.currentThread())")
    }

    task.resume()
}

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