I would like to give a module variable a read-only access for client modules. Several solutions:
1. The most common one:
// module_a.c
static int a;
int get_a(void)
{
return a;
}
// module_a.h
int get_a(void);
This makes one function per variable to share, one function call (I am thinking both execution time and readability), and one copy for every read. Assuming no optimizing linker.
2. Another solution:
// module_a.c
static int _a;
const int * const a = &_a;
// module_a.h
extern const int * const a;
// client_module.c
int read_variable = *a;
*a = 5; // error: variable is read-only
I like that, besides the fact that the client needs to read the content of a pointer. Also, every read-only variable needs its extern const
pointer to const
.
3. A third solution, inspired by the second one, is to hide the variables behind a struct and an extern pointer to struct. The notation module_name->a
is more readable in the client module, in my opinion.
4. I could create an inline definition for the get_a(void)
function. It would still look like a function call in the client module, but the optimization should take place.
My questions:
Is there a best way to make variables modified in a module accessible as read-only in other modules? Best in what aspect?
Which solutions above would you accept or refuse to use, and why?
I am aware that this is microoptimization - I might not implement it - but I am still interested in the possibility, and above all in the knowing.
_a
was modified on interrupt (this is imported from test code), but that has nothing to do with the question so I'll remove it.