///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// // Name: wx/cocoa/ObjcRef.h // Purpose: wxObjcAutoRef template class // Author: David Elliott // Modified by: // Created: 2004/03/28 // RCS-ID: $Id: ObjcRef.h 51591 2008-02-08 08:06:26Z DE $ // Copyright: (c) 2004 David Elliott // Licence: wxWindows licence ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// #ifndef _WX_COCOA_OBJCREF_H__ #define _WX_COCOA_OBJCREF_H__ // Reuse wxCFRef-related code (e.g. wxCFRetain/wxCFRelease) #include "wx/mac/corefoundation/cfref.h" // NOTE WELL: We can only know whether or not GC can be used when compiling Objective-C. // Therefore we cannot implement these functions except when compiling Objective-C. #ifdef __OBJC__ /*! @function wxGCSafeRetain @templatefield Type (implicit) An Objective-C class type @arg r Pointer to Objective-C object. May be null. @abstract Retains the Objective-C object, even when using Apple's garbage collector @discussion When Apple's garbage collector is enabled, the usual [obj retain] and [obj release] messages are ignored. Instead the collector with help from compiler-generated write-barriers tracks reachable objects. The write-barriers are generated when setting i-vars of C++ classes but they are ignored by the garbage collector unless the C++ object is in GC-managed memory. The simple solution is to use CFRetain on the Objective-C object which has been enhanced in GC mode to forcibly retain the object. In Retain/Release (RR) mode the CFRetain function has the same effect as [obj retain]. Note that GC vs. RR is selected at runtime. Take care that wxGCSafeRetain must be balanced with wxGCSafeRelease and that conversely wxGCSafeRelease must only be called on objects to balance wxGCSafeRetain. In particular when receiving an Objective-C object from an alloc or copy method take care that you must retain it with wxGCSafeRetain and balance the initial alloc with a standard release. Example: wxGCSafeRelease(m_obj); // release current object (if any) NSObject *obj = [[NSObject alloc] init]; m_obj = wxGCSafeRetain(obj); [obj release]; Alternatively (same effect, perhaps less clear): wxGCSafeRelease(m_obj); // release current object (if any) m_obj = wxGCSafeRetain([[NSObject alloc] init]); [m_obj release]; // balance alloc Consider the effect on the retain count from each statement (alloc, CFRetain, release) In RR mode: retainCount = 1, +1, -1 In GC mode: strongRetainCount = 0, +1, -0 This is a template function to ensure it is used on raw pointers and never on pointer-holder objects via implicit conversion operators. */ template inline Type * wxGCSafeRetain(Type *r) { #ifdef __OBJC_GC__ return static_cast(wxCFRetain(r)); #else return [r retain]; #endif } /*! @function wxGCSafeRelease @templatefield Type (implicit) An Objective-C class type @arg r Pointer to Objective-C object. May be null. @abstract Balances wxGCSafeRetain. Particularly useful with the Apple Garbage Collector. @discussion See the wxGCSafeRetain documentation for more details. Example (from wxGCSafeRetain documentation): wxGCSafeRelease(m_obj); // release current object (if any) m_obj = wxGCSafeRetain([[NSObject alloc] init]); [m_obj release]; // balance alloc When viewed from the start, m_obj ought to start as nil. However, the second time through the wxGCSafeRelease call becomes critical as it releases the retain from the first time through. In the destructor for this C++ object with the m_obj i-var you ought to do the following: wxGCSafeRelease(m_obj); m_obj = nil; // Not strictly needed, but safer. Under no circumstances should you balance an alloc or copy with a wxGCSafeRelease. */ template inline void wxGCSafeRelease(Type *r) { #ifdef __OBJC_GC__ wxCFRelease(r); #else [r release]; #endif } #else // NOTE: When not compiling Objective-C, declare these functions such that they can be // used by other inline-implemented methods. Since those methods in turn will not actually // be used from non-ObjC code the compiler ought not emit them. If it emits an out of // line copy of those methods then presumably it will have also emitted at least one // out of line copy of these functions from at least one Objective-C++ translation unit. // That means the out of line implementation will be available at link time. template inline Type * wxGCSafeRetain(Type *r); template inline void wxGCSafeRelease(Type *r); #endif //def __OBJC__ /* wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc: construct a reference to an object that was [NSObject -alloc]'ed and thus does not need a retain wxObjcAutoRef: construct a reference to an object that was either autoreleased or is retained by something else. */ struct objc_object; // We must do any calls to Objective-C from an Objective-C++ source file class wxObjcAutoRefBase { protected: /*! @function ObjcRetain @abstract Simply does [p retain]. */ static struct objc_object* ObjcRetain(struct objc_object*); /*! @function ObjcRelease @abstract Simply does [p release]. */ static void ObjcRelease(struct objc_object*); }; /*! @class wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc @templatefield T The type of _pointer_ (e.g. NSString*, NSRunLoop*) @abstract Pointer-holder for Objective-C objects @discussion When constructing this object from a raw pointer, the pointer is assumed to have come from an alloc-style method. That is, once you construct this object from the pointer you must not balance your alloc with a call to release. This class has been carefully designed to work with both the traditional Retain/Release and the new Garbage Collected modes. In RR-mode it will prevent the object from being released by managing the reference count using the retain/release semantics. In GC-mode it will use a method (currently CFRetain/CFRelease) to ensure the object will never be finalized until this object is destroyed. */ template class wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc: wxObjcAutoRefBase { public: wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc(T p = 0) : m_ptr(p) // NOTE: this is from alloc. Do NOT retain { // CFRetain // GC: Object is strongly retained and prevented from being collected // non-GC: Simply realizes it's an Objective-C object and calls [p retain] wxGCSafeRetain(p); // ObjcRelease (e.g. [p release]) // GC: Objective-C retain/release mean nothing in GC mode // non-GC: This is a normal release call, balancing the retain ObjcRelease(static_cast(p)); // The overall result: // GC: Object is strongly retained // non-GC: Retain count is the same as it was (retain then release) } wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc(const wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc& otherRef) : m_ptr(otherRef.m_ptr) { wxGCSafeRetain(m_ptr); } ~wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc() { wxGCSafeRelease(m_ptr); } wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc& operator=(const wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc& otherRef) { wxGCSafeRetain(otherRef.m_ptr); wxGCSafeRelease(m_ptr); m_ptr = otherRef.m_ptr; return *this; } operator T() const { return static_cast(m_ptr); } T operator->() const { return static_cast(m_ptr); } protected: /*! @field m_ptr The pointer to the Objective-C object @discussion The pointer to the Objective-C object is typed as void* to avoid compiler-generated write barriers as would be used for implicitly __strong object pointers and to avoid the similar read barriers as would be used for an explicitly __weak object pointer. The write barriers are useless unless this object is located in GC-managed heap which is highly unlikely. Since we guarantee strong reference via CFRetain/CFRelease the write-barriers are not needed at all, even if this object does happen to be allocated in GC-managed heap. */ void *m_ptr; }; /*! @class wxObjcAutoRef @description A pointer holder that does retain its argument. NOTE: It is suggest that you instead use wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc foo([aRawPointer retain]) */ template class wxObjcAutoRef: public wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc { public: /*! @method wxObjcAutoRef @description Uses the underlying wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc and simply does a typical [p retain] such that in RR-mode the object is in effectively the same retain-count state as it would have been coming straight from an alloc method. */ wxObjcAutoRef(T p = 0) : wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc(p) { // NOTE: ObjcRetain is correct because in GC-mode it balances ObjcRelease in our superclass constructor // In RR mode it does retain and the superclass does retain/release thus resulting in an overall retain. ObjcRetain(static_cast(wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc::m_ptr)); } ~wxObjcAutoRef() {} wxObjcAutoRef(const wxObjcAutoRef& otherRef) : wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc(otherRef) {} wxObjcAutoRef(const wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc& otherRef) : wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc(otherRef) {} wxObjcAutoRef& operator=(const wxObjcAutoRef& otherRef) { return wxObjcAutoRefFromAlloc::operator=(otherRef); } }; #endif //ndef _WX_COCOA_OBJCREF_H__