/* Copyright (C) 2019-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GDB. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . */ #ifndef COMMON_FORWARD_SCOPE_EXIT_H #define COMMON_FORWARD_SCOPE_EXIT_H #include "gdbsupport/scope-exit.h" #include /* A forward_scope_exit is like scope_exit, but instead of giving it a callable, you instead specialize it for a given cleanup function, and the generated class automatically has a constructor with the same interface as the cleanup function. forward_scope_exit captures the arguments passed to the ctor, and in turn passes those as arguments to the wrapped cleanup function, when it is called at scope exit time, from within the forward_scope_exit dtor. The forward_scope_exit class can take any number of arguments, and is cancelable if needed. This allows usage like this: void delete_longjmp_breakpoint (int arg) { // Blah, blah, blah... } using longjmp_breakpoint_cleanup = FORWARD_SCOPE_EXIT (delete_longjmp_breakpoint); This above created a new cleanup class `longjmp_breakpoint_cleanup` than can then be used like this: longjmp_breakpoint_cleanup obj (thread); // Blah, blah, blah... obj.release (); // Optional cancel if needed. forward_scope_exit is also handy when you would need to wrap a scope_exit in a gdb::optional: gdb::optional cleanup; if (some condition) cleanup.emplace (thread); ... if (cleanup) cleanup->release (); since with scope exit, you would have to know the scope_exit's callable template type when you create the gdb::optional: gdb:optional> The "forward" naming fits both purposes shown above -- the class "forwards" ctor arguments to the wrapped cleanup function at scope exit time, and can also be used to "forward declare" scope_exit-like objects. */ namespace detail { /* Function and Signature are passed in the same type, in order to extract Function's arguments' types in the specialization below. Those are used to generate the constructor. */ template struct forward_scope_exit; template class forward_scope_exit : public scope_exit_base> { /* For access to on_exit(). */ friend scope_exit_base>; public: explicit forward_scope_exit (Args ...args) : m_bind_function (function, args...) { /* Nothing. */ } private: void on_exit () { m_bind_function (); } /* The function and the arguments passed to the ctor, all packed in a std::bind. */ decltype (std::bind (function, std::declval ()...)) m_bind_function; }; } /* namespace detail */ /* This is the "public" entry point. It's a macro to avoid having to name FUNC more than once. */ #define FORWARD_SCOPE_EXIT(FUNC) \ detail::forward_scope_exit #endif /* COMMON_FORWARD_SCOPE_EXIT_H */