-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 30.1k
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
src: use smart pointer instead of new and delete #17020
src: use smart pointer instead of new and delete #17020
Conversation
There was a problem hiding this comment.
Choose a reason for hiding this comment
The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.
May be just me of course, but I feel the old code is more explicit in what it's trying to do ("free the memory"), while the same behavior is now implicit due to unique_ptr going out of scope.
8449b49
to
60b14f3
Compare
agree with @TimothyGu |
Use an std::unique_ptr for variables that are deleted right after creation. Since the destructor of InspectorTimer is private but needed by the unique_ptr, define deleter_type as friend.
60b14f3
to
43635c0
Compare
@Fishrock123, @TimothyGu I understand your concern. I added a comment to make the delete more explicit. I think as we move to smart pointers we shouldn't leave those as raw pointers. |
There was a problem hiding this comment.
Choose a reason for hiding this comment
The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.
Still not a big fan, but LGTM if we were to completely eliminate dumb pointers from the code base.
Landed in f96abea. |
Use an std::unique_ptr for variables that are deleted right after creation. Since the destructor of InspectorTimer is private but needed by the unique_ptr, define deleter_type as friend. PR-URL: nodejs#17020 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Timothy Gu <[email protected]>
Add rule for smart pointers, i.e., std::unique_ptr and std::shared_ptr, to the Cpp style guide. Mostly copied from the Google style guide. PR-URL: #17055 Ref: #16970 Ref: #16974 Ref: #17000 Ref: #17012 Ref: #17020 Ref: #17030 Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <[email protected]>
Use an std::unique_ptr for variables that are deleted right after creation. Since the destructor of InspectorTimer is private but needed by the unique_ptr, define deleter_type as friend. PR-URL: #17020 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Timothy Gu <[email protected]>
Add rule for smart pointers, i.e., std::unique_ptr and std::shared_ptr, to the Cpp style guide. Mostly copied from the Google style guide. PR-URL: #17055 Ref: #16970 Ref: #16974 Ref: #17000 Ref: #17012 Ref: #17020 Ref: #17030 Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <[email protected]>
This will need a manual backport for v6.x |
Use an std::unique_ptr for variables that are deleted right after creation. Since the destructor of InspectorTimer is private but needed by the unique_ptr, define deleter_type as friend. PR-URL: #17020 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Timothy Gu <[email protected]>
Add rule for smart pointers, i.e., std::unique_ptr and std::shared_ptr, to the Cpp style guide. Mostly copied from the Google style guide. PR-URL: #17055 Ref: #16970 Ref: #16974 Ref: #17000 Ref: #17012 Ref: #17020 Ref: #17030 Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <[email protected]>
Use an std::unique_ptr for variables that are deleted right after creation. Since the destructor of InspectorTimer is private but needed by the unique_ptr, define deleter_type as friend. PR-URL: #17020 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Timothy Gu <[email protected]>
Add rule for smart pointers, i.e., std::unique_ptr and std::shared_ptr, to the Cpp style guide. Mostly copied from the Google style guide. PR-URL: #17055 Ref: #16970 Ref: #16974 Ref: #17000 Ref: #17012 Ref: #17020 Ref: #17030 Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <[email protected]> Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <[email protected]>
Use an std::unique_ptr for variables that are deleted
right after creation.
Since the destructor of InspectorTimer is private
but needed by the unique_ptr, define deleter_type as friend.
Checklist
make -j4 test
(UNIX), orvcbuild test
(Windows) passesAffected core subsystem(s)
stc