std::allocate_shared, std::allocate_shared_for_overwrite
<memory>
shared_ptr<T> allocate_shared( const Alloc& alloc, Args&&... args );
shared_ptr<T> allocate_shared( const Alloc& alloc, std::size_t N );
shared_ptr<T> allocate_shared( const Alloc& alloc );
shared_ptr<T> allocate_shared( const Alloc& alloc, std::size_t N,
shared_ptr<T> allocate_shared( const Alloc& alloc,
shared_ptr<T> allocate_shared_for_overwrite( const Alloc& alloc );
shared_ptr<T> allocate_shared_for_overwrite( const Alloc& alloc,
Allocates memory for an object using a copy of alloc (rebound for an unspecified value_type
) and initialize the object with the supplied arguments. Returns a std::shared_ptr object managing the newly created object.
T
, and is constructed as if by std::allocator_traits <Alloc>::construct(a, pt, (std::forward <Args>(args)...), where pt is a std::remove_cv_t <T>* pointer to storage suitable to hold an object of type std::remove_cv_t <T>. If the object is to be destroyed, it is destroyed as if by std::allocator_traits <Alloc>::destroy(a, pt), where pt is a pointer to that object of type std::remove_cv_t <T>.
Alloc
, and it is a potentially rebound copy of alloc.
This overload participates in overload resolution only if T
is not an array type.
T
is an unbounded array type.T
. Each element has a default initial value.T
is a bounded array type.T
is an unbounded array type.T
. Each element has the initial value u.T
is a bounded array type.T
.
- If
T
is not an array type, the object is constructed as if by ::new (pv) T, where pv is a void* pointer to storage suitable to hold an object of typeT
. If the object is to be destroyed, it is destroyed as if by pt->~T(), where pt is a pointer to that object of typeT
. - If
T
is a bounded array type, the initial value is unspecified for each element.
T
is not an array type or is an bounded array type.T
is an unbounded array type.Contents
Initializing and destroying array elements
In the description below, a is of type Alloc
, and it is a potentially rebound copy of alloc.
Array elements of type U
are initialized in ascending order of their addresses.
- If
U
is not an array type, each element is constructed as if by the following expression, where pu is a std::remove_cv_t <U>* pointer to storage suitable to hold an object of type std::remove_cv_t <U>, and pv is a void* pointer to storage suitable to hold an object of typeU
:
- Otherwise, recursively initializes the elements of each element. For the next dimension:
-
U
becomes std::remove_extent_t <U>. - For overloads (4,5), u becomes the corresponding element of u.
-
When the lifetime of the object managed by the return std::shared_ptr ends, or when the initialization of an array element throws an exception, the initialized elements are destroyed in the reverse order of their original construction.
For each array element of non-array type U
to be destroyed, it is destroyed as if by the following expression:
U
U
[edit] Parameters
T
will be constructed
[edit] Return value
std::shared_ptr to an object of type T
or std::remove_extent_t <T>[N] if T
is an unbounded array type(since C++20).
For the returned std::shared_ptr r, r.get() returns a non-null pointer and r.use_count() returns 1.
[edit] Exceptions
Can throw the exceptions thrown from Alloc::allocate() or from the constructor of T
. If an exception is thrown, (1) has no effect. If an exception is thrown during the construction of the array, already-initialized elements are destroyed in reverse order(since C++20).
[edit] Notes
These functions will typically allocate more memory than sizeof(T) to allow for internal bookkeeping structures such as reference counts.
Like std::make_shared , this function typically performs only one allocation, and places both the T
object and the control block in the allocated memory block (the standard recommends but does not require this, all known implementations do this). A copy of alloc is stored as part of the control block so that it can be used to deallocate it once both shared and weak reference counts reach zero.
Unlike the std::shared_ptr
constructors
, std::allocate_shared
does not accept a separate custom deleter: the supplied allocator is used for destruction of the control block and the T
object, and for deallocation of their shared memory block.
std::shared_ptr supports array types (as of C++17), but std::allocate_shared
does not. This functionality is supported by boost::allocate_shared
.
A constructor enables shared_from_this
with a pointer ptr of type U*
means that it determines if U
has an unambiguous and accessible(since C++17) base class that is a specialization of std::enable_shared_from_this , and if so, the constructor evaluates
if (ptr != nullptr && ptr->weak_this
.expired())
ptr->weak_this
= std::shared_ptr <std::remove_cv_t <U>>
(*this, const_cast<std::remove_cv_t <U>*>(ptr));
.
The assignment to the weak_this
is not atomic and conflicts with any potentially concurrent access to the same object. This ensures that future calls to shared_from_this() would share ownership with the std::shared_ptr created by this raw pointer constructor.
The test ptr->weak_this
.expired() in the code above makes sure that weak_this
is not reassigned if it already indicates an owner. This test is required as of C++17.
Feature-test macro | Value | Std | Feature |
---|---|---|---|
__cpp_lib_smart_ptr_for_overwrite |
202002L |
(C++20) | Smart pointer creation with default initialization (std::allocate_shared_for_overwrite , std::make_shared_for_overwrite , std::make_unique_for_overwrite ); overloads (6,7)
|
[edit] Example
#include <cstddef> #include <iostream> #include <memory> #include <memory_resource> #include <vector> class Value { int i; public: Value(int i) : i(i) { std::cout << "Value(), i = " << i << '\n'; } ~Value() { std::cout << "~Value(), i = " << i << '\n'; } void print() const { std::cout << "i = " << i << '\n'; } }; int main() { // Create a polymorphic allocator using the monotonic buffer resource std::byte buffer[sizeof(Value) * 8]; std::pmr::monotonic_buffer_resource resource(buffer, sizeof(buffer)); std::pmr::polymorphic_allocator <Value> allocator(&resource); std::vector <std::shared_ptr <Value>> v; for (int i{}; i != 4; ++i) // Use std::allocate_shared with the custom allocator v.emplace_back(std::allocate_shared<Value>(allocator, i)); for (const auto& sp : v) sp->print(); } //< All shared pointers will automatically clean up when they go out of scope.
Output:
Value(), i = 0 Value(), i = 1 Value(), i = 2 Value(), i = 3 i = 0 i = 1 i = 2 i = 3 ~Value(), i = 0 ~Value(), i = 1 ~Value(), i = 2 ~Value(), i = 3
[edit] Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
---|---|---|---|
LWG 3216 | C++20 | std::allocate_shared always rebound theallocator before constructing and destroying objects |
rebind is optional |
LWG 4024 | C++20 | it was unclear how the objects constructed instd::allocate_shared_for_overwrite are destroyed
|
made clear |