Main Page | Namespace List | Class Hierarchy | Alphabetical List | Class List | Directories | File List | Namespace Members | Class Members | File Members | Related Pages

Dump.h File Reference

#include "ace/ACE_export.h"
#include "ace/Dump_T.h"

Include dependency graph for Dump.h:

Include dependency graph

This graph shows which files directly or indirectly include this file:

Included by dependency graph

Classes

class  ACE_Dumpable
 Base class that defines a uniform interface for all object dumping. More...
class  ACE_Dumpable_Ptr
 A smart pointer stored in the in-memory object database ACE_ODB. The pointee (if any) is deleted when reassigned. More...
class  ACE_ODB
 This is the object database (ODB) that keeps track of all live ACE objects. More...
struct  ACE_ODB::Tuple

Detailed Description

Id
Dump.h,v 4.19 2005/10/28 16:14:52 ossama Exp

A prototype mechanism that allow all ACE objects to be registered with a central in-memory "database" that can dump the state of all live ACE objects (e.g., from within a debugger).

The macros which allow easy registration and removal of objects to be dumped (ACE_REGISTER_OBJECT and ACE_REMOVE_OBJECT) are turned into no-ops by compiling with the ACE_NDEBUG macro defined. This allows usage to be removed in "release mode" builds without changing code.

There are several interesting aspects to this design:

1. It uses the External Polymorphism pattern to avoid having to derive all ACE classes from a common base class that has virtual methods (this is crucial to avoid unnecessary overhead). In addition, there is no additional space added to ACE objects (this is crucial to maintain binary layout compatibility).

2. This mechanism can be conditionally compiled in order to completely disable this feature entirely. Moreover, by using macros there are relatively few changes to ACE code.

3. This mechanism copes with single-inheritance hierarchies of dumpable classes. In such cases we typically want only one dump, corresponding to the most derived instance. Thanks to Christian Millour (chris@etca.fr) for illustrating how to do this. Note, however, that this scheme doesn't generalize to work with multiple-inheritance or virtual base classes.

Future work includes:

1. Using a dynamic object table rather than a static table

2. Adding support to allow particular classes of objects to be selectively dumped.

Author:
Doug Schmidt

Generated on Tue Dec 20 22:38:19 2005 for ACE by  doxygen 1.3.9.1