Introduction
What are smart pointers? The answer is fairly simple; a smart pointer is a pointer which is smart. What does that mean? Actually, smart pointers are objects which behave like pointers
but do more than a pointer. These objects are flexible as pointers and have the advantage of being an object (like constructor and destructors called automatically).
A smart pointer is designed to handle the problems caused by using normal pointers (hence called smart).
Problems with pointers
What are the common problems we face in C++ programs while using pointers? The answer is memory management. Have a look at the following code:
char* pName = new char[1024];
…
SetName(pName);
…
…
if(null != pName)
{
delete[] pName;
}
How many times have we found a bug which was caused because we forgot to delete pName
. It would be great if someone could take care of releasing the memory when
the pointer is not useful (we are not talking about the garbage collector here). What if the pointer itself takes care of that? Yes, that’s exactly what smart pointers are intended to do.
Let us write a smart pointer and see how we can handle a pointer better.
We shall start with a realistic example. Let’s say we have a class called Person
which is defined as below.
class Person
{
int age;
char* pName;
public:
Person(): pName(0),age(0)
{
}
Person(char* pName, int age): pName(pName), age(age)
{
}
~Person()
{
}
void Display()
{
printf("Name = %s Age = %d \n", pName, age);
}
void Shout()
{
printf("Ooooooooooooooooo",);
}
};
Now we shall write the client code to use Person
.
void main()
{
Person* pPerson = new Person("Scott", 25);
pPerson->Display();
delete pPerson;
}
Now look at this code, every time I create a pointer, I need to take care of deleting it. This is exactly what I want to avoid. I need some automatic mechanism which deletes
the pointer. One thing which strikes to me is a destructor. But pointers do not have destructors, so what? Our smart pointer can have one. So we will create a class called SP
which can hold a pointer to the Person
class and will delete the pointer when its destructor is called. Hence my client code will change to something like this:
void main()
{
SP p(new Person("Scott", 25));
p->Display();
}
Note the following things:
- We have created an object of class
SP
which holds our Person
class pointer. Since the destructor of the SP
class will be called
when this object goes out of scope, it will delete the Person
class pointer (as its main responsibility); hence we don’t have the pain of deleting the pointer.
- One more thing of major importance is that we should be able to call the
Display
method using the SP
class object the way we used to call using
the Person
class pointer, i.e., the class should behave exactly like a pointer.
Interface for a smart pointer
Since the smart pointer should behave like a pointer, it should support the same interface as pointers do; i.e., they should support the following operations.
- Dereferencing (operator
*
) - Indirection (operator
->
)
Let us write the SP
class now.
class SP
{
private:
Person* pData; public:
SP(Person* pValue) : pData(pValue)
{
}
~SP()
{
delete pData;
}
Person& operator* ()
{
return *pData;
}
Person* operator-> ()
{
return pData;
}
};
This class is our smart pointer class. The main responsibility of this class is to hold a pointer to the Person
class and then delete it when its destructor is called.
It should also support the interface of the pointer.
Generic smart pointer class
One problem which we see here is that we can use this smart pointer class for a pointer of the Person
class only. This means that we have to create a smart pointer
class for each type, and that’s not easy. We can solve this problem by making use of templates and making this smart pointer class generic. So let us change the code like this:
template < typename T > class SP
{
private:
T* pData; public:
SP(T* pValue) : pData(pValue)
{
}
~SP()
{
delete pData;
}
T& operator* ()
{
return *pData;
}
T* operator-> ()
{
return pData;
}
};
void main()
{
SP<PERSON> p(new Person("Scott", 25));
p->Display();
}
Now we can use our smart pointer class for any type of pointer. So is our smart pointer really smart? Check the following code segment.
void main()
{
SP<PERSON> p(new Person("Scott", 25));
p->Display();
{
SP<PERSON> q = p;
q->Display();
}
p->Display();
}
Look what happens here. p
and q
are referring to the same Person
class pointer. Now when q
goes out of scope, the destructor
of q
will be called which deletes the Person
class pointer. Now we cannot call p->Display();
since p
will be left
with a dangling pointer and this call will fail. (Note that this problem would have existed even if we were using normal pointers instead of smart pointers.) We should not
delete the Person
class pointer unless no body is using it. How do we do that? Implementing a reference counting mechanism in our smart pointer class will solve this problem.
Reference counting
What we are going to do is we will have a reference counting class RC
. This class will maintain an integer value which represents the reference count.
We will have methods to increment and decrement the reference count.
class RC
{
private:
int count;
public:
void AddRef()
{
count++;
}
int Release()
{
return --count;
}
};
Now that we have a reference counting class, we will introduce this to our smart pointer class. We will maintain a pointer to class RC
in our SP
class
and this pointer will be shared for all instances of the smart pointer which refers to the same pointer. For this to happen, we need to have an assignment operator and copy constructor
in our SP
class.
template < typename T > class SP
{
private:
T* pData; RC* reference;
public:
SP() : pData(0), reference(0)
{
reference = new RC();
reference->AddRef();
}
SP(T* pValue) : pData(pValue), reference(0)
{
reference = new RC();
reference->AddRef();
}
SP(const SP<T>& sp) : pData(sp.pData), reference(sp.reference)
{
reference->AddRef();
}
~SP()
{
if(reference->Release() == 0)
{
delete pData;
delete reference;
}
}
T& operator* ()
{
return *pData;
}
T* operator-> ()
{
return pData;
}
SP<T>& operator = (const SP<T>& sp)
{
if (this != &sp) {
if(reference->Release() == 0)
{
delete pData;
delete reference;
}
pData = sp.pData;
reference = sp.reference;
reference->AddRef();
}
return *this;
}
};
Let us have a look at the client code.
void main()
{
SP<PERSON> p(new Person("Scott", 25));
p->Display();
{
SP<PERSON> q = p;
q->Display();
SP<PERSON> r;
r = p;
r->Display();
}
p->Display();
}
When we create a smart pointer p
of type Person
, the constructor of SP
will be called, the data will be stored, and a new RC
pointer
will be created. The AddRef
method of RC
is called to increment the reference count to 1. Now SP<person> q = p;</person>
will create a new smart pointer
q
using the copy constructor. Here the data will be copied and the reference will again be incremented to 2. Now r = p;
will call the assignment operator to assign
the value of p
to q
. Here also we copy the data and increment the reference count, thus making the count 3. When r
and q
go out
of scope, the destructors of the respective objects will be called. Here the reference count will be decremented, but data will not be deleted unless the reference count becomes zero.
This happens only when the destructor of p
is called. Hence our data will be deleted only when no body is referring to it.
Applications
Memory leaks: Using smart pointers reduces the work of managing pointers for memory leaks. Now you could create a pointer and forget about deleting it, the smart pointer will do that
for you. This is the simplest garbage collector we could think of.
Exceptions: Smart pointers are very useful where exceptions are used. For example, look at the following code:
void MakeNoise()
{
Person* p = new Person("Scott", 25);
p->Shout();
delete p;
}
We are using a normal pointer here and deleting it after using, so every thing looks okay here. But what if our Shout
function throws some exception?
delete p;
will never be called. So we have a memory leak. Let us handle that.
void MakeNoise()
{
Person* p = new Person("Scott", 25);
try
{
p->Shout();
}
catch(...)
{
delete p;
throw;
}
delete p;
}
Don't you think this is an overhead of catching an exception and re-throwing it? This code becomes cumbersome if you have many pointers created. How will a smart pointer help here?
Let's have a look at the same code if a smart pointer is used.
void MakeNoise()
{
SP<Person> p(new Person("Scott", 25));
p->Shout();
}
We are making use of a smart pointer here; yes, we don’t need to catch the exception here. If the Shout
method throws an exception, stack unwinding will happen for the function
and during this, the destructor of all local objects will be called, hence the destructor of p
will be called which will release the memory, hence we are safe.
So this makes it very useful to use smart pointers here.
Conclusion
Smart pointers are useful for writing safe and efficient code in C++. Make use of smart pointers and take the advantage of garbage collection.
Take a look at Scott Meyers' auto_ptr implementation in STL.