1 // Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format
2 // Copyright 2008 Google Inc. All rights reserved.
3 // https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/
4 //
5 // Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6 // modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
7 // met:
8 //
9 // * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
10 // notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
11 // * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
12 // copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer
13 // in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
14 // distribution.
15 // * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its
16 // contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
17 // this software without specific prior written permission.
18 //
19 // THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
20 // "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
21 // LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
22 // A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
23 // OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
24 // SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
25 // LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
26 // DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
27 // THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
28 // (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
29 // OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
30
31 // Author: kenton@google.com (Kenton Varda) and others
32 //
33 // Contains basic types and utilities used by the rest of the library.
34
35 #ifndef GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_COMMON_H__
36 #define GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_COMMON_H__
37
38 #include <assert.h>
39 #include <stdlib.h>
40 #include <cstddef>
41 #include <string>
42 #include <string.h>
43 #if defined(__osf__)
44 // Tru64 lacks stdint.h, but has inttypes.h which defines a superset of
45 // what stdint.h would define.
46 #include <inttypes.h>
47 #elif !defined(_MSC_VER)
48 #include <stdint.h>
49 #endif
50
51 #ifndef PROTOBUF_USE_EXCEPTIONS
52 #if defined(_MSC_VER) && defined(_CPPUNWIND)
53 #define PROTOBUF_USE_EXCEPTIONS 1
54 #elif defined(__EXCEPTIONS)
55 #define PROTOBUF_USE_EXCEPTIONS 1
56 #else
57 #define PROTOBUF_USE_EXCEPTIONS 0
58 #endif
59 #endif
60
61 #if PROTOBUF_USE_EXCEPTIONS
62 #include <exception>
63 #endif
64
65 #if defined(_WIN32) && defined(GetMessage)
66 // Allow GetMessage to be used as a valid method name in protobuf classes.
67 // windows.h defines GetMessage() as a macro. Let's re-define it as an inline
68 // function. The inline function should be equivalent for C++ users.
GetMessage_Win32(LPMSG lpMsg,HWND hWnd,UINT wMsgFilterMin,UINT wMsgFilterMax)69 inline BOOL GetMessage_Win32(
70 LPMSG lpMsg, HWND hWnd,
71 UINT wMsgFilterMin, UINT wMsgFilterMax) {
72 return GetMessage(lpMsg, hWnd, wMsgFilterMin, wMsgFilterMax);
73 }
74 #undef GetMessage
GetMessage(LPMSG lpMsg,HWND hWnd,UINT wMsgFilterMin,UINT wMsgFilterMax)75 inline BOOL GetMessage(
76 LPMSG lpMsg, HWND hWnd,
77 UINT wMsgFilterMin, UINT wMsgFilterMax) {
78 return GetMessage_Win32(lpMsg, hWnd, wMsgFilterMin, wMsgFilterMax);
79 }
80 #endif
81
82
83 namespace std {}
84
85 namespace google {
86 namespace protobuf {
87
88 #undef GOOGLE_DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS
89 #define GOOGLE_DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(TypeName) \
90 TypeName(const TypeName&); \
91 void operator=(const TypeName&)
92
93 #if defined(_MSC_VER) && defined(PROTOBUF_USE_DLLS)
94 #ifdef LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORTS
95 #define LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT __declspec(dllexport)
96 #else
97 #define LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT __declspec(dllimport)
98 #endif
99 #ifdef LIBPROTOC_EXPORTS
100 #define LIBPROTOC_EXPORT __declspec(dllexport)
101 #else
102 #define LIBPROTOC_EXPORT __declspec(dllimport)
103 #endif
104 #else
105 #define LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT
106 #define LIBPROTOC_EXPORT
107 #endif
108
109 namespace internal {
110
111 // Some of these constants are macros rather than const ints so that they can
112 // be used in #if directives.
113
114 // The current version, represented as a single integer to make comparison
115 // easier: major * 10^6 + minor * 10^3 + micro
116 #define GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_VERSION 2006001
117
118 // The minimum library version which works with the current version of the
119 // headers.
120 #define GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_MIN_LIBRARY_VERSION 2006000
121
122 // The minimum header version which works with the current version of
123 // the library. This constant should only be used by protoc's C++ code
124 // generator.
125 static const int kMinHeaderVersionForLibrary = 2006000;
126
127 // The minimum protoc version which works with the current version of the
128 // headers.
129 #define GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_MIN_PROTOC_VERSION 2006000
130
131 // The minimum header version which works with the current version of
132 // protoc. This constant should only be used in VerifyVersion().
133 static const int kMinHeaderVersionForProtoc = 2006000;
134
135 // Verifies that the headers and libraries are compatible. Use the macro
136 // below to call this.
137 void LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT VerifyVersion(int headerVersion, int minLibraryVersion,
138 const char* filename);
139
140 // Converts a numeric version number to a string.
141 std::string LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT VersionString(int version);
142
143 } // namespace internal
144
145 // Place this macro in your main() function (or somewhere before you attempt
146 // to use the protobuf library) to verify that the version you link against
147 // matches the headers you compiled against. If a version mismatch is
148 // detected, the process will abort.
149 #define GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_VERIFY_VERSION \
150 ::google::protobuf::internal::VerifyVersion( \
151 GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_VERSION, GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_MIN_LIBRARY_VERSION, \
152 __FILE__)
153
154 // ===================================================================
155 // from google3/base/port.h
156
157 typedef unsigned int uint;
158
159 #ifdef _MSC_VER
160 typedef __int8 int8;
161 typedef __int16 int16;
162 typedef __int32 int32;
163 typedef __int64 int64;
164
165 typedef unsigned __int8 uint8;
166 typedef unsigned __int16 uint16;
167 typedef unsigned __int32 uint32;
168 typedef unsigned __int64 uint64;
169 #else
170 typedef int8_t int8;
171 typedef int16_t int16;
172 typedef int32_t int32;
173 typedef int64_t int64;
174
175 typedef uint8_t uint8;
176 typedef uint16_t uint16;
177 typedef uint32_t uint32;
178 typedef uint64_t uint64;
179 #endif
180
181 // long long macros to be used because gcc and vc++ use different suffixes,
182 // and different size specifiers in format strings
183 #undef GOOGLE_LONGLONG
184 #undef GOOGLE_ULONGLONG
185 #undef GOOGLE_LL_FORMAT
186
187 #ifdef _MSC_VER
188 #define GOOGLE_LONGLONG(x) x##I64
189 #define GOOGLE_ULONGLONG(x) x##UI64
190 #define GOOGLE_LL_FORMAT "I64" // As in printf("%I64d", ...)
191 #else
192 #define GOOGLE_LONGLONG(x) x##LL
193 #define GOOGLE_ULONGLONG(x) x##ULL
194 #define GOOGLE_LL_FORMAT "ll" // As in "%lld". Note that "q" is poor form also.
195 #endif
196
197 static const int32 kint32max = 0x7FFFFFFF;
198 static const int32 kint32min = -kint32max - 1;
199 static const int64 kint64max = GOOGLE_LONGLONG(0x7FFFFFFFFFFFFFFF);
200 static const int64 kint64min = -kint64max - 1;
201 static const uint32 kuint32max = 0xFFFFFFFFu;
202 static const uint64 kuint64max = GOOGLE_ULONGLONG(0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF);
203
204 // -------------------------------------------------------------------
205 // Annotations: Some parts of the code have been annotated in ways that might
206 // be useful to some compilers or tools, but are not supported universally.
207 // You can #define these annotations yourself if the default implementation
208 // is not right for you.
209
210 #ifndef GOOGLE_ATTRIBUTE_ALWAYS_INLINE
211 #if defined(__GNUC__) && (__GNUC__ > 3 ||(__GNUC__ == 3 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 1))
212 // For functions we want to force inline.
213 // Introduced in gcc 3.1.
214 #define GOOGLE_ATTRIBUTE_ALWAYS_INLINE __attribute__ ((always_inline))
215 #else
216 // Other compilers will have to figure it out for themselves.
217 #define GOOGLE_ATTRIBUTE_ALWAYS_INLINE
218 #endif
219 #endif
220
221 #ifndef GOOGLE_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED
222 #ifdef __GNUC__
223 // If the method/variable/type is used anywhere, produce a warning.
224 #define GOOGLE_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED __attribute__((deprecated))
225 #else
226 #define GOOGLE_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED
227 #endif
228 #endif
229
230 #ifndef GOOGLE_PREDICT_TRUE
231 #ifdef __GNUC__
232 // Provided at least since GCC 3.0.
233 #define GOOGLE_PREDICT_TRUE(x) (__builtin_expect(!!(x), 1))
234 #else
235 #define GOOGLE_PREDICT_TRUE
236 #endif
237 #endif
238
239 // Delimits a block of code which may write to memory which is simultaneously
240 // written by other threads, but which has been determined to be thread-safe
241 // (e.g. because it is an idempotent write).
242 #ifndef GOOGLE_SAFE_CONCURRENT_WRITES_BEGIN
243 #define GOOGLE_SAFE_CONCURRENT_WRITES_BEGIN()
244 #endif
245 #ifndef GOOGLE_SAFE_CONCURRENT_WRITES_END
246 #define GOOGLE_SAFE_CONCURRENT_WRITES_END()
247 #endif
248
249 // ===================================================================
250 // from google3/base/basictypes.h
251
252 // The GOOGLE_ARRAYSIZE(arr) macro returns the # of elements in an array arr.
253 // The expression is a compile-time constant, and therefore can be
254 // used in defining new arrays, for example.
255 //
256 // GOOGLE_ARRAYSIZE catches a few type errors. If you see a compiler error
257 //
258 // "warning: division by zero in ..."
259 //
260 // when using GOOGLE_ARRAYSIZE, you are (wrongfully) giving it a pointer.
261 // You should only use GOOGLE_ARRAYSIZE on statically allocated arrays.
262 //
263 // The following comments are on the implementation details, and can
264 // be ignored by the users.
265 //
266 // ARRAYSIZE(arr) works by inspecting sizeof(arr) (the # of bytes in
267 // the array) and sizeof(*(arr)) (the # of bytes in one array
268 // element). If the former is divisible by the latter, perhaps arr is
269 // indeed an array, in which case the division result is the # of
270 // elements in the array. Otherwise, arr cannot possibly be an array,
271 // and we generate a compiler error to prevent the code from
272 // compiling.
273 //
274 // Since the size of bool is implementation-defined, we need to cast
275 // !(sizeof(a) & sizeof(*(a))) to size_t in order to ensure the final
276 // result has type size_t.
277 //
278 // This macro is not perfect as it wrongfully accepts certain
279 // pointers, namely where the pointer size is divisible by the pointee
280 // size. Since all our code has to go through a 32-bit compiler,
281 // where a pointer is 4 bytes, this means all pointers to a type whose
282 // size is 3 or greater than 4 will be (righteously) rejected.
283 //
284 // Kudos to Jorg Brown for this simple and elegant implementation.
285
286 #undef GOOGLE_ARRAYSIZE
287 #define GOOGLE_ARRAYSIZE(a) \
288 ((sizeof(a) / sizeof(*(a))) / \
289 static_cast<size_t>(!(sizeof(a) % sizeof(*(a)))))
290
291 namespace internal {
292
293 // Use implicit_cast as a safe version of static_cast or const_cast
294 // for upcasting in the type hierarchy (i.e. casting a pointer to Foo
295 // to a pointer to SuperclassOfFoo or casting a pointer to Foo to
296 // a const pointer to Foo).
297 // When you use implicit_cast, the compiler checks that the cast is safe.
298 // Such explicit implicit_casts are necessary in surprisingly many
299 // situations where C++ demands an exact type match instead of an
300 // argument type convertable to a target type.
301 //
302 // The From type can be inferred, so the preferred syntax for using
303 // implicit_cast is the same as for static_cast etc.:
304 //
305 // implicit_cast<ToType>(expr)
306 //
307 // implicit_cast would have been part of the C++ standard library,
308 // but the proposal was submitted too late. It will probably make
309 // its way into the language in the future.
310 template<typename To, typename From>
implicit_cast(From const & f)311 inline To implicit_cast(From const &f) {
312 return f;
313 }
314
315 // When you upcast (that is, cast a pointer from type Foo to type
316 // SuperclassOfFoo), it's fine to use implicit_cast<>, since upcasts
317 // always succeed. When you downcast (that is, cast a pointer from
318 // type Foo to type SubclassOfFoo), static_cast<> isn't safe, because
319 // how do you know the pointer is really of type SubclassOfFoo? It
320 // could be a bare Foo, or of type DifferentSubclassOfFoo. Thus,
321 // when you downcast, you should use this macro. In debug mode, we
322 // use dynamic_cast<> to double-check the downcast is legal (we die
323 // if it's not). In normal mode, we do the efficient static_cast<>
324 // instead. Thus, it's important to test in debug mode to make sure
325 // the cast is legal!
326 // This is the only place in the code we should use dynamic_cast<>.
327 // In particular, you SHOULDN'T be using dynamic_cast<> in order to
328 // do RTTI (eg code like this:
329 // if (dynamic_cast<Subclass1>(foo)) HandleASubclass1Object(foo);
330 // if (dynamic_cast<Subclass2>(foo)) HandleASubclass2Object(foo);
331 // You should design the code some other way not to need this.
332
333 template<typename To, typename From> // use like this: down_cast<T*>(foo);
down_cast(From * f)334 inline To down_cast(From* f) { // so we only accept pointers
335 // Ensures that To is a sub-type of From *. This test is here only
336 // for compile-time type checking, and has no overhead in an
337 // optimized build at run-time, as it will be optimized away
338 // completely.
339 if (false) {
340 implicit_cast<From*, To>(0);
341 }
342
343 #if !defined(NDEBUG) && !defined(GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_NO_RTTI)
344 assert(f == NULL || dynamic_cast<To>(f) != NULL); // RTTI: debug mode only!
345 #endif
346 return static_cast<To>(f);
347 }
348
349 } // namespace internal
350
351 // We made these internal so that they would show up as such in the docs,
352 // but we don't want to stick "internal::" in front of them everywhere.
353 using internal::implicit_cast;
354 using internal::down_cast;
355
356 // The COMPILE_ASSERT macro can be used to verify that a compile time
357 // expression is true. For example, you could use it to verify the
358 // size of a static array:
359 //
360 // COMPILE_ASSERT(ARRAYSIZE(content_type_names) == CONTENT_NUM_TYPES,
361 // content_type_names_incorrect_size);
362 //
363 // or to make sure a struct is smaller than a certain size:
364 //
365 // COMPILE_ASSERT(sizeof(foo) < 128, foo_too_large);
366 //
367 // The second argument to the macro is the name of the variable. If
368 // the expression is false, most compilers will issue a warning/error
369 // containing the name of the variable.
370
371 namespace internal {
372
373 template <bool>
374 struct CompileAssert {
375 };
376
377 } // namespace internal
378
379 #undef GOOGLE_COMPILE_ASSERT
380 #define GOOGLE_COMPILE_ASSERT(expr, msg) \
381 typedef ::google::protobuf::internal::CompileAssert<(bool(expr))> \
382 msg[bool(expr) ? 1 : -1]
383
384
385 // Implementation details of COMPILE_ASSERT:
386 //
387 // - COMPILE_ASSERT works by defining an array type that has -1
388 // elements (and thus is invalid) when the expression is false.
389 //
390 // - The simpler definition
391 //
392 // #define COMPILE_ASSERT(expr, msg) typedef char msg[(expr) ? 1 : -1]
393 //
394 // does not work, as gcc supports variable-length arrays whose sizes
395 // are determined at run-time (this is gcc's extension and not part
396 // of the C++ standard). As a result, gcc fails to reject the
397 // following code with the simple definition:
398 //
399 // int foo;
400 // COMPILE_ASSERT(foo, msg); // not supposed to compile as foo is
401 // // not a compile-time constant.
402 //
403 // - By using the type CompileAssert<(bool(expr))>, we ensures that
404 // expr is a compile-time constant. (Template arguments must be
405 // determined at compile-time.)
406 //
407 // - The outter parentheses in CompileAssert<(bool(expr))> are necessary
408 // to work around a bug in gcc 3.4.4 and 4.0.1. If we had written
409 //
410 // CompileAssert<bool(expr)>
411 //
412 // instead, these compilers will refuse to compile
413 //
414 // COMPILE_ASSERT(5 > 0, some_message);
415 //
416 // (They seem to think the ">" in "5 > 0" marks the end of the
417 // template argument list.)
418 //
419 // - The array size is (bool(expr) ? 1 : -1), instead of simply
420 //
421 // ((expr) ? 1 : -1).
422 //
423 // This is to avoid running into a bug in MS VC 7.1, which
424 // causes ((0.0) ? 1 : -1) to incorrectly evaluate to 1.
425
426 // ===================================================================
427 // from google3/base/scoped_ptr.h
428
429 namespace internal {
430
431 // This is an implementation designed to match the anticipated future TR2
432 // implementation of the scoped_ptr class, and its closely-related brethren,
433 // scoped_array, scoped_ptr_malloc, and make_scoped_ptr.
434
435 template <class C> class scoped_ptr;
436 template <class C> class scoped_array;
437
438 // A scoped_ptr<T> is like a T*, except that the destructor of scoped_ptr<T>
439 // automatically deletes the pointer it holds (if any).
440 // That is, scoped_ptr<T> owns the T object that it points to.
441 // Like a T*, a scoped_ptr<T> may hold either NULL or a pointer to a T object.
442 //
443 // The size of a scoped_ptr is small:
444 // sizeof(scoped_ptr<C>) == sizeof(C*)
445 template <class C>
446 class scoped_ptr {
447 public:
448
449 // The element type
450 typedef C element_type;
451
452 // Constructor. Defaults to intializing with NULL.
453 // There is no way to create an uninitialized scoped_ptr.
454 // The input parameter must be allocated with new.
ptr_(p)455 explicit scoped_ptr(C* p = NULL) : ptr_(p) { }
456
457 // Destructor. If there is a C object, delete it.
458 // We don't need to test ptr_ == NULL because C++ does that for us.
~scoped_ptr()459 ~scoped_ptr() {
460 enum { type_must_be_complete = sizeof(C) };
461 delete ptr_;
462 }
463
464 // Reset. Deletes the current owned object, if any.
465 // Then takes ownership of a new object, if given.
466 // this->reset(this->get()) works.
467 void reset(C* p = NULL) {
468 if (p != ptr_) {
469 enum { type_must_be_complete = sizeof(C) };
470 delete ptr_;
471 ptr_ = p;
472 }
473 }
474
475 // Accessors to get the owned object.
476 // operator* and operator-> will assert() if there is no current object.
477 C& operator*() const {
478 assert(ptr_ != NULL);
479 return *ptr_;
480 }
481 C* operator->() const {
482 assert(ptr_ != NULL);
483 return ptr_;
484 }
get()485 C* get() const { return ptr_; }
486
487 // Comparison operators.
488 // These return whether two scoped_ptr refer to the same object, not just to
489 // two different but equal objects.
490 bool operator==(C* p) const { return ptr_ == p; }
491 bool operator!=(C* p) const { return ptr_ != p; }
492
493 // Swap two scoped pointers.
swap(scoped_ptr & p2)494 void swap(scoped_ptr& p2) {
495 C* tmp = ptr_;
496 ptr_ = p2.ptr_;
497 p2.ptr_ = tmp;
498 }
499
500 // Release a pointer.
501 // The return value is the current pointer held by this object.
502 // If this object holds a NULL pointer, the return value is NULL.
503 // After this operation, this object will hold a NULL pointer,
504 // and will not own the object any more.
release()505 C* release() {
506 C* retVal = ptr_;
507 ptr_ = NULL;
508 return retVal;
509 }
510
511 private:
512 C* ptr_;
513
514 // Forbid comparison of scoped_ptr types. If C2 != C, it totally doesn't
515 // make sense, and if C2 == C, it still doesn't make sense because you should
516 // never have the same object owned by two different scoped_ptrs.
517 template <class C2> bool operator==(scoped_ptr<C2> const& p2) const;
518 template <class C2> bool operator!=(scoped_ptr<C2> const& p2) const;
519
520 // Disallow evil constructors
521 scoped_ptr(const scoped_ptr&);
522 void operator=(const scoped_ptr&);
523 };
524
525 // scoped_array<C> is like scoped_ptr<C>, except that the caller must allocate
526 // with new [] and the destructor deletes objects with delete [].
527 //
528 // As with scoped_ptr<C>, a scoped_array<C> either points to an object
529 // or is NULL. A scoped_array<C> owns the object that it points to.
530 //
531 // Size: sizeof(scoped_array<C>) == sizeof(C*)
532 template <class C>
533 class scoped_array {
534 public:
535
536 // The element type
537 typedef C element_type;
538
539 // Constructor. Defaults to intializing with NULL.
540 // There is no way to create an uninitialized scoped_array.
541 // The input parameter must be allocated with new [].
array_(p)542 explicit scoped_array(C* p = NULL) : array_(p) { }
543
544 // Destructor. If there is a C object, delete it.
545 // We don't need to test ptr_ == NULL because C++ does that for us.
~scoped_array()546 ~scoped_array() {
547 enum { type_must_be_complete = sizeof(C) };
548 delete[] array_;
549 }
550
551 // Reset. Deletes the current owned object, if any.
552 // Then takes ownership of a new object, if given.
553 // this->reset(this->get()) works.
554 void reset(C* p = NULL) {
555 if (p != array_) {
556 enum { type_must_be_complete = sizeof(C) };
557 delete[] array_;
558 array_ = p;
559 }
560 }
561
562 // Get one element of the current object.
563 // Will assert() if there is no current object, or index i is negative.
564 C& operator[](std::ptrdiff_t i) const {
565 assert(i >= 0);
566 assert(array_ != NULL);
567 return array_[i];
568 }
569
570 // Get a pointer to the zeroth element of the current object.
571 // If there is no current object, return NULL.
get()572 C* get() const {
573 return array_;
574 }
575
576 // Comparison operators.
577 // These return whether two scoped_array refer to the same object, not just to
578 // two different but equal objects.
579 bool operator==(C* p) const { return array_ == p; }
580 bool operator!=(C* p) const { return array_ != p; }
581
582 // Swap two scoped arrays.
swap(scoped_array & p2)583 void swap(scoped_array& p2) {
584 C* tmp = array_;
585 array_ = p2.array_;
586 p2.array_ = tmp;
587 }
588
589 // Release an array.
590 // The return value is the current pointer held by this object.
591 // If this object holds a NULL pointer, the return value is NULL.
592 // After this operation, this object will hold a NULL pointer,
593 // and will not own the object any more.
release()594 C* release() {
595 C* retVal = array_;
596 array_ = NULL;
597 return retVal;
598 }
599
600 private:
601 C* array_;
602
603 // Forbid comparison of different scoped_array types.
604 template <class C2> bool operator==(scoped_array<C2> const& p2) const;
605 template <class C2> bool operator!=(scoped_array<C2> const& p2) const;
606
607 // Disallow evil constructors
608 scoped_array(const scoped_array&);
609 void operator=(const scoped_array&);
610 };
611
612 } // namespace internal
613
614 // We made these internal so that they would show up as such in the docs,
615 // but we don't want to stick "internal::" in front of them everywhere.
616 using internal::scoped_ptr;
617 using internal::scoped_array;
618
619 // ===================================================================
620 // emulates google3/base/logging.h
621
622 enum LogLevel {
623 LOGLEVEL_INFO, // Informational. This is never actually used by
624 // libprotobuf.
625 LOGLEVEL_WARNING, // Warns about issues that, although not technically a
626 // problem now, could cause problems in the future. For
627 // example, a // warning will be printed when parsing a
628 // message that is near the message size limit.
629 LOGLEVEL_ERROR, // An error occurred which should never happen during
630 // normal use.
631 LOGLEVEL_FATAL, // An error occurred from which the library cannot
632 // recover. This usually indicates a programming error
633 // in the code which calls the library, especially when
634 // compiled in debug mode.
635
636 #ifdef NDEBUG
637 LOGLEVEL_DFATAL = LOGLEVEL_ERROR
638 #else
639 LOGLEVEL_DFATAL = LOGLEVEL_FATAL
640 #endif
641 };
642
643 namespace internal {
644
645 class LogFinisher;
646
647 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT LogMessage {
648 public:
649 LogMessage(LogLevel level, const char* filename, int line);
650 ~LogMessage();
651
652 LogMessage& operator<<(const std::string& value);
653 LogMessage& operator<<(const char* value);
654 LogMessage& operator<<(char value);
655 LogMessage& operator<<(int value);
656 LogMessage& operator<<(uint value);
657 LogMessage& operator<<(long value);
658 LogMessage& operator<<(unsigned long value);
659 LogMessage& operator<<(double value);
660
661 private:
662 friend class LogFinisher;
663 void Finish();
664
665 LogLevel level_;
666 const char* filename_;
667 int line_;
668 std::string message_;
669 };
670
671 // Used to make the entire "LOG(BLAH) << etc." expression have a void return
672 // type and print a newline after each message.
673 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT LogFinisher {
674 public:
675 void operator=(LogMessage& other);
676 };
677
678 } // namespace internal
679
680 // Undef everything in case we're being mixed with some other Google library
681 // which already defined them itself. Presumably all Google libraries will
682 // support the same syntax for these so it should not be a big deal if they
683 // end up using our definitions instead.
684 #undef GOOGLE_LOG
685 #undef GOOGLE_LOG_IF
686
687 #undef GOOGLE_CHECK
688 #undef GOOGLE_CHECK_OK
689 #undef GOOGLE_CHECK_EQ
690 #undef GOOGLE_CHECK_NE
691 #undef GOOGLE_CHECK_LT
692 #undef GOOGLE_CHECK_LE
693 #undef GOOGLE_CHECK_GT
694 #undef GOOGLE_CHECK_GE
695 #undef GOOGLE_CHECK_NOTNULL
696
697 #undef GOOGLE_DLOG
698 #undef GOOGLE_DCHECK
699 #undef GOOGLE_DCHECK_EQ
700 #undef GOOGLE_DCHECK_NE
701 #undef GOOGLE_DCHECK_LT
702 #undef GOOGLE_DCHECK_LE
703 #undef GOOGLE_DCHECK_GT
704 #undef GOOGLE_DCHECK_GE
705
706 #define GOOGLE_LOG(LEVEL) \
707 ::google::protobuf::internal::LogFinisher() = \
708 ::google::protobuf::internal::LogMessage( \
709 ::google::protobuf::LOGLEVEL_##LEVEL, __FILE__, __LINE__)
710 #define GOOGLE_LOG_IF(LEVEL, CONDITION) \
711 !(CONDITION) ? (void)0 : GOOGLE_LOG(LEVEL)
712
713 #define GOOGLE_CHECK(EXPRESSION) \
714 GOOGLE_LOG_IF(FATAL, !(EXPRESSION)) << "CHECK failed: " #EXPRESSION ": "
715 #define GOOGLE_CHECK_OK(A) GOOGLE_CHECK(A)
716 #define GOOGLE_CHECK_EQ(A, B) GOOGLE_CHECK((A) == (B))
717 #define GOOGLE_CHECK_NE(A, B) GOOGLE_CHECK((A) != (B))
718 #define GOOGLE_CHECK_LT(A, B) GOOGLE_CHECK((A) < (B))
719 #define GOOGLE_CHECK_LE(A, B) GOOGLE_CHECK((A) <= (B))
720 #define GOOGLE_CHECK_GT(A, B) GOOGLE_CHECK((A) > (B))
721 #define GOOGLE_CHECK_GE(A, B) GOOGLE_CHECK((A) >= (B))
722
723 namespace internal {
724 template<typename T>
CheckNotNull(const char *,int,const char * name,T * val)725 T* CheckNotNull(const char* /* file */, int /* line */,
726 const char* name, T* val) {
727 if (val == NULL) {
728 GOOGLE_LOG(FATAL) << name;
729 }
730 return val;
731 }
732 } // namespace internal
733 #define GOOGLE_CHECK_NOTNULL(A) \
734 internal::CheckNotNull(__FILE__, __LINE__, "'" #A "' must not be NULL", (A))
735
736 #ifdef NDEBUG
737
738 #define GOOGLE_DLOG GOOGLE_LOG_IF(INFO, false)
739
740 #define GOOGLE_DCHECK(EXPRESSION) while(false) GOOGLE_CHECK(EXPRESSION)
741 #define GOOGLE_DCHECK_EQ(A, B) GOOGLE_DCHECK((A) == (B))
742 #define GOOGLE_DCHECK_NE(A, B) GOOGLE_DCHECK((A) != (B))
743 #define GOOGLE_DCHECK_LT(A, B) GOOGLE_DCHECK((A) < (B))
744 #define GOOGLE_DCHECK_LE(A, B) GOOGLE_DCHECK((A) <= (B))
745 #define GOOGLE_DCHECK_GT(A, B) GOOGLE_DCHECK((A) > (B))
746 #define GOOGLE_DCHECK_GE(A, B) GOOGLE_DCHECK((A) >= (B))
747
748 #else // NDEBUG
749
750 #define GOOGLE_DLOG GOOGLE_LOG
751
752 #define GOOGLE_DCHECK GOOGLE_CHECK
753 #define GOOGLE_DCHECK_EQ GOOGLE_CHECK_EQ
754 #define GOOGLE_DCHECK_NE GOOGLE_CHECK_NE
755 #define GOOGLE_DCHECK_LT GOOGLE_CHECK_LT
756 #define GOOGLE_DCHECK_LE GOOGLE_CHECK_LE
757 #define GOOGLE_DCHECK_GT GOOGLE_CHECK_GT
758 #define GOOGLE_DCHECK_GE GOOGLE_CHECK_GE
759
760 #endif // !NDEBUG
761
762 typedef void LogHandler(LogLevel level, const char* filename, int line,
763 const std::string& message);
764
765 // The protobuf library sometimes writes warning and error messages to
766 // stderr. These messages are primarily useful for developers, but may
767 // also help end users figure out a problem. If you would prefer that
768 // these messages be sent somewhere other than stderr, call SetLogHandler()
769 // to set your own handler. This returns the old handler. Set the handler
770 // to NULL to ignore log messages (but see also LogSilencer, below).
771 //
772 // Obviously, SetLogHandler is not thread-safe. You should only call it
773 // at initialization time, and probably not from library code. If you
774 // simply want to suppress log messages temporarily (e.g. because you
775 // have some code that tends to trigger them frequently and you know
776 // the warnings are not important to you), use the LogSilencer class
777 // below.
778 LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT LogHandler* SetLogHandler(LogHandler* new_func);
779
780 // Create a LogSilencer if you want to temporarily suppress all log
781 // messages. As long as any LogSilencer objects exist, non-fatal
782 // log messages will be discarded (the current LogHandler will *not*
783 // be called). Constructing a LogSilencer is thread-safe. You may
784 // accidentally suppress log messages occurring in another thread, but
785 // since messages are generally for debugging purposes only, this isn't
786 // a big deal. If you want to intercept log messages, use SetLogHandler().
787 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT LogSilencer {
788 public:
789 LogSilencer();
790 ~LogSilencer();
791 };
792
793 // ===================================================================
794 // emulates google3/base/callback.h
795
796 // Abstract interface for a callback. When calling an RPC, you must provide
797 // a Closure to call when the procedure completes. See the Service interface
798 // in service.h.
799 //
800 // To automatically construct a Closure which calls a particular function or
801 // method with a particular set of parameters, use the NewCallback() function.
802 // Example:
803 // void FooDone(const FooResponse* response) {
804 // ...
805 // }
806 //
807 // void CallFoo() {
808 // ...
809 // // When done, call FooDone() and pass it a pointer to the response.
810 // Closure* callback = NewCallback(&FooDone, response);
811 // // Make the call.
812 // service->Foo(controller, request, response, callback);
813 // }
814 //
815 // Example that calls a method:
816 // class Handler {
817 // public:
818 // ...
819 //
820 // void FooDone(const FooResponse* response) {
821 // ...
822 // }
823 //
824 // void CallFoo() {
825 // ...
826 // // When done, call FooDone() and pass it a pointer to the response.
827 // Closure* callback = NewCallback(this, &Handler::FooDone, response);
828 // // Make the call.
829 // service->Foo(controller, request, response, callback);
830 // }
831 // };
832 //
833 // Currently NewCallback() supports binding zero, one, or two arguments.
834 //
835 // Callbacks created with NewCallback() automatically delete themselves when
836 // executed. They should be used when a callback is to be called exactly
837 // once (usually the case with RPC callbacks). If a callback may be called
838 // a different number of times (including zero), create it with
839 // NewPermanentCallback() instead. You are then responsible for deleting the
840 // callback (using the "delete" keyword as normal).
841 //
842 // Note that NewCallback() is a bit touchy regarding argument types. Generally,
843 // the values you provide for the parameter bindings must exactly match the
844 // types accepted by the callback function. For example:
845 // void Foo(string s);
846 // NewCallback(&Foo, "foo"); // WON'T WORK: const char* != string
847 // NewCallback(&Foo, string("foo")); // WORKS
848 // Also note that the arguments cannot be references:
849 // void Foo(const string& s);
850 // string my_str;
851 // NewCallback(&Foo, my_str); // WON'T WORK: Can't use referecnes.
852 // However, correctly-typed pointers will work just fine.
853 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT Closure {
854 public:
Closure()855 Closure() {}
856 virtual ~Closure();
857
858 virtual void Run() = 0;
859
860 private:
861 GOOGLE_DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(Closure);
862 };
863
864 namespace internal {
865
866 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT FunctionClosure0 : public Closure {
867 public:
868 typedef void (*FunctionType)();
869
FunctionClosure0(FunctionType function,bool self_deleting)870 FunctionClosure0(FunctionType function, bool self_deleting)
871 : function_(function), self_deleting_(self_deleting) {}
872 ~FunctionClosure0();
873
Run()874 void Run() {
875 bool needs_delete = self_deleting_; // read in case callback deletes
876 function_();
877 if (needs_delete) delete this;
878 }
879
880 private:
881 FunctionType function_;
882 bool self_deleting_;
883 };
884
885 template <typename Class>
886 class MethodClosure0 : public Closure {
887 public:
888 typedef void (Class::*MethodType)();
889
MethodClosure0(Class * object,MethodType method,bool self_deleting)890 MethodClosure0(Class* object, MethodType method, bool self_deleting)
891 : object_(object), method_(method), self_deleting_(self_deleting) {}
~MethodClosure0()892 ~MethodClosure0() {}
893
Run()894 void Run() {
895 bool needs_delete = self_deleting_; // read in case callback deletes
896 (object_->*method_)();
897 if (needs_delete) delete this;
898 }
899
900 private:
901 Class* object_;
902 MethodType method_;
903 bool self_deleting_;
904 };
905
906 template <typename Arg1>
907 class FunctionClosure1 : public Closure {
908 public:
909 typedef void (*FunctionType)(Arg1 arg1);
910
FunctionClosure1(FunctionType function,bool self_deleting,Arg1 arg1)911 FunctionClosure1(FunctionType function, bool self_deleting,
912 Arg1 arg1)
913 : function_(function), self_deleting_(self_deleting),
914 arg1_(arg1) {}
~FunctionClosure1()915 ~FunctionClosure1() {}
916
Run()917 void Run() {
918 bool needs_delete = self_deleting_; // read in case callback deletes
919 function_(arg1_);
920 if (needs_delete) delete this;
921 }
922
923 private:
924 FunctionType function_;
925 bool self_deleting_;
926 Arg1 arg1_;
927 };
928
929 template <typename Class, typename Arg1>
930 class MethodClosure1 : public Closure {
931 public:
932 typedef void (Class::*MethodType)(Arg1 arg1);
933
MethodClosure1(Class * object,MethodType method,bool self_deleting,Arg1 arg1)934 MethodClosure1(Class* object, MethodType method, bool self_deleting,
935 Arg1 arg1)
936 : object_(object), method_(method), self_deleting_(self_deleting),
937 arg1_(arg1) {}
~MethodClosure1()938 ~MethodClosure1() {}
939
Run()940 void Run() {
941 bool needs_delete = self_deleting_; // read in case callback deletes
942 (object_->*method_)(arg1_);
943 if (needs_delete) delete this;
944 }
945
946 private:
947 Class* object_;
948 MethodType method_;
949 bool self_deleting_;
950 Arg1 arg1_;
951 };
952
953 template <typename Arg1, typename Arg2>
954 class FunctionClosure2 : public Closure {
955 public:
956 typedef void (*FunctionType)(Arg1 arg1, Arg2 arg2);
957
FunctionClosure2(FunctionType function,bool self_deleting,Arg1 arg1,Arg2 arg2)958 FunctionClosure2(FunctionType function, bool self_deleting,
959 Arg1 arg1, Arg2 arg2)
960 : function_(function), self_deleting_(self_deleting),
961 arg1_(arg1), arg2_(arg2) {}
~FunctionClosure2()962 ~FunctionClosure2() {}
963
Run()964 void Run() {
965 bool needs_delete = self_deleting_; // read in case callback deletes
966 function_(arg1_, arg2_);
967 if (needs_delete) delete this;
968 }
969
970 private:
971 FunctionType function_;
972 bool self_deleting_;
973 Arg1 arg1_;
974 Arg2 arg2_;
975 };
976
977 template <typename Class, typename Arg1, typename Arg2>
978 class MethodClosure2 : public Closure {
979 public:
980 typedef void (Class::*MethodType)(Arg1 arg1, Arg2 arg2);
981
MethodClosure2(Class * object,MethodType method,bool self_deleting,Arg1 arg1,Arg2 arg2)982 MethodClosure2(Class* object, MethodType method, bool self_deleting,
983 Arg1 arg1, Arg2 arg2)
984 : object_(object), method_(method), self_deleting_(self_deleting),
985 arg1_(arg1), arg2_(arg2) {}
~MethodClosure2()986 ~MethodClosure2() {}
987
Run()988 void Run() {
989 bool needs_delete = self_deleting_; // read in case callback deletes
990 (object_->*method_)(arg1_, arg2_);
991 if (needs_delete) delete this;
992 }
993
994 private:
995 Class* object_;
996 MethodType method_;
997 bool self_deleting_;
998 Arg1 arg1_;
999 Arg2 arg2_;
1000 };
1001
1002 } // namespace internal
1003
1004 // See Closure.
NewCallback(void (* function)())1005 inline Closure* NewCallback(void (*function)()) {
1006 return new internal::FunctionClosure0(function, true);
1007 }
1008
1009 // See Closure.
NewPermanentCallback(void (* function)())1010 inline Closure* NewPermanentCallback(void (*function)()) {
1011 return new internal::FunctionClosure0(function, false);
1012 }
1013
1014 // See Closure.
1015 template <typename Class>
NewCallback(Class * object,void (Class::* method)())1016 inline Closure* NewCallback(Class* object, void (Class::*method)()) {
1017 return new internal::MethodClosure0<Class>(object, method, true);
1018 }
1019
1020 // See Closure.
1021 template <typename Class>
NewPermanentCallback(Class * object,void (Class::* method)())1022 inline Closure* NewPermanentCallback(Class* object, void (Class::*method)()) {
1023 return new internal::MethodClosure0<Class>(object, method, false);
1024 }
1025
1026 // See Closure.
1027 template <typename Arg1>
NewCallback(void (* function)(Arg1),Arg1 arg1)1028 inline Closure* NewCallback(void (*function)(Arg1),
1029 Arg1 arg1) {
1030 return new internal::FunctionClosure1<Arg1>(function, true, arg1);
1031 }
1032
1033 // See Closure.
1034 template <typename Arg1>
NewPermanentCallback(void (* function)(Arg1),Arg1 arg1)1035 inline Closure* NewPermanentCallback(void (*function)(Arg1),
1036 Arg1 arg1) {
1037 return new internal::FunctionClosure1<Arg1>(function, false, arg1);
1038 }
1039
1040 // See Closure.
1041 template <typename Class, typename Arg1>
NewCallback(Class * object,void (Class::* method)(Arg1),Arg1 arg1)1042 inline Closure* NewCallback(Class* object, void (Class::*method)(Arg1),
1043 Arg1 arg1) {
1044 return new internal::MethodClosure1<Class, Arg1>(object, method, true, arg1);
1045 }
1046
1047 // See Closure.
1048 template <typename Class, typename Arg1>
NewPermanentCallback(Class * object,void (Class::* method)(Arg1),Arg1 arg1)1049 inline Closure* NewPermanentCallback(Class* object, void (Class::*method)(Arg1),
1050 Arg1 arg1) {
1051 return new internal::MethodClosure1<Class, Arg1>(object, method, false, arg1);
1052 }
1053
1054 // See Closure.
1055 template <typename Arg1, typename Arg2>
NewCallback(void (* function)(Arg1,Arg2),Arg1 arg1,Arg2 arg2)1056 inline Closure* NewCallback(void (*function)(Arg1, Arg2),
1057 Arg1 arg1, Arg2 arg2) {
1058 return new internal::FunctionClosure2<Arg1, Arg2>(
1059 function, true, arg1, arg2);
1060 }
1061
1062 // See Closure.
1063 template <typename Arg1, typename Arg2>
NewPermanentCallback(void (* function)(Arg1,Arg2),Arg1 arg1,Arg2 arg2)1064 inline Closure* NewPermanentCallback(void (*function)(Arg1, Arg2),
1065 Arg1 arg1, Arg2 arg2) {
1066 return new internal::FunctionClosure2<Arg1, Arg2>(
1067 function, false, arg1, arg2);
1068 }
1069
1070 // See Closure.
1071 template <typename Class, typename Arg1, typename Arg2>
NewCallback(Class * object,void (Class::* method)(Arg1,Arg2),Arg1 arg1,Arg2 arg2)1072 inline Closure* NewCallback(Class* object, void (Class::*method)(Arg1, Arg2),
1073 Arg1 arg1, Arg2 arg2) {
1074 return new internal::MethodClosure2<Class, Arg1, Arg2>(
1075 object, method, true, arg1, arg2);
1076 }
1077
1078 // See Closure.
1079 template <typename Class, typename Arg1, typename Arg2>
NewPermanentCallback(Class * object,void (Class::* method)(Arg1,Arg2),Arg1 arg1,Arg2 arg2)1080 inline Closure* NewPermanentCallback(
1081 Class* object, void (Class::*method)(Arg1, Arg2),
1082 Arg1 arg1, Arg2 arg2) {
1083 return new internal::MethodClosure2<Class, Arg1, Arg2>(
1084 object, method, false, arg1, arg2);
1085 }
1086
1087 // A function which does nothing. Useful for creating no-op callbacks, e.g.:
1088 // Closure* nothing = NewCallback(&DoNothing);
1089 void LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT DoNothing();
1090
1091 // ===================================================================
1092 // emulates google3/base/mutex.h
1093
1094 namespace internal {
1095
1096 // A Mutex is a non-reentrant (aka non-recursive) mutex. At most one thread T
1097 // may hold a mutex at a given time. If T attempts to Lock() the same Mutex
1098 // while holding it, T will deadlock.
1099 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT Mutex {
1100 public:
1101 // Create a Mutex that is not held by anybody.
1102 Mutex();
1103
1104 // Destructor
1105 ~Mutex();
1106
1107 // Block if necessary until this Mutex is free, then acquire it exclusively.
1108 void Lock();
1109
1110 // Release this Mutex. Caller must hold it exclusively.
1111 void Unlock();
1112
1113 // Crash if this Mutex is not held exclusively by this thread.
1114 // May fail to crash when it should; will never crash when it should not.
1115 void AssertHeld();
1116
1117 private:
1118 struct Internal;
1119 Internal* mInternal;
1120
1121 GOOGLE_DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(Mutex);
1122 };
1123
1124 // MutexLock(mu) acquires mu when constructed and releases it when destroyed.
1125 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT MutexLock {
1126 public:
MutexLock(Mutex * mu)1127 explicit MutexLock(Mutex *mu) : mu_(mu) { this->mu_->Lock(); }
~MutexLock()1128 ~MutexLock() { this->mu_->Unlock(); }
1129 private:
1130 Mutex *const mu_;
1131 GOOGLE_DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(MutexLock);
1132 };
1133
1134 // TODO(kenton): Implement these? Hard to implement portably.
1135 typedef MutexLock ReaderMutexLock;
1136 typedef MutexLock WriterMutexLock;
1137
1138 // MutexLockMaybe is like MutexLock, but is a no-op when mu is NULL.
1139 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT MutexLockMaybe {
1140 public:
MutexLockMaybe(Mutex * mu)1141 explicit MutexLockMaybe(Mutex *mu) :
1142 mu_(mu) { if (this->mu_ != NULL) { this->mu_->Lock(); } }
~MutexLockMaybe()1143 ~MutexLockMaybe() { if (this->mu_ != NULL) { this->mu_->Unlock(); } }
1144 private:
1145 Mutex *const mu_;
1146 GOOGLE_DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(MutexLockMaybe);
1147 };
1148
1149 } // namespace internal
1150
1151 // We made these internal so that they would show up as such in the docs,
1152 // but we don't want to stick "internal::" in front of them everywhere.
1153 using internal::Mutex;
1154 using internal::MutexLock;
1155 using internal::ReaderMutexLock;
1156 using internal::WriterMutexLock;
1157 using internal::MutexLockMaybe;
1158
1159 // ===================================================================
1160 // from google3/util/utf8/public/unilib.h
1161
1162 namespace internal {
1163
1164 // Checks if the buffer contains structurally-valid UTF-8. Implemented in
1165 // structurally_valid.cc.
1166 LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT bool IsStructurallyValidUTF8(const char* buf, int len);
1167
1168 } // namespace internal
1169
1170 // ===================================================================
1171 // from google3/util/endian/endian.h
1172 LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT uint32 ghtonl(uint32 x);
1173
1174 // ===================================================================
1175 // Shutdown support.
1176
1177 // Shut down the entire protocol buffers library, deleting all static-duration
1178 // objects allocated by the library or by generated .pb.cc files.
1179 //
1180 // There are two reasons you might want to call this:
1181 // * You use a draconian definition of "memory leak" in which you expect
1182 // every single malloc() to have a corresponding free(), even for objects
1183 // which live until program exit.
1184 // * You are writing a dynamically-loaded library which needs to clean up
1185 // after itself when the library is unloaded.
1186 //
1187 // It is safe to call this multiple times. However, it is not safe to use
1188 // any other part of the protocol buffers library after
1189 // ShutdownProtobufLibrary() has been called.
1190 LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void ShutdownProtobufLibrary();
1191
1192 namespace internal {
1193
1194 // Register a function to be called when ShutdownProtocolBuffers() is called.
1195 LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT void OnShutdown(void (*func)());
1196
1197 } // namespace internal
1198
1199 #if PROTOBUF_USE_EXCEPTIONS
1200 class FatalException : public std::exception {
1201 public:
FatalException(const char * filename,int line,const std::string & message)1202 FatalException(const char* filename, int line, const std::string& message)
1203 : filename_(filename), line_(line), message_(message) {}
1204 virtual ~FatalException() throw();
1205
1206 virtual const char* what() const throw();
1207
filename()1208 const char* filename() const { return filename_; }
line()1209 int line() const { return line_; }
message()1210 const std::string& message() const { return message_; }
1211
1212 private:
1213 const char* filename_;
1214 const int line_;
1215 const std::string message_;
1216 };
1217 #endif
1218
1219 // This is at the end of the file instead of the beginning to work around a bug
1220 // in some versions of MSVC.
1221 using namespace std; // Don't do this at home, kids.
1222
1223 } // namespace protobuf
1224 } // namespace google
1225
1226 #endif // GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_COMMON_H__
1227