enable_shared_from_this fails at runtime when inherited privately

2019-08-29 Thread Christian Schneider

Hello,
I just discovered, that, when using enable_shared_from_this and 
inheriting it privately, this fails at runtime.

I made a small example:

#include 
#include 
#include 
#include 

#ifndef prefix
#define prefix std
#endif

class foo:
prefix::enable_shared_from_this
{
public:
prefix::shared_ptr get_sptr()
{
return shared_from_this();
}
};

int main()
{
auto a = prefix::make_shared();
auto b = a->get_sptr();
return 0;
}

This compiles fine, but throws a weak_ptr exception at runtime.
I'm aware, that the implementation requires, that 
enable_shared_from_this needs to be publicly inherited, but as a first 
time user, I had to find this out the hard way, as documentations (I 
use, ie. cppreference.com) don't mention it, probably because it's not a 
requirement of the standard.


On the other hand, if you compile the code with additional 
-Dprefix=boost (and needed boost stuff installed, of course), it gives a 
compiler error (

gcc: 'boost::enable_shared_from_this' is an inaccessible base of 'foo';
clang: error: cannot cast 'boost::shared_ptr::element_type' (aka 
'foo') to its private base class 'boost::enable_shared_from_this')


I'm think, it would be helpful, if the std implemantions also would fail 
at compile time already, and wanted to ask if this would be 
possible/feasible.


BR, Christian

compilers:
gcc-Version 9.2.0 (Gentoo 9.2.0 p1)
clang version 8.0.1 (tags/RELEASE_801/final) (used with both 
libstdc++.so.6 and libc++.so.1 (v8.0.1))


Re: enable_shared_from_this fails at runtime when inherited privately

2019-08-29 Thread Christian Schneider

Am 29.08.19 um 12:07 schrieb Jonathan Wakely:

On Thu, 29 Aug 2019 at 10:15, Christian Schneider
 wrote:


Hello,
I just discovered, that, when using enable_shared_from_this and
inheriting it privately, this fails at runtime.
I made a small example:

#include 
#include 
#include 
#include 

#ifndef prefix
#define prefix std
#endif

class foo:
  prefix::enable_shared_from_this
{
public:
  prefix::shared_ptr get_sptr()
  {
  return shared_from_this();
  }
};

int main()
{
  auto a = prefix::make_shared();
  auto b = a->get_sptr();
  return 0;
}

This compiles fine, but throws a weak_ptr exception at runtime.
I'm aware, that the implementation requires, that
enable_shared_from_this needs to be publicly inherited, but as a first
time user, I had to find this out the hard way, as documentations (I
use, ie. cppreference.com) don't mention it, probably because it's not a
requirement of the standard.


It definitely is a requirement of the standard. The new wording we
added via 
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2016/p0033r1.html#spec
says that the base's weak_ptr is only initialized when the base class
is "unambiguous and accessible". It doesn't say that an ambiguous or
inaccessible base class makes the program ill-formed, so we're not
allowed to reject such a program. >

I see. As far as I understand, this sentence was removed:
Requires: enable_shared_from_this shall be an accessible base class 
of T. *this shall be a subobject of an object t of type T. There shall 
be at least one shared_ptr instance p that owns &t.


As far as I read it, this required enable_shared_from_this to be public 
accessible. Do you know (or someone else), why it was removed?
I find it a little, umm..., inconvenient, that the compiler happily 
accepts it when it is clear that it never ever can work...



On the other hand, if you compile the code with additional
-Dprefix=boost (and needed boost stuff installed, of course), it gives a
compiler error (
gcc: 'boost::enable_shared_from_this' is an inaccessible base of 'foo';
clang: error: cannot cast 'boost::shared_ptr::element_type' (aka
'foo') to its private base class 'boost::enable_shared_from_this')


That seems like a bug in Boost.

When Boost wants to follow the standard, then yes. If not i would see it 
as a feature, see above :)



I'm think, it would be helpful, if the std implemntions also would fail
at compile time already, and wanted to ask if this would be
possible/feasible.


No, that would not conform to the standard.


Clear.


Re: enable_shared_from_this fails at runtime when inherited privately

2019-08-29 Thread Christian Schneider




Am 29.08.19 um 13:44 schrieb Jonathan Wakely:

On Thu, 29 Aug 2019 at 12:43, Jonathan Wakely wrote:


On Thu, 29 Aug 2019 at 11:50, Christian Schneider
 wrote:


Am 29.08.19 um 12:07 schrieb Jonathan Wakely:

On Thu, 29 Aug 2019 at 10:15, Christian Schneider
 wrote:


Hello,
I just discovered, that, when using enable_shared_from_this and
inheriting it privately, this fails at runtime.
I made a small example:

#include 
#include 
#include 
#include 

#ifndef prefix
#define prefix std
#endif

class foo:
   prefix::enable_shared_from_this
{
public:
   prefix::shared_ptr get_sptr()
   {
   return shared_from_this();
   }
};

int main()
{
   auto a = prefix::make_shared();
   auto b = a->get_sptr();
   return 0;
}

This compiles fine, but throws a weak_ptr exception at runtime.
I'm aware, that the implementation requires, that
enable_shared_from_this needs to be publicly inherited, but as a first
time user, I had to find this out the hard way, as documentations (I
use, ie. cppreference.com) don't mention it, probably because it's not a
requirement of the standard.


It definitely is a requirement of the standard. The new wording we
added via 
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2016/p0033r1.html#spec
says that the base's weak_ptr is only initialized when the base class
is "unambiguous and accessible". It doesn't say that an ambiguous or
inaccessible base class makes the program ill-formed, so we're not
allowed to reject such a program. >

I see. As far as I understand, this sentence was removed:
Requires: enable_shared_from_this shall be an accessible base class
of T. *this shall be a subobject of an object t of type T. There shall
be at least one shared_ptr instance p that owns &t.

As far as I read it, this required enable_shared_from_this to be public
accessible.


No. It only required it to be publicly accessible if you called
shared_from_this().


Do you know (or someone else), why it was removed?


Yes (look at the author of the paper :-). As I wrote in that paper:

"The proposed wording removes the preconditions on shared_from_this so
that it is now well-defined to call it on an object which is not owned
by any shared_ptr, in which case shared_from_this would throw an
exception."

Previously it was undefined behaviour to call shared_from_this() if
the base class hadn't been initialized to share ownership with a
shared_ptr. That meant the following was undefined:

#include 
struct X : std::enable_shared_from_this { };
int main()
{
   X x; // not owned by a shared_ptr
   x.shared_from_this();
}

Now this program is perfectly well-defined, but it throws an
exception. There is no good reason to say that program has undefined
behaviour (which means potentially unbounded types of errors) when we
can just make it valid code that throws an exception when misused.


And in order to make it well-defined, we tightened up the
specification to say exactly how and when the weak_ptr in a
enable_shared_from_this base class gets initialized. If it's not
possible to initialize it (e.g. because it's private) then it doesn't
initialize it.


OK, thx for clarification and insights.
Since it is a requirement from the standard, I will add a note on 
cppreference.com, so that it is clear that it needs to be public 
inherited, and it silently fails if you don't inherit public.





I find it a little, umm..., inconvenient, that the compiler happily
accepts it when it is clear that it never ever can work...


The code compiles and runs. It just doesn't do what you thought it
would do. Welcome to C++.