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@ -1044,9 +1044,12 @@ thread, rather than once at program startup. This means that
other <code>thread_local</code> variables are subject to the same
initialization-order issues as static variables (and more besides).</p>
<p><code>thread_local</code> variable instances are not destroyed before their
thread terminates, so they do not have the destruction-order issues of static
variables.</p>
<p><code>thread_local</code> variables have a subtle destruction-order issue:
during thread shutdown, <code>thread_local</code> variables will be destroyed
in the opposite order of their initialization (as is generally true in C++).
If code triggered by the destructor of any <code>thread_local</code> variable
refers to any already-destroyed <code>thread_local</code> on that thread, we will
get a particularly hard to diagnose use-after-free.</p>
<p class="pros"></p>
<ul>
@ -1060,22 +1063,47 @@ variables.</p>
<p class="cons"></p>
<ul>
<li>Accessing a <code>thread_local</code> variable may trigger execution of
an unpredictable and uncontrollable amount of other code.</li>
an unpredictable and uncontrollable amount of other code during thread-start or
first use on a given thread.</li>
<li><code>thread_local</code> variables are effectively global variables,
and have all the drawbacks of global variables other than lack of
thread-safety.</li>
<li>The memory consumed by a <code>thread_local</code> variable scales with
the number of running threads (in the worst case), which can be quite large
in a program.</li>
<li>Non-static data members cannot be <code>thread_local</code>.</li>
<li><code>thread_local</code> may not be as efficient as certain compiler
intrinsics.</li>
<li>Data members cannot be <code>thread_local</code> unless they are also
<code>static</code>.</li>
<li>We may suffer from use-after-free bugs if <code>thread_local</code> variables
have complex destructors. In particular, the destructor of any such variable must not
call any code (transitively) that refers to any potentially-destroyed
<code>thread_local</code>. This property is hard to enforce.</li>
<li>Approaches for avoiding use-after-free in global/static contexts do not work for
<code>thread_local</code>s. Specifically, skipping destructors for globals and static
variables is allowable because their lifetimes end at program shutdown. Thus, any "leak"
is managed immediately by the OS cleaning up our memory and other resources. By
contrast, skipping destructors for <code>thread_local</code> variables leads to resource
leaks proportional to the total number of threads that terminate during the lifetime of
the program.</li>
</ul>
<p class="decision"></p>
<p><code>thread_local</code> variables inside a function have no safety
concerns, so they can be used without restriction. Note that you can use
<p><code>thread_local</code> variables at class or namespace scope must be
initialized with a true compile-time constant (i.e., they must have no
dynamic initialization). To enforce this, <code>thread_local</code> variables
at class or namespace scope must be annotated with
<a href="https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/blob/master/absl/base/attributes.h">
<code>ABSL_CONST_INIT</code></a>
(or <code>constexpr</code>, but that should be rare):</p>
<pre> ABSL_CONST_INIT thread_local Foo foo = ...;
</pre>
<p><code>thread_local</code> variables inside a function have no initialization
concerns, but still risk use-after-free during thread exit. Note that you can use
a function-scope <code>thread_local</code> to simulate a class- or
namespace-scope <code>thread_local</code> by defining a function or
static method that exposes it:</p>
@ -1086,18 +1114,12 @@ variables.</p>
}
</pre>
<p><code>thread_local</code> variables at class or namespace scope must be
initialized with a true compile-time constant (i.e., they must have no
dynamic initialization). To enforce this, <code>thread_local</code> variables
at class or namespace scope must be annotated with
<a href="https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/blob/master/absl/base/attributes.h">
<code>ABSL_CONST_INIT</code></a>
(or <code>constexpr</code>, but that should be rare):</p>
<pre>ABSL_CONST_INIT thread_local Foo foo = ...;
</pre>
<p>Note that <code>thread_local</code> variables will be destroyed whenever a thread exits.
If the destructor of any such variable refers to any other (potentially-destroyed)
<code>thread_local</code> we will suffer from hard to diagnose use-after-free bugs.
Prefer trivial types, or types that provably run no user-provided code at destruction to
minimize the potential of accessing any other <code>thread_local</code>.
</p>
<p><code>thread_local</code> should be preferred over other mechanisms for
defining thread-local data.</p>
@ -2613,8 +2635,8 @@ casts when explicit type conversion is necessary.
types,
including <code>void*</code>. Use this
only if you know what you are doing and you understand the aliasing
issues. Also, consider the alternative
<code>absl::bit_cast</code>.</li>
issues. Also, consider dereferencing the pointer (without a cast) and
using <code>absl::bit_cast</code> to cast the resulting value.</li>
<li>Use <code>absl::bit_cast</code> to interpret the raw bits of a
value using a different type of the same size (a type pun), such as
@ -4226,8 +4248,8 @@ enum class UrlTableError { ...
<h3 id="Variable_Names">Variable Names</h3>
<p>The names of variables (including function parameters) and data members are
all lowercase, with underscores between words. Data members of classes (but not
structs) additionally have trailing underscores. For instance:
<code>snake_case</code> (all lowercase, with underscores between words). Data members of classes
(but not structs) additionally have trailing underscores. For instance:
<code>a_local_variable</code>, <code>a_struct_data_member</code>,
<code>a_class_data_member_</code>.</p>
@ -4235,7 +4257,7 @@ structs) additionally have trailing underscores. For instance:
<p>For example:</p>
<pre>std::string table_name; // OK - lowercase with underscore.
<pre>std::string table_name; // OK - snake_case.
</pre>
<pre class="badcode">std::string tableName; // Bad - mixed case.
@ -4288,7 +4310,22 @@ const int kAndroid8_0_0 = 24; // Android 8.0.0
see <a href="http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/storage_duration#Storage_duration">
Storage Duration</a> for details) should be named this way. This
convention is optional for variables of other storage classes, e.g., automatic
variables, otherwise the usual variable naming rules apply.</p>
variables; otherwise the usual variable naming rules apply. For example:</p>
<pre>void ComputeFoo(absl::string_view suffix) {
// Either of these is acceptable.
const absl::string_view kPrefix = "prefix";
const absl::string_view prefix = "prefix";
...
}
</pre>
<pre class="badcode">void ComputeFoo(absl::string_view suffix) {
// Bad - different invocations of ComputeFoo give kCombined different values.
const std::string kCombined = absl::StrCat(kPrefix, suffix);
...
}
</pre>
<h3 id="Function_Names">Function Names</h3>
@ -4450,12 +4487,19 @@ comment and what style you use where.</p>
<p>Start each file with license boilerplate.</p>
</div>
<p>File comments describe the contents of a file. If a file declares,
implements, or tests exactly one abstraction that is documented by a comment
at the point of declaration, file comments are not required. All other files
must have file comments.</p>
<p>If a source file (such as a <code>.h</code> file) declares multiple user-facing abstractions
(common functions, related classes, etc.), include a comment describing the collection of those
abstractions. Include enough detail for future authors to know what does not fit there. However,
the detailed documentation about individual abstractions belongs with those abstractions, not at the
file level.</p>
<h4>Legal Notice and Author Line</h4>
<p>For instance, if you write a file comment for <code>frobber.h</code>, you do not need
to include a file comment in <code>frobber.cc</code> or
<code>frobber_test.cc</code>. On the other hand, if you write a collection of classes in
<code>registered_objects.cc</code> that has no associated header file, you must include a file
comment in <code>registered_objects.cc</code>.
</p><h4>Legal Notice and Author Line</h4>
@ -4471,17 +4515,6 @@ author line, consider deleting the author line.
New files should usually not contain copyright notice or
author line.</p>
<h4>File Contents</h4>
<p>If a <code>.h</code> declares multiple abstractions, the file-level comment
should broadly describe the contents of the file, and how the abstractions are
related. A 1 or 2 sentence file-level comment may be sufficient. The detailed
documentation about individual abstractions belongs with those abstractions,
not at the file level.</p>
<p>Do not duplicate comments in both the <code>.h</code> and the
<code>.cc</code>. Duplicated comments diverge.</p>
<h3 id="Class_Comments">Class Comments</h3>
<p>Every non-obvious class or struct declaration should have an
@ -4759,23 +4792,18 @@ a short-term solution, or good-enough but not perfect.</p>
<p><code>TODO</code>s should include the string
<code>TODO</code> in all caps, followed by the
name, e-mail address, bug ID, or other
bug ID, name, e-mail address, or other
identifier
of the person or issue with the best context
about the problem referenced by the <code>TODO</code>. The
main purpose is to have a consistent <code>TODO</code> that
can be searched to find out how to get more details upon
request. A <code>TODO</code> is not a commitment that the
person referenced will fix the problem. Thus when you create
a <code>TODO</code> with a name, it is almost always your
name that is given.</p>
about the problem referenced by the <code>TODO</code>.
</p>
<div>
<pre>// TODO(kl@gmail.com): Use a "*" here for concatenation operator.
// TODO(Zeke) change this to use relations.
// TODO(bug 12345): remove the "Last visitors" feature.
<pre>// TODO: bug 12345678 - Remove this after the 2047q4 compatibility window expires.
// TODO: example.com/my-design-doc - Manually fix up this code the next time it's touched.
// TODO(bug 12345678): Update this list after the Foo service is turned down.
// TODO(John): Use a "\*" here for concatenation operator.
</pre>
</div>