#pragma once /* tests/constructor_stats.h -- framework for printing and tracking object instance lifetimes in example/test code. Copyright (c) 2016 Jason Rhinelander All rights reserved. Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be found in the LICENSE file. This header provides a few useful tools for writing examples or tests that want to check and/or display object instance lifetimes. It requires that you include this header and add the following function calls to constructors: class MyClass { MyClass() { ...; print_default_created(this); } ~MyClass() { ...; print_destroyed(this); } MyClass(const MyClass &c) { ...; print_copy_created(this); } MyClass(MyClass &&c) { ...; print_move_created(this); } MyClass(int a, int b) { ...; print_created(this, a, b); } MyClass &operator=(const MyClass &c) { ...; print_copy_assigned(this); } MyClass &operator=(MyClass &&c) { ...; print_move_assigned(this); } ... } You can find various examples of these in several of the existing testing .cpp files. (Of course you don't need to add any of the above constructors/operators that you don't actually have, except for the destructor). Each of these will print an appropriate message such as: ### MyClass @ 0x2801910 created via default constructor ### MyClass @ 0x27fa780 created 100 200 ### MyClass @ 0x2801910 destroyed ### MyClass @ 0x27fa780 destroyed You can also include extra arguments (such as the 100, 200 in the output above, coming from the value constructor) for all of the above methods which will be included in the output. For testing, each of these also keeps track the created instances and allows you to check how many of the various constructors have been invoked from the Python side via code such as: from pybind11_tests import ConstructorStats cstats = ConstructorStats.get(MyClass) print(cstats.alive()) print(cstats.default_constructions) Note that `.alive()` should usually be the first thing you call as it invokes Python's garbage collector to actually destroy objects that aren't yet referenced. For everything except copy and move constructors and destructors, any extra values given to the print_...() function is stored in a class-specific values list which you can retrieve and inspect from the ConstructorStats instance `.values()` method. In some cases, when you need to track instances of a C++ class not registered with pybind11, you need to add a function returning the ConstructorStats for the C++ class; this can be done with: m.def("get_special_cstats", &ConstructorStats::get, py::return_value_policy::reference) Finally, you can suppress the output messages, but keep the constructor tracking (for inspection/testing in python) by using the functions with `print_` replaced with `track_` (e.g. `track_copy_created(this)`). */ #include "pybind11_tests.h" #include #include #include #include class ConstructorStats { protected: std::unordered_map _instances; // Need a map rather than set because members can shared address with parents std::list _values; // Used to track values (e.g. of value constructors) public: int default_constructions = 0; int copy_constructions = 0; int move_constructions = 0; int copy_assignments = 0; int move_assignments = 0; void copy_created(void *inst) { created(inst); copy_constructions++; } void move_created(void *inst) { created(inst); move_constructions++; } void default_created(void *inst) { created(inst); default_constructions++; } void created(void *inst) { ++_instances[inst]; } void destroyed(void *inst) { if (--_instances[inst] < 0) throw std::runtime_error("cstats.destroyed() called with unknown " "instance; potential double-destruction " "or a missing cstats.created()"); } static void gc() { // Force garbage collection to ensure any pending destructors are invoked: #if defined(PYPY_VERSION) PyObject *globals = PyEval_GetGlobals(); PyObject *result = PyRun_String( "import gc\n" "for i in range(2):" " gc.collect()\n", Py_file_input, globals, globals); if (result == nullptr) throw py::error_already_set(); Py_DECREF(result); #else py::module::import("gc").attr("collect")(); #endif } int alive() { gc(); int total = 0; for (const auto &p : _instances) if (p.second > 0) total += p.second; return total; } void value() {} // Recursion terminator // Takes one or more values, converts them to strings, then stores them. template void value(const T &v, Tmore &&...args) { std::ostringstream oss; oss << v; _values.push_back(oss.str()); value(std::forward(args)...); } // Move out stored values py::list values() { py::list l; for (const auto &v : _values) l.append(py::cast(v)); _values.clear(); return l; } // Gets constructor stats from a C++ type index static ConstructorStats& get(std::type_index type) { static std::unordered_map all_cstats; return all_cstats[type]; } // Gets constructor stats from a C++ type template static ConstructorStats& get() { #if defined(PYPY_VERSION) gc(); #endif return get(typeid(T)); } // Gets constructor stats from a Python class static ConstructorStats& get(py::object class_) { auto &internals = py::detail::get_internals(); const std::type_index *t1 = nullptr, *t2 = nullptr; try { auto *type_info = internals.registered_types_py.at((PyTypeObject *) class_.ptr()).at(0); for (auto &p : internals.registered_types_cpp) { if (p.second == type_info) { if (t1) { t2 = &p.first; break; } t1 = &p.first; } } } catch (const std::out_of_range &) {} if (!t1) throw std::runtime_error("Unknown class passed to ConstructorStats::get()"); auto &cs1 = get(*t1); // If we have both a t1 and t2 match, one is probably the trampoline class; return whichever // has more constructions (typically one or the other will be 0) if (t2) { auto &cs2 = get(*t2); int cs1_total = cs1.default_constructions + cs1.copy_constructions + cs1.move_constructions + (int) cs1._values.size(); int cs2_total = cs2.default_constructions + cs2.copy_constructions + cs2.move_constructions + (int) cs2._values.size(); if (cs2_total > cs1_total) return cs2; } return cs1; } }; // To track construction/destruction, you need to call these methods from the various // constructors/operators. The ones that take extra values record the given values in the // constructor stats values for later inspection. template void track_copy_created(T *inst) { ConstructorStats::get().copy_created(inst); } template void track_move_created(T *inst) { ConstructorStats::get().move_created(inst); } template void track_copy_assigned(T *, Values &&...values) { auto &cst = ConstructorStats::get(); cst.copy_assignments++; cst.value(std::forward(values)...); } template void track_move_assigned(T *, Values &&...values) { auto &cst = ConstructorStats::get(); cst.move_assignments++; cst.value(std::forward(values)...); } template void track_default_created(T *inst, Values &&...values) { auto &cst = ConstructorStats::get(); cst.default_created(inst); cst.value(std::forward(values)...); } template void track_created(T *inst, Values &&...values) { auto &cst = ConstructorStats::get(); cst.created(inst); cst.value(std::forward(values)...); } template void track_destroyed(T *inst) { ConstructorStats::get().destroyed(inst); } template void track_values(T *, Values &&...values) { ConstructorStats::get().value(std::forward(values)...); } /// Don't cast pointers to Python, print them as strings inline const char *format_ptrs(const char *p) { return p; } template py::str format_ptrs(T *p) { return "{:#x}"_s.format(reinterpret_cast(p)); } template auto format_ptrs(T &&x) -> decltype(std::forward(x)) { return std::forward(x); } template void print_constr_details(T *inst, const std::string &action, Output &&...output) { py::print("###", py::type_id(), "@", format_ptrs(inst), action, format_ptrs(std::forward(output))...); } // Verbose versions of the above: template void print_copy_created(T *inst, Values &&...values) { // NB: this prints, but doesn't store, given values print_constr_details(inst, "created via copy constructor", values...); track_copy_created(inst); } template void print_move_created(T *inst, Values &&...values) { // NB: this prints, but doesn't store, given values print_constr_details(inst, "created via move constructor", values...); track_move_created(inst); } template void print_copy_assigned(T *inst, Values &&...values) { print_constr_details(inst, "assigned via copy assignment", values...); track_copy_assigned(inst, values...); } template void print_move_assigned(T *inst, Values &&...values) { print_constr_details(inst, "assigned via move assignment", values...); track_move_assigned(inst, values...); } template void print_default_created(T *inst, Values &&...values) { print_constr_details(inst, "created via default constructor", values...); track_default_created(inst, values...); } template void print_created(T *inst, Values &&...values) { print_constr_details(inst, "created", values...); track_created(inst, values...); } template void print_destroyed(T *inst, Values &&...values) { // Prints but doesn't store given values print_constr_details(inst, "destroyed", values...); track_destroyed(inst); } template void print_values(T *inst, Values &&...values) { print_constr_details(inst, ":", values...); track_values(inst, values...); }