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							- // Copyright 2017 The Abseil Authors.
 
- //
 
- // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
 
- // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
 
- // You may obtain a copy of the License at
 
- //
 
- //      https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 
- //
 
- // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 
- // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
 
- // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
 
- // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
 
- // limitations under the License.
 
- //
 
- // -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
- // kConstInit
 
- // -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
- //
 
- // A constructor tag used to mark an object as safe for use as a global
 
- // variable, avoiding the usual lifetime issues that can affect globals.
 
- #ifndef ABSL_BASE_CONST_INIT_H_
 
- #define ABSL_BASE_CONST_INIT_H_
 
- #include "absl/base/config.h"
 
- // In general, objects with static storage duration (such as global variables)
 
- // can trigger tricky object lifetime situations.  Attempting to access them
 
- // from the constructors or destructors of other global objects can result in
 
- // undefined behavior, unless their constructors and destructors are designed
 
- // with this issue in mind.
 
- //
 
- // The normal way to deal with this issue in C++11 is to use constant
 
- // initialization and trivial destructors.
 
- //
 
- // Constant initialization is guaranteed to occur before any other code
 
- // executes.  Constructors that are declared 'constexpr' are eligible for
 
- // constant initialization.  You can annotate a variable declaration with the
 
- // ABSL_CONST_INIT macro to express this intent.  For compilers that support
 
- // it, this annotation will cause a compilation error for declarations that
 
- // aren't subject to constant initialization (perhaps because a runtime value
 
- // was passed as a constructor argument).
 
- //
 
- // On program shutdown, lifetime issues can be avoided on global objects by
 
- // ensuring that they contain  trivial destructors.  A class has a trivial
 
- // destructor unless it has a user-defined destructor, a virtual method or base
 
- // class, or a data member or base class with a non-trivial destructor of its
 
- // own.  Objects with static storage duration and a trivial destructor are not
 
- // cleaned up on program shutdown, and are thus safe to access from other code
 
- // running during shutdown.
 
- //
 
- // For a few core Abseil classes, we make a best effort to allow for safe global
 
- // instances, even though these classes have non-trivial destructors.  These
 
- // objects can be created with the absl::kConstInit tag.  For example:
 
- //   ABSL_CONST_INIT absl::Mutex global_mutex(absl::kConstInit);
 
- //
 
- // The line above declares a global variable of type absl::Mutex which can be
 
- // accessed at any point during startup or shutdown.  global_mutex's destructor
 
- // will still run, but will not invalidate the object.  Note that C++ specifies
 
- // that accessing an object after its destructor has run results in undefined
 
- // behavior, but this pattern works on the toolchains we support.
 
- //
 
- // The absl::kConstInit tag should only be used to define objects with static
 
- // or thread_local storage duration.
 
- namespace absl {
 
- ABSL_NAMESPACE_BEGIN
 
- enum ConstInitType {
 
-   kConstInit,
 
- };
 
- ABSL_NAMESPACE_END
 
- }  // namespace absl
 
- #endif  // ABSL_BASE_CONST_INIT_H_
 
 
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