This is a somewhat involved refactoring of this class. Here's an overview of the changes:
* FileWrapper can now be used as a regular class and instances allocated on the stack.
* The type now has support for move semantics and copy isn't allowed.
* New public ctor with FILE* that can be used instead of OpenFromFileHandle.
* New static Open() method. The intent of this is to allow opening a file and getting back a FileWrapper instance. Using this method instead of Create(), will allow us in the future to make the FILE* member pointer, to be const and simplify threading (get rid of the lock).
* Rename the Open() method to is_open() and make it inline.
* The FileWrapper interface is no longer a pure virtual interface. There's only one implementation so there's no need to go through a vtable for everything.
* Functionality offered by the class, is now reduced. No support for looping (not clear if that was actually useful to users of that flag), no need to implement the 'read_only_' functionality in the class, since file APIs implement that already, no support for *not* managing the file handle (this wasn't used). OpenFromFileHandle always "manages" the file.
* Delete the unused WriteText() method and don't support opening files in text mode. Text mode is only different on Windows and on Windows it translates \n to \r\n, which means that files such as log files, could have a slightly different format on Windows than other platforms. Besides, tools on Windows can handle UNIX line endings.
* Remove FileName(), change Trace code to manage its own path.
* Rename id_ member variable to file_.
* Removed the open_ member variable since the same functionality can be gotten from just checking the file pointer.
* Don't call CloseFile inside of Write. Write shouldn't be changing the state of the class beyond just attempting to write.
* Remove concept of looping from FileWrapper and never close inside of Read()
* Changed stream base classes to inherit from a common base class instead of both defining the Rewind method. Ultimately, Id' like to remove these interfaces and just have FileWrapper.
* Remove read_only param from OpenFromFileHandle
* Renamed size_in_bytes_ to position_, since it gets set to 0 when Rewind() is called (and the size actually does not change).
* Switch out rw lock for CriticalSection. The r/w lock was only used for reading when checking the open_ flag.
BUG=
Review-Url: https://codereview.webrtc.org/2054373002
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#13155}
Reason for revert:
Broke downstream compile step, possibly relandable when using a MSVC version that has constexpr, other than that I'm out of ideas.
.../webrtc/base/atomicops.h:71:8: note: no known conversion for argument 1 from '<brace-enclosed initializer list>' to 'const rtc::AtomicInt&'
Original issue's description:
> Reland of "Create rtc::AtomicInt POD struct."
>
> Relands https://codereview.webrtc.org/1420043008/ with brace initializers
> instead of constructors hoping that they won't introduce static
> initializers.
>
> BUG=
> R=tommi@webrtc.org
>
> Committed: https://crrev.com/84f0970d100e67a1dc4fe9a1b16b7d293302044e
> Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#10920}
TBR=tommi@webrtc.org
NOPRESUBMIT=true
NOTREECHECKS=true
NOTRY=true
BUG=
Review URL: https://codereview.webrtc.org/1505053002
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#10922}
Using explicit atomic operations permits TSan to understand them and
prevents false positives.
Downgrading the atomic Load to acquire semantics. This reduces the
number of memory barriers inserted from two down to one at most.
Also renaming Load/Store to AcquireLoad/ReleaseStore.
BUG=chromium:512382
R=dvyukov@chromium.org, glider@chromium.orgTBR=tommi@webrtc.org
Review URL: https://codereview.webrtc.org/1246073002
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#9613}
Removes FixedSizeLockFreeQueue which isn't used anymore. This enabled
moving rtc::AtomicOps to webrtc/base/atomicops.h where they should be.
BUG=4330
R=tommi@webrtc.org
Review URL: https://webrtc-codereview.appspot.com/51789004
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#9120}
I mistakenly ommitted the checks when logging.h was ported from
libjingle to webrtc. This caused a significant CPU cost for logs which
were later filtered out anyway.
Verified with LS_VERBOSE logging in neteq4, running:
$ out/Release/modules_unittests \
--gtest_filter=NetEqDecodingTest.TestBitExactness \
--gtest_repeat=50 > time.txt
$ grep "case ran" time.txt | grep "[0-9]* ms" -o | sort
Results on a MacBook Retina, averaged over 5 runs:
Verbose logs disabled: 666 ms
Exisiting implementation, verbose logs enabled: 944 ms (1.42x)
New implementation, verbose logs enabled: 673 ms (1.01x)
BUG=2314
R=henrik.lundin@webrtc.org, henrike@webrtc.org, kjellander@webrtc.org, turaj@webrtc.org
Review URL: https://webrtc-codereview.appspot.com/2160005
git-svn-id: http://webrtc.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@4682 4adac7df-926f-26a2-2b94-8c16560cd09d
Add a highly stripped-down version of libjingle's base/logging.h. It is
a thin wrapper around WEBRTC_TRACE, maintaining the libjingle log
semantics to ease a transition to that format.
Also add some helper macros for easy API and function failure logging.
Review URL: https://webrtc-codereview.appspot.com/931010
git-svn-id: http://webrtc.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@3099 4adac7df-926f-26a2-2b94-8c16560cd09d