The existing comment is wrong, and the test even ensures it: Bind will capture reference values by reference. That makes it hard to use with AsyncInvoker, because you can't safely Bind to a function that takes (const) reference params.
The new version of this code strips references in the bound object, so it captures by value, but can bind against functions that take const references, they'll just be references to the copy.
As the class comment implies, actual by-reference args should be passed as pointers or things that safely share (e.g. scoped_refptr) and not references directly. A new test case ensures the pointer reference works. The new code will also give a compiler error if you try to bind
to a non-const reference.
BUG=
Review URL: https://codereview.webrtc.org/1291543006
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#10397}
This CL makes AddRef() and Release() const member methods and the refcount integer mutable. This is reasonable, because they only manage the lifetime of the object, and this is also how it's done in Chromium.
The purpose is to be able to capture a const pointer in a scoped_refptr, which is currenty impossible. The practial problem this CL solves is this:
void Foo::Bar() const {}
rtc::Callback0<void> Foo::MakeClosure() const {
return rtc::Bind(&Foo::Bar, this);
}
We currently capture |this| as const Foo*. With this CL, |this| will be captured as scoped_refptr<const Foo>.
A test is also added in bind_unittest to check this behaviour.
BUG=webrtc:5065
R=perkj@webrtc.org, tommi@webrtc.org
Review URL: https://codereview.webrtc.org/1403683004 .
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#10253}