开发者

Can one extend virtual interface without recompilation of client code?

A library provides a class with virtual functions. Can this class be extended with new virtual functions without recompiling binaries dynamically linked to the library?

I beleive this is not possible i开发者_开发问答n standard. Are there platforms allowing this?

Would that be easier if new functions are only added to the end of the class body?


The standard is not concerned with binary compatibility. It is concerned though with classes, and by "changing" the definition of a class from one translation unit to another you indeed invoke undefined behavior.

Most compilers do allow a number of changes without the need for recompilation, however the list is small... and for this one I would say that it might not be possible, depending on the a priori knowledge of the derived classes.

The problem I foresee lies with the optimization that compilers usually carry out on the virtual tables.

When you create a class with virtual functions, you get a virtual table that looks like so:

// B virtual table
0 - Offset to complete object
1 - RTTI
2 - func0
3 - func1
...

In order to gain some space, the derived class own virtual functions are usually "appended":

// D virtual table
Same as B
N+3 - func(N+1)
N+4 - func(N+2)

This way a D object only has one virtual pointer, than can be used as such even when the type is (statically) a B (through pointer or reference).

However, if you were to extend B without recompiling D, then it would just plain crash, since when calling the N+1 function of B you would instead call the N+1 function of D which would probably not even have the same arguments... oups!

It can be done, though, if you know than no derived class add any virtual function of its own.

0

上一篇:

下一篇:

精彩评论

暂无评论...
验证码 换一张
取 消

最新问答

问答排行榜