I am trying to use boost::interprocess
to allocate a very simple data structure in shared memory but I cannot quite figure out how to use the boost interprocess allocators to perform the memory allocations/deallocations within the shared memory segment which I allocate as follows
using namespace boost::interprocess;
shared_memory_object::remove("MySharedMem");
mSharedMemory = std::make_unique<managed_shared_memory>(
open_or_create, "MySharedMem", 65536);
I previously asked a similar question but unfortunately I never got any answers. MyStruct
below is essentially an array with a length field indicating the size of the array. For now I have a simple length field but I will add some other constructor arguments later (bool's and other simple types).
In order to allocate this in the shared memory segment, I know I have to do something with allocators but I cannot find a similar example where I have a user defined type containing an array/pointer field.
using MyType = struct MyType {
explicit MyType(const size_t aSize)
: mSize(aSize)
, mpData(new char[aSize])
{}
~MyType() {
delete[]mpData;
}
size_t mSize;
char * mpData;
};
using MyTypeAllocator = boost::interprocess::allocator<MyType,
boost::interprocess::managed_shared_memory::segment_manager>;
// Initialize the shared memory STL-compatible allocator
MyTypeAllocator alloc(mSharedMemory->get_segment_manager());
Just don't do manual allocation. If you want a contiguous allocation of aSize
elements of type char
, that's what C++ has std::vector
for.
Best of all, std::vector
already knows how to use another allocator, so there is really no reason not to use it:
template <typename Alloc>
struct MyType {
explicit MyType(size_t aSize, Alloc alloc = {}) : mData(aSize, alloc) {}
private:
std::vector<char, Alloc> mData;
};
Now to play well with standard library construct/scoped allocators, you might want to define the allocator_type
nested type:
using allocator_type = Alloc; // typename Alloc::template rebind<char>::other;
That's all. Just use it as any standard library type that has an allocator:
int main() {
using namespace Shared;
Shared::remove("MySharedMem");
auto memory = Segment(create_only, "MySharedMem", 65536);
using A = Alloc<char>;
A alloc(memory.get_segment_manager());
auto* data = memory.find_or_construct<MyType<A>>("data")(1024, memory.get_segment_manager());
return data? 0 : 255;
}
I created a few convenience typedefs in the Shared
namespace, for maintainability. Here's the full sample
Full Sample
Live On Coliru ¹
#include <boost/interprocess/managed_shared_memory.hpp>
#include <vector>
template <typename Alloc>
struct MyType {
using allocator_type = typename Alloc::template rebind<char>::other;
explicit MyType(size_t aSize, Alloc alloc = {}) : mData(aSize, alloc) {}
private:
std::vector<char, Alloc> mData;
};
namespace Shared {
namespace bip = boost::interprocess;
using Segment = bip::managed_shared_memory;
using Manager = Segment::segment_manager;
template <typename T>
using Alloc = bip::allocator<T, Manager>;
void remove(char const* name) { bip::shared_memory_object::remove(name); }
using bip::create_only;
}
int main() {
using namespace Shared;
Shared::remove("MySharedMem");
auto memory = Segment(create_only, "MySharedMem", 65536);
using A = Alloc<char>;
A alloc(memory.get_segment_manager());
auto* data = memory.find_or_construct<MyType<A>>("data")(1024, memory.get_segment_manager());
return data? 0 : 255;
}
¹ For Coliru uses managed mapped file because shared memory is not supported there