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Memory Layout for Multiple and Virtual Inheritance
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Note that the first attribute is the attribute inherited from Top
. This means that after the following two assignments
Left* left = new Left(); Top* top = left;
left
and top
can point to the exact same address, and we can treat the Left
object as if it were a Top
object (and obviously a similar thing happens for Right
). What about Bottom
?gcc suggests
Bottom |
---|
Left::Top::a |
Left::b |
Right::Top::a |
Right::c |
Bottom::d |
Now what happens when we upcast a Bottom
pointer?
Bottom* bottom = new Bottom(); Left* left = bottom;
This works out nicely. Because of the memory layout, we can treat an object of type Bottom
as if it were an object of type Left
, because the memory layout of both classes coincide. However, what happens when we upcast to Right
?
Right* right = bottom;
For this to work, we have to adjust the pointer value to make it point to the corresponding section of the Bottom
layout:
Bottom | |
---|---|
Left::Top::a | |
Left::b | |
right | Right::Top::a |
Right::c | |
Bottom::d |
After this adjustment, we can access bottom
through the right
pointer as a normal Right
object; however, bottom
and right
now point to different memory locations. For completeness' sake, consider what would happen when we do
Top* top = bottom;
Right, nothing at all. This statement is ambiguous: the compiler will complain
error: `Top' is an ambiguous base of `Bottom'
The two possibilities can be disambiguated using
Top* topL = (Left*) bottom; Top* topR = (Right*) bottom;
After these two assignments, topL
and left
will point to the same address, as will topR
and right
.
Virtual Inheritance
To avoid the repeated inheritance of Top
, we must inherit virtually from Top
:
class Top { public: int a; }; class Left : virtual public Top { public: int b; }; class Right : virtual public Top { public: int c; }; class Bottom : public Left, public Right { public: int d; };
This yields the following hierarchy (which is perhaps what you expected in the first place)
while this may seem more obvious and simpler from a programmer's point of view, from the compiler's point of view, this is vastly more complicated. Consider the layout of Bottom
again. One (non) possibility is
Bottom |
---|
Left::Top::a |
Left::b |
Right::c |
Bottom::d |
The advantage of this layout is that the first part of the layout collides with the layout of Left
, and we can thus access a Bottom
easily through a Left
pointer. However, what are we going to do with
Right* right = bottom;
Which address do we assign to right
? After this assignment, we should be able to use right
as if it were pointing to a regular Right
object. However, this is impossible! The memory layout of Right
itself is completely different, and we can thus no longer access a “real” Right
object in the same way as an upcasted Bottom
object. Moreover, no other (simple) layout for Bottom
will work.
The solution is non-trivial. We will show the solution first and then explain it.
You should note two things in this diagram. First, the order of the fields is completely different (in fact, it is approximately the reverse). Second, there are these new vptr
pointers. These attributes are automatically inserted by the compiler when necessary (when using virtual inheritance, or when using virtual functions). The compiler also inserts code into the constructor to initialise these pointers.
The vptr
s (virtual pointers) index a “virtual table”. There is a vptr
for every virtual base of the class. To see how the virtual table (vtable) is used, consider the following C++ code.
Bottom* bottom = new Bottom(); Left* left = bottom; int p = left->a;
The second assignment makes left
point to the same address as bottom
(i.e., it points to the “top” of the Bottom
object). We consider the compilation of the last assignment (slightly simplified):
movl left, %eax # %eax = left movl (%eax), %eax # %eax = left.vptr.Left movl (%eax), %eax # %eax = virtual base offset addl left, %eax # %eax = left + virtual base offset movl (%eax), %eax # %eax = left.a movl %eax, p # p = left.a
In words, we use left
to index the virtual table and obtain the “virtual base offset” (vbase). This offset is then added to left
, which is then used to index the Top
section of the Bottom
object. From the diagram, you can see that the virtual base offset for Left
is 20; if you assume that all the fields in Bottom
are 4 bytes, you will see that adding 20 bytes to left
will indeed point to the a
field.
With this setup, we can access the Right
part the same way. After
Bottom* bottom = new Bottom(); Right* right = bottom; int p = right->a;
right
will point to the appropriate part of the Bottom
object:
Bottom | |
---|---|
vptr.Left | |
Left::b | |
right | vptr.Right |
Right::c | |
Bottom::d | |
Top::a |
The assignment to p
can now be compiled in the exact same way as we did previously for Left
. The only difference is that the vptr
we access now points to a different part of the virtual table: the virtual base offset we obtain is 12, which is correct (verify!). We can summarise this visually:
Of course, the point of the exercise was to be able to access real Right
objects the same way as upcasted Bottom
objects. So, we have to introduce vptr
s in the layout of Right
(andLeft
) too:
Now we can access a Bottom
object through a Right
pointer without further difficulty. However, this has come at rather large expense: we needed to introduce virtual tables, classes needed to be extended with one or more virtual pointers, and a simple attribute lookup in an object now needs two indirections through the virtual table (although compiler optimizations can reduce that cost somewhat).
Downcasting
As we have seen, casting a pointer of type DerivedClass
to a pointer of type SuperClass
(in other words, upcasting) may involve adding an offset to the pointer. One might be tempted to think that downcasting (going the other way) can then simply be implemented by subtracting the same offset. And indeed, this is the case for non-virtual inheritance. However, virtual inheritance (unsurprisingly!) introduces another complication.
Suppose we extend our inheritance hierarchy with the following class.
class AnotherBottom : public Left, public Right { public: int e; int f; };
The hierarchy now looks like
Now consider the following code.
Bottom* bottom1 = new Bottom(); AnotherBottom* bottom2 = new AnotherBottom(); Top* top1 = bottom1; Top* top2 = bottom2; Left* left = static_cast<Left*>(top1);
The following diagram shows the layout of Bottom
and AnotherBottom
, and shows where top
is pointing after the last assignment.
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Now consider how to implement the static cast from top1
to left
, while taking into account that we do not know whether top1
is pointing to an object of type Bottom
or an object of type AnotherBottom
. It can't be done! The necessary offset depends on the runtime type of top1
(20 for Bottom
and 24 for AnotherBottom
). The compiler will complain:
error: cannot convert from base `Top' to derived type `Left' via virtual base `Top'
Since we need runtime information, we need to use a dynamic cast instead:
Left* left = dynamic_cast<Left*>(top1);
However, the compiler is still unhappy:
error: cannot dynamic_cast `top' (of type `class Top*') to type `class Left*' (source type is not polymorphic)
The problem is that a dynamic cast (as well as use of typeid
) needs runtime type information about the object pointed to by top1
. However, if you look at the diagram, you will see that all we have at the location pointed to by top1
is an integer (a
). The compiler did not include a vptr.Top
because it did not think that was necessary. To force the compiler to include this vptr
, we can add a virtual destructor to Top
:
class Top
{
public:
virtual ~Top() {}
int a;
};
This change necessitates a vptr
for Top
. The new layout for Bottom
is
(Of course, the other classes get a similar new vptr.Top
attribute). The compiler now inserts a library call for the dynamic cast:
left = __dynamic_cast(top1, typeinfo_for_Top, typeinfo_for_Left, -1);
This function __dynamic_cast
is defined in libstdc++ (the corresponding header file is cxxabi.h); armed with the type information for Top
, Left
and Bottom
(through vptr.Top
), the cast can be executed. (The -1 parameter indicates that the relationship between Left
and Top
is presently unknown). For details, refer to the implementation in tinfo.cc.
Concluding Remarks
Finally, we tie a couple of loose ends.(In)variance of Double Pointers
This is were it gets slightly confusing, although it is rather obvious when you give it some thought. We consider an example. Assume the class hierarchy presented in the last section (Downcasting). We have seen previously what the effect is of
Bottom* b = new Bottom(); Right* r = b;
(the value of b
gets adjusted by 8 bytes before it is assigned to r
, so that it points to the Right
section of the Bottom
object). Thus, we can legally assign a Bottom*
to a Right*
. What about Bottom**
and Right**
?
Bottom** bb = &b; Right** rr = bb;
Should the compiler accept this? A quick test will show that the compiler will complain:
error: invalid conversion from `Bottom**' to `Right**'
Why? Suppose the compiler would accept the assignment of bb
to rr
. We can visualise the result as:
So, bb
and rr
both point to b
, and b
and r
point to the appropriate sections of the Bottom
object. Now consider what happens when we assign to *rr
(note that the type of *rr
isRight*
, so this assignment is valid):
*rr = b;
This is essentially the same assignment as the assignment to r
above. Thus, the compiler will implement it the same way! In particular, it will adjust the value of b
by 8 bytes before it assigns it to *rr
. But *rr
pointed to b
! If we visualise the result again:
This is correct as long as we access the Bottom
object through *rr
, but as soon as we access it through b
itself, all memory references will be off by 8 bytes — obviously a very undesirable situation.
So, in summary, even if *a
and *b
are related by some subtyping relation, **a
and **b
are not.
Constructors of Virtual Bases
The compiler must guarantee that all virtual pointers of an object are properly initialised. In particular, it guarantees that the constructor for all virtual bases of a class get invoked, and get invoked only once. If you don't explicitly call the constructors of your virtual superclasses (independent of how far up the tree they are), the compiler will automatically insert a call to their default constructors.
This can lead to some unexpected results. Consider the same class hierarchy again we have been considering so far, extended with constructors:
class Top { public: Top() { a = -1; } Top(int _a) { a = _a; } int a; }; class Left : public Top { public: Left() { b = -2; } Left(int _a, int _b) : Top(_a) { b = _b; } int b; }; class Right : public Top { public: Right() { c = -3; } Right(int _a, int _c) : Top(_a) { c = _c; } int c; }; class Bottom : public Left, public Right { public: Bottom() { d = -4; } Bottom(int _a, int _b, int _c, int _d) : Left(_a, _b), Right(_a, _c) { d = _d; } int d; };
(We consider the non-virtual case first.) What would you expect this to output:
Bottom bottom(1,2,3,4); printf("%d %d %d %d %d\n", bottom.Left::a, bottom.Right::a, bottom.b, bottom.c, bottom.d);
You would probably expect (and get)
1 1 2 3 4
However, now consider the virtual case (where we inherit virtually from Top
). If we make that single change, and run the program again, we instead get
-1 -1 2 3 4
Why? If you trace the execution of the constructors, you will find
Top::Top() Left::Left(1,2) Right::Right(1,3) Bottom::Bottom(1,2,3,4)
As explained above, the compiler has inserted a call to the default constructor in Bottom
, before the execution of the other constructors. Then when Left
tries to call its superconstructor (Top
), we find that Top
has already been initialised and the constructor does not get invoked.
To avoid this situation, you should explicitly call the constructor of your virtual base(s):
Bottom(int _a, int _b, int _c, int _d): Top(_a), Left(_a,_b), Right(_a,_c)
{
d = _d;
}
Pointer Equivalence
Once again assuming the same (virtual) class hierarchy, would you expect this to print “Equal”?
Bottom* b = new Bottom(); Right* r = b; if(r == b) printf("Equal!\n");
Bear in mind that the two addresses are not actually equal (r
is off by 8 bytes). However, that should be completely transparent to the user; so, the compiler actually subtracts the 8 bytes from r
before comparing it to b
; thus, the two addresses are considered equal.
Casting to void*
Finally, we consider what happens we can cast an object to void*
. The compiler must guarantee that a pointer cast to void*
points to the “top” of the object. Using the vtable, this is actually very easy to implement. You may have been wondering what the offset to top field is. It is the offset from the vptr
to the top of the object. So, a cast to void*
can be implemented using a single lookup in the vtable. Make sure to use a dynamic cast, however, thus:
dynamic_cast<void*>(b);
References
[1] CodeSourcery, in particular the C++ ABI Summary, the Itanium C++ ABI (despite the name, this document is referenced in a platform-independent context; in particular, thestructure of the vtables is detailed here). The libstdc++ implementation of dynamic casts, as well RTTI and name unmangling/demangling, is defined in tinfo.cc.
[2] The libstdc++ website, in particular the section on the C++ Standard Library API.
[3] C++: Under the Hood by Jan Gray.
[4] Chapter 9, “Multiple Inheritance” of Thinking in C++ (volume 2) by Bruce Eckel. The author has made this book available for download.
$LastChangedDate: 2009-05-31 14:03:14 +0100 (Sun, 31 May 2009) $. |