| Document number | P0792R2 |
| Date | 2018-05-06 |
| Reply-to | Vittorio Romeo <vittorio.romeo@outlook.com> |
| Audience | Library Evolution Working Group (LEWG) |
| Project | ISO JTC1/SC22/WG21: Programming Language C++ |
function_ref: a non-owning reference to a CallableThis paper proposes the addition of function_ref<R(Args...)> to the Standard Library, a “vocabulary type” for non-owning references to Callable objects.
Made copy constructor and copy assignment = default;
Changed uses of std::decay_t to std::remove_cvref_t;
Added “exposition only” void* and pointer to function data members;
Moved “Open questions” section to “Annex: previously open questions”;
Change function_ref(F&&) constructor’s precondition to use remove_cvref_t to check if F is an instance of the function class template;
Dropped function_ref<Signature>:: qualification in member function specification.
We want to prevent construction of std::function from std::function_ref (but not other callable-taking things like std::bind).
SF F N A SA
0 0 4 8 0
We want to revise the paper to include discussion of ref-qualified callables.
SF F N A SA
0 3 6 6 0
Forward paper as-is to LWG for C++20?
SF F N A SA
3 9 3 0 0
Should the !f precondition when constructing function_ref from an instance f of std::function be removed? The behavior in that case is well-defined, as f is guarateed to throw on invocation.
The std::is_nothrow_invocable constraint in function_ref construction/assignment for noexcept signatures prevents users from providing a non-noexcept function, even if they know that it cannot ever throw (e.g. C functions). Should this constraint be removed? Should an explicit constructor without the constraint be provided?
Propagating const to function_ref::operator() doesn’t make sense when looking at function_ref as a simple “reference” class. const instances of function_ref should be able to invoke a mutable lambda, as the state of function_ref itself doesn’t change. E.g.
auto l0 = []() mutable { };
const function_ref<void()> fr{l0};
fr(); // Currently a compilation errorAn alternative is to only propagate noexcept from the signature to function_ref::operator(), and unconditionally const-qualify function_ref::operator(). Do we want this?
We want to avoid double indirection when a function_ref instance is initialized with a reference_wrapper. function_ref could just copy the pointer stored inside the reference_wrapper instead of pointing to the wrapper itself. This cannot be covered by the as-if rule as it changes program semantics. E.g.
auto l0 = []{ };
auto l1 = []{ };
auto rw = std::ref(l0);
function_ref<void()> fr{rw};
fr(); // Invokes `l0`
rw = l1;
fr(); // What is invoked?Is adding wording to handle std::reference_wrapper as a special case desirable?
Is it possible and desirable to remove function_ref’s template assignment operator from F&& and rely on an implicit conversion to function_ref + the default copy assignment operator?
Should function_ref only store a void* pointer for the callable object, or a union? In the first case, seemingly innocent usages will result in undefined behavior:
If a union is stored instead, the first usage could be well-formed without any extra overhead (assuming sizeof(void*) == sizeof(void(*)())). The second usage could also be made well-formed, but with size overhead as sizeof(void(C::*)()) > sizeof(void*).
Regardless, the exposition-only members should clearly illustrate the outcome of this decision.
Note that if we want the following to compile and be well-defined, a void(*)() would have to be stored inside function_ref:
Should the function_ref(F&&) deduction guide take its argument by value instead? This could simplify the wording.
Removed empty state and comparisons with nullptr;
Removed default constructor;
Added support for noexcept and const-qualified function signatures (these are propagated to function_ref::operator());
Added deduction guides for function pointers and arbitrary callable objects with well-formed &remove_reference_t<F>::operator();
Added two new bullet points to “Open questions”;
Added “Example implementation”;
Added “Feature test macro”;
Removed noexcept from constructor and assignment.
option 1
function_ref, non-nullable, not default constructible
option 2
function_ptr, nullable, default constructible
We want 1 and 2
SF F N A SA
1 2 8 3 6
ref vs ptr
SR R N P SP
6 5 2 5 0
The poll above clearly shows that the desired direction for function_ref is towards a non nullable, non default-constructible reference type. This revision (P0792R2) removes the “empty state” and default constructibility from the proposed function_ref. If those semantics are required by users, they can trivially wrap function_ref into an std::optional<function_ref</* ... */>>.
target and target_typeWe want target and target-type (consistent with std::function) if they have no overhead
Unanimous consent
We want target and target-type (consistent with std::function) even though they have overhead
SF F N A SA
0 0 1 9 4
I am not sure whether target and target_type can be implemented without introducing overhead. I seek the guidance of the committee or any interested reader to figure that out. If they require overhead, I agree with the poll: they will be left out of the proposal.
Since the advent of C++11 writing more functional code has become easier: functional programming patterns and idioms have become powerful additions to the C++ developer’s toolbox. “Higher-order functions” are one of the key ideas of the functional paradigm - in short, they are functions that take functions as arguments and/or return functions as results.
The need of referring to an existing Callable object comes up often when writing functional C++ code, but the Standard Library unfortunately doesn’t provide a flexible facility that allows to do so. Let’s consider the existing utilities:
Pointers to functions are only useful when the entity they refer to is stateless (i.e. a non-member function or a capture-less lambda), but they are cumbersome to use otherwise. Fully supporting the Callable concept requires also explicitly dealing with pointers to member functions and pointers to data members.
std::function seamlessly works with Callable objects, but it’s a “general-purpose polymorphic function wrapper” that may introduce unnecessary overhead and that owns the Callable it stores. std::function is a great choice when an owning type-erased wrapper is required, but it’s often abused when its ownership semantics and its flexibility are not required.
Note that when std::function is constructed/assigned with a std::reference_wrapper to a Callable, it has reference semantics.
Another limitation of std::function is the fact that the stored Callable must be CopyConstructible.
Templates can be used to avoid unnecessary costs and to uniformly handle any Callable object, but they are hard to constrain to a particular signature and force code to be defined in headers.
This paper proposes the introduction of a new function_ref class template, which is akin to std::string_view. This paper describes function_ref as a non-owning lightweight wrapper over any Callable object.
Here’s one example use case that benefits from higher-order functions: a retry(n, f) function that attempts to synchronously call f up to n times until success. This example might model the real-world scenario of repeatedly querying a flaky web service.
struct payload { /* ... */ };
// Repeatedly invokes `action` up to `times` repetitions.
// Immediately returns if `action` returns a valid `payload`.
// Returns `std::nullopt` otherwise.
std::optional<payload> retry(std::size_t times, /* ????? */ action);The passed-in action should be a Callable which takes no arguments and returns std::optional<payload>. Let’s see how retry can be implemented with various techniques:
Using pointers to functions:
Advantages:
Easy to implement: no need to use a template or any explicit constraint (e.g. std::enable_if_t<...>). The type of the pointer specifies exactly which functions can be passed, no extra constraints are required.
Minimal overhead: no allocations, no exceptions, and action is as big as a pointer.
action, producing optimal assembly.Drawbacks:
Callable objects.Using a template:
template <typename F>
auto retry(std::size_t times, F&& action)
-> std::enable_if_t<std::is_invocable_r_v<std::optional<payload>, F&&>,
std::optional<payload>>
{
/* ... */
}Advantages:
Supports arbitrary Callable objects, such as stateful closures.
Zero-overhead: no allocations, no exceptions, no indirections.
Drawbacks:
Harder to implement and less readable: users must use std::enable_if_t and std::invocable_r_v to ensure that action’s signature is properly constrained.
retry must be defined in a header file. This might be undesiderable when trying to minimize compilation times.
Using std::function:
std::optional<payload> retry(std::size_t times,
std::function<std::optional<payload>()> action)
{
/* ... */
}Advantages:
Supports arbitrary Callable objects, such as stateful closures.
Easy to implement: no need to use a template or any explicit constraint. The type fully constrains what can be passed.
Drawbacks:
Unclear ownership semantics: action might either own the the stored Callable, or just refer to an existing Callable if initialized with a std::reference_wrapper.
Can potentially have significant overhead:
Even though the implementation makes use of SBO (small buffer optimization), std::function might allocate if the stored object is large enough. This requires one extra branch on construction/assignment, one potential dynamic allocation, and makes action as big as the size of the internal buffer.
If the implementation doesn’t make use of SBO, std::function will always allocate on construction/assignment.
Modern compilers are not able to inline std::function, often resulting in very poor assembly compared to the previously mentioned techniques.
Mandatory use of exceptions: std::function might throw if an allocation fails, and throws std::bad_function_call if it’s invoked while unset.
Using the proposed function_ref:
std::optional<payload> retry(std::size_t times,
function_ref<std::optional<payload>()> action)
{
/* ... */
}Advantages:
Supports arbitrary Callable objects, such as stateful closures.
Easy to implement: no need to use a template or any constraint. The type fully constrains what can be passed.
Clear ownership semantics: action is a non-owning reference to an existing Callable.
Small overhead: no allocations, no exceptions, and action is as big as two pointers.
action, producing optimal assembly.This proposal is a pure library extension. It does not require changes to any existing part of the Standard.
The only existing viable alternative to function_ref currently is std::function + std::reference_wrapper. The Standard guarantees that when a std::reference_wrapper is used to construct/assign to a std::function no allocations will occur and no exceptions will be thrown.
Using std::function for non-owning references is suboptimal for various reasons.
The ownership semantics of a std::function are unclear - they change depending on whether or not the std::function was constructed/assigned with a std::reference_wrapper.
This technique doesn’t work with temporaries. This is a huge drawback as it prevents stateful temporary lambdas from being passed as callbacks.
void foo(std::function<void()> f);
int main()
{
int x = 0;
foo(std::ref([&x]{ ++x; }); // does not compile
}The code above doesn’t compile, as std::ref only accepts non-const lvalue references (additionally, std::cref is explicitly deleted for rvalue references). Avoiding the use of std::ref breaks the guarantee that f won’t allocate or throw an exception on construction.
std::function is harder for compilers to optimize compared to the proposed function_ref. This is true due to various reasons:
std::function can allocate and/or throw exceptions on construction and/or assigment.
std::function might use SBO, which could require an additional branch during construction/assignment, make inlining more difficult, and unnecessarily increase memory usage.
Rough benchmarks comparing the generated assembly of a std::function parameter and a function_ref parameter against a template parameter show that:
std::function, on average, generates approximately 5x more assembly than a template parameter.
function_ref, on average, generates approximately 1.5x more assembly than a template parameter.
A description of the benchmarking techniques used and the full results can be found on my article “passing functions to functions” 1.
namespace std
{
template <typename Signature>
class function_ref
{
void* object; // exposition only
R(*erased_function)(Args...) qualifiers; // exposition only
// `R`, `Args...`, and `qualifiers` are the return type, the parameter-type-list,
// and the sequence "cv-qualifier-seq-opt noexcept-specifier-opt" of the function
// type `Signature`, respectively.
public:
constexpr function_ref(const function_ref&) noexcept = default;
template <typename F>
constexpr function_ref(F&&);
constexpr function_ref& operator=(const function_ref&) noexcept = default;
template <typename F>
constexpr function_ref& operator=(F&&);
constexpr void swap(function_ref&) noexcept;
R operator()(Args...) qualifiers;
// `R`, `Args...`, and `qualifiers` are the return type, the parameter-type-list,
// and the sequence "cv-qualifier-seq-opt noexcept-specifier-opt" of the function
// type `Signature`, respectively.
};
template <typename Signature>
constexpr void swap(function_ref<Signature>&, function_ref<Signature>&) noexcept;
template <typename R, typename... Args>
function_ref(R (*)(Args...)) -> function_ref<R(Args...)>;
template <typename R, typename... Args>
function_ref(R (*)(Args...) noexcept) -> function_ref<R(Args...) noexcept>;
template <typename F>
function_ref(F&&) -> function_ref<see below>;
}The template argument Signature shall be a non-volatile-qualified function type.
<functional> headerAdd the following to [functional.syn]:
namespace std
{
// ...
template <typename Signature> class function_ref;
template <typename Signature>
constexpr void swap(function_ref<Signature>& lhs, function_ref<Signature>& rhs) noexcept;
// ...
}function_ref referring to the same callable rhs refers to.Requires: none of the following must hold:
f is a null function pointer value.
f is a null member pointer value.
remove_cvref_t<F> is an instance of the function class template, and !f.
Effects: constructs a function_ref referring to f.
Remarks: This constructor shall not participate in overload resolution unless is_same_v<remove_cvref_t<F>, function_ref> is false and:
If Signature is marked noexcept: is_nothrow_invocable_r_v<R, cv-qualifiers F&, Args...>;
Otherwise: is_invocable_r_v<R, cv-qualifiers F&, Args...>.
Where R, Args..., and cv-qualifiers are the return type, the parameter-type-list, and the sequence “cv-qualifier-seq-opt” of the function type Signature, respectively.
Postconditions: *this refers to the same callable rhs refers to.
Returns: *this.
Requires: none of the following must hold:
f is a null function pointer value.
f is a null member pointer value.
F is an instance of the function class template, and !f.
Remarks: This function shall not participate in overload resolution unless is_same_v<remove_cvref_t<F>, function_ref> is false and:
If Signature is marked noexcept: is_nothrow_invocable_r_v<R, cv-qualifiers F&, Args...>;
Otherwise: is_invocable_r_v<R, cv-qualifiers F&, Args...>.
Postconditions: *this refers to f.
Returns: *this.
*this and rhs.return INVOKE<R>(f, std::forward<Args>(xs)...);, where f is the callable object referred to by *this, qualified with the same cv-qualifiers as the function type Signature.&remove_reference_t<F>::operator() is well-formed when treated as an unevaluated operand. In that case, if decltype(&remove_reference_t<F>::operator()) is of the form R(G::*)(A...) qualifiers for a class type G, then the deduced type is function_ref<R(A...) qualifiers>, where qualifiers is the sequence “cv-qualifier-seq-opt noexcept-specifier-opt” of the function type F.template <typename Signature>
constexpr void swap(function_ref<Signature>& lhs, function_ref<Signature>& rhs) noexcept;lhs.swap(rhs).I propose the feature-testing macro name __cpp_lib_function_ref.
An example implementation is available here on GitHub.
Many facilities similar to function_ref exist and are widely used in large codebases. Here are some examples:
The llvm::function_ref 2 class template is used throughout LLVM. A quick GitHub search on the LLVM organization reports hundreds of usages both in llvm and clang 3.
Facebook’s Folly libraries 4 provide a folly::FunctionRef 5 class template. A GitHub search shows that it’s used in projects proxygen and fbthrift 6.
GNU’s popular debugger, gdb 7, uses gdb::function_view 8 throughout its code base. The documentation in the linked header file 9 is particularly well-written and greatly motivates the need for this facility.
Additionally, combining results from GitHub searches (excluding “llvm” and “folly”) for “function_ref” 10, “function_view” 11, “FunctionRef” 12, and “FunctionView” 13 roughly shows more than 2800 occurrences.
Accepting temporaries in function_ref’s constructor is extremely useful in the most common use case: using it as a function parameter. E.g.
The usage shown above is completely safe: the temporary closure generated by the lambda expression is guarantee to live for the entirety of the call to foo. Unfortunately, this also means that the following code snippet will result in undefined behavior:
The above closure is a temporary whose lifetime ends after the function_ref constructor call. The function_ref will store an address to a “dead” closure - invoking it will produce undefined behavior 14. As an example, AddressSanitizer detects an invalid memory access in this gist 15. Note that this problem is not unique to function_ref: the recently standardized std::string_view 16 has the same problem 17.
I strongly believe that accepting temporaries is a “necessary evil” for both function_ref and std::string_view, as it enables countless valid use cases. The problem of dangling references has been always present in the language - a more general solution like Herb Sutter and Neil Macintosh’s lifetime tracking 18 would prevent mistakes without limiting the usefulness of view/reference classes.
The name function_ref is subject to bikeshedding. Here are some other potential names:
function_view
callable_ref
callable_view
invocable_ref
invocable_view
fn_view
fn_ref
Thanks to Agustín Bergé, Dietmar Kühl, Eric Niebler, Tim van Deurzen, and Alisdair Meredith for providing very valuable feedback on earlier drafts of this proposal.
Below are some unanswered questions for which I kindly ask guidance from members of the commitee and readers of this paper.
function_ref<Signature>’s signature currently only accepts any combination of const and noexcept. Should this be extended to include ref-qualifiers? This would mean that function_ref::operator() would first cast the referenced callable to either an lvalue reference or rvalue reference (depending on Signature’s ref qualifiers) before invoking it. See P0045R1 19 and N4159 20) for additional context.
const and noexcept have useful cases, but we could not find enough motivation to include support for ref-qualified signatures. Nevertheless, this could be added as a non-breaking extension to function_ref in the future.Constructing a std::function<Signature> from a function_ref<Signature> is completely different from constructing a std::string from a std::string_view: the latter does actually create a copy while the former remains a reference. It may be reasonable to prevent implicit conversions from function_ref to std::function in order to avoid surprising dangerous behavior.
std::function construction from std::function_ref as it would special-case std::function and there are other utilities in the Standard Library (and outside of it) that would need a similar change (e.g. std::bind).function_ref::operator() is not currently marked as constexpr due to implementation issues. I could not figure a way to implement a constexpr-friendly operator(). Is there any possibility it could be marked as constexpr to increase the usefulness of function_ref?
constexpr function_ref::operator() and that we do not want to impose that burden on implementations.https://vittorioromeo.info/index/blog/passing_functions_to_functions.html#benchmark---generated-assembly↩
http://llvm.org/doxygen/classllvm_1_1function__ref_3_01Ret_07Params_8_8_8_08_4.html↩
https://github.com/search?q=org%3Allvm-mirror+function_ref&type=Code↩
https://github.com/facebook/folly/blob/master/folly/Function.h#L743-L824↩
https://github.com/search?q=org%3Afacebook+FunctionRef&type=Code↩
https://sourceware.org/git/gitweb.cgi?p=binutils-gdb.git;a=blob;f=gdb/common/function-view.h↩
https://sourceware.org/git/gitweb.cgi?p=binutils-gdb.git;a=blob;f=gdb/common/function-view.h↩
https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=function_ref+AND+NOT+llvm+AND+NOT+folly+language%3AC%2B%2B&type=Code↩
https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=function_view+AND+NOT+llvm+AND+NOT+folly+language%3AC%2B%2B&type=Code↩
https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=functionref+AND+NOT+llvm+AND+NOT+folly+language%3AC%2B%2B&type=Code↩
https://github.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&q=functionview+AND+NOT+llvm+AND+NOT+folly+language%3AC%2B%2B&type=Code↩
http://foonathan.net/blog/2017/01/20/function-ref-implementation.html↩
https://gist.github.com/SuperV1234/a41eb1c825bfbb43f595b13bd4ea99c3↩
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2013/n3762.html↩
http://foonathan.net/blog/2017/03/22/string_view-temporary.html↩
https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/docs/Lifetimes%20I%20and%20II%20-%20v0.9.1.pdf↩