#### FaRzi XcOdeR ####
Friday, April 26, 2013
EKEventStore
BOOL result = NO;
for (EKCalendar *thisCalendar in eventStore.calendars){
thisCalendar.type == paramCalendarType){ targetCalendar = thisCalendar;
if (targetCalendar == nil){
if (result == NO){ }
EKCalendar *targetCalendar =
if (targetCalendar == nil){
NSDate *startDate = [NSDate date];
NSPredicate *searchPredicate =
if (searchPredicate == nil){
} else {
[self readEvents];
self.window.backgroundColor = [UIColor whiteColor]; [self.window makeKeyAndVisible];
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
HockeyApp Integration for iOS
HockeyApp Integration for iOS
The Hockey App SDK allows to send crash reports. If a crash has happened, it will ask the tester on the next start whether he wants to send information about the crash to the server.
The SDK runs on devices with iOS 5.0 or higher.
This is the url for download HockeyApp SDK
If you need support for iOS 4.x, please check out HockeySDK v2.5.5
If you need support for iOS 3.x, please check out HockeyKit and QuincyKit
Step to implement HockeyApp in to iOS Application
1. Download the latest HockeySDK-iOS framework.
2. Unzip the file. A new folder HockeySDK-iOS is created.
3. Move the folder into your project directory. We usually put 3rd-party code into a subdirectory named Vendor, so we move the directory into it.
Set Up Xcode
1. Drag & drop HockeySDK.embeddedframework from your project directory to your Xcode project.
2. Select Create groups for any added folders and set the checkmark for your target. Then click Finish.
3. Select your project in the Project Navigator (⌘+1).
4. Select Your Target.
4. Select the tab Build Settings.
5. Search for preprocessor macros
6.Select the top-most line and double-click the value field.
7. Click the + button.
8. Enter the following string into the input field and finish with "Done".
CONFIGURATION_$(CONFIGURATION)
Modify Code in AppDelegate.m
#import <HockeySDK/HockeySDK.h>
add following code in ApplicationDidFinishLaunching.
[[BITHockeyManager sharedHockeyManager] configureWithBetaIdentifier:@"BETA_IDENTIFIER"
liveIdentifier:@"LIVE_IDENTIFIER"
delegate:self];
[[BITHockeyManager sharedHockeyManager] startManager];
The Hockey App SDK allows to send crash reports. If a crash has happened, it will ask the tester on the next start whether he wants to send information about the crash to the server.
The SDK runs on devices with iOS 5.0 or higher.
This is the url for download HockeyApp SDK
If you need support for iOS 4.x, please check out HockeySDK v2.5.5
If you need support for iOS 3.x, please check out HockeyKit and QuincyKit
Step to implement HockeyApp in to iOS Application
1. Download the latest HockeySDK-iOS framework.
2. Unzip the file. A new folder HockeySDK-iOS is created.
3. Move the folder into your project directory. We usually put 3rd-party code into a subdirectory named Vendor, so we move the directory into it.
Set Up Xcode
1. Drag & drop HockeySDK.embeddedframework from your project directory to your Xcode project.
2. Select Create groups for any added folders and set the checkmark for your target. Then click Finish.
3. Select your project in the Project Navigator (⌘+1).
4. Select Your Target.
4. Select the tab Build Settings.
5. Search for preprocessor macros
6.Select the top-most line and double-click the value field.
7. Click the + button.
8. Enter the following string into the input field and finish with "Done".
CONFIGURATION_$(CONFIGURATION)
Modify Code in AppDelegate.m
#import <HockeySDK/HockeySDK.h>
add following code in ApplicationDidFinishLaunching.
[[BITHockeyManager sharedHockeyManager] configureWithBetaIdentifier:@"BETA_IDENTIFIER"
liveIdentifier:@"LIVE_IDENTIFIER"
delegate:self];
[[BITHockeyManager sharedHockeyManager] startManager];
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Objective-C Automatic Reference Counting (ARC)
Objective-C Automatic Reference Counting (ARC)
- About this document
- Purpose
- Background
- Evolution
- General
- Retainable object pointers
- Retain count semantics
- Retainable object pointers as operands and arguments
- Consumed parameters
- Retained return values
- Unretained return values
- Bridged casts
- Restrictions
- Conversion of retainable object pointers
- Conversion to retainable object pointer type of expressions with known semantics
- Conversion from retainable object pointer type in certain contexts
- Ownership qualification
- Spelling
- Property declarations
- Semantics
- Restrictions
- Weak-unavailable types
- Storage duration of __autoreleasing objects
- Conversion of pointers to ownership-qualified types
- Passing to an out parameter by writeback
- Ownership-qualified fields of structs and unions
- Ownership inference
- Objects
- Indirect parameters
- Template arguments
- Spelling
- Method families
- Explicit method family control
- Semantics of method families
- Semantics of init
- Related result types
- Optimization
- Precise lifetime semantics
- Miscellaneous
- Special methods
- Memory management methods
- dealloc
- @autoreleasepool
- self
- Fast enumeration iteration variables
- Blocks
- Exceptions
- Interior pointers
- C retainable pointer types
- Auditing of C retainable pointer interfaces
- Special methods
- Runtime support
- id objc_autorelease(id value);
- void objc_autoreleasePoolPop(void *pool);
- void *objc_autoreleasePoolPush(void);
- id objc_autoreleaseReturnValue(id value);
- void objc_copyWeak(id *dest, id *src);
- void objc_destroyWeak(id *object);
- id objc_initWeak(id *object, id value);
- id objc_loadWeak(id *object);
- id objc_loadWeakRetained(id *object);
- void objc_moveWeak(id *dest, id *src);
- void objc_release(id value);
- id objc_retain(id value);
- id objc_retainAutorelease(id value);
- id objc_retainAutoreleaseReturnValue(id value);
- id objc_retainAutoreleasedReturnValue(id value);
- id objc_retainBlock(id value);
- id objc_storeStrong(id *object, id value);
- id objc_storeWeak(id *object, id value);
About this document
Purpose
The first and primary purpose of this document is to serve as a complete technical specification of Automatic Reference Counting. Given a core Objective-C compiler and runtime, it should be possible to write a compiler and runtime which implements these new semantics.The secondary purpose is to act as a rationale for why ARC was designed in this way. This should remain tightly focused on the technical design and should not stray into marketing speculation.
Background
This document assumes a basic familiarity with C.Blocks are a C language extension for creating anonymous functions. Users interact with and transfer block objects using block pointers, which are represented like a normal pointer. A block may capture values from local variables; when this occurs, memory must be dynamically allocated. The initial allocation is done on the stack, but the runtime provides a Block_copy function which, given a block pointer, either copies the underlying block object to the heap, setting its reference count to 1 and returning the new block pointer, or (if the block object is already on the heap) increases its reference count by 1. The paired function is Block_release, which decreases the reference count by 1 and destroys the object if the count reaches zero and is on the heap.
Objective-C is a set of language extensions, significant enough to be considered a different language. It is a strict superset of C. The extensions can also be imposed on C++, producing a language called Objective-C++. The primary feature is a single-inheritance object system; we briefly describe the modern dialect.
Objective-C defines a new type kind, collectively called the object pointer types. This kind has two notable builtin members, id and Class; id is the final supertype of all object pointers. The validity of conversions between object pointer types is not checked at runtime. Users may define classes; each class is a type, and the pointer to that type is an object pointer type. A class may have a superclass; its pointer type is a subtype of its superclass’s pointer type. A class has a set of ivars, fields which appear on all instances of that class. For every class T there’s an associated metaclass; it has no fields, its superclass is the metaclass of T‘s superclass, and its metaclass is a global class. Every class has a global object whose class is the class’s metaclass; metaclasses have no associated type, so pointers to this object have type Class.
A class declaration (@interface) declares a set of methods. A method has a return type, a list of argument types, and a selector: a name like foo:bar:baz:, where the number of colons corresponds to the number of formal arguments. A method may be an instance method, in which case it can be invoked on objects of the class, or a class method, in which case it can be invoked on objects of the metaclass. A method may be invoked by providing an object (called the receiver) and a list of formal arguments interspersed with the selector, like so:
[receiver foo: fooArg bar: barArg baz: bazArg]
Method declarations may also be grouped into protocols, which are not inherently associated with any class, but which classes may claim to follow. Object pointer types may be qualified with additional protocols that the object is known to support.
Class extensions are collections of ivars and methods, designed to allow a class’s @interface to be split across multiple files; however, there is still a primary implementation file which must see the @interfaces of all class extensions. Categories allow methods (but not ivars) to be declared post hoc on an arbitrary class; the methods in the category’s @implementation will be dynamically added to that class’s method tables which the category is loaded at runtime, replacing those methods in case of a collision.
In the standard environment, objects are allocated on the heap, and their lifetime is manually managed using a reference count. This is done using two instance methods which all classes are expected to implement: retain increases the object’s reference count by 1, whereas release decreases it by 1 and calls the instance method dealloc if the count reaches 0. To simplify certain operations, there is also an autorelease pool, a thread-local list of objects to call release on later; an object can be added to this pool by calling autorelease on it.
Block pointers may be converted to type id; block objects are laid out in a way that makes them compatible with Objective-C objects. There is a builtin class that all block objects are considered to be objects of; this class implements retain by adjusting the reference count, not by calling Block_copy.
Evolution
ARC is under continual evolution, and this document must be updated as the language progresses.If a change increases the expressiveness of the language, for example by lifting a restriction or by adding new syntax, the change will be annotated with a revision marker, like so:
For now, it is sensible to version this document by the releases of its sole implementation (and its host project), clang. “LLVM X.Y” refers to an open-source release of clang from the LLVM project. “Apple X.Y” refers to an Apple-provided release of the Apple LLVM Compiler. Other organizations that prepare their own, separately-versioned clang releases and wish to maintain similar information in this document should send requests to cfe-dev.ARC applies to Objective-C pointer types, block pointer types, and [beginning Apple 8.0, LLVM 3.8] BPTRs declared within extern "BCPL" blocks.
If a change decreases the expressiveness of the language, for example by imposing a new restriction, this should be taken as an oversight in the original specification and something to be avoided in all versions. Such changes are generally to be avoided.
General
Automatic Reference Counting implements automatic memory management for Objective-C objects and blocks, freeing the programmer from the need to explicitly insert retains and releases. It does not provide a cycle collector; users must explicitly manage the lifetime of their objects, breaking cycles manually or with weak or unsafe references.ARC may be explicitly enabled with the compiler flag -fobjc-arc. It may also be explicitly disabled with the compiler flag -fno-objc-arc. The last of these two flags appearing on the compile line “wins”.
If ARC is enabled, __has_feature(objc_arc) will expand to 1 in the preprocessor. For more information about __has_feature, see the language extensions document.
Retainable object pointers
This section describes retainable object pointers, their basic operations, and the restrictions imposed on their use under ARC. Note in particular that it covers the rules for pointer values (patterns of bits indicating the location of a pointed-to object), not pointer objects (locations in memory which store pointer values). The rules for objects are covered in the next section.A retainable object pointer (or “retainable pointer”) is a value of a retainable object pointer type (“retainable type”). There are three kinds of retainable object pointer types:
- block pointers (formed by applying the caret (^) declarator sigil to a function type)
- Objective-C object pointers (id, Class, NSFoo*, etc.)
- typedefs marked with __attribute__((NSObject))
Rationale
We are not at liberty to require all code to be recompiled with ARC;
therefore, ARC must interoperate with Objective-C code which manages retains
and releases manually. In general, there are three requirements in order for
a compiler-supported reference-count system to provide reliable
interoperation:- The type system must reliably identify which objects are to be managed. An int* might be a pointer to a malloc‘ed array, or it might be an interior pointer to such an array, or it might point to some field or local variable. In contrast, values of the retainable object pointer types are never interior.
- The type system must reliably indicate how to manage objects of a type. This usually means that the type must imply a procedure for incrementing and decrementing retain counts. Supporting single-ownership objects requires a lot more explicit mediation in the language.
- There must be reliable conventions for whether and when “ownership” is passed between caller and callee, for both arguments and return values. Objective-C methods follow such a convention very reliably, at least for system libraries on Mac OS X, and functions always pass objects at +0. The C-based APIs for Core Foundation objects, on the other hand, have much more varied transfer semantics.
Rationale
Any compiler operation which incidentally strips type “sugar” from a type
will yield a type without the attribute, which may result in unexpected
behavior.
Retain count semantics
A retainable object pointer is either a null pointer or a pointer to a valid object. Furthermore, if it has block pointer type and is not null then it must actually be a pointer to a block object, and if it has Class type (possibly protocol-qualified) then it must actually be a pointer to a class object. Otherwise ARC does not enforce the Objective-C type system as long as the implementing methods follow the signature of the static type. It is undefined behavior if ARC is exposed to an invalid pointer.For ARC’s purposes, a valid object is one with “well-behaved” retaining operations. Specifically, the object must be laid out such that the Objective-C message send machinery can successfully send it the following messages:
- retain, taking no arguments and returning a pointer to the object.
- release, taking no arguments and returning void.
- autorelease, taking no arguments and returning a pointer to the object.
It is undefined behavior if a computation history featuring a send of retain followed by a send of release to the same object, with no intervening release on that object, is not equivalent under the high-level semantics to a computation history in which these sends are removed. Note that this implies that these methods may not raise exceptions.
It is undefined behavior if a computation history features any use whatsoever of an object following the completion of a send of release that is not preceded by a send of retain to the same object.
The behavior of autorelease must be equivalent to sending release when one of the autorelease pools currently in scope is popped. It may not throw an exception.
When the semantics call for performing one of these operations on a retainable object pointer, if that pointer is null then the effect is a no-op.
All of the semantics described in this document are subject to additional optimization rules which permit the removal or optimization of operations based on local knowledge of data flow. The semantics describe the high-level behaviors that the compiler implements, not an exact sequence of operations that a program will be compiled into.
Retainable object pointers as operands and arguments
In general, ARC does not perform retain or release operations when simply using a retainable object pointer as an operand within an expression. This includes:- loading a retainable pointer from an object with non-weak ownership,
- passing a retainable pointer as an argument to a function or method, and
- receiving a retainable pointer as the result of a function or method call.
Rationale
While this might seem uncontroversial, it is actually unsafe when multiple
expressions are evaluated in “parallel”, as with binary operators and calls,
because (for example) one expression might load from an object while another
writes to it. However, C and C++ already call this undefined behavior
because the evaluations are unsequenced, and ARC simply exploits that here to
avoid needing to retain arguments across a large number of calls.
Consumed parameters
A function or method parameter of retainable object pointer type may be marked as consumed, signifying that the callee expects to take ownership of a +1 retain count. This is done by adding the ns_consumed attribute to the parameter declaration, like so:void foo(__attribute((ns_consumed)) id x);
- (void) foo: (id) __attribute((ns_consumed)) x;
When passing such an argument, ARC retains the argument prior to making the call.
When receiving such an argument, ARC releases the argument at the end of the function, subject to the usual optimizations for local values.
Rationale
This formalizes direct transfers of ownership from a caller to a callee. The
most common scenario here is passing the self parameter to init, but
it is useful to generalize. Typically, local optimization will remove any
extra retains and releases: on the caller side the retain will be merged with
a +1 source, and on the callee side the release will be rolled into the
initialization of the parameter.
It is undefined behavior if an Objective-C message send to a method with ns_consumed parameters (other than self) is made with a null receiver. It is undefined behavior if the method to which an Objective-C message send statically resolves to has a different set of ns_consumed parameters than the method it dynamically resolves to. It is undefined behavior if a block or function call is made through a static type with a different set of ns_consumed parameters than the implementation of the called block or function.
Rationale
Consumed parameters with null receiver are a guaranteed leak. Mismatches
with consumed parameters will cause over-retains or over-releases, depending
on the direction. The rule about function calls is really just an
application of the existing C/C++ rule about calling functions through an
incompatible function type, but it’s useful to state it explicitly.
Retained return values
A function or method which returns a retainable object pointer type may be marked as returning a retained value, signifying that the caller expects to take ownership of a +1 retain count. This is done by adding the ns_returns_retained attribute to the function or method declaration, like so:id foo(void) __attribute((ns_returns_retained));
- (id) foo __attribute((ns_returns_retained));
When returning from such a function or method, ARC retains the value at the point of evaluation of the return statement, before leaving all local scopes.
When receiving a return result from such a function or method, ARC releases the value at the end of the full-expression it is contained within, subject to the usual optimizations for local values.
Rationale
This formalizes direct transfers of ownership from a callee to a caller. The
most common scenario this models is the retained return from init,
alloc, new, and copy methods, but there are other cases in the
frameworks. After optimization there are typically no extra retains and
releases required.
It is undefined behavior if the method to which an Objective-C message send statically resolves has different retain semantics on its result from the method it dynamically resolves to. It is undefined behavior if a block or function call is made through a static type with different retain semantics on its result from the implementation of the called block or function.
Rationale
Mismatches with returned results will cause over-retains or over-releases,
depending on the direction. Again, the rule about function calls is really
just an application of the existing C/C++ rule about calling functions
through an incompatible function type.
Unretained return values
A method or function which returns a retainable object type but does not return a retained value must ensure that the object is still valid across the return boundary.When returning from such a function or method, ARC retains the value at the point of evaluation of the return statement, then leaves all local scopes, and then balances out the retain while ensuring that the value lives across the call boundary. In the worst case, this may involve an autorelease, but callers must not assume that the value is actually in the autorelease pool.
ARC performs no extra mandatory work on the caller side, although it may elect to do something to shorten the lifetime of the returned value.
Rationale
It is common in non-ARC code to not return an autoreleased value; therefore
the convention does not force either path. It is convenient to not be
required to do unnecessary retains and autoreleases; this permits
optimizations such as eliding retain/autoreleases when it can be shown that
the original pointer will still be valid at the point of return.
Bridged casts
A bridged cast is a C-style cast annotated with one of three keywords:- (__bridge T) op casts the operand to the destination type T. If T is a retainable object pointer type, then op must have a non-retainable pointer type. If T is a non-retainable pointer type, then op must have a retainable object pointer type. Otherwise the cast is ill-formed. There is no transfer of ownership, and ARC inserts no retain operations.
- (__bridge_retained T) op casts the operand, which must have retainable object pointer type, to the destination type, which must be a non-retainable pointer type. ARC retains the value, subject to the usual optimizations on local values, and the recipient is responsible for balancing that +1.
- (__bridge_transfer T) op casts the operand, which must have non-retainable pointer type, to the destination type, which must be a retainable object pointer type. ARC will release the value at the end of the enclosing full-expression, subject to the usual optimizations on local values.
Using a __bridge_retained or __bridge_transfer cast purely to convince ARC to emit an unbalanced retain or release, respectively, is poor form.
Restrictions
Conversion of retainable object pointers
In general, a program which attempts to implicitly or explicitly convert a value of retainable object pointer type to any non-retainable type, or vice-versa, is ill-formed. For example, an Objective-C object pointer shall not be converted to void*. As an exception, cast to intptr_t is allowed because such casts are not transferring ownership. The bridged casts may be used to perform these conversions where necessary.
Rationale
We cannot ensure the correct management of the lifetime of objects if they
may be freely passed around as unmanaged types. The bridged casts are
provided so that the programmer may explicitly describe whether the cast
transfers control into or out of ARC.
Conversion to retainable object pointer type of expressions with known semantics
[beginning Apple 4.0, LLVM 3.1] These exceptions have been greatly expanded; they previously applied only to a much-reduced subset which is difficult to categorize but which included null pointers, message sends (under the given rules), and the various global constants.An unbridged conversion to a retainable object pointer type from a type other than a retainable object pointer type is ill-formed, as discussed above, unless the operand of the cast has a syntactic form which is known retained, known unretained, or known retain-agnostic.
An expression is known retain-agnostic if it is:
- an Objective-C string literal,
- a load from a const system global variable of C retainable pointer type, or
- a null pointer constant.
- a direct call to a function, and either that function has the cf_returns_not_retained attribute or it is an audited function that does not have the cf_returns_retained attribute and does not follow the create/copy naming convention,
- a message send, and the declared method either has the cf_returns_not_retained attribute or it has neither the cf_returns_retained attribute nor a selector family that implies a retained result.
- a message send, and the declared method either has the cf_returns_retained attribute, or it does not have the cf_returns_not_retained attribute but it does have a selector family that implies a retained result.
- a comma expression is classified according to its right-hand side,
- a statement expression is classified according to its result expression, if it has one,
- an lvalue-to-rvalue conversion applied to an Objective-C property lvalue is classified according to the underlying message send, and
- a conditional operator is classified according to its second and third operands, if they agree in classification, or else the other if one is known retain-agnostic.
Rationale
Bridging casts are annoying. Absent the ability to completely automate the
management of CF objects, however, we are left with relatively poor attempts
to reduce the need for a glut of explicit bridges. Hence these rules.
We’ve so far consciously refrained from implicitly turning retained CF
results from function calls into __bridge_transfer casts. The worry is
that some code patterns — for example, creating a CF value, assigning it
to an ObjC-typed local, and then calling CFRelease when done — are a
bit too likely to be accidentally accepted, leading to mysterious behavior.
Conversion from retainable object pointer type in certain contexts
[beginning Apple 4.0, LLVM 3.1]If an expression of retainable object pointer type is explicitly cast to a C retainable pointer type, the program is ill-formed as discussed above unless the result is immediately used:
- to initialize a parameter in an Objective-C message send where the parameter is not marked with the cf_consumed attribute, or
- to initialize a parameter in a direct call to an audited function where the parameter is not marked with the cf_consumed attribute.
Rationale
Consumed parameters are left out because ARC would naturally balance them
with a retain, which was judged too treacherous. This is in part because
several of the most common consuming functions are in the Release family,
and it would be quite unfortunate for explicit releases to be silently
balanced out in this way.
Ownership qualification
This section describes the behavior of objects of retainable object pointer type; that is, locations in memory which store retainable object pointers.A type is a retainable object owner type if it is a retainable object pointer type or an array type whose element type is a retainable object owner type.
An ownership qualifier is a type qualifier which applies only to retainable object owner types. An array type is ownership-qualified according to its element type, and adding an ownership qualifier to an array type so qualifies its element type.
A program is ill-formed if it attempts to apply an ownership qualifier to a type which is already ownership-qualified, even if it is the same qualifier. There is a single exception to this rule: an ownership qualifier may be applied to a substituted template type parameter, which overrides the ownership qualifier provided by the template argument.
Except as described under the inference rules, a program is ill-formed if it attempts to form a pointer or reference type to a retainable object owner type which lacks an ownership qualifier.
Rationale
These rules, together with the inference rules, ensure that all objects and
lvalues of retainable object pointer type have an ownership qualifier. The
ability to override an ownership qualifier during template substitution is
required to counteract the inference of __strong for template type
arguments.
- __autoreleasing
- __strong
- __unsafe_unretained
- __weak
Spelling
The names of the ownership qualifiers are reserved for the implementation. A program may not assume that they are or are not implemented with macros, or what those macros expand to.An ownership qualifier may be written anywhere that any other type qualifier may be written.
If an ownership qualifier appears in the declaration-specifiers, the following rules apply:
- if the type specifier is a retainable object owner type, the qualifier applies to that type;
- if the outermost non-array part of the declarator is a pointer or block pointer, the qualifier applies to that type;
- otherwise the program is ill-formed.
If an ownership qualifier appears anywhere else in a declarator, it applies to the type there.
Property declarations
A property of retainable object pointer type may have ownership. If the property’s type is ownership-qualified, then the property has that ownership. If the property has one of the following modifiers, then the property has the corresponding ownership. A property is ill-formed if it has conflicting sources of ownership, or if it has redundant ownership modifiers, or if it has __autoreleasing ownership.- assign implies __unsafe_unretained ownership.
- copy implies __strong ownership, as well as the usual behavior of copy semantics on the setter.
- retain implies __strong ownership.
- strong implies __strong ownership.
- unsafe_unretained implies __unsafe_unretained ownership.
- weak implies __weak ownership.
A property’s specified ownership is preserved in its metadata, but otherwise the meaning is purely conventional unless the property is synthesized. If a property is synthesized, then the associated instance variable is the instance variable which is named, possibly implicitly, by the @synthesize declaration. If the associated instance variable already exists, then its ownership qualification must equal the ownership of the property; otherwise, the instance variable is created with that ownership qualification.
A property of retainable object pointer type which is synthesized without a source of ownership has the ownership of its associated instance variable, if it already exists; otherwise, [beginning Apple 3.1, LLVM 3.1] its ownership is implicitly strong. Prior to this revision, it was ill-formed to synthesize such a property.
Rationale
Using strong by default is safe and consistent with the generic ARC rule
about inferring ownership. It is,
unfortunately, inconsistent with the non-ARC rule which states that such
properties are implicitly assign. However, that rule is clearly
untenable in ARC, since it leads to default-unsafe code. The main merit to
banning the properties is to avoid confusion with non-ARC practice, which did
not ultimately strike us as sufficient to justify requiring extra syntax and
(more importantly) forcing novices to understand ownership rules just to
declare a property when the default is so reasonable. Changing the rule away
from non-ARC practice was acceptable because we had conservatively banned the
synthesis in order to give ourselves exactly this leeway.
Semantics
There are five managed operations which may be performed on an object of retainable object pointer type. Each qualifier specifies different semantics for each of these operations. It is still undefined behavior to access an object outside of its lifetime.A load or store with “primitive semantics” has the same semantics as the respective operation would have on an void* lvalue with the same alignment and non-ownership qualification.
Reading occurs when performing a lvalue-to-rvalue conversion on an object lvalue.
- For __weak objects, the current pointee is retained and then released at the end of the current full-expression. This must execute atomically with respect to assignments and to the final release of the pointee.
- For all other objects, the lvalue is loaded with primitive semantics.
- For __strong objects, the new pointee is first retained; second, the lvalue is loaded with primitive semantics; third, the new pointee is stored into the lvalue with primitive semantics; and finally, the old pointee is released. This is not performed atomically; external synchronization must be used to make this safe in the face of concurrent loads and stores.
- For __weak objects, the lvalue is updated to point to the new pointee, unless the new pointee is an object currently undergoing deallocation, in which case the lvalue is updated to a null pointer. This must execute atomically with respect to other assignments to the object, to reads from the object, and to the final release of the new pointee.
- For __unsafe_unretained objects, the new pointee is stored into the lvalue using primitive semantics.
- For __autoreleasing objects, the new pointee is retained, autoreleased, and stored into the lvalue using primitive semantics.
- First, a null pointer is stored into the lvalue using primitive semantics. This step is skipped if the object is __unsafe_unretained.
- Second, if the object has an initializer, that expression is evaluated and then assigned into the object using the usual assignment semantics.
Moving occurs in specific situations where an lvalue is “moved from”, meaning that its current pointee will be used but the object may be left in a different (but still valid) state. This arises with __block variables and rvalue references in C++. For __strong lvalues, moving is equivalent to loading the lvalue with primitive semantics, writing a null pointer to it with primitive semantics, and then releasing the result of the load at the end of the current full-expression. For all other lvalues, moving is equivalent to reading the object.
Restrictions
Weak-unavailable types
It is explicitly permitted for Objective-C classes to not support __weak references. It is undefined behavior to perform an operation with weak assignment semantics with a pointer to an Objective-C object whose class does not support __weak references.
Rationale
Historically, it has been possible for a class to provide its own
reference-count implementation by overriding retain, release, etc.
However, weak references to an object require coordination with its class’s
reference-count implementation because, among other things, weak loads and
stores must be atomic with respect to the final release. Therefore, existing
custom reference-count implementations will generally not support weak
references without additional effort. This is unavoidable without breaking
binary compatibility.
Storage duration of __autoreleasing objects
A program is ill-formed if it declares an __autoreleasing object of non-automatic storage duration. A program is ill-formed if it captures an __autoreleasing object in a block or, unless by reference, in a C++11 lambda.
Rationale
Autorelease pools are tied to the current thread and scope by their nature.
While it is possible to have temporary objects whose instance variables are
filled with autoreleased objects, there is no way that ARC can provide any
sort of safety guarantee there.
Conversion of pointers to ownership-qualified types
A program is ill-formed if an expression of type T* is converted, explicitly or implicitly, to the type U*, where T and U have different ownership qualification, unless:- T is qualified with __strong, __autoreleasing, or __unsafe_unretained, and U is qualified with both const and __unsafe_unretained; or
- either T or U is cv void, where cv is an optional sequence of non-ownership qualifiers; or
- the conversion is requested with a reinterpret_cast in Objective-C++; or
- the conversion is a well-formed pass-by-writeback.
Rationale
These rules provide a reasonable level of type-safety for indirect pointers,
as long as the underlying memory is not deallocated. The conversion to
const __unsafe_unretained is permitted because the semantics of reads are
equivalent across all these ownership semantics, and that’s a very useful and
common pattern. The interconversion with void* is useful for allocating
memory or otherwise escaping the type system, but use it carefully.
reinterpret_cast is considered to be an obvious enough sign of taking
responsibility for any problems.
It is undefined behavior if a managed operation is performed on a __strong or __weak object without a guarantee that it contains a primitive zero bit-pattern, or if the storage for such an object is freed or reused without the object being first assigned a null pointer.
Rationale
ARC cannot differentiate between an assignment operator which is intended to
“initialize” dynamic memory and one which is intended to potentially replace
a value. Therefore the object’s pointer must be valid before letting ARC at
it. Similarly, C and Objective-C do not provide any language hooks for
destroying objects held in dynamic memory, so it is the programmer’s
responsibility to avoid leaks (__strong objects) and consistency errors
(__weak objects).
Passing to an out parameter by writeback
If the argument passed to a parameter of type T __autoreleasing * has type U oq *, where oq is an ownership qualifier, then the argument is a candidate for pass-by-writeback` if:- oq is __strong or __weak, and
- it would be legal to initialize a T __strong * with a U __strong *.
The pass-by-writeback is ill-formed if the argument expression does not have a legal form:
- &var, where var is a scalar variable of automatic storage duration with retainable object pointer type
- a conditional expression where the second and third operands are both legal forms
- a cast whose operand is a legal form
- a null pointer constant
Rationale
The restriction in the form of the argument serves two purposes. First, it
makes it impossible to pass the address of an array to the argument, which
serves to protect against an otherwise serious risk of mis-inferring an
“array” argument as an out-parameter. Second, it makes it much less likely
that the user will see confusing aliasing problems due to the implementation,
below, where their store to the writeback temporary is not immediately seen
in the original argument variable.
- The argument is evaluated to yield a pointer p of type U oq *.
- If p is a null pointer, then a null pointer is passed as the argument, and no further work is required for the pass-by-writeback.
- Otherwise, a temporary of type T __autoreleasing is created and initialized to a null pointer.
- If the parameter is not an Objective-C method parameter marked out, then *p is read, and the result is written into the temporary with primitive semantics.
- The address of the temporary is passed as the argument to the actual call.
- After the call completes, the temporary is loaded with primitive semantics, and that value is assigned into *p.
Rationale
This is all admittedly convoluted. In an ideal world, we would see that a
local variable is being passed to an out-parameter and retroactively modify
its type to be __autoreleasing rather than __strong. This would be
remarkably difficult and not always well-founded under the C type system.
However, it was judged unacceptably invasive to require programmers to write
__autoreleasing on all the variables they intend to use for
out-parameters. This was the least bad solution.
Ownership-qualified fields of structs and unions
A program is ill-formed if it declares a member of a C struct or union to have a nontrivially ownership-qualified type.
Rationale
The resulting type would be non-POD in the C++ sense, but C does not give us
very good language tools for managing the lifetime of aggregates, so it is
more convenient to simply forbid them. It is still possible to manage this
with a void* or an __unsafe_unretained object.
Rationale
Unlike in C, we can express all the necessary ARC semantics for
ownership-qualified subobjects as suboperations of the (default) special
member functions for the class. These functions then become non-trivial.
This has the non-obvious result that the class will have a non-trivial copy
constructor and non-trivial destructor; if this would not normally be true
outside of ARC, objects of the type will be passed and returned in an
ABI-incompatible manner.
Ownership inference
Objects
If an object is declared with retainable object owner type, but without an explicit ownership qualifier, its type is implicitly adjusted to have __strong qualification.As a special case, if the object’s base type is Class (possibly protocol-qualified), the type is adjusted to have __unsafe_unretained qualification instead.
Indirect parameters
If a function or method parameter has type T*, where T is an ownership-unqualified retainable object pointer type, then:- if T is const-qualified or Class, then it is implicitly qualified with __unsafe_unretained;
- otherwise, it is implicitly qualified with __autoreleasing.
Rationale
__autoreleasing exists mostly for this case, the Cocoa convention for
out-parameters. Since a pointer to const is obviously not an
out-parameter, we instead use a type more useful for passing arrays. If the
user instead intends to pass in a mutable array, inferring
__autoreleasing is the wrong thing to do; this directs some of the
caution in the following rules about writeback.
This rule does not apply in Objective-C++ if a parameter’s type is dependent in a template pattern and is only instantiated to a type which would be a pointer to an unqualified retainable object pointer type. Such code is still ill-formed.
Rationale
The convention is very unlikely to be intentional in template code.
Template arguments
If a template argument for a template type parameter is an retainable object owner type that does not have an explicit ownership qualifier, it is adjusted to have __strong qualification. This adjustment occurs regardless of whether the template argument was deduced or explicitly specified.
Rationale
__strong is a useful default for containers (e.g., std::vector<id>),
which would otherwise require explicit qualification. Moreover, unqualified
retainable object pointer types are unlikely to be useful within templates,
since they generally need to have a qualifier applied to the before being
used.
Method families
An Objective-C method may fall into a method family, which is a conventional set of behaviors ascribed to it by the Cocoa conventions.A method is in a certain method family if:
- it has a objc_method_family attribute placing it in that family; or if not that,
- it does not have an objc_method_family attribute placing it in a different or no family, and
- its selector falls into the corresponding selector family, and
- its signature obeys the added restrictions of the method family.
The families and their added restrictions are:
- alloc methods must return a retainable object pointer type.
- copy methods must return a retainable object pointer type.
- mutableCopy methods must return a retainable object pointer type.
- new methods must return a retainable object pointer type.
- init methods must be instance methods and must return an Objective-C pointer type. Additionally, a program is ill-formed if it declares or contains a call to an init method whose return type is neither id nor a pointer to a super-class or sub-class of the declaring class (if the method was declared on a class) or the static receiver type of the call (if it was declared on a protocol).RationaleThere are a fair number of existing methods with init-like selectors which nonetheless don’t follow the init conventions. Typically these are either accidental naming collisions or helper methods called during initialization. Because of the peculiar retain/release behavior of init methods, it’s very important not to treat these methods as init methods if they aren’t meant to be. It was felt that implicitly defining these methods out of the family based on the exact relationship between the return type and the declaring class would be much too subtle and fragile. Therefore we identify a small number of legitimate-seeming return types and call everything else an error. This serves the secondary purpose of encouraging programmers not to accidentally give methods names in the init family.
Note that a method with an init-family selector which returns a non-Objective-C type (e.g. void) is perfectly well-formed; it simply isn’t in the init family.
Explicit method family control
A method may be annotated with the objc_method_family attribute to precisely control which method family it belongs to. If a method in an @implementation does not have this attribute, but there is a method declared in the corresponding @interface that does, then the attribute is copied to the declaration in the @implementation. The attribute is available outside of ARC, and may be tested for with the preprocessor query __has_attribute(objc_method_family).The attribute is spelled __attribute__((objc_method_family( family ))). If family is none, the method has no family, even if it would otherwise be considered to have one based on its selector and type. Otherwise, family must be one of alloc, copy, init, mutableCopy, or new, in which case the method is considered to belong to the corresponding family regardless of its selector. It is an error if a method that is explicitly added to a family in this way does not meet the requirements of the family other than the selector naming convention.
Rationale
The rules codified in this document describe the standard conventions of
Objective-C. However, as these conventions have not heretofore been enforced
by an unforgiving mechanical system, they are only imperfectly kept,
especially as they haven’t always even been precisely defined. While it is
possible to define low-level ownership semantics with attributes like
ns_returns_retained, this attribute allows the user to communicate
semantic intent, which is of use both to ARC (which, e.g., treats calls to
init specially) and the static analyzer.
Semantics of method families
A method’s membership in a method family may imply non-standard semantics for its parameters and return type.Methods in the alloc, copy, mutableCopy, and new families — that is, methods in all the currently-defined families except init — implicitly return a retained object as if they were annotated with the ns_returns_retained attribute. This can be overridden by annotating the method with either of the ns_returns_autoreleased or ns_returns_not_retained attributes.
Properties also follow same naming rules as methods. This means that those in the alloc, copy, mutableCopy, and new families provide access to retained objects. This can be overridden by annotating the property with ns_returns_not_retained attribute.
Semantics of init
Methods in the init family implicitly consume their self parameter and return a retained object. Neither of these properties can be altered through attributes.A call to an init method with a receiver that is either self (possibly parenthesized or casted) or super is called a delegate init call. It is an error for a delegate init call to be made except from an init method, and excluding blocks within such methods.
As an exception to the usual rule, the variable self is mutable in an init method and has the usual semantics for a __strong variable. However, it is undefined behavior and the program is ill-formed, no diagnostic required, if an init method attempts to use the previous value of self after the completion of a delegate init call. It is conventional, but not required, for an init method to return self.
It is undefined behavior for a program to cause two or more calls to init methods on the same object, except that each init method invocation may perform at most one delegate init call.
Related result types
Certain methods are candidates to have related result types:- class methods in the alloc and new method families
- instance methods in the init family
- the instance method self
- outside of ARC, the instance methods retain and autorelease
- if it is a class method, and the receiver is a class name T, the message send expression has type T*; otherwise
- if it is an instance method, and the receiver has type T, the message send expression has type T; otherwise
- the message send expression has the normal result type of the method.
Rationale
ARC’s automatic code emission is more prone than most code to signature
errors, i.e. errors where a call was emitted against one method signature,
but the implementing method has an incompatible signature. Having more
precise type information helps drastically lower this risk, as well as
catching a number of latent bugs.
Optimization
ARC applies aggressive rules for the optimization of local behavior. These rules are based around a core assumption of local balancing: that other code will perform retains and releases as necessary (and only as necessary) for its own safety, and so the optimizer does not need to consider global properties of the retain and release sequence. For example, if a retain and release immediately bracket a call, the optimizer can delete the retain and release on the assumption that the called function will not do a constant number of unmotivated releases followed by a constant number of “balancing” retains, such that the local retain/release pair is the only thing preventing the called function from ending up with a dangling reference.The optimizer assumes that when a new value enters local control, e.g. from a load of a non-local object or as the result of a function call, it is instaneously valid. Subsequently, a retain and release of a value are necessary on a computation path only if there is a use of that value before the release and after any operation which might cause a release of the value (including indirectly or non-locally), and only if the value is not demonstrably already retained.
The complete optimization rules are quite complicated, but it would still be useful to document them here.
Precise lifetime semantics
In general, ARC maintains an invariant that a retainable object pointer held in a __strong object will be retained for the full formal lifetime of the object. Objects subject to this invariant have precise lifetime semantics.By default, local variables of automatic storage duration do not have precise lifetime semantics. Such objects are simply strong references which hold values of retainable object pointer type, and these values are still fully subject to the optimizations on values under local control.
Rationale
Applying these precise-lifetime semantics strictly would be prohibitive.
Many useful optimizations that might theoretically decrease the lifetime of
an object would be rendered impossible. Essentially, it promises too much.
Rationale
Nonetheless, it is sometimes useful to be able to force an object to be
released at a precise time, even if that object does not appear to be used.
This is likely to be uncommon enough that the syntactic weight of explicitly
requesting these semantics will not be burdensome, and may even make the code
clearer.
Miscellaneous
Special methods
Memory management methods
A program is ill-formed if it contains a method definition, message send, or @selector expression for any of the following selectors:- autorelease
- release
- retain
- retainCount
Rationale
retainCount is banned because ARC robs it of consistent semantics. The
others were banned after weighing three options for how to deal with message
sends:Honoring them would work out very poorly if a programmer naively or accidentally tried to incorporate code written for manual retain/release code into an ARC program. At best, such code would do twice as much work as necessary; quite frequently, however, ARC and the explicit code would both try to balance the same retain, leading to crashes. The cost is losing the ability to perform “unrooted” retains, i.e. retains not logically corresponding to a strong reference in the object graph.
Ignoring them would badly violate user expectations about their code. While it would make it easier to develop code simultaneously for ARC and non-ARC, there is very little reason to do so except for certain library developers. ARC and non-ARC translation units share an execution model and can seamlessly interoperate. Within a translation unit, a developer who faithfully maintains their code in non-ARC mode is suffering all the restrictions of ARC for zero benefit, while a developer who isn’t testing the non-ARC mode is likely to be unpleasantly surprised if they try to go back to it.
Banning them has the disadvantage of making it very awkward to migrate existing code to ARC. The best answer to that, given a number of other changes and restrictions in ARC, is to provide a specialized tool to assist users in that migration.
Implementing these methods was banned because they are too integral to the
semantics of ARC; many tricks which worked tolerably under manual reference
counting will misbehave if ARC performs an ephemeral extra retain or two. If
absolutely required, it is still possible to implement them in non-ARC code,
for example in a category; the implementations must obey the semantics laid out elsewhere in this document.
dealloc
A program is ill-formed if it contains a message send or @selector expression for the selector dealloc.
Rationale
There are no legitimate reasons to call dealloc directly.
Rationale
Even though ARC destroys instance variables automatically, there are still
legitimate reasons to write a dealloc method, such as freeing
non-retainable resources. Failing to call [super dealloc] in such a
method is nearly always a bug. Sometimes, the object is simply trying to
prevent itself from being destroyed, but dealloc is really far too late
for the object to be raising such objections. Somewhat more legitimately, an
object may have been pool-allocated and should not be deallocated with
free; for now, this can only be supported with a dealloc
implementation outside of ARC. Such an implementation must be very careful
to do all the other work that NSObject‘s dealloc would, which is
outside the scope of this document to describe.
Rationale
The traditional, non-ARC pattern for destroying instance variables is to
destroy them immediately before calling [super dealloc]. Unfortunately,
message sends from the superclass are quite capable of reaching methods in
the subclass, and those methods may well read or write to those instance
variables. Making such message sends from dealloc is generally discouraged,
since the subclass may well rely on other invariants that were broken during
dealloc, but it’s not so inescapably dangerous that we felt comfortable
calling it undefined behavior. Therefore we chose to delay destroying the
instance variables to a point at which message sends are clearly disallowed:
the point at which the root class’s deallocation routines take over.
In most code, the difference is not observable. It can, however, be observed
if an instance variable holds a strong reference to an object whose
deallocation will trigger a side-effect which must be carefully ordered with
respect to the destruction of the super class. Such code violates the design
principle that semantically important behavior should be explicit. A simple
fix is to clear the instance variable manually during dealloc; a more
holistic solution is to move semantically important side-effects out of
dealloc and into a separate teardown phase which can rely on working with
well-formed objects.
@autoreleasepool
To simplify the use of autorelease pools, and to bring them under the control of the compiler, a new kind of statement is available in Objective-C. It is written @autoreleasepool followed by a compound-statement, i.e. by a new scope delimited by curly braces. Upon entry to this block, the current state of the autorelease pool is captured. When the block is exited normally, whether by fallthrough or directed control flow (such as return or break), the autorelease pool is restored to the saved state, releasing all the objects in it. When the block is exited with an exception, the pool is not drained.@autoreleasepool may be used in non-ARC translation units, with equivalent semantics.
A program is ill-formed if it refers to the NSAutoreleasePool class.
Rationale
Autorelease pools are clearly important for the compiler to reason about, but
it is far too much to expect the compiler to accurately reason about control
dependencies between two calls. It is also very easy to accidentally forget
to drain an autorelease pool when using the manual API, and this can
significantly inflate the process’s high-water-mark. The introduction of a
new scope is unfortunate but basically required for sane interaction with the
rest of the language. Not draining the pool during an unwind is apparently
required by the Objective-C exceptions implementation.
self
The self parameter variable of an Objective-C method is never actually retained by the implementation. It is undefined behavior, or at least dangerous, to cause an object to be deallocated during a message send to that object.To make this safe, for Objective-C instance methods self is implicitly const unless the method is in the init family. Further, self is always implicitly const within a class method.
Rationale
The cost of retaining self in all methods was found to be prohibitive, as
it tends to be live across calls, preventing the optimizer from proving that
the retain and release are unnecessary — for good reason, as it’s quite
possible in theory to cause an object to be deallocated during its execution
without this retain and release. Since it’s extremely uncommon to actually
do so, even unintentionally, and since there’s no natural way for the
programmer to remove this retain/release pair otherwise (as there is for
other parameters by, say, making the variable __unsafe_unretained), we
chose to make this optimizing assumption and shift some amount of risk to the
user.
Fast enumeration iteration variables
If a variable is declared in the condition of an Objective-C fast enumeration loop, and the variable has no explicit ownership qualifier, then it is qualified with const __strong and objects encountered during the enumeration are not actually retained.
Rationale
This is an optimization made possible because fast enumeration loops promise
to keep the objects retained during enumeration, and the collection itself
cannot be synchronously modified. It can be overridden by explicitly
qualifying the variable with __strong, which will make the variable
mutable again and cause the loop to retain the objects it encounters.
Blocks
The implicit const capture variables created when evaluating a block literal expression have the same ownership semantics as the local variables they capture. The capture is performed by reading from the captured variable and initializing the capture variable with that value; the capture variable is destroyed when the block literal is, i.e. at the end of the enclosing scope.The inference rules apply equally to __block variables, which is a shift in semantics from non-ARC, where __block variables did not implicitly retain during capture.
__block variables of retainable object owner type are moved off the stack by initializing the heap copy with the result of moving from the stack copy.
With the exception of retains done as part of initializing a __strong parameter variable or reading a __weak variable, whenever these semantics call for retaining a value of block-pointer type, it has the effect of a Block_copy. The optimizer may remove such copies when it sees that the result is used only as an argument to a call.
Exceptions
By default in Objective C, ARC is not exception-safe for normal releases:- It does not end the lifetime of __strong variables when their scopes are abnormally terminated by an exception.
- It does not perform releases which would occur at the end of a full-expression if that full-expression throws an exception.
Rationale
The standard Cocoa convention is that exceptions signal programmer error and
are not intended to be recovered from. Making code exceptions-safe by
default would impose severe runtime and code size penalties on code that
typically does not actually care about exceptions safety. Therefore,
ARC-generated code leaks by default on exceptions, which is just fine if the
process is going to be immediately terminated anyway. Programs which do care
about recovering from exceptions should enable the option.
Rationale
C++ already introduces pervasive exceptions-cleanup code of the sort that ARC
introduces. C++ programmers who have not already disabled exceptions are
much more likely to actual require exception-safety.
Rationale
The consequence of a local __weak object not being destroyed is very
likely to be corruption of the Objective-C runtime, so we want to be safer
here. Of course, potentially massive leaks are about as likely to take down
the process as this corruption is if the program does try to recover from
exceptions.
Interior pointers
An Objective-C method returning a non-retainable pointer may be annotated with the objc_returns_inner_pointer attribute to indicate that it returns a handle to the internal data of an object, and that this reference will be invalidated if the object is destroyed. When such a message is sent to an object, the object’s lifetime will be extended until at least the earliest of:- the last use of the returned pointer, or any pointer derived from it, in the calling function or
- the autorelease pool is restored to a previous state.
Rationale
Rationale: not all memory and resources are managed with reference counts; it
is common for objects to manage private resources in their own, private way.
Typically these resources are completely encapsulated within the object, but
some classes offer their users direct access for efficiency. If ARC is not
aware of methods that return such “interior” pointers, its optimizations can
cause the owning object to be reclaimed too soon. This attribute informs ARC
that it must tread lightly.
The extension rules are somewhat intentionally vague. The autorelease pool
limit is there to permit a simple implementation to simply retain and
autorelease the receiver. The other limit permits some amount of
optimization. The phrase “derived from” is intended to encompass the results
both of pointer transformations, such as casts and arithmetic, and of loading
from such derived pointers; furthermore, it applies whether or not such
derivations are applied directly in the calling code or by other utility code
(for example, the C library routine strchr). However, the implementation
never need account for uses after a return from the code which calls the
method returning an interior pointer.
Rationale
Implicit autoreleases carry the risk of significantly inflating memory use,
so it’s important to provide users a way of avoiding these autoreleases.
Tying this to precise lifetime semantics is ideal, as for local variables
this requires a very explicit annotation, which allows ARC to trust the user
with good cheer.
C retainable pointer types
A type is a C retainable pointer type if it is a pointer to (possibly qualified) void or a pointer to a (possibly qualifier) struct or class type.
Rationale
ARC does not manage pointers of CoreFoundation type (or any of the related
families of retainable C pointers which interoperate with Objective-C for
retain/release operation). In fact, ARC does not even know how to
distinguish these types from arbitrary C pointer types. The intent of this
concept is to filter out some obviously non-object types while leaving a hook
for later tightening if a means of exhaustively marking CF types is made
available.
Auditing of C retainable pointer interfaces
[beginning Apple 4.0, LLVM 3.1]A C function may be marked with the cf_audited_transfer attribute to express that, except as otherwise marked with attributes, it obeys the parameter (consuming vs. non-consuming) and return (retained vs. non-retained) conventions for a C function of its name, namely:
- A parameter of C retainable pointer type is assumed to not be consumed unless it is marked with the cf_consumed attribute, and
- A result of C retainable pointer type is assumed to not be returned retained unless the function is either marked cf_returns_retained or it follows the create/copy naming convention and is not marked cf_returns_not_retained.
- either “Create” or “Copy” not followed by a lowercase letter, or
- either “create” or “copy” not followed by a lowercase letter and not preceded by any letter, whether uppercase or lowercase.
A pragma is provided to facilitate the mass annotation of interfaces:
#pragma clang arc_cf_code_audited begin
...
#pragma clang arc_cf_code_audited end
It is possible to test for all the features in this section with __has_feature(arc_cf_code_audited).
Rationale
A significant inconvenience in ARC programming is the necessity of
interacting with APIs based around C retainable pointers. These features are
designed to make it relatively easy for API authors to quickly review and
annotate their interfaces, in turn improving the fidelity of tools such as
the static analyzer and ARC. The single-file restriction on the pragma is
designed to eliminate the risk of accidentally annotating some other header’s
interfaces.
Runtime support
This section describes the interaction between the ARC runtime and the code generated by the ARC compiler. This is not part of the ARC language specification; instead, it is effectively a language-specific ABI supplement, akin to the “Itanium” generic ABI for C++.Ownership qualification does not alter the storage requirements for objects, except that it is undefined behavior if a __weak object is inadequately aligned for an object of type id. The other qualifiers may be used on explicitly under-aligned memory.
The runtime tracks __weak objects which holds non-null values. It is undefined behavior to direct modify a __weak object which is being tracked by the runtime except through an objc_storeWeak, objc_destroyWeak, or objc_moveWeak call.
The runtime must provide a number of new entrypoints which the compiler may emit, which are described in the remainder of this section.
Rationale
Several of these functions are semantically equivalent to a message send; we
emit calls to C functions instead because:- the machine code to do so is significantly smaller,
- it is much easier to recognize the C functions in the ARC optimizer, and
- a sufficient sophisticated runtime may be able to avoid the message send in common cases.
Several other of these functions are “fused” operations which can be
described entirely in terms of other operations. We use the fused operations
primarily as a code-size optimization, although in some cases there is also a
real potential for avoiding redundant operations in the runtime.
id objc_autorelease(id value);
Precondition: value is null or a pointer to a valid object.If value is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, it adds the object to the innermost autorelease pool exactly as if the object had been sent the autorelease message.
Always returns value.
void objc_autoreleasePoolPop(void *pool);
Precondition: pool is the result of a previous call to objc_autoreleasePoolPush on the current thread, where neither pool nor any enclosing pool have previously been popped.Releases all the objects added to the given autorelease pool and any autorelease pools it encloses, then sets the current autorelease pool to the pool directly enclosing pool.
void *objc_autoreleasePoolPush(void);
Creates a new autorelease pool that is enclosed by the current pool, makes that the current pool, and returns an opaque “handle” to it.
Rationale
While the interface is described as an explicit hierarchy of pools, the rules
allow the implementation to just keep a stack of objects, using the stack
depth as the opaque pool handle.
id objc_autoreleaseReturnValue(id value);
Precondition: value is null or a pointer to a valid object.If value is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, it makes a best effort to hand off ownership of a retain count on the object to a call to objc_retainAutoreleasedReturnValue for the same object in an enclosing call frame. If this is not possible, the object is autoreleased as above.
Always returns value.
void objc_copyWeak(id *dest, id *src);
Precondition: src is a valid pointer which either contains a null pointer or has been registered as a __weak object. dest is a valid pointer which has not been registered as a __weak object.dest is initialized to be equivalent to src, potentially registering it with the runtime. Equivalent to the following code:
void objc_copyWeak(id *dest, id *src) {
objc_release(objc_initWeak(dest, objc_loadWeakRetained(src)));
}
void objc_destroyWeak(id *object);
Precondition: object is a valid pointer which either contains a null pointer or has been registered as a __weak object.object is unregistered as a weak object, if it ever was. The current value of object is left unspecified; otherwise, equivalent to the following code:
void objc_destroyWeak(id *object) {
objc_storeWeak(object, nil);
}
id objc_initWeak(id *object, id value);
Precondition: object is a valid pointer which has not been registered as a __weak object. value is null or a pointer to a valid object.If value is a null pointer or the object to which it points has begun deallocation, object is zero-initialized. Otherwise, object is registered as a __weak object pointing to value. Equivalent to the following code:
id objc_initWeak(id *object, id value) {
*object = nil;
return objc_storeWeak(object, value);
}
Does not need to be atomic with respect to calls to objc_storeWeak on object.
id objc_loadWeak(id *object);
Precondition: object is a valid pointer which either contains a null pointer or has been registered as a __weak object.If object is registered as a __weak object, and the last value stored into object has not yet been deallocated or begun deallocation, retains and autoreleases that value and returns it. Otherwise returns null. Equivalent to the following code:
id objc_loadWeak(id *object) {
return objc_autorelease(objc_loadWeakRetained(object));
}
Rationale
Loading weak references would be inherently prone to race conditions without
the retain.
id objc_loadWeakRetained(id *object);
Precondition: object is a valid pointer which either contains a null pointer or has been registered as a __weak object.If object is registered as a __weak object, and the last value stored into object has not yet been deallocated or begun deallocation, retains that value and returns it. Otherwise returns null.
Must be atomic with respect to calls to objc_storeWeak on object.
void objc_moveWeak(id *dest, id *src);
Precondition: src is a valid pointer which either contains a null pointer or has been registered as a __weak object. dest is a valid pointer which has not been registered as a __weak object.dest is initialized to be equivalent to src, potentially registering it with the runtime. src may then be left in its original state, in which case this call is equivalent to objc_copyWeak, or it may be left as null.
Must be atomic with respect to calls to objc_storeWeak on src.
void objc_release(id value);
Precondition: value is null or a pointer to a valid object.If value is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, it performs a release operation exactly as if the object had been sent the release message.
id objc_retain(id value);
Precondition: value is null or a pointer to a valid object.If value is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, it performs a retain operation exactly as if the object had been sent the retain message.
Always returns value.
id objc_retainAutorelease(id value);
Precondition: value is null or a pointer to a valid object.If value is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, it performs a retain operation followed by an autorelease operation. Equivalent to the following code:
id objc_retainAutorelease(id value) {
return objc_autorelease(objc_retain(value));
}
id objc_retainAutoreleaseReturnValue(id value);
Precondition: value is null or a pointer to a valid object.If value is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, it performs a retain operation followed by the operation described in objc_autoreleaseReturnValue. Equivalent to the following code:
id objc_retainAutoreleaseReturnValue(id value) {
return objc_autoreleaseReturnValue(objc_retain(value));
}
id objc_retainAutoreleasedReturnValue(id value);
Precondition: value is null or a pointer to a valid object.If value is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, it attempts to accept a hand off of a retain count from a call to objc_autoreleaseReturnValue on value in a recently-called function or something it calls. If that fails, it performs a retain operation exactly like objc_retain.
Always returns value.
id objc_retainBlock(id value);
Precondition: value is null or a pointer to a valid block object.If value is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, if the block pointed to by value is still on the stack, it is copied to the heap and the address of the copy is returned. Otherwise a retain operation is performed on the block exactly as if it had been sent the retain message.
id objc_storeStrong(id *object, id value);
Precondition: object is a valid pointer to a __strong object which is adequately aligned for a pointer. value is null or a pointer to a valid object.Performs the complete sequence for assigning to a __strong object of non-block type. Equivalent to the following code:
id objc_storeStrong(id *object, id value) {
value = [value retain];
id oldValue = *object;
*object = value;
[oldValue release];
return value;
}
id objc_storeWeak(id *object, id value);
Precondition: object is a valid pointer which either contains a null pointer or has been registered as a __weak object. value is null or a pointer to a valid object.If value is a null pointer or the object to which it points has begun deallocation, object is assigned null and unregistered as a __weak object. Otherwise, object is registered as a __weak object or has its registration updated to point to value.
Returns the value of object after the call.
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