/* AngelCode Scripting Library Copyright (c) 2003-2014 Andreas Jonsson This software is provided 'as-is', without any express or implied warranty. In no event will the authors be held liable for any damages arising from the use of this software. Permission is granted to anyone to use this software for any purpose, including commercial applications, and to alter it and redistribute it freely, subject to the following restrictions: 1. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product documentation would be appreciated but is not required. 2. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must not be misrepresented as being the original software. 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. The original version of this library can be located at: http://www.angelcode.com/angelscript/ Andreas Jonsson andreas@angelcode.com */ // // as_atomic.cpp // // The implementation of the atomic class for thread safe reference counting // #include "as_atomic.h" BEGIN_AS_NAMESPACE asCAtomic::asCAtomic() { value = 0; } asDWORD asCAtomic::get() const { // A very high ref count is highly unlikely. It most likely a problem with // memory that has been overwritten or is being accessed after it was deleted. asASSERT(value < 1000000); return value; } void asCAtomic::set(asDWORD val) { // A very high ref count is highly unlikely. It most likely a problem with // memory that has been overwritten or is being accessed after it was deleted. asASSERT(value < 1000000); value = val; } asDWORD asCAtomic::atomicInc() { // A very high ref count is highly unlikely. It most likely a problem with // memory that has been overwritten or is being accessed after it was deleted. asASSERT(value < 1000000); return asAtomicInc((int&)value); } asDWORD asCAtomic::atomicDec() { // A very high ref count is highly unlikely. It most likely a problem with // memory that has been overwritten or is being accessed after it was deleted. asASSERT(value < 1000000); return asAtomicDec((int&)value); } // // The following code implements the atomicInc and atomicDec on different platforms // #if defined(AS_NO_THREADS) || defined(AS_NO_ATOMIC) int asAtomicInc(int &value) { return ++value; } int asAtomicDec(int &value) { return --value; } #elif defined(AS_XENON) /// XBox360 END_AS_NAMESPACE #include BEGIN_AS_NAMESPACE int asAtomicInc(int &value) { return InterlockedIncrement((LONG*)&value); } int asAtomicDec(int &value) { return InterlockedDecrement((LONG*)&value); } #elif defined(AS_WIN) END_AS_NAMESPACE #define WIN32_MEAN_AND_LEAN #include BEGIN_AS_NAMESPACE int asAtomicInc(int &value) { return InterlockedIncrement((LONG*)&value); } int asAtomicDec(int &value) { asASSERT(value > 0); return InterlockedDecrement((LONG*)&value); } #elif defined(AS_LINUX) || defined(AS_BSD) || defined(AS_ILLUMOS) || defined(AS_ANDROID) // // atomic_inc_and_test() and atomic_dec_and_test() from asm/atomic.h is not meant // to be used outside the Linux kernel. Instead we should use the GNUC provided // __sync_add_and_fetch() and __sync_sub_and_fetch() functions. // // Reference: http://golubenco.org/blog/atomic-operations/ // // These are only available in GCC 4.1 and above, so for older versions we // use the critical sections, though it is a lot slower. // int asAtomicInc(int &value) { return __sync_add_and_fetch(&value, 1); } int asAtomicDec(int &value) { return __sync_sub_and_fetch(&value, 1); } #elif defined(AS_MAC) || defined(AS_IPHONE) END_AS_NAMESPACE #include BEGIN_AS_NAMESPACE int asAtomicInc(int &value) { return OSAtomicIncrement32((int32_t*)&value); } int asAtomicDec(int &value) { return OSAtomicDecrement32((int32_t*)&value); } #else // If we get here, then the configuration in as_config.h // is wrong for the compiler/platform combination. int ERROR_PleaseFixTheConfig[-1]; #endif END_AS_NAMESPACE