I have a library which contains a singleton. The library compiles file. Except that when I try to link my applicaiton against the library I get errors saying "undefined refernce"
Am I missing something in particular for this to work?
that doesn't really belong in the header. If you have C++17 or whatever it was then you should just use "inline static SINGLETON* singleton = nullptr;"
and yeah, I don't see where you defined fds storage or where you defined the SINGLETON constructor
if you have static int fd; in a header then it's just the declaration. But you need to define it in one place. It's basically an old artifact of how linking worked in C
I dont understand what you are saying. Are you saying I should have a single global variable of type SINGLETON inside my cpp file and return a reference to it?
I can see how in theory there might be an application that is extremely starved for resources and must be optimized at all costs, and was, and skipping a page fault is the only way, but it just seems like ... impossible odds.
There might be a need to destroy the instance and recreate it later in which case the new/delete approach would make sense. Maybe it's another thing that I just never encountered and it's what you do every day.
I still feel you're mixing 2 different concepts together here. There is the fd wrapper and there is the singleton implementation. In my opinion they should not be merged into a single class.
the singleton is in charge of writing data to a file. Only 1 of such instances can exist. Which is why the singleton also contains a function called writeMyStuff
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn I don't think it's relevant to you. It doesn't help you with anything and I can't really think of a use-case anymore.
Hmm. The singleton should be in charge of making sure there is only one instance and a file wrapper should be responsible for writing to files. But I guess overall it's fine.
The thing is, if you need another singleton you will be implementing the whole singleton again.
Since you have a wrapper already, may as well return an object that locks in its constructor, unlocks in its destructor and has an implicit conversion to int.