Hi,
this sounds interesting. How do I use it? I guess, I just need to add
this to a small header and include it everywhere it shall count it?
Am 01.10.2012 20:14, schrieb ArtemGr:
> Tommi Mäkitalo <tommi@...> writes:
>> If you call tnt::Tntnet::shutdown, tntnet stops accepting new requests
>> and waits until all requests are finished. There is no direct way to
>> detect active requests.
>>
>> What about my suggestion to implement it in a global class? Any request,
>> you want to monitor may instantiate a class, which increments a global
>> (atomic) counter in the ctor and decrements it in the destructor. Then
>> you can always check the counter.
> Indeed, Denis could use an atomic with a RAII semantic to count open requests.
>
> #include <atomic>
> struct request_counter_t {
> static std::atomic<int> OPEN_REQUESTS (0);
> request_counter_t(){++OPEN_REQUESTS;}
> ~request_counter_t(){--OPEN_REQUESTS;}
> };
>
>
>
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