If I have a class with a private construction, using boost::make_shared() to construct a shared_ptr of that class from within a member function of that class will issue a compiler error using gcc 4.6.
#include "boost/shared_ptr.hpp"
#include "boost/make_shared.hpp"
class Foo
{
private:
Foo(int a){};
public:
static boost::shared_ptr<Foo> do_foo(){ return boost::make_shared<Foo>(5); }
friend template boost::shared_ptr<Foo> boost::make_shared<Foo>( Arg1 && arg1, Args && ... args );
}
int main()
{
auto f = Foo::do_foo();
}
A call to Foo::do_foo will result in a compiler error.
Any thoughts?
Unfortunately, it is not specified which function actually calls the constructor in
make_shared, so you cannot make that function a friend. If you have a class with a private constructor like this then you thus cannot construct an instance withmake_shared.However, what you can do is create a derived class with a public constructor that calls the appropriate base class constructor, and make that derived class a friend (so it can call the private constructor):
If
DerivedFoois in an anonymous namespace in the .cpp file that definesdo_foothen functions in other .cpp files will still not be able to construct any instances ofFoodirectly, and users will not be able to tell that what they have is actually aDerivedFoo.