policies
stack modification right before lua call returns
sol::policies is an advanced, low-level modification feature allowing you to take advantage of sol2’s abstractions before applying your own stack-based modifications at the last moment. They cover the same functionality as luabind’s “return reference to” and “dependency” types. A few pre-rolled policies are defined for your use:
policy |
usage |
modification |
sol::returns_self
|
sol::policies( some_function, sol::returns_self() )
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takes the argument at stack index 1 (self in member function calls and lambdas that take a specific userdata first) and makes that to be the return value
rather than creating a new userdata that references the same C++ memory, it copies the userdata, similar to writing obj2 = obj1 just increases the reference count
saves memory space on top of keeping original memory alive
|
sol::returns_self_with<int...>
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sol::policies( some_function, sol::returns_self_with<2, 3>() )
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same as above, with the caveat that the self is returned while also putting dependencies into the self
can keep external dependencies alive
|
sol::self_dependency
|
sol::policies( some_function, sol::self_dependency() );
|
|
sol::stack_dependencies
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sol::policies( some_function, sol::stack_dependencies( target_index, 2, 1, ... ) );
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whatever is at target_index on the stack is given a special “keep alive” table with the elements on the stack specified by the integer indices after target_index
allows you to keep arguments and other things alive for the duration of the existence of the class
|
custom |
sol::policies( some_function, [](lua_State* L, int current_stack_return_count) -> int { ... } )
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whatever you want, so long as it has the form int (lua_State*, int )
works with callables (such as lambdas), so long as it has the correct form
expected to return the number of things on the stack to return to Lua
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“some_function” can be any callable function, member variable, or similar
dependency additions only work on userdata
works with table::set( ... ), table::set_function( ... );, and on all usertype bindings
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You can specify multiple policies on the same sol::policies call, and can also specify custom policies as long as the signature is correct.