问题
I've written the following category for NSOperationBlock
@implementation NSOperationQueue (Extensions)
-(void)addAsynchronousOperationWithBlock:(void (^)(block))operationBlock
{
dispatch_semaphore_t semaphore = dispatch_semaphore_create(0);
block signal = ^ {
dispatch_semaphore_signal(semaphore);
};
[self addOperationWithBlock:^{
operationBlock(signal);
dispatch_semaphore_wait(semaphore, DISPATCH_TIME_FOREVER);
dispatch_release(semaphore);
}];
}
@end
it seems to work properly but when I call it (as shown in the following snippet) I get a warning:
block is likely to lead a retain cycle
[_queue addAsynchronousOperationWithBlock:^(block signal) {
[self foo:nil];
signal();
}];
foo
is a method of the class that uses this category.
The same code with addOperationWithBlock:
(from NSOperationQueue
) doesn't show the warning:
[_queue addOperationWithBlock:^ {
[self foo:nil];
}];
I really don't understand it. Particularly what I don't understand is: should I actually use the weak pointer in both the cases? will actually the two snippet bring to a retain cycle in case I don't use the weak pointer?
回答1:
To distill what others have written here:
- Neither code example creates a long-lasting retain cycle of the sort that will strand memory.
- Xcode complains about your
addAsynchronousOperationWithBlock
method because it has a suspicious name. It doesn't complain aboutaddOperationWithBlock
because it has special knowledge aboutaddOperationWithBlock
that overrides its suspicions. - To get rid of the warning, use
__weak
(see the answers by jszumski and matt) or renameaddAsynchronousOperationWithBlock
to not start with "add" or "set".
To elaborate a bit on these:
If
self
owns_queue
, you will have a short-lived retain cycle.self
will own_queue
, which will own the blocks, and the block that calls[self foo:]
will ownself
. But once the blocks have finished running,_queue
will release them, and the cycle will be broken.The static analyzer has been programmed to be suspicious of method names starting with "set" and "add". Those names suggest that the method may retain the passed block permanently, possibly creating a permanent retain cycle. Thus the warning about your method. It doesn't complain about
-[NSOperationQueue addOperationWithBlock:]
because it's been told not to, by someone who knows thatNSOperationQueue
releases blocks after running them.If you use
__weak
the analyzer won't complain because there won't be the possibility of a retain cycle. If you rename your method the analyzer won't complain because it won't have any reason to suspect your method of permanently retaining the block passed to it.
回答2:
When you use self
within a block, it is captured by the block and could lead to a retain cycle. To cycle occurs when self
(or something it has a strong reference to) has a strong reference to the block. To avoid the potential cycle, declare a weak pointer and use that in the block instead:
YourClassName * __weak weakSelf = self;
[_queue addAsynchronousOperationWithBlock:^(block signal) {
[weakSelf foo:nil];
}];
回答3:
The answer from jszumski is correct in essence, but it is important to get the form of the "weak self" dance correct. The form (building on his code) is:
YourClassName * __weak weakSelf = self;
[_queue addAsynchronousOperationWithBlock:^(block signal) {
YourClassName * strongSelf = weakSelf;
if (strongSelf)
[weakSelf foo:nil];
}];
Thus we capture weakSelf
through a strong reference. If you don't do that, weakSelf
can go out of existence while you are in the middle of using it (because your reference to it is weak).
See my book for the dance, and for other things you can do about potential retain cycles caused by blocks:
http://www.apeth.com/iOSBook/ch12.html#_unusual_memory_management_situations
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/16450675/block-is-likely-to-lead-a-retain-cycle