Makes turn restrictions into dedicated structures and diferentiates between them via a variant.
Ensures that we do not accidentally mess up ID types within our application.
In addition this improves the restriction performance by only parsing all edges
once at the cost of (at the time of writing) 22MB in terms of main memory usage.
Takes a stricter aproach for whitelisting / blacklisting restrictions:
- uses `restriction=`
- uses more specific `restriction:<type>=`
- uses `except=<type>` to invert
Where `type` is the type of transportation to restrict, e.g. `motorcar`.
https://github.com/Project-OSRM/osrm-backend/issues/2833
Phew, a lot of classes were affected by this. The rationale for the
changes are as follows:
- When a type X declares any constructor, the default constructor is
not declared, so there is no need for X() = delete there. In fact,
there is brutal difference between those two: deleted members
participate in overload resolution, but not-declared members do not!
- When a type X wants to be non-copyable (e.g. to be only movable, like
threads, unique_ptrs, and so on), you can either do it by inheriting
from boost::noncopyable (the old way), or better declare both (!) the
copy constructor _and_ the copy assignment operator as deleted:
X(X const&) = delete;
X& operator=(X const&) = delete;
We had tons of types with deleted copy constructors that were lacking
a corresponding deleted copy assignment operator, making them still
copyable and you wouldn't even notice (read: scary)!
References:
- http://accu.org/content/conf2014/Howard_Hinnant_Accu_2014.pdf
- http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/master/libs/core/doc/html/core/noncopyable.html
Note: I know, I'm quoting Hinnant's extraordinary slides a lot, but
getting the sematic right here is so incredibly important.