Here is a simpler case that triggers the same warning:
class A {
public:
// ...
A();
};
A my_A; // triggers said warning
test.cpp:7:3: warning: declaration requires a global constructor [-Wglobal-constructors]
A my_A; // triggers said warning
^~~~
1 warning generated.
This is perfectly legal and safe C++.
However for every non-trivial global constructor you have, launch time of your application suffers. The warning is simply a way of letting you know about this potential performance problem.
You can disable the warning with -Wno-global-constructors. Or you can change to a lazy initialization scheme like this:
A&
my_A()
{
static A a;
return a;
}
which avoids the issue entirely (and suppresses the warning).