This patch overhalls the libc++ test format/configuration in order to fully support modules. By "fully support" I mean get almost all of the tests passing. The main hurdle for doing this is handling tests that `#define _LIBCPP_FOO` macros to test a different configuration. This patch deals with these tests in the following ways:
1. For tests that define single `_LIBCPP_ABI_FOO` macros have been annotated with `// MODULES_DEFINES: _LIBCPP_ABI_FOO`. This allows the test suite to define the macro on the command line so it uses a different set of modules.
2. Tests for libc++'s debug mode (which define custom `_LIBCPP_ASSERT`) are automatically detected by the test suite and are compiled and run with modules disabled.
This patch also cleans up how the `CXXCompiler` helper class handles enabling/disabling language features.
NOTE: This patch uses `LIT` features which were only committed to LLVM today. If this patch breaks running the libc++ tests you probably need to update LLVM.
llvm-svn: 288728
It's useful to be able to disable visibility annotations entirely; for
example, if we're building libc++ static to include in another library,
and we don't want any libc++ functions getting exported out of that
library. This is a generalization of _LIBCPP_DISABLE_DLL_IMPORT_EXPORT.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26934
llvm-svn: 288690
Under libcpp-no-exceptions, noexcept is trivially true. Some tests expect in
the usual setting to return false, so adjust them to expect true under
libcpp-no-exceptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27310
llvm-svn: 288660
Previously these hashes were 0 and -1 respectively. These seem like common
sentinel values and should be avoided to prevent needless collisions.
This patch changes those values to different arbitrary numbers, which should
hopefully cause less collisions. Because I couldn't help myself I choose the
fundamental constants for gravity and the speed of light.
llvm-svn: 288623
Replace throw with TEST_THROW and protect tests that do throw. Also add missing assert(false).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27252
llvm-svn: 288383
When initializing unsigned integers to their maximum values, change "const T M(~0);" to "const T M(static_cast<T>(-1));".
~0 and -1 are equivalent, but I consider the -1 form to be significantly clearer (and more consistent with other tests).
llvm-svn: 287827
Various changes:
test/std/algorithms/alg.sorting/alg.binary.search/binary.search/binary_search.pass.cpp
Change M from unsigned to int. It's compared against "int x",
and we binary_search() for it within a vector<int>.
test/std/numerics/rand/rand.dis/rand.dist.norm/rand.dist.norm.f/eval.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/rand/rand.dis/rand.dist.norm/rand.dist.norm.f/eval_param.pass.cpp
Add static_cast<unsigned> when comparing int to unsigned.
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.cons/size_char_alloc.pass.cpp
Change unsigned indices to int when we're being given int as a bound.
llvm-svn: 287825
The function definitions being guarded by the pragma were all static, so
they wouldn't be exported anyway. In any case, we should prefer the
visibility macros. No functional change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26940
llvm-svn: 287768
Summary: The `max_size()` method of containers should respect both the allocator's reported `max_size` and the range of the `difference_type`. This patch makes all containers choose the smallest of those two values.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26885
llvm-svn: 287729
Libc++ internal uses <atomic> in C++03 code but the module map forbids its use.
This causes the libc++ 'std' module to fail to build in C++03.
This patch removes the requirement to fix this issue.
llvm-svn: 287693
Summary:
Because `locale.h` isn't part of the libc++ modules the class definitions it provides are exported as part of `__locale` (since it happens to be build first). This breaks `<clocale>` which exports `std::lconv` without including `<__locale>`.
This patch implements `locale.h` to fix this issue, it also adds support for testing libc++ with modules.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rsmith, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26826
llvm-svn: 287413
In C++11 mode and newer, use real static_asserts.
In C++03 mode, min() and max() aren't constexpr, so use plain asserts.
One test triggers MSVC's warning C4310 "cast truncates constant value".
The code is valid, and yet the warning is valid, so I'm silencing it
through push-disable-pop.
llvm-svn: 287391
The code cannot currently link when using libsupc++ with the
LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC_ABI_LIBRARY option.
This change ifdef's out the the destructor and 'what' function for
bad_array_length and bad_array_new_length when GLIBCXX is defined.
The constructors that are left in are the only functions not being provided by
libsupc++ itself, and follows the same pattern that was used to ifdef bad_alloc.
Testing was done on a Linux x86_64 host using GCC 5.4 and libc++ from ToT.
I see no change to the test results when using libsup++ or libstdc++ without
LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC_ABI_LIBRARY. When using libsupc++ with
LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC_ABI_LIBRARY it will now build and test results are the
same as those without the option specified.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D26186
llvm-svn: 287388
sample() isn't specified with a reproducible algorithm, so expecting
exact output is non-Standard. Mark those tests with LIBCPP_ASSERT.
In test_small_population(), we're guaranteed to get all of the elements,
but not necessarily in their original order. When PopulationCategory is
forward, we're guaranteed stability (and can therefore test equal()).
Otherwise, we can only test is_permutation(). (As it happens, both libcxx
and MSVC's STL provide stability in this scenario for input-only iterators.)
llvm-svn: 287383
The Standard doesn't provide any guarantees beyond "valid but unspecified" for
moved-from std::functions. libcxx moves from small targets and leaves them
there, while MSVC's STL empties out the source. Mark these assertions as
libcxx-specific.
llvm-svn: 287382
N4582 17.6.3.5 [allocator.requirements] says that allocators are given
cv-unqualified object types, and N4582 20.9.9 [default.allocator]
implies that allocator<const T> is ill-formed (due to colliding
address() overloads). Therefore, tests for allocator<const T>
should be marked as libcxx-specific (if not removed outright).
llvm-svn: 287381
libc++ no longer supports C++11 compilers that don't implement `= default`.
This patch removes all instances of the feature test macro
_LIBCPP_HAS_NO_DEFAULTED_FUNCTIONS as well as the potentially dead code it hides.
llvm-svn: 287321
Fix a typo in the conditional. Caught by going through list of removed
symbols when building with hidden visibility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26825
llvm-svn: 287309
Currently sym_check almost all names found in the binary, including those
which are defined in other libraries. This makes our ABI lists harder to maintain.
This patch adds a --only-stdlib-symbols option to sym_check which removes
all symbols which aren't possibly provided by libc++. It also re-generates
the linux ABI list after making this change.
llvm-svn: 287294
This is a generalization of `_LIBCPP_NEW_DELETE_VIS`; the new macro name
captures the semantics better, and also allows us to get rid of the
`_WIN32` check in `include/new`. No functional change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26702
llvm-svn: 287164
This fails with gcc because __builtin_isnan and friends, which
libcpp_isnan and friends call, are not themselves constexpr-evaluatable.
llvm-svn: 287041
Adding a Clang Format file to libc++ and which style it should use has been
discussed a couple of times. This patch finally adds a .clang-format file
which specifies LLVM styles.
Personally I dislike how the LLVM style handles much of the meta-programming
in libc++. However the general consensus was that libc++ should prefer the
LLVM style and make adjustments where needed.
Note that using clang-format on changes is not required, especially for
changes within the headers. However formatting tests should be encouraged.
llvm-svn: 287020
Summary:
This makes these functions available on host and device, which is
necessary to compile <complex> for the device.
Reviewers: hfinkel, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25403
llvm-svn: 287012
With a max_load_factor of 1.0, the only guarantee is that
bucket_count() >= size(). (Note: setting max_load_factor without
rehashing isn't supposed to affect this, because setting
max_load_factor is currently specified to be constant time.)
llvm-svn: 286982
test/std/depr/depr.c.headers/inttypes_h.pass.cpp
test/std/input.output/file.streams/c.files/cinttypes.pass.cpp
test/std/input.output/iostream.forward/iosfwd.pass.cpp
Add test() to avoid a bunch of void-casts, although we still need a few.
test/std/input.output/iostream.format/quoted.manip/quoted.pass.cpp
skippingws was unused (it's unclear to me whether this was mistakenly copy-pasted from round_trip() below).
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.collate/locale.collate/types.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.ctype/facet.ctype.special/types.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.ctype/locale.codecvt/types_char.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.ctype/locale.codecvt/types_wchar_t.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.ctype/locale.ctype/types.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/facet.numpunct/locale.numpunct/types.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locales/locale.global.templates/use_facet.pass.cpp
When retrieving facets, the references are unused.
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.numeric/locale.nm.put/facet.num.put.members/put_long.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.numeric/locale.nm.put/facet.num.put.members/put_unsigned_long.pass.cpp
"std::ios_base::iostate err = ios.goodbit;" was completely unused here.
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.time/locale.time.get/time_base.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/c.math/ctgmath.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/rand/rand.device/entropy.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/rand/rand.device/eval.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.modifiers/string_copy/copy.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char16_t/eof.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char32_t/eof.pass.cpp
test/std/thread/futures/futures.promise/dtor.pass.cpp
test/std/thread/futures/futures.task/futures.task.members/dtor.pass.cpp
test/std/thread/thread.condition/thread.condition.condvar/wait_for_pred.pass.cpp
These variables are verifying types but are otherwise unused.
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.capacity/reserve.pass.cpp
old_cap was unused (it's unclear to me whether it was intended to be used).
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char/eq.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char16_t/eq.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char16_t/lt.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char32_t/eq.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char32_t/lt.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.wchar.t/eq.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.wchar.t/lt.pass.cpp
These tests contained unused characters.
llvm-svn: 286847
Skip tests that expect an exception be thrown. Also add
some missing asserts in the original test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26512
llvm-svn: 286823
This patch adds a `check-cxx-abilist` target which verifies the libc++.so ABI
when the current build configuration matches the configuration used to generate
the ABI lists.
In order to make this change `HandleOutOfTreeLLVM.cmake` needed to be modified
to include `LLVMConfig.cmake` so that `TARGET_TRIPLE` is defined. Hopefully
the changes needed to accommodate this won't break existing build
configurations.
llvm-svn: 286789
Bitset tests feature a sequence of tests of increasing bitset sizes,
but these tests rely on exceptions when the bitset size is less than
50 elements.
This change adds a flag to tell whether a test should throw. If it must
throw it will be skipped under no-exceptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26140
llvm-svn: 286474
The runtimes subdir is the new location for runtimes, we should
include it when looking for libcxxabi headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26363
llvm-svn: 286333
Visual Studio 2013 and up have these functions, and we don't need to
support older versions.
There are some remaining _LIBCPP_MSVCRT exclusions which are present on
Visual Studio 2015 but not 2013. Those will be addressed in a follow-up.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26377
llvm-svn: 286202
In these tests there are some paths that explicitly throw, so use
the TEST_THROW macro that was proposed for this and then skip the tests
that may enter the throwing path.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26142
llvm-svn: 286099
This replaces every occurrence of _LIBCPP_STD_VER in the tests with
TEST_STD_VER. Additionally, for every affected
file, #include "test_macros.h" is being added explicitly if it wasn't
already there.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D26294
llvm-svn: 286007
Skip the tests that expect an exception be thrown and protect unreachable catch blocks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26197
llvm-svn: 285791
Previously __libcpp_is_constructible checked the validity of reference
construction using 'eat<To>(declval<From>())' but this doesn't consider
From's explicit conversion operators. This patch teaches __libcpp_is_constructible
how to handle these cases. To do this we need to check the validity
using 'static_cast<To>(declval<From>())'. Unfortunately static_cast allows
additional base-to-derived and lvalue-to-rvalue conversions, which have to be
checked for and manually rejected.
While implementing these changes I discovered that Clang incorrectly
rejects `static_cast<int&&>(declval<float&>())` even though
`int &&X(declval<float&>())` is well formed. In order to tolerate this bug
the `__eat<T>(...)` needs to be left in-place. Otherwise it could be replaced
entirely with the new static_cast implementation.
Thanks to Walter Brown for providing the test cases.
llvm-svn: 285786
These tests are of the form
try {
action-that-may-throw
assert(!exceptional-condition)
assert(some-other-facts)
} catch (relevant-exception) {
assert(exceptional-condition)
}
Under libcpp-no-exceptions there is still value in verifying
some-other-facts while avoiding the exceptional case. So for these tests
just conditionally check some-other-facts if exceptional-condition is
false. When exception are supported make sure that a true
exceptional-condition throws an exception
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26136
llvm-svn: 285697
Create this define in __config and use it elsewhere, instead of checking
the operating system/library defines in other files. The aim is to
reduce the usage of _WIN32 outside __config. No functional change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25741
llvm-svn: 285582
Under -fno-exceptions TEST_THROW becomes abort / __builtin_abort which returns
void. This causes a type mismatch in the conditional operator when testing the
library in C++98,03,11 modes.
Use a comma operator to workaround this problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26147
llvm-svn: 285572
This is a follow up of D24562.
These tests do not check anything but exceptions, so it makes sense to mark
them as UNSUPPORTED under a library built without exceptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26075
llvm-svn: 285550
Adding both 'inline' and 'always_inline' to the destructor has been contentious.
However most of the performance benefits can be gained by only adding 'inline',
and there is no reason to hold up that change while discussing the other.
llvm-svn: 285538
path uses string::append to construct, append, and concatenate paths. Unfortunatly
string::append has a strong exception safety guaranteed and if it can't prove
that the iterator operations don't throw then it will allocate a temporary
string copy to append to. However this extra allocation and copy is very
undesirable for path which doesn't have the same exception guarantees.
To work around this this patch adds string::__append_forward_unsafe which exposes
the std::string::append interface for forward iterators without enforcing
that the iterator is noexcept.
llvm-svn: 285532
This prevent the symbols from being both externally available and hidden, which
causes them to be linked incorrectly. This is only a problem when the address
of the function is explicitly taken since it will always be inlined otherwise.
This patch fixes the issues that caused r285456 to be reverted, and can
now be reapplied.
llvm-svn: 285531
This patch fixes a performance bug when constructing or appending to a path
from a string or c-string. Previously we called 'push_back' to append every
single character. This caused multiple re-allocation and copies when at most
one reallocation is necessary. The new behavior is to simply call
`string::append` so it can correctly handle reallocation.
For large strings this change is a ~4x improvement. This also makes our path
faster to construct than libstdc++'s.
llvm-svn: 285530
This patch entirely rewrites the parsing logic for paths. Unlike the previous
implementation this one stores information about the current state; For example
if we are in a trailing separator or a root separator. This avoids the need for
extra lookahead (and extra work) when incrementing or decrementing an iterator.
Roughly this gives us a 15% speedup over the previous implementation.
Unfortunately this implementation is still a lot slower than libstdc++'s.
Because libstdc++ pre-parses and splits the path upon construction their
iterators are trivial to increment/decrement. This makes libc++ lazy parsing
100x slower than libstdc++. However the pre-parsing libstdc++ causes a ton
of extra and unneeded allocations when constructing the string. For example
`path("/foo/bar/")` would require at least 5 allocations with libstdc++
whereas libc++ uses only one. The non-allocating behavior is much preferable
when you consider filesystem usages like 'exists("/foo/bar/")'.
Even then libc++'s path seems to be twice as slow to simply construct compared
to libstdc++. More investigation is needed about this.
llvm-svn: 285526
Author: laxmansole
Reviewers: howard.hinnant
mclow.lists
Subscribers: EricWF, flyingforyou, evandro
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25624
Reapplying the patch as the bug https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30341 is fixed.
Currently basic_string's destructor is not getting inlined. So adding 'inline' attribute to ~basic_string().
Worked in collaboration with Aditya Kumar.
llvm-svn: 285456
This patch does two seperate things. First it adds a file called
"__libcpp_version" which only contains the current libc++ version
(currently 4000). This file is not intended for use as a header. This file
is used by Clang in order to easily determine the installed libc++ version.
This allows Clang to enable/disable certain language features only when the
library supports them.
The second change is the addition of _LIBCPP_LIBRARY_VERSION macro, which
returns the version of the installed dylib since it may be different than
the headers.
llvm-svn: 285382
Summary:
Fixes PR19851.
alg.re.match/ecma.pass.cpp still XFAILS on linux, but after commenting out
locale-related tests, it passes. I don't have a freebsd machine to produce a
full pass.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26026
llvm-svn: 285352
Fixes MS issues 63, 64, and 65.
test/std/utilities/any/any.class/any.cons/move.pass.cpp:
* "Moves are always destructive" is not a portable assumption; check with LIBCPP_ASSERT.
test/std/utilities/any/any.class/any.cons/value.pass.cpp:
* The standard does not forbid initializing std::any from any pointer-to-function type. Remove the non-conforming "DecayTag" test.
test/std/utilities/any/any.class/any.modifiers/swap.pass.cpp:
* Self-swap is not specified to perform no moves; check with LIBCPP_ASSERT.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26007
llvm-svn: 285234
Summary:
This patch turns on `-fvisibility-inlines-hidden` when building the dylib. This is important so that libc++.dylib doesn't accidentally export inline-functions which are ODR used somewhere in the dylib.
On OS X this change has no effect on the current ABI of the dylib. Unfortunately on Linux there are already ~20 inline functions which are unintentionally exported by the dylib. Almost all of these are implicitly generated destructors. I believe removing these function definitions is safe because every "linkage unit" which uses these functions has its own definition, and therefore shouldn't be dependent on libc++.dylib to provide them.
Also could a FreeBSD maintainer comment on the ABI compatibility of this patch?
Reviewers: mclow.lists, emaste, dexonsmith, joker-eph-DISABLED, jroelofs, danalbert, mehdi_amini, compnerd, dim
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, cfe-commits, modocache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25593
llvm-svn: 285101
Summary:
`__libcpp_refstring` currently has two different definitions. First there is the complete definition in `<__refstring>` but there is also a second in `<stdexcept>`. The historical reason for this split is because both libc++ and libc++abi need to see the inline definitions of __libcpp_refstrings methods, but the `<stdexcept>` header doesn't. However this is an ODR violation and breaks the modules build.
This patch fixes the issue by creating a single class definition in `<stdexcept>` and changing `<__refstring>` to contain only the inline method definitions. This way both `libcxx/src/stdexcept.cpp` and `libcxxabi/src/stdexcept.cpp` see the same declaration in `<stdexcept>` and definitions in `<__refstring>`
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25603
llvm-svn: 285100
musl's pthread implementations use volatile types in their structs
which is not being constexpr in C++11 but is in C++14.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25491
llvm-svn: 284950
These modules are necessary on Darwin to allow modules with
'no_undeclared_includes' (introduced in clang r284797) to work properly
while using libc++ headers.
Patch extracted from a suggested module.modulemap from Richard Smith!
llvm-svn: 284801
Adjust the stand-alone build files to accept either CMake files from
LLVM_CMAKE_PATH or from LLVM_MAIN_SRC_DIR instead of requiring both.
This makes it possible to run libcxx tests on top of installed LLVM
and lit, without having to unpack a copy of LLVM sources. Furthermore,
it avoids adding duplicate paths.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25093
llvm-svn: 284583
Convert the Solaris xlocale.c compatibility library from plain C to C++
in order to fix the build failures caused by the addition of -std=c++11
to LIBCXX_COMPILE_FLAGS. The additional flag got propagated to the C
file, resulting in error with strict compilers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25431
llvm-svn: 284494
Fix the iswxdigit_l() function prototype to take wint_t parameter
instead of incorrect wchar_t.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25431
llvm-svn: 284493
This fixes a small omission where even when __external_threading is provided,
we attempt to declare a pthread based threading API. Instead, we should leave
out everything for the __external_threading header to take care of.
The __threading_support header provides a proof-of-concept externally threaded
libc++ variant when _LIBCPP_HAS_THREAD_API_EXTERNAL is defined. But if the
__external_threading header is present, we should exclude all of that POC stuff.
Reviewers: EricWF
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25468
llvm-svn: 284232
Libc++ will not build with modules enabled. In order to support an in-tree
libc++ when LLVM_ENABLE_MODULES is ON we need to explicitly disable the feature.
Unfortunately the libc++ sources are fundamentally non-modular. For example
iostream.cpp defines cout, cerr, wout, ... as char buffers instead of streams
in order to better control initialization/destruction. Not shockingly Clang
diagnoses this. Many other sources files define _LIBCPP_BUILDING_FOO macros to
provide definitions for normally inline symbols (See bind.cpp). Finally The
current module.map prohibits using <strstream> in C++11 so we can't build
strstream.cpp.
I think I can fix most of these issues but until then just disable modules.
llvm-svn: 284230
Summary:
This patch implements the library side of P0035R4. The implementation is thanks to @rsmith.
In addition to the C++17 implementation, the library implementation can be explicitly turned on using `-faligned-allocation` in all dialects.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rsmith
Subscribers: rsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25591
llvm-svn: 284206
These functions were removed from the dylib sometime between the 3.9 release
and now. This patch manually exports them to re-gain ABI compatibility.
llvm-svn: 284193
The primary reason for this patch is to add the OS X ABI lists for 3.9 and
ToT.
However while working on that I discovered that we incorrectly
exported the libc++abi symbols. Previously we had chosen the wrong CMake
configuration path and that caused us to re-export the c++abi binary instead
of using the symbol lists.
llvm-svn: 284188
Summary:
On FreeBSD, for ABI compatibility reasons, the pair trivial copy
constructor is disabled, using the aptly-named
`_LIBCPP_DEPRECATED_ABI_DISABLE_PAIR_TRIVIAL_COPY_CTOR` define.
Disable the related tests when this define is on, so they don't fail
unexpectedly.
Reviewers: emaste, rsmith, theraven, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25449
llvm-svn: 284047
The behavior of this macro actually needs to apply universally on
Windows and not just when using the Microsoft CRT. Update the macro
definition and documentation accordingly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25145
llvm-svn: 284016
Summary:
Adapt implementation of Library Fundamentals TS optional into an implementation of N4606 optional.
- Update relational operators per http://wg21.link/P0307
- Update to requirements of http://wg21.link/P0032
- Extension: Implement trivial copy/move construction/assignment for `optional<T>` when `T` is trivially copyable.
Audit P/Rs for optional LWG issues:
- 2756 "C++ WP optional<T> should 'forward' T's implicit conversions" Implemented, which also resolves 2753 "Optional's constructors and assignments need constraints" (modulo my refusal to explicitly delete the move operations, which is a design error that I'm working on correcting in the 2756 P/R).
- 2736 "nullopt_t insufficiently constrained" Already conforming. I've added a test ensuring that `nullopt_t` is not copy-initializable from an empty braced-init-list, which I believe is the root intent of the issue, to avoid regression.
- 2740 "constexpr optional<T>::operator->" Already conforming.
- 2746 "Inconsistency between requirements for emplace between optional and variant" No P/R, but note that the author's '"suggested resolution" is already implemented.
- 2748 "swappable traits for optionals" Already conforming.
- 2753 "Optional's constructors and assignments need constraints" Implemented.
Most of the work for this patch was done by Casey Carter @ Microsoft. Thank you Casey!
Reviewers: mclow.lists, CaseyCarter, EricWF
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22741
llvm-svn: 283980
This patch is largely thanks to Casey Carter @ Microsoft. He did the initial
work of porting our experimental implementation and tests over to namespace
std.
llvm-svn: 283977
Summary:
FreeBSD ships an old ABI for std::pair which requires that it have non-trivial copy/move constructors. Currently the non-trivial copy/move is achieved by providing explicit definitions of the constructors. This is problematic because it means the constructors don't SFINAE properly. In order to SFINAE copy/move constructors they have to be explicitly defaulted and hense non-trivial.
This patch attempts to provide SFINAE'ing copy/move constructors for std::pair while still making them non-trivial. It does this by adding a base class with a non-trivial copy constructor and then allowing pair's constructors to be generated by the compiler. This also allows the constructors to be constexpr.
Reviewers: emaste, theraven, rsmith, dim
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25389
llvm-svn: 283944
Fuchsia is a new operating system which uses musl as the standard
C library, libc++ and libc++abi as the C++ standard library.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25414
llvm-svn: 283788
The implementation of [depr.c.headers] in D12747 introduced the necessary
C headers into libc++. This patch adds one more missing headers: limits.h
We spotted this due to a failing C++03 test [limits_h.pass.cpp] in our libc++
configuration; when the limits.h header is included from a C++ program, it now
bypassed the __config header and went directly into the underlying C library's
limits.h header, which is problematic for us because we use __config header to
configure the underlying C library's behaviour when used from a C++ context.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rsmith
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25361
llvm-svn: 283726
__builtin_addressof was added to the GCC trunk in the past week. This patch
teaches libc++ about it so it can correctly provide constexpr addressof.
Unfortunately this patch will break users of earlier GCC 7 builds, since
we expect __builtin_addressof but one won't be provided. One option would be
to only use __builtin_addressof for GCC 7.1 and above, but that means
waiting for another release.
Instead I've specifically chosen to break older GCC 7 versions. Since GCC 7
has yet to be released, and the 7.0 release is a development release, I
believe that anybody currently using GCC 7.0 will have no issue upgrading.
llvm-svn: 283715
r283659 changed the argument to gen_link_script.py from SCRIPT_ABI_LIBNAME to
LIBCXX_LIBRARIES_PUBLIC, assuming that all of the items in the
LIBCXX_LIBRARIES_PUBLIC list were library names. This is not right, however,
for in-tree libcxxabi builds, we might have the target name in this list. There
was special logic to fixup SCRIPT_ABI_LIBNAME for this situation; change it to
apply a similar fixup for LIBCXX_LIBRARIES_PUBLIC.
llvm-svn: 283684
Introduce LIBCXX_LIBRARIES_PUBLIC in addition to LIBCXX_LIBRARIES that
holds 'public' interface libraries -- that is, libraries that both
libc++ links to and programs linked against it need to link to.
Currently this includes the ABI library and optionally -lunwind (when
LIBCXXABI_USE_LLVM_UNWINDER is on). The libraries are included in the
linker script, in order to make it possible to link C++ programs using
clang with compiler-rt runtime out-of-the-box.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25008
llvm-svn: 283659
Summary:
To quote STL the problems with stack allocator are"
>"stack_allocator<T, N> is seriously nonconformant to N4582 17.6.3.5 [allocator.requirements].
> First, it lacks a rebinding constructor. (The nested "struct rebind" isn't sufficient.)
> Second, it lacks templated equality/inequality.
> Third, it completely ignores alignment.
> Finally, and most severely, the Standard forbids its existence. Allocators are forbidden from returning memory "inside themselves". This requirement is implied by the Standard's requirements for rebinding and equality. It's permitted to return memory from a separate buffer object on the stack, though."
This patch attempts to address all of those issues.
First, instead of storing the buffer inside the allocator I've change `stack_allocator` to accept the buffer as an argument.
Second, in order to fix rebinding I changed the parameter list from `<class T, size_t NumElements>` to `<class T, size_t NumBytes>`. This allows allocator rebinding
between types that have different sizes.
Third, I added copy and rebinding constructors and assignment operators.
And finally I fixed the allocation logic to always return properly aligned storage.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, howard.hinnant, STL_MSFT
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25154
llvm-svn: 283631
This was caused by r281673, specifically changing `_LIBCPP_EXTERN_TEMPLATE_TYPE_VIS`
from `__attribute__((__type_visibility__("default")))` to
`__attribute__((__visibility("default")))`.
I made that change because I thought the external instantiations needed
their members to have default visibility. However since libc++ never builds
with -fvisibility=hidden this appears not to be needed. Instead this change
caused previously hidden inline methods to become un-hidden, which is a regression.
This patch reverts the problematic change and fixes PR30642.
llvm-svn: 283620
* Fix self-swap. Patch from Casey Carter.
* Remove workarounds and tests for types with deleted move constructors. This
was originally added as part of a LWG proposed resolution that has since
changed.
* Re-apply most recent PR for LWG 2769.
* Re-apply most recent PR for LWG 2754. Specifically fix the SFINAE checks to
use the decayed type.
* Fix tests to allow moved-from std::any's to have a non-empty state. This is
the behavior of MSVC's std::any.
* Various whitespace and test fixes.
llvm-svn: 283606
First batch of changes to get some of these XFAILs working in the
no-exceptions libc++ variant.
Changed some XFAILs to UNSUPPORTED where the test is all about exception
handling. In other cases, used the test macros TEST_THROW and
TEST_HAS_NO_EXCEPTIONS to conditionally exclude those parts of the test
that concerns exception handling behaviour.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24562
llvm-svn: 283441
Summary:
The current implementation of `hash_code()` for uniqued RTTI strings violates strict aliasing by dereferencing a type-punned pointer. Specifically it generates a `const char**` pointer from the address of the `__name` member before casting it to `const size_t*` and dereferencing it to get the hash. This is really just a complex and incorrect way of writing `reinterpret_cast<size_t>(__name)`.
This patch changes the conversion sequence so that it no longer contains UB.
Reviewers: howard.hinnant, mclow.lists
Subscribers: rjmccall, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24012
llvm-svn: 283408
Summary: There's a macro scheme already being used for __has_feature etc. Use it for __has_include too, which makes MSVC happy (it doesn't support __has_include yet, and unguarded use explodes horribly).
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25251
llvm-svn: 283260
The libc-provided isnan/isinf/isfinite macro implementations are specifically
designed to function correctly, even in the presence of -ffast-math (or, more
specifically, -ffinite-math-only). As such, on most implementation, these
either always turn into external function calls (e.g. glibc) or are
specifically function calls when FINITE_MATH_ONLY is defined (e.g. Darwin).
Our implementation of complex arithmetic makes heavy use of isnan/isinf/isfinite
to deal with corner cases involving non-finite quantities. This was problematic
in two respects:
1. On systems where these are always function calls (e.g. Linux/glibc), there was a
performance penalty
2. When compiling with -ffast-math, there was a significant performance
penalty (in fact, on Darwin and systems with similar implementations, the code
may in fact be slower than not using -ffast-math, because the inline
definitions provided by libc become unavailable to prevent the checks from
being optimized out).
Eliding these inf/nan checks in -ffast-math mode is consistent with what
happens with libstdc++, and in my experience, what users expect. This is
critical to getting high-performance code when using complex<T>. This change
replaces uses of those functions on basic floating-point types with calls to
__builtin_isnan/isinf/isfinite, which Clang will always expand inline. When
using -ffast-math (or -ffinite-math-only), the optimizer will remove the checks
as expected.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18639
llvm-svn: 283051
Add underscore aliases for strtof_l and strtod_l. _strtold_l exists in
VS 2013 and above, so fix that definition as a drive-by fix.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25059
llvm-svn: 282681
Replace a stale reference to cxx_EXPORTS with _LIBCPP_BUILDING_LIBRARY,
and clarify why the operator new and delete family of functions are
marked dllexport when building but *not* dllimport when including the
header externally.
The new code is identical to the intent of the old code (and would be
functionally equivalent were cxx_EXPORTS still defined when building
libc++). The overall behavior is not ideal, since Microsoft's operator
new and delete functions will get called instead of libc++'s, but I
think consistently calling msvcrt's functions is better than either
calling msvcrt's or libc++'s functions depending on header inclusion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25042
llvm-svn: 282644
This patch applies the _LIBCPP_SAFE_STATIC attribute to internal globals,
most of which are locking primitives, in order to ensure that they can
safely be used during program startup.
This patch also fixes an unsafe static init issue with the global locks
used to implement atomic operations on shared pointers. Previously the
locks were initialized using a dynamically initialized pointer, so it was
possible that the pointer was uninitialized.
llvm-svn: 282640
The ::stat struct on Linux, FreeBSD, and OS X provides the access and
modification times as an instance of 'timespec', which has a nanosecond
resolution. The 'st_mtime' and 'st_atime' members simply reference the 'tv_sec'
value of the timespec struct. This patch changes 'last_write_time(...)' so that
it extracts both the seconds and nanoseconds values of the last modification
time, providing a more accurate implementation of 'last_write_time(...)'.
Additionally this patch fixes a possible signed integer overflow bug. The
'file_time_type' type cannot represent all possible values returned by
the filesystem. Attempting to construct a 'file_time_type' from one of these
values is undefined behavior. This patch avoids that UB by detecting possible
overflows before the conversion.
llvm-svn: 282634
Revert r282483 as it causes build failures due to missing symbols when
not linking to -lgcc_s (i.e. doing pure LLVM stack build). The patch can
be reintroduced when the build system is fixed to add all needed
libraries (libunwind, compiler-rt).
llvm-svn: 282524
Add the "-Wl,-z,defs" linker option that is used to prevent
underlinking. It is already used by LLVM itself but does not get
propagated into stand-alone build of libc++. This patch ensures
that the option is passed in independently of whether libc++ is built
in-tree or out-of-tree.
Patch by Lei Zhang.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24119
llvm-svn: 282483
Strip the set of flags (including debug defs, -m32) that could
be inherited from top-level LLVM build only when in-tree build is
performed. This prevents libcxx from confusingly and undesiredly
stripping user-supplied flags e.g. when performing packaging system
controlled multi-ABI build.
Otherwise, in order to perform 32-bit builds the build scripts would
have to use LIBCXX_BUILD_32_BITS. However, -m32 is only one of the many
different ABI flags for different targets, and it really makes no sense
to add separate CMake options for each possible -m* flag and then keep
a mapping from well-known flags to the custom CMake options.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24809
llvm-svn: 282475
builds.
On Windows the __declspec(dllimport) and __declspec(dllexport) attributes
require linking to a DLL, not a static library. Previously these annotations
were disabled by default unless _LIBCPP_DLL was defined. However the DLL
configuration is probably the more common one, so it should be supported by
default.
This patch enables import/export attributes by default and adds a
_LIBCPP_DISABLE_DLL_IMPORT_EXPORT macro which can be used to disable this
behavior. If libc++ is built as a static library on Windows then a custom __config
header will be generated that predefines this macro.
This patch is based off work by Shoaib Meenai.
llvm-svn: 282449
Summary: This patch fixes a couple of typos that cause compilation errors when application includes <unordered_map> and enables the libc++'s debugging capabilities.
Reviewers: EricWF
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24883
llvm-svn: 282446
Summary:
`std::move` and `std::forward` were not marked constexpr in C++11. This can be very damaging because it makes otherwise constant expressions non-constant. For example:
```
#include <utility>
template <class T>
struct Foo {
constexpr Foo(T&& tx) : t(std::move(tx)) {}
T t;
};
[[clang::require_constant_initialization]] Foo<int> f(42); // Foo should be constant initialized but C++11 move is not constexpr. As a result `f` is an unsafe global.
```
This patch applies `constexpr` to `move` and `forward` as an extension in C++11. Normally the library is not allowed to add `constexpr` because it may be observable to the user. In particular adding constexpr may cause valid code to stop compiling. However these problems only happen in more complex situations, like making `__invoke(...)` constexpr. `forward` and `move` are simply enough that applying `constexpr` is safe.
Note that libstdc++ has offered this extension since at least 4.8.1.
Most of the changes in this patch are simply test cleanups or additions. The main changes in the tests are:
* Fold all `forward_N.fail.cpp` tests into a single `forward.fail.cpp` test using -verify.
* Delete most `move_only_N.fail.cpp` tests because they weren't actually testing anything.
* Fold `move_copy.pass.cpp` and `move_only.pass.cpp` into a single `move.pass.cpp` test.
* Add return type and noexcept tests for `forward` and `move`.
Reviewers: rsmith, mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: K-ballo, loladiro
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24637
llvm-svn: 282439
Declare __STDC_FORMAT_MACROS, __STDC_LIMIT_MACROS and
__STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS before including real inttypes.h/stdint.h when
the wrapper-header is included in C++11, in order to enable
the necessary macros in C99-compliant libc.
The C99 standard defined that the format macros in inttypes.h should be
defined by the C++ implementations only when __STDC_FORMAT_MACROS is
defined, and the limit and constant macros in stdint.h should be defined
only when __STDC_LIMIT_MACROS and __STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS are defined
appropriately. Following this specification, multiple old versions of
glibc up to 2.17 do not define those macros by default for C++,
rendering the libc++ headers non-compliant to the C++11 standard.
In order to achieve the necessary compliance, __STDC_FORMAT_MACROS is
defined in wrapped inttypes.h just before including the system
inttypes.h, when C++11 or newer is used. Both __STDC_LIMIT_MACROS
and __STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS are defined in newly-wrapped stdint.h. This
fixes the C++11 compliance while preserving the current behavior for
C++03.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24903
llvm-svn: 282435
Summary:
Libc++ still uses per-feature configuration macros when configuring for C++11. However libc++ requires a feature-complete C++11 compiler so there is no reason to check individual features. This patch starts the process of removing the feature specific macros and replacing their usage with `_LIBCPP_CXX03_LANG`.
This patch removes the __config macros:
* _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_TRAILING_RETURN
* _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_TEMPLATE_ALIASES
* _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_ADVANCED_SFINAE
* _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_DEFAULT_FUNCTION_TEMPLATE_ARGS
* _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_STATIC_ASSERT
As a drive I also changed our C++03 static_assert to use _Static_assert if available.
I plan to commit this without review if nobody voices an objection.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24895
llvm-svn: 282347
Summary:
This patch has been a long time coming (Thanks @eugenis). It changes `_LIBCPP_INLINE_VISIBILITY` to use `__attribute__((internal_linkage))` instead of `__attribute__((visibility("hidden"), always_inline))`.
The point of `_LIBCPP_INLINE_VISIBILITY` is to prevent inline functions from being exported from both the libc++ library and from user libraries. This helps libc++ better manage it's ABI.
Previously this was done by forcing inlining and modifying the symbols visibility. However inlining isn't guaranteed and symbol visibility only affects shared libraries making this an imperfect solution. `internal_linkage` improves this situation by making all symbols local to the TU they are emitted in, regardless of inlining or visibility. IIRC the effect of applying `__attribute__((internal_linkage))` to an inline function is the same as applying `static`.
For more information about the attribute see: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2015-October/045580.html
Most of the work for this patch was done by @eugenis.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, eugenis
Subscribers: eugenis, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24642
llvm-svn: 282345
Visual Studio 2013 and onward have all the required functions in their
CRT headers, and we don't support older versions anymore.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24879
llvm-svn: 282328
On Windows, marking an `extern template class` declaration as exported
actually forces an instantiation, which is not the desired behavior.
Instead, the actual explicit instantiations need to be exported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24679
llvm-svn: 281925
Summary:
None of these checks are specific to Android devices. If libc++ was
used with Bionic on a normal Linux system these checks would still be
needed.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: compnerd, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24690
llvm-svn: 281921
gcc and clang in gcc compatibility mode do not accept __forceinline. Use
the gcc attribute for them instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24678
llvm-svn: 281766
The externally instantiated member functions must be declared using
_LIBCPP_EXTERN_TEMPLATE_INLINE_VISIBILITY, not _LIBCPP_INLINE_VISIBILITY, in
order to be properly exported when using __attribute__((internal_linkage)).
Otherwise the explicit instantiations will obviously have internal linkage and
will not be exported from the dylib.
llvm-svn: 281684
Summary:
This patch fixes a number of problems with the visibility macros across GCC (on Unix) and Windows (DLL import/export semantics). All of the visibility macros are now documented under `DesignDocs/VisibilityMacros.rst`. Now I'll no longer forget the subtleties of each!
This patch adds two new visibility macros:
* `_LIBCPP_ENUM_VIS` for controlling the typeinfo of enum types. Only Clang supports this.
* `_LIBCPP_EXTERN_TEMPLATE_TYPE_VIS` for redefining visibility on explicit instantiation declarations. Clang and Windows require this.
After applying this patch GCC only emits one -Wattribute warning opposed to 30+.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24602
llvm-svn: 281673
When `_LIBCPP_NO_EXCEPTIONS` is defined, we end up with compile errors
when targeting MSVCRT:
* Code includes `<new>`
* `<new>` includes `<cstdlib>` in order to get `abort`
* `<cstdlib>` includes `<stdlib.h>`, _before_ the `using ::abort`
* `<stdlib.h>` includes `locale_win32.h`
* `locale_win32.h` includes `<memory>`
* `<memory>` includes `<stdexcept>`
* `<stdexcept>` includes `<cstdlib` for `abort`, but that inclusion gets
(correctly) ignored because of header guards
* `<stdexcept>` references `_VSTD::abort`, which isn't declared
The easiest solution is to make `locale_win32.h` not include `<memory>`,
by removing the use of `unique_ptr` and manually restoring the locale
instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24374
llvm-svn: 281641
This patch causes a couple of issues:
1) It triggers http://llvm.org/PR30341. Although the bug is not truly a libc++
bug it breaks the LLVM build using libc++. Reverting this patch is only
a temporary workaround until Clang is fixed.
2) It adds yet another ABI incompatibility when libc++.so is compiled with GCC.
Specifically GCC doesn't ignore the _LIBCPP_INLINE_VISIBILITY on the out-of-line
definition when compiling the dylib. This causes the externally instantiated
~basic_string symbol to have hidden visibility.
This patch should be recommitted after addressing (1) and (2). (2) can be fixed
by adding _LIBCPP_EXTERN_TEMPLATE_INLINE_VISIBILITY which is defined as
__attribute__((visibility("default"), always_inline)) as opposed to
_LIBCPP_INLINE_VISIBILITY which makes the symbol hidden.
llvm-svn: 281562
This patch enables building and testing libcxx under ThreadSanitizer on OS X. CMake builds that have -DLLVM_USE_SANITIZER=Thread will automatically build libcxx with -fsanitize=thread and testing via lit then runs under TSan.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24297
llvm-svn: 281475
An enum class has associated type info. In the Microsoft ABI, type info
is emitted in the COMDAT section and isn't exported, so clang rightfully
complains about __declspec(dllexport) being unused for an enum class.
On other platforms, we still want to export the type info.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24065
llvm-svn: 281264
This patch further decouples libc++ from pthread, allowing libc++ to be built
against other threading systems. There are two main use cases:
- Building libc++ against a thread library other than pthreads.
- Building libc++ with an "external" thread API, allowing a separate library to
provide the implementation of that API.
The two use cases are quite similar, the second one being sligtly more
de-coupled than the first. The cmake option LIBCXX_HAS_EXTERNAL_THREAD_API
enables both kinds of builds. One needs to place an <__external_threading>
header file containing an implementation of the "libc++ thread API" declared
in the <__threading_support> header.
For the second use case, the implementation of the libc++ thread API can
delegate to a custom "external" thread API where the implementation of this
external API is provided in a seperate library. This mechanism allows toolchain
vendors to distribute a build of libc++ with a custom thread-porting-layer API
(which is the "external" API above), platform vendors (recipients of the
toolchain/libc++) are then required to provide their implementation of this API
to be linked with (end-user) C++ programs.
Note that the second use case still requires establishing the basic types that
get passed between the external thread library and the libc++ library
(e.g. __libcpp_mutex_t). These cannot be opaque pointer types (libc++ sources
won't compile otherwise). It should also be noted that the second use case can
have a slight performance penalty; as all the thread constructs need to cross a
library boundary through an additional function call.
When the header <__external_threading> is omitted, libc++ is built with the
"libc++ thread API" (declared in <__threading_support>) as the "external" thread
API (basic types are pthread based). An implementation (pthread based) of this
API is provided in test/support/external_threads.cpp, which is built into a
separate DSO and linked in when running the libc++ test suite. A test run
therefore demonstrates the second use case (less the intermediate custom API).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21968
Reviewers: bcraig, compnerd, EricWF, mclow.lists
llvm-svn: 281179
Visual Studio 2013 (CRT version 12) added support for many C99 long long and
long double functions. Visual Studio 2015 (CRT version 14) increased C99 and C11
compliance further. Since we don't support Visual Studio versions older than
2013, we can considerably clean up the support header.
Patch by Shoaib Meenai!
llvm-svn: 280988
Author: laxmansole
Reviewers: howard.hinnant
mclow.lists
Subscribers: EricWF, flyingforyou, evandro
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22834
Currently basic_string's destructor is not getting inlined. So adding 'inline' attribute to ~basic_string().
Worked in collaboration with Aditya Kumar.
llvm-svn: 280944
This patch fixes PR30260 by using a (void*) cast on the placement argument
to placement new to casts away the const. See also http://llvm.org/PR30260.
As a drive by change this patch also changes the header guard for
<experimental/optional> to _LIBCPP_EXPERIMENTAL_OPTIONAL from _LIBCPP_OPTIONAL.
llvm-svn: 280775
When libc++experimental was originally created it was empty and therefore there
was no reason to install it. Now that the library contains
<experimental/memory_resource> and <experimental/filesystem> there is a good
reason to install it.
Specifically this patch enables the installation whenever LIBCXX_INSTALL_LIBRARY
is true and LIBCPP_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL_LIBRARY is true.
llvm-svn: 280773
This patch removes the `<cstdlib>` include from exception where it is no longer
needed. Unlike my previous attempt this patch also adds <cstdlib> where needed
in other headers like <new> and <typeinfo>.
This won't fix the Firefox build issues discussed on IRC but it is more correct
for libc++.
llvm-svn: 280754
Apparently I missed a number of additional include which need to be added.
Reverting so I can recommit as a single patch with all of the required includes.
llvm-svn: 280752
call_once is using relaxed atomic load to perform double-checked locking, which contains a data race. The fast-path load has to be an acquire atomic load.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24028
llvm-svn: 280621
Summary:
This patch allows threads not created using `std::thread` to use `std::notify_all_at_thread_exit` by ensuring the TL state has been initialized within `std::notify_all_at_thread_exit`.
Additionally this patch "fixes" a potential oddity in `__thread_local_pointer::reset(pointer)`, which would previously delete the old thread local data. However there should *never* be old thread local data because pthread *should* null it out on thread exit. Unfortunately it's possible that pthread failed to do this according to the spec:
>
> Upon key creation, the value NULL shall be associated with the new key in all active threads. Upon thread creation, the value NULL shall be associated with all defined keys in the new thread.
>
> An optional destructor function may be associated with each key value. At thread exit, if a key value has a non-NULL destructor pointer, and the thread has a non-NULL value associated with that key, the value of the key is set to NULL, and then the function pointed to is called with the previously associated value as its sole argument. The order of destructor calls is unspecified if more than one destructor exists for a thread when it exits.
>
> If, after all the destructors have been called for all non-NULL values with associated destructors, there are still some non-NULL values with associated destructors, then the process is repeated. If, after at least {PTHREAD_DESTRUCTOR_ITERATIONS} iterations of destructor calls for outstanding non-NULL values, there are still some non-NULL values with associated destructors, implementations may stop calling destructors, or they may continue calling destructors until no non-NULL values with associated destructors exist, even though this might result in an infinite loop.
However if pthread fails to delete the value it is probably incorrect for us to do it. Destroying the value performs all of the "at thread exit" actions registered with it but we are way past "at thread exit".
Reviewers: mclow.lists, bcraig, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24159
llvm-svn: 280588
When <bitset> is compiled with warnings enabled, on a platform where
size_t is 4 bytes, it results in errors similar to:
bitset:265:16: error: non-constant-expression cannot be narrowed
from type 'unsigned long long' to '__storage_type' (aka 'unsigned
int') in initializer list [-Wc++11-narrowing]
: __first_{__v, __v >> __bits_per_word}
^~~
bitset:676:52: note: in instantiation of member function
'std::__1::__bitset<2, 53>::__bitset' requested here
bitset(unsigned long long __v) _NOEXCEPT : base(__v) {}
^
Fix these by casting the initializer list elements to __storage_type.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23960
llvm-svn: 280543
Microsoft removed gets from the CRT in Visual Studio 2015 onwards [1].
Attempting to reference it when targeting CRT versions 14 and above will cause
compile errors.
[1] https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/2029ea5f.aspx
Patch by Shoaib Meenai!
llvm-svn: 280417
`-fPIC` doesn't make much sense for Windows, since Windows DLLs aren't compiled
position independent and are instead relocated at runtime.
Patch by Shoaib Meenai!
llvm-svn: 280413
In r280108 I tried to make the headers copy relative to LLVM_BINARY_DIR, and the intent was that it would only happen on in-tree builds or runtimes directory builds. It didn't actually work that way.
This patch adds a check for CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR being equal to CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR. In this case we set a variable LIBCXX_USING_INSTLLED_LLVM. This doesn't necessarily mean the LLVM is installed (it could be a build directory), but it means we need to treat the LLVM directory as read-only.
llvm-svn: 280400
Summary: This copy phase is only needed for in-tree builds, so we should be copying to the LLVM build directory's include dir instead of the sub-project include dir.
Reviewers: bogner, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24015
llvm-svn: 280108
Some of the mutex tests fail on machines with high load. This patch implements
the test directive "// FLAKY_TEST" which allows a test to be run 3 times
before it's considered a failure.
llvm-svn: 280050
We're compiling libc++ with -nodefaultlibs, so we should also pass this
option during the configuration checks to ensure those checks are
consistent with the actual build.
The primary motivation here is to ease cross-compilation against a
non-standard set of C++ libraries. Previously, the configuration checks
would attempt to link against the standard C++ libraries, which would
cause link failures when cross-compiling, even though the actual library
link would go through correctly (because of the use of -nodefaultlibs
and explicitly specifying any needed libraries). This is more correct
even ignoring the motivation, however.
Patch by Shoaib Meenai!
llvm-svn: 280015
Summary:
Currently a number of GCC warnings are emitted when building libc++. This patch fixes or ignores all of them. The primary changes are:
* Work around strict aliasing issues in `typeinfo::hash_code()` by using __attribute__((may_alias)). However I think a non-aliasing `hash_code()` implementation is possible. Further investigation needed.
* Add `_LIBCPP_UNREACHABLE()` to switch in `strstream.cpp` to avoid -Wpotentially-uninitialized.
* Fix -Wunused-value warning in `__all` by adding a void cast.
* Ignore -Wattributes for now. There are a number of real attribute issues when using GCC but enabling the warning is too noisy.
* Ignore -Wliteral-suffix since it warns about the use of reserved identifiers. Note Only GCC 7.0 supports disabling this warning.
* Ignore -Wc++14-compat since it warns about the sized new/delete overloads.
Reviewers: EricWF
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24003
llvm-svn: 280007
This patch enables the `cxx-benchmarks` target by default. Note that the target
still has to be manually invoked since it isn't included in the default 'make'
rule.
This patch also gets the benchmarks building w/ GCC. The build previously
required the '-stdlib=libc++' flag but upstream patches to Google Benchmark
now allow the library to build w/ libc++ and GCC.
These changes should make the benchmarks easier to build and test.
llvm-svn: 279999
This assignment operator was previously broken since the SFINAE always resulted
in substitution failure. This caused assignments to turn into
copy construction + assignment.
This patch was originally committed as r279953 but was reverted due to warnings
in the test-suite. This new patch corrects those warnings.
llvm-svn: 279955
This assignment operator was previously broken since the SFINAE always resulted
in substitution failure. This caused assignments to turn into
copy construction + assignment.
llvm-svn: 279953
This patch implements the std::sample function added to C++17 from LFTS. It
also removes the std::experimental::sample implementation which now forwards
to std::sample.
llvm-svn: 279948
Libc++'s implementation of shuffle and sample already support lvalue and rvalue
RNG's. This patch adds tests for both categories and marks the issue as complete.
This patch also contains drive-by change for std::experimental::sample which
improves the diagnostics produced when the correct iterator categories are
not supplied.
llvm-svn: 279947
Similar to rL242623, move C++ version checks outside of _NOEXCEPT_()
macro invocation argument lists, to avoid "embedding a directive within
macro arguments has undefined behavior" warnings.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23961
llvm-svn: 279926
Summary:
The point of this patch is to have a consistent convention for naming build, check and install targets so that the targets can be constructed from the project name.
This change renames a bunch of CMake components and targets from libcxx to cxx. For each renamed target I've added a convenience target that matches the old target name and depends on the new target. This will preserve function of the old targets so that the change doesn't break the world. We can evaluate if it is worth removing the extra targets later.
Reviewers: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23699
llvm-svn: 279675
We're compiling libc++ with -nodefaultlibs, so we should also pass this option
during the configuration checks to ensure those checks are consistent with the
actual build.
The primary motivation here is to ease cross-compilation against a non-standard
set of C++ libraries. Previously, the configuration checks would attempt to link
against the standard C++ libraries, which would cause link failures when
cross-compiling, even though the actual library link would go through correctly
(because of the use of -nodefaultlibs and explicitly specifying any needed
libraries). This is more correct even ignoring the motivation, however.
Patch by Shoaib Meenai!
llvm-svn: 279584
Some tests uses 'long double' to/from conversions and for some targets
they are provided by compiler runtime (either compiler-rt or libgcc).
However when building libcxx with linunwinder current test configuration
at target_info.py do not include the required libraries, as:
not llvm_unwinder:
"-lc++" "-lm" "-lgcc_s" "-lgcc" "-lpthread" "-lc" "-lgcc_s" "-lgcc"
llvm_unwinder
"-lc++" "-lm" "-lpthread" "-lc" "-lunwind" "-ldl"
This causes some tests build issues with missing symbols on aarch64,
for instance, where 'long double' is a binary float with 128-bits with
mostly of internal operations being provided by software routines.
This patch changes how to define the default linker flags with libunwinder by
adding libgcc regardless.
I checked and aarch64 and x86_64 with libcxx and libunwind (with and without
LIBCXXABI_USE_LLVM_UNWINDER).
llvm-svn: 279552
Summary:
The new LLVM runtimes build directory requires some basic conventions across the runtime projects. These changes make libcxx build under the runtimes subdirectory. The general idea of the changes is that the runtimes subdirectory requires some conventions to be consistent across runtime projects.
I expect to have a few more small patches that build on this to tie up check targets and other things useful in development workflows.
Summary of changes in this patch:
* Renamed variable LLVM_CONFIG -> LLVM_CONFIG_PATH
* Renamed variable LIBCXX_BUILT_STANDALONE -> LIBCXX_STANDALONE_BUILD
* Add an include of AddLLVM in the tests subdirectory for add_lit_testsuite.
Reviewers: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23696
llvm-svn: 279151
The expected 'filesystem::path::compare' result states that for different
path only result sign contains the information about passed arguments
(not its integer value). This is due it uses the output of other compare
functions (basic_string_view and char_traits) without further handling and
char_traits uses memcmp for final buffer comparison.
However for GLIBC on AArch64 the code:
int ret = memcmp ("b/a/c", "a/b/c", 1);
Results in '64' where for x86_64 it results in '1'.
This patch fixes the expected 'filesystem::path::compare' by normalizing
all the results before assert comparison.
llvm-svn: 278745
Currently certain tests get killed when compiled with ASAN at -O0 because
they eat all of the systems memory. This doesn't happen at -O1, so enable that
to work around the issue.
llvm-svn: 278722
Although libc++ only requires C++11 to build, there are other
reasons to turn on a newer dialect in the build. For example
IDE's may not highlight any C++14/C++17 in the headers when
configured for C++11. This patch add's a private option for
changing this.
llvm-svn: 278638
Some filesystems track atime always. This relaxes the test to accept either a
filesystem which does not accurately track atime or does track the atime
accurately. This allows the test to pass on filesystems mounted with
`strictatime` on Linux or on macOS.
llvm-svn: 278357
basic_string's constructor calls init which was not getting inlined. This
prevented optimization of const string as init would appear as a call in between
a string's def and use.
Patch by Laxman Sole and Aditya Kumar.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22782
llvm-svn: 278356
I've put some work into the Google Benchmark library in order to make it easier
to benchmark libc++. These changes have already been upstreamed into
Google Benchmark and this patch applies the changes to the in-tree version.
The main improvement in the addition of a 'compare_bench.py' script which
makes it very easy to compare benchmarks. For example to compare the native
STL to libc++ you would run:
`$ compare_bench.py ./util_smartptr.native.out ./util_smartptr.libcxx.out`
And the output would look like:
RUNNING: ./util_smartptr.native.out
Benchmark Time CPU Iterations
----------------------------------------------------------------
BM_SharedPtrCreateDestroy 62 ns 62 ns 10937500
BM_SharedPtrIncDecRef 31 ns 31 ns 23972603
BM_WeakPtrIncDecRef 28 ns 28 ns 23648649
RUNNING: ./util_smartptr.libcxx.out
Benchmark Time CPU Iterations
----------------------------------------------------------------
BM_SharedPtrCreateDestroy 46 ns 46 ns 14957265
BM_SharedPtrIncDecRef 31 ns 31 ns 22435897
BM_WeakPtrIncDecRef 34 ns 34 ns 21084337
Comparing ./util_smartptr.native.out to ./util_smartptr.libcxx.out
Benchmark Time CPU
-----------------------------------------------------
BM_SharedPtrCreateDestroy -0.26 -0.26
BM_SharedPtrIncDecRef +0.00 +0.00
BM_WeakPtrIncDecRef +0.21 +0.21
llvm-svn: 278147
Neither of these results files has been update in years. Linux now has a dozen
or so buildbots tracking it and the Windows results are no longer relevant.
I plan on looking into getting a Windows buildbot going using Appveyor in the
coming days.
llvm-svn: 278087
This change allows building both shared and static version of libc++
in a single build, sharing object files between both versions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23232
llvm-svn: 278068
Summary:
The synopsis in C++11 subclause 28.8 [re.regex] has:
```
basic_regex(const charT* p, size_t len,
flag_type f = regex_constants::ECMAScript);
```
The default argument is added to libc++ by this change.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rsmith, hubert.reinterpretcast
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22702
Reapplies r277966.
Patch by Jason Liu!
llvm-svn: 277968
Summary:
In the synopsis in C++11 subclause 28.8 [re.regex], `basic_regex` is
specified to have member typedefs `traits_type` and `string_type`. This
change adds them to libc++.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rsmith, hubert.reinterpretcast
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22698
Patch by Jason Liu!
llvm-svn: 277526
It currently fails because GCC changed the mangling of templates, which affects std::atomic using __attribute__((vector(X))). The bot using GCC 4.9 generates the following message:
In file included from /home/llvm-builder/llvm-buildslave-root/libcxx-libcxxabi-x86_64-linux-ubuntu-gcc49-cxx11/llvm/projects/libcxx/test/libcxx/atomics/atomics.align/align.pass.sh.cpp:24:0:
/home/llvm-builder/llvm-buildslave-root/libcxx-libcxxabi-x86_64-linux-ubuntu-gcc49-cxx11/llvm/projects/libcxx/include/atomic: In instantiation of 'atomic_test<T>::atomic_test() [with T = __vector(2) int]':
/home/llvm-builder/llvm-buildslave-root/libcxx-libcxxabi-x86_64-linux-ubuntu-gcc49-cxx11/llvm/projects/libcxx/test/libcxx/atomics/atomics.align/align.pass.sh.cpp:66:3: required from here
/home/llvm-builder/llvm-buildslave-root/libcxx-libcxxabi-x86_64-linux-ubuntu-gcc49-cxx11/llvm/projects/libcxx/include/atomic:583:5: error: 'std::__1::__gcc_atomic::__gcc_atomic_t<_Tp>::__gcc_atomic_t() [with _Tp = __vector(2) int]' conflicts with a previous declaration
__gcc_atomic_t() _NOEXCEPT = default;
^
/home/llvm-builder/llvm-buildslave-root/libcxx-libcxxabi-x86_64-linux-ubuntu-gcc49-cxx11/llvm/projects/libcxx/include/atomic:583:5: note: previous declaration 'std::__1::__gcc_atomic::__gcc_atomic_t<_Tp>::__gcc_atomic_t() [with _Tp = __vector(1) int]'
/home/llvm-builder/llvm-buildslave-root/libcxx-libcxxabi-x86_64-linux-ubuntu-gcc49-cxx11/llvm/projects/libcxx/include/atomic:583:5: note: -fabi-version=6 (or =0) avoids this error with a change in mangling
/home/llvm-builder/llvm-buildslave-root/libcxx-libcxxabi-x86_64-linux-ubuntu-gcc49-cxx11/llvm/projects/libcxx/include/atomic:583:5: error: 'std::__1::__gcc_atomic::__gcc_atomic_t<_Tp>::__gcc_atomic_t() [with _Tp = __vector(2) int]' conflicts with a previous declaration
/home/llvm-builder/llvm-buildslave-root/libcxx-libcxxabi-x86_64-linux-ubuntu-gcc49-cxx11/llvm/projects/libcxx/include/atomic:583:5: note: previous declaration 'std::__1::__gcc_atomic::__gcc_atomic_t<_Tp>::__gcc_atomic_t() [with _Tp = __vector(1) int]'
/home/llvm-builder/llvm-buildslave-root/libcxx-libcxxabi-x86_64-linux-ubuntu-gcc49-cxx11/llvm/projects/libcxx/include/atomic:583:5: note: -fabi-version=6 (or =0) avoids this error with a change in mangling
/home/llvm-builder/llvm-buildslave-root/libcxx-libcxxabi-x86_64-linux-ubuntu-gcc49-cxx11/llvm/projects/libcxx/include/atomic:939:5: note: synthesized method 'std::__1::__gcc_atomic::__gcc_atomic_t<_Tp>::__gcc_atomic_t() [with _Tp = __vector(2) int]' first required here
__atomic_base() _NOEXCEPT = default;
^
GCC's docs say the following about ABI version 6:
Version 6, which first appeared in G++ 4.7, corrects the promotion behavior of C++11 scoped enums and the mangling of template argument packs, const/static_cast, prefix ++ and –, and a class scope function used as a template argument.
llvm-svn: 277380
Summary:
libc++ implements std::atomic<_Tp> using __atomic_base<_Tp> with
`mutable _Atomic(_Tp) __a_`. That member must be suitably aligned on
relevant ISAs for instructions such as cmpxchg to work properly, but
this alignment isn't checked anywhere. __atomic_base's implementation
relies on _Atomic doing "the right thing" since it's under the
compiler's control, and only the compiler knows about lock-freedom and
instruction generation. This test makes sure that the compiler isn't
breaking libc++'s expectations.
I'm looking at a few odd things in the C++ standard, and will have a few
other fixes around this area in the future.
This requires building with `-DLIBCXX_HAS_ATOMIC_LIB=True`, the test
marks the dependency as REQUIRES and won't be run without.
Reviewers: cfe-commits
Subscribers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22073
llvm-svn: 277368
If the last destruction is uncontended, skip the atomic store on
__shared_weak_owners_. This shifts some costs from normal
shared_ptr usage to weak_ptr uses.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D22470
llvm-svn: 277357
This is a breaking change. The SFINAE required is instantiated the second
the class is instantiated, and this can cause hard SFINAE errors
when applied to references to incomplete types. Ex.
struct IncompleteType;
extern IncompleteType it;
std::tuple<IncompleteType&> t(it); // SFINAE will blow up.
llvm-svn: 276598
In C++03 mode evaluating the SFINAE can cause a hard error due to
access control violations. This is a problem because the SFINAE
is evaluated as soon as the class is instantiated, and not later.
llvm-svn: 276594
Summary:
This patch attempts to fix the undefined behavior in __hash_table by changing the node pointer types used throughout. The pointer types are changed for raw pointers in the current ABI and for fancy pointers in ABI V2 (since the fancy pointer types may not be ABI compatible).
The UB in `__hash_table` arises because tree downcasts the embedded end node and then deferences that pointer. Currently there are 2 node types in __hash_table:
* `__hash_node_base` which contains the `__next_` pointer.
* `__hash_node` which contains `__hash_` and `__value_`.
Currently the bucket list, iterators, and `__next_` pointers store pointers to `__hash_node` even though they all need to store `__hash_node_base` pointers.
This patch makes that change by introducing a `__next_pointer` typedef which is a pointer to `__hash_node` in the current ABI and `__hash_node_base` afterwards.
One notable change is to the type of `__bucket_list` which used to be defined as `unique_ptr<__node_pointer[], ...>` and is now `unique_ptr<__next_pointer[], ...>` meaning that we now allocate and deallocate different types using a different allocator. I'm going to give this part of the change more thought since it may introduce compatibility issues.
This change is similar to D20786.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20787
llvm-svn: 276533
There is a bug in Clang 3.6 and earlier that causes compile failures.
I suspect it's due to the usage of member function parameter names in the
attributes.
llvm-svn: 276507
Summary:
This patch uses the __attribute__((enable_if)) hack suggested by @rsmith to diagnose invalid arguments when possible.
In order to diagnose an invalid argument `m` to `f(m)` we provide an additional overload of `f` that is only enabled when `m` is invalid. When that function is enabled it uses __attribute__((unavailable)) to produce a diagnostic message.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rsmith, jfb, EricWF
Subscribers: bcraig, jfb, rsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22557
llvm-svn: 276506
Increasingly the .fail.cpp tests are written using -verify, making them
sensitive to the exact diagnostics generated by the compiler. To prevent
additional diagnostics from being generated, and causing the tests to fail,
this patch removes the warning flags when compiling those tests.
llvm-svn: 276208
Although inheriting constructors have already been fixed in Clang 3.9 I still
choose to fix std::function so users can derive from it with older compilers.
llvm-svn: 276090
The previous implementation relied highly on specializations to handle
special cases. This new implementation lets the compiler do the work when possible.
llvm-svn: 276084
Libc++ provides static assertions to detect reference binding issues inside
tuple. This patch adds tests for those diagnostics.
It should be noted that these static assertions technically violate the
standard since it allows these illegal bindings to occur.
Also see https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20855
llvm-svn: 276078
The functions arg, conj, imag, norm, proj, and real have additional overloads
for arguments of integral or floating point types. However these overloads should
not allow conversions to the integral/floating point types, only exact matches.
This patch constrains these functions so they no longer allow conversions.
llvm-svn: 276067
Summary:
This patch does the following:
1. Checks in a copy of the Google Benchmark library into the libc++ repo under `utils/google-benchmark`.
2. Teaches libc++ how to build Google Benchmark against both (A) in-tree libc++ and (B) the platforms native STL.
3. Allows performance benchmarks to be built as part of the libc++ build.
Building the benchmarks (and Google Benchmark) is off by default. It must be enabled using the CMake option `-DLIBCXX_INCLUDE_BENCHMARKS=ON`. When this option is enabled the tests under `libcxx/benchmarks` can be built using the `libcxx-benchmarks` target.
On Linux platforms where libstdc++ is the default STL the CMake option `-DLIBCXX_BUILD_BENCHMARKS_NATIVE_STDLIB=ON` can be used to build each benchmark test against libstdc++ as well. This is useful for comparing performance between standard libraries.
Support for benchmarks is currently very minimal. They must be manually run by the user and there is no mechanism for detecting performance regressions.
Known Issues:
* `-DLIBCXX_INCLUDE_BENCHMARKS=ON` is only supported for Clang, and not GCC, since the `-stdlib=libc++` option is needed to build Google Benchmark.
Reviewers: danalbert, dberlin, chandlerc, mclow.lists, jroelofs
Subscribers: chandlerc, dberlin, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, hfinkel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22240
llvm-svn: 276049
Summary:
This patch attempts to fix the undefined behavior in __tree by changing the node pointer types used throughout. The pointer types are changed for raw pointers in the current ABI and for fancy pointers in ABI V2 (since the fancy pointer types may not be ABI compatible).
The UB in `__tree` arises because tree downcasts the embedded end node and then deferences that pointer. Currently there are 3 node types in __tree.
* `__tree_end_node` which contains the `__left_` pointer. This node is embedded within the container.
* `__tree_node_base` which contains `__right_`, `__parent_` and `__is_black`. This node is used throughout the tree rebalancing algorithms.
* `__tree_node` which contains `__value_`.
Currently `__tree` stores the start of the tree, `__begin_node_`, as a pointer to a `__tree_node`. Additionally the iterators store their position as a pointer to a `__tree_node`. In both of these cases the pointee can be the end node. This is fixed by changing them to store `__tree_end_node` pointers instead.
To make this change I introduced an `__iter_pointer` typedef which is defined to be a pointer to either `__tree_end_node` in the new ABI or `__tree_node` in the current one.
Both `__tree::__begin_node_` and iterator pointers are now stored as `__iter_pointers`.
The other situation where `__tree_end_node` is stored as the wrong type is in `__tree_node_base::__parent_`. Currently `__left_`, `__right_`, and `__parent_` are all `__tree_node_base` pointers. Since the end node will only be stored in `__parent_` the fix is to change `__parent_` to be a pointer to `__tree_end_node`.
To make this change I introduced a `__parent_pointer` typedef which is defined to be a pointer to either `__tree_end_node` in the new ABI or `__tree_node_base` in the current one.
Note that in the new ABI `__iter_pointer` and `__parent_pointer` are the same type (but not in the old one). The confusion between these two types is unfortunate but it was the best solution I could come up with that maintains the ABI.
The typedef changes force a ton of explicit type casts to correct pointer types and to make current code compatible with both the old and new pointer typedefs. This is the bulk of the change and it's really messy. Unfortunately I don't know how to avoid it.
Please let me know what you think.
Reviewers: howard.hinnant, mclow.lists
Subscribers: howard.hinnant, bbannier, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20786
llvm-svn: 276003
Constructing a std::locale object from an empty string selects the language
from the current environment variables. If the environment variables name
a locale that doesn't exist, or isn't installed, then the construction of
facets using that locale may throw.
This patch removes tests that use 'std::locale l("")'.
The optimal solution would be to manually set the environment variables
in the test. Unfortunately there is no portable way to do this.
llvm-svn: 275772
man page for mkdir says: "If the parent directory has the set-group-ID bit set,
then so will the newly created directory."
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22265
llvm-svn: 275760
This patch updates the way libc++ handles checking for libatomic, in part
to prepare for https://reviews.llvm.org/D22073.
Changes:
* 'LIBCXX_HAS_ATOMIC_LIB' is now set whenever libatomic is available even libc++
doesn't need to manually link it.
* 'LIBCXX_HAVE_CXX_ATOMICS_WITH_LIB' is now used to detect when libatomic
needs to be manually linked.
* 'LIBCXX_HAS_ATOMIC_LIB' now adds 'libatomic' as a available feature in the
test suite.
llvm-svn: 275759
This patch does the following:
* It renames `_LIBCPP_TRIVIAL_PAIR_COPY_CTOR` to `_LIBCPP_DEPRECATED_ABI_DISABLE_PAIR_TRIVIAL_COPY_CTOR`.
* It automatically enables this option on FreeBSD in ABI V1, since that's the current ABI FreeBSD ships.
* It cleans up the handling of this option in `std::pair`.
I would like the sign off from the FreeBSD maintainers. They will no longer need to keep their `__config` changes downstream.
I'm still hoping to come up with a better way to maintain the ABI without needing these constructors.
Reviewed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D21329
llvm-svn: 275749
This patch upgrades <tuple> to be C++17 compliant by implementing:
* tuple_size_v: This was forgotten when implementing the other _v traits.
* std::apply: This was added via LFTS v1 in p0220r1.
* std::make_from_tuple: This was added in p0209r2.
llvm-svn: 275745
This patch implements a simple optimization in __hash_table::find. When iterating
the found bucket we only constrain the bucket elements hash if it doesn't
already match the unconstrained hash of the specified key. This prevent
the performance of an expensive modulo operation.
Since the bucket element almost always matches the key, especially when the
load factor is low, this optimization has large performance impacts. For
a unordered_set<int> of random integers this patch improves the performance of
'find(...)' by 40%.
llvm-svn: 275734
From r229162:
Visual Studio's SAL extension uses a macro named __deallocate. This
macro is used pervasively
Using -Werror when building for Windows can force the use of -Wno-#warnings
specifically because of this __deallocate #warning. Instead of forcing
builds to disable all #warnings, this option allows libc++ to be built
without this particular warning, while leaving other #warnings enabled.
Patch by Dave Lee!
llvm-svn: 275172
This cleans up a previous optimization attempt in hash, and results in
additional performance improvements over that previous attempt. Additionally
this new optimization does not hinder the power of 2 bucket count optimization.
llvm-svn: 275114
Summary: The current implementations of __hash_table::find used by std::unordered_set/unordered_map call key_eq on each key that lands in the same bucket as the key you're looking for. However, since equal objects mush hash to the same value, you can short-circuit the possibly expensive call to key_eq by checking the hashes first.
Reviewers: EricWF
Subscribers: kmensah, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21510
llvm-svn: 274857
This patch improves the performance of unordered_set's find by 45% when
the value exists within the set. __hash_tables find method
needs to check if it's reached the end of the bucket by constraining the
hash of the current node and checking it against the bucket index. However
constraining the hash is an expensive operations and it can be avoided if the
two unconstrained hashes are equal. This patch applies that optimization.
This patch also adds a top level directory called benchmarks. 'benchmarks/'
is intended to store any/all benchmarks written for the standard library.
Currently nothing is done with files under 'benchmarks/' but I would like
to move towards introducing a formal format and test runner.
llvm-svn: 274423
This patch is the last in a series that replaces recursive meta-programming
in std::tuple with non-recursive implementations.
Previously std::tuple could only be instantiated with 126 elements before
it blew the max template instantiation depth. Now the size of std::tuple is
essentially unbounded (I've tested with over 5000 elements).
One unfortunate side-effect of this change is that tuple_constructible
and similar no longer short circuit after the first failure. Instead they
evaluate the conditions for all elements. This could be potentially breaking.
I plan to look into this further.
llvm-svn: 274331
This patch attempts to improve the QoI of std::tuples tuple_element and
__make_tuple_types helpers. Previously they required O(N) instantiations,
one for every element in the tuple
The new implementations are O(1) after __tuple_indices<Id...> is created.
llvm-svn: 274330
The previous __make_tuple_indices implementation caused O(N) instantiations
and was pretty inefficient. The C++14 __make_integer_sequence implementation
is much better, since it either uses a builtin to generate the sequence or
a very nice Log8(N) implementation provided by richard smith.
This patch moves the __make_integer_sequence implementation into __tuple
and uses it to implement __make_tuple_indices.
Since libc++ can't expose the name 'integer_sequence' in C++11 this patch
also introduces a dummy type '__integer_sequence' which is used when generating
the sequence. One the sequence is generated '__integer_sequence' can be
converted into the required type; either '__tuple_indices' or 'integer_sequence'.
llvm-svn: 274286
* P0163r0: Implemented in r273839.
* LWG 2309: pthread_mutex_lock only returns this error if certain debug flags
were passed during construction. libc++ does not pass these flags. There is
nothing to do.
* LWG 2310: Wording fix. No impact on libc++'s implementation.
* LWG 2312: libc++'s std::tuple implementation already constrains the overloads
based on the number of arguments.
* LWG 2549: libc++'s std::tuple already applied this fix.
* LWG 2674: libc++ already depends on this relaxed wording.
* LWG 2704, 2706, 2707, 2719, 2720, 2721, 2723, 2725, 2728: All of these filesystem were either
submitted by me and fixed before submission, or have already been applied.
llvm-svn: 274214
Since at least the C++11 standard insert iterators are specified
as having ::reference typedef void. Libc++ was not doing that.
This patch corrects the typedef.
This patch changes the std::iterator base class of insert_iterator,
front_insert_iterator and back_insert_iterator. This should not
be an ABI breaking change.
llvm-svn: 274209
The end pointer should point to one past the end of the newly allocated
buffer.
rdar://problem/24265174
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20334
llvm-svn: 274132
This patch adds the weak_type typedef in shared_ptr. It is available in
C++17 and newer.
This patch also updates the _LIBCPP_STD_VER and TEST_STD_VER macros to
have the value of 16, since 2016 is the current year.
llvm-svn: 273839
See https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27115
The problem was that the conversion from
'const enable_shared_from_this<T>*' to 'const T*' didn't work if
T inherited enable_shared_from_this as a virtual base class. The fix
is to take the original pointer passed to shared_ptr's constructor in the
__enable_weak_this method and perform an upcast to 'const T*' instead of
performing a downcast from the enable_shared_from_this base.
llvm-svn: 273835
The move constructor for wstring_convert accidentally copied the state member
into the converted count member in the move constructor. This patch fixes
the typo.
While working on this I discovered that wstring_convert doesn't actually
provide a move constructor according to the standard and therefore this
constructor is a libc++ extension. I'll look further into whether libc++ should
provide this constructor at all. Neither libstdc++ or MSVC's STL provide it.
llvm-svn: 273831
This patch makes the bind placeholders in std::placeholders both (1) const and
(2) constexpr (See below).
This is technically a breaking change for any code using the placeholders
outside of std::bind and depending on them being non-const. However I don't
think this will break any real world code.
(1) Previously the placeholders were non-const extern globals in all
dialects. This patch changes these extern globals to be const in all dialects.
Since the cv-qualifiers don't participate in name mangling for globals this
is an ABI compatible change.
(2) Make the placeholders constexpr in C++11 and beyond. Although LWG 2488 only
applies to C++17 I don't see any reason not to backport this change.
llvm-svn: 273824
Summary: this fixes build error when built with c++14 and no exceptions
Reviewers: rmaprath
Subscribers: weimingz, grandinj, rmaprath, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21673
llvm-svn: 273697
So the macros TEST_HAS_NO_EXCEPTIONS and TEST_HAS_NO_RTTI were always
getting defined because I spelt __cpp_exceptions and __cpp_rtti as
__cxx_exceptions and __cxx_rtti.
Tests incoming after this patch.
llvm-svn: 273381
Libc++ has to deduce the 'allocator_arg_t' parameter as 'AllocArgT' for the
following constructor:
template <class Alloc> tuple(allocator_arg_t, Alloc const&)
Previously libc++ has tried to support tags derived from 'allocator_arg_t' by
using 'is_base_of<AllocArgT, allocator_arg_t>'. However this breaks whenever a
2-tuple contains a reference to an incomplete type as its first parameter.
See https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27684
llvm-svn: 273334
This changes how filesystem::permissions(p, perms) handles symlinks. Previously
symlinks were not resolved by default instead only getting resolved when
"perms::resolve_symlinks" was used. After this change symlinks are resolved
by default and perms::symlink_nofollow must be given to change this.
This issue has not yet been moved to Ready status, and I will revert if it
doesn't get moved at the current meeting. However I feel confident that it
will and it's nice to have implementations when moving issues.
llvm-svn: 273328
The filesystem tests were expecting the paths to the build/source directories
did not contain any symlinks. This patch resolves those symlinks before running
the test suite.
llvm-svn: 273323
Summary:
An implementation of std::experimental::propagate_const from Library Fundamentals Technical Specification v2.
No tests are provided for disallowed types like fancy pointers or function pointers as no code was written to handle these.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12486
llvm-svn: 273122
* Fix non-null violation in strstream.cpp
Overflow was calling memcpy with a null parameter and a size of 0.
* Fix std/atomics/atomics.flag/ tests:
a.test_and_set() was reading from an uninitialized atomic, but wasn't
using the value. The tests now clear the flag before performing the
first test_and_set. This allows UBSAN to test that clear doesn't read
an invalid value.
* Fix std/experimental/algorithms/alg.random.sample/sample.pass.cpp
The tests were dereferencing a past-the-end pointer to an array so that
they could do pointer arithmetic with it. Instead of dereference the iterator
I changed the tests to use the special 'base()' test iterator method.
* Add -fno-sanitize=float-divide-by-zero to suppress division by zero UBSAN diagnostics.
The tests that cause float division by zero are explicitly aware that they
are doing that. Since this is well defined for IEEE floats suppress the warnings
for now.
llvm-svn: 273107
Use strtof and strtod for floats and doubles respectively instead of
always using strtold. The other parts of the change are already implemented
in libc++.
This patch also has a drive by fix to wbuffer_convert::underflow() which
prevents it from calling memmove(buff, null, 0).
llvm-svn: 273106
We all know <__tree> and <__hash_table> have plenty of UB that UBSan faithfully
finds. I am working on fixing this. However the noisy output from these failures
prevent automatically detecting regressions elsewhere.
This patch adds a blacklist file for these failures so I can later set up a
UBSAN buildbot.
llvm-svn: 273104
* Fix passing a negative number as either tv_usec or tv_nsec. When file_time_type
is negative and has a non-zero sub-second value we subtract 1 from tv_sec
and make the sub-second duration positive.
* Detect and report when 'file_time_type' cannot be represented by time_t. This
happens when using large/small file_time_type values with a 32 bit time_t.
There is more work to be done in the implementation. It should start to use
stat's st_mtim or st_mtimeval if it's provided as an extension. That way
we can provide a better resolution.
llvm-svn: 273103
fstream has a switch over ios_base::seekdir which provides a defensive default
case. This seems like the right thing for fstream to do, but we need to disable
clangs warning during the build to allow this.
llvm-svn: 273092
Single threaded builds often don't provide a monotonic clock, so we can't
always provide a monotonic SleepFor(...) implementation. Hopefully this
won't cause the builds to hang.
llvm-svn: 273091
This patch fixes the following bugs, all of which were discovered while
testing a 32 bit build on a 64 bit machine.
* path.itr/iterator.pass.cpp has undefined behavior.
'path::iterator' stashes the value of the element inside the iterator.
This violates the BiDirIterator requirements but is allowed for path::iterator.
However this means that using reverse_iterator<path::iterator> has undefined
behavior because it assumes that 'Iter tmp = it; return *tmp' will not create
a dangling reference. However it does, and this caused this particular test
to fail.
* path.native.obs/string_alloc.pass.cpp tested the SSO with a long string.
On 32 bit builds std::wstring only has the SSO for strings of size 2. The
test was using a string of size 4.
* fs.op.space/space.pass.cpp had overflows while calculating the expected values.
The fix here is to convert the statvfs data members to std::uintmax_t before
multiplying them. The internal implementation already does this but the tests
needed to do it as well.
llvm-svn: 273078
Summary:
Currently the implementation of [util.smartptr.shared.atomic] is provided only when using Clang, and not with GCC. This is a relic of not having a GCC implementation of <atomic>, even though <atomic> isn't actually used in the implementation. This patch enables support for atomic shared_ptr functions when using GCC.
Note that this is not a header only change. Previously only Clang builds of libc++.so would provide the required symbols. There is no reason for this restriction.
After this change both Clang and GCC builds should be binary compatible with each other WRT these symbols.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rmaprath, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21407
llvm-svn: 273076
Currently 4 tests are failing on the ARM buildbot. To try and diagnose each
of the failures this patch does the following:
1) path.itr/iterator.pass.cpp
* Temporarily print iteration sequence to see where its failing.
2) path.native.obs/string_alloc.pass.cpp
* Remove test that ::new is not called when constructing a short string
that requires a conversion. Since during the conversion global locale
objects might be constructed.
3) fs.op.funcs/space.pass.cpp
* Explicitly use uintmax_t in the implementation of space, hopefully
preventing possible overflows.
* Add additional tests that check for overflow is the calculation of the
space_info values.
* Add additional tests for the values returned from statfvs.
4) fs.op.funcs/last_write_time.pass.cpp
* No changes made yet.
llvm-svn: 273075
r273060 didn't completely fix the issues in recursive_directory_iterator and
the tests. This patch follows up with more fixes
* Fix bug where recursive_directory_iterator::increment(ec) did not reset
the error code if no failure occurred.
* Fix bad assertion in the recursive_directory_iterator::increment(ec) test
that would only fire for certain iteration orders.
llvm-svn: 273070
There are two fixes in this patch:
* Fix bug where the constructor of recursive_directory_iterator did not reset
the error code if no failure occurred.
* Fix tests were dependent on the iteration order of the test directories.
llvm-svn: 273060
Add the completed std::experimental::filesystem implementation and tests.
The implementation supports C++11 or newer.
The TS is built as part of 'libc++experimental.a'. Users of the TS need to
manually link this library. Building and testing the TS can be disabled using
the CMake option '-DLIBCXX_ENABLE_FILESYSTEM=OFF'.
Currently 'libc++experimental.a' is not installed by default. To turn on the
installation of the library use '-DLIBCXX_INSTALL_EXPERIMENTAL_LIBRARY=ON'.
llvm-svn: 273034
CloudABI has gained the mblen_l() function in the meantime that does
properly return whether the character set has shift-states (read:
never).
llvm-svn: 272886
Summary:
Android didn't gain GNU's strerror_r until Marshmallow. If we're
building libc++ against something older (we build the NDK library
against the oldest release we support, currently Gingerbread), fall
back to the POSIX version.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21402
llvm-svn: 272827
Summary:
In test/support/test_allocator.h, fix construct() to avoid moving immovable types.
This improves the allocator's conformance, and fixes compiler errors with MSVC's STL. The scenario is when the allocator is asked to construct an object of type X that's immovable (deleted copy/move ctors), but implicitly constructible from an argument type A. When perfectly forwarded, X can be (explicitly) constructed from A, and everything is fine. That's std::allocator's behavior, and the Standard's default when a user allocator's construct() doesn't exist. The previous implementation of construct() here mishandled this scenario. Passing A to this construct() would implicitly construct an X temporary, bound to (non-templated) T&&. Then construct() would attempt to move-construct X from that X temporary, but X is immovable, boom.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21094
llvm-svn: 272747
Summary:
Libc++ reexports symbols from the system libc++abi using -reexport_symbols_list. This can cause a linker failure if the list contains symbols not defined in the system libc++abi.
This patch attempts to detect the OS X version and use it to determine the correct symbol list.
It's my understanding that `lib/libc++abi2.exp` should be used on 10.9 and greater. Otherwise 'lib/libc++abi.exp' should be used
This fixes PR25666 (https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25666)
Reviewers: mclow.lists, bcraig, dexonsmith, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20772
llvm-svn: 272723
Summary:
This patch implements the variadic `lock_guard` paper.
Making `lock_guard` variadic is a ABI breaking change because the specialization `lock_guard<_Mutex>` mangles differently then when it was the primary template. This change only provides variadic `lock_guard` in ABI V2 or when `_LIBCPP_ABI_VARIADIC_LOCK_GUARD` is defined.
Note that in ABI V2 `lock_guard` must always be declared as a variadic template, even in C++03, in order to keep the ABI consistent. For this reason `lock_guard` is forward declared as a variadic template in all standard dialects and therefore depends on variadic templates being provided as an extension in C++03. All supported versions of Clang and GCC provide this extension.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: K-ballo, mclow.lists, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21260
llvm-svn: 272634
Summary:
system_error::message() uses `strerror` for the generic and system categories. This function is not thread safe.
The fix is to use `strerror_r`. It has been available since 2001 for GNU libc and since BSD 4.4 on FreeBSD/OS X.
On platforms with GNU libc the extended version is used which always returns a valid string, even if an error occurs.
In single-threaded builds `strerror` is still used.
See https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25598
Reviewers: majnemer, mclow.lists
Subscribers: erik65536, cfe-commits, emaste
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20903
llvm-svn: 272633
Summary:
I haven't added it to all the tests, just those that fail without it
(those that aren't header only).
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21247
llvm-svn: 272443
Patch by Laman Sole <laxman.g@partner.samsung.com>, Sebastian Pop
<s.pop@samsung.com>, Aditya Kumar <aditya.k7@samsung.com>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21103
llvm-svn: 272401
Some pthread implementations do not like being called pthead_join()
with the pthread_t argument set to 0, and causes a segfault. This
patch fixes this issue by validating the pthread_t argument before
invoking pthread_join().
NFC.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20929
Change-Id: Ief817c57bd0e1f43cbaa03061e02417d6a180c38
Reviewers: EricWF
llvm-svn: 271634
LWG issue 2218 relaxes a restriction on how containers can call
Alloc::construct(...) and Alloc::destroy(...). There is nothing new to test.
llvm-svn: 271477
Summary:
Currently much of the libcxx website is duplicated between the old www/ documentation and newer Sphinx docs. This patch changes the main libc++ webpage so that it links to the new documentation where possible. This means removing numerous sections from the landing page.
@mclow.lists What do you think?
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits, mclow.lists
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19250
llvm-svn: 271469
Summary:
Exactly what it sounds like.
I plan to commit this in a couple of days assuming no objections.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20799
llvm-svn: 271464
Summary:
This patch changes the libc++ CMake so that it adds certain target flags like '-m32' or '--gcc-toolchain' before including config-ix.cmake.
Since these flags can affect things like check_library_exists([...]) they needed to be added before the tests are performed.
This patch fixes:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24322
Reviewers: danalbert, jroelofs, bcraig, compnerd
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20887
llvm-svn: 271460
This patch addresses the following issues in the test suite:
1. Move "std::bad_array_length" test from std/ to libcxx/ test directory
since the feature is not a part of the standard.
2. Rename "futures.tas" test directory to "futures.task" since that is the
correct stable name.
3. Move tests for "packaged_task<T>::result_type" from std/ to libcxx/
test directory since the typedef is a libc++ extension.
llvm-svn: 271430
Quite a few libcxx tests seem to follow the format:
#if _LIBCPP_STD_VER > X
// Do test.
#else
// Empty test.
#endif
We should instead use the UNSUPPORTED lit directive to exclude the test on
earlier C++ standards. This gives us a more accurate number of test passes
for those standards and avoids unnecessary conflicts with other lit
directives on the same tests.
Reviewers: bcraig, ericwf, mclow.lists
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20730
llvm-svn: 271108
Summary:
GLIBC recently removed the incorrect `int isinf(double)` and `int isnan(double)` overloads in C++11 and greater. This causes previously `XFAIL: linux` tests to start passing.
Since there is no longer a way to 'XFAIL' the tests I choose to simply tolerate this bug.
See https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19439
Reviewers: rsmith, mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: jroelofs, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19835
llvm-svn: 271060
The existing pthread detection code in __config is pretty good for
common operating systems. It doesn't allow cmake-time choices to be
made for uncommon operating systems though.
This change adds the LIBCXX_HAS_PTHREAD_API cmake flag, which turns
into the _LIBCPP_HAS_THREAD_API_PTHREAD preprocessor define. This is
a name change from the old _LIBCPP_THREAD_API_PTHREAD. The lit tests
want __config_site.in variables to have a _LIBCPP_HAS prefix.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D20573
llvm-svn: 270735
The various _l locale extension functions originate from very
different places. Some come from POSIX, some are BSD extensions,
and some are shared BSD and GLIBC extensions. This patch tries to
group the local extension reimplementations by source. This should
make it easier to make libcxx work with POSIX compliant C libraries
that lack these extensions.
The fallback locale functions are also useful on their own for other
lightweight platforms. Putting these fallback implementations in
support/xlocale should enable code sharing.
I have no access to a newlib system or an android system to build
and test with. I _do_ have access to a system without any of the _l
locale extensions though, and I was able to ensure that the new
__posix_l_fallback.h and __strtonum_fallback.h didn't have any massive
problems.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17416
llvm-svn: 270213
This patch implements the C++11 version of declval without requiring a template
instantiation.
See PR27798 for more information. https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27798
llvm-svn: 269991
When you assign a shared_ptr, the deleter gets called and assigned. In this routine, the assignment happens inside a critical section, which could (potentially) lead to a deadlock, if the deleter did something wonky. Now we swap the old value with an (empty) temporary shared_ptr, and then let the temporary delete the old value when it goes out of scope (after the lock has been released). This should fix PR#27724. Thanks to Hans Boehm for the bug report and the suggested fix.
llvm-svn: 269965
This option is geared towards shared library builds and causes static
library builds to fail if not explicitly disabled.
This patch fixes PR27706: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27706
Thanks rgoodfel@isi.edu for the catch.
llvm-svn: 269585
Summary:
Currently libc++experimental builds with C++11. This patch changes that to C++14 when supported by the compiler. Although nothing currently requires C++14 the upcoming <experimental/memory_resource> implementation would benefit from it. [1]
Note that libc++.so continues to build with C++11 and is unaffected by this change.
[1] <experimental/memory_resource> provides global resources which must exist for the entire lifetime of the program. In order to ensure that a global resource can be used during program termination there destructors must never be invoked. The only way to do this, while also allowing "constant initialization", is to use a C++14 union.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: pete, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19992
llvm-svn: 269070
This patch extracts out all the pthread dependencies of libcxx into the
new header __threading_support. The motivation is to make it easy to
re-target libcxx into platforms that do not support pthread.
Original patch from Fulvio Esposito (fulvio.esposito@outlook.com) - D11781
Applied with tweaks - D19412
Change-Id: I301111f0075de93dd8129416e06babc195aa936b
llvm-svn: 268734
Summary:
Out-of-line symbols for <experimental/...> headers are not ABI or API stable and cannot live in the 'libc++.dylib'. Currently they have nowhere to live. I would like to add a new library target `libc++experimental.a` to fix this.
Previously I had suggested different libraries for different TS's (`libc++filesystem.a`, 'libc++LFTS.a`, ect). I no longer think this is the right approach.
Instead `c++experimental` will hold *all* TS implementations as a single monolithic library. I see two main benefits to this:
1. Users only have to know about and manually link one library.
2. It makes it easy to implement TS's with one or two out-of-line symbols. (Ex. PMRs)
`c++experimental` provides NO ABI compatibility. Symbols can freely be added/removed/changed without concern for ABI stability.
I will add documentation for this after landing this patch (but before adding anything to it).
`c++experimental` only builds as a static library. By default CMake will build/test this library but will *NOT* install it.
This patch adds the CMake and LIT logic needed to build/test the new library. Once this lands I plan on using it to implement parts of `<experimental/memory_resource>`.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits, theraven, krememek, dexonsmith, bcraig, beanz, danalbert
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19856
llvm-svn: 268443
This patch fixes a bunch of bugs in the fallback implementation of
is_convertible, which is used by GCC. Removing the "__is_convertible"
specializations for array/function types we fallback on the SFINAE test,
which is more correct.
See https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27538
llvm-svn: 268359
Summary:
Replace non-Standard "atomic_flag f(false);" with Standard "atomic_flag f;" in clear tests.
Although the value of 'f' is unspecified it shouldn't matter because these tests always call `f.test_and_set()` without checking the result, so the initial state shouldn't matter.
The test init03.pass.cpp is explicitly testing this non-Standard extension; It has been moved into the `test/libcxx` directory.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, STL_MSFT
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19758
llvm-svn: 268355
std::__clz is a libc++ specific function so it can't be used in the test suite.
This patch implements a dumb "count leading zeros" implementation within
hexfloat itself.
This patch also fixes UB since the output of `__builtin_clz(0)` is undefined
according to the GCC docs.
llvm-svn: 268354
This change doesn't impact the behavior of the install-libcxx target which installs whichever libcxx components you build, it just adds a separate target to just install the headers.
llvm-svn: 268124
This patch does the following:
* Remove <__config> includes from some container tests.
* Guards uses of std::launch::any in async tests because it's an extension.
* Move "test/std/extensions" to "test/libcxx/extensions"
* Moves various non-standard tests including those in "sequences/vector",
"std/localization" and "utilities/meta".
llvm-svn: 267981
Testing the concrete implementation of INVOKE means calling the implementation
specific names `__invoke` and `__invoke_constexpr`. For this reason the test
are non-standard. For this reason it's best if the tests live outside of the
`test/std` directory.
llvm-svn: 267973
Summary:
when setting LIBCXX_ENABLE_EXCEPTIONS=false, _LIBCPP_NO_EXCEPTIONS wil be defined in both commandline and _config
Reviewers: bcraig, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19344
llvm-svn: 266956
Summary:
Hi,
When creating a new thread libc++ performs at least 2 allocations. The first allocates a tuple of args and the functor that will be passed to the new thread. The second allocation is for the thread local storage needed internally by libc++. Currently the second allocation happens in the child thread, meaning that if it throws the program will terminate with an uncaught bad alloc.
The solution to this is to allocate ALL memory in the parent thread and then pass it to the child.
See https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=15638
Reviewers: mclow.lists, danalbert, jroelofs, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13748
llvm-svn: 266851
The primary purpose of this patch is to add the 'is_callable' traits.
Since 'is_nothrow_callable' required making 'INVOKE' conditionally noexcept
I also took this oppertunity to implement a constexpr version of INVOKE.
This fixes 'std::experimental::apply' which required constexpr 'INVOKE support'.
This patch will be followed up with some cleanup. Primarly removing most
of "__member_function_traits" since it's no longer used by INVOKE (in C++11 at least).
llvm-svn: 266836
These changes make linking against static libraries more explicit. Instead
of using -lc++ and -lc++abi in the tests, an absolute path to the library is
provided instead.
The choices of shared vs. static, and the choices of library paths for both
libcxx and libcxxabi needed to be exchanged for this to work. In other words,
libcxx tests need to know the library path of libcxxabi, and whether libcxxabi
is a static or shared library.
Some Mac specific logic for testing against libc++abi had to be moved from
libcxxabi's config.py, as it was overriding choices made in libcxx's config.py.
That logic is now in libcxx's target_info.py.
Testing a static libcxx on Linux will now automatically link in librt most of
the time. Previously, lots of pthread tests would fail because of an
unresolved clock_gettime.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D16544
llvm-svn: 266730
In cases where emplace is called with two arguments and the first one
matches the key_type we can Key to check for duplicates before allocating.
This patch expands on work done by dexonsmith@apple.com.
llvm-svn: 266498
There are two main fixes in this patch.
First the constructor SFINAE was changed so that it's evaluated in two stages
where the first stage evaluates the "safe" SFINAE conditions and the second
evaluates the "dangerous" ones. The key is that the second stage is lazily
evaluated only if the first stage passes. This helps fix PR23256
(https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23256).
The second fix is for PR22806 and LWG issue 2549. This fix applies
the suggested resolution to the LWG issue in order to prevent the construction
of dangling references. The SFINAE for this check is contained within
the _PreferTupleLikeConstructor alias template. The tuple-like constructors
are disabled whenever that trait returns false.
(https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22806)
(http://cplusplus.github.io/LWG/lwg-active.html#2549)
llvm-svn: 266461
Summary:
A default uses-allocator constructor has been added since that overload was previously provided by the extended constructor.
Since Clang does implicit conversion checking after substitution this constructor has to deduce the allocator_arg_t parameter so that it can prevent the evaluation of "is_default_constructible" if the first argument doesn't match. See http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_defects.html#1391 for more information.
This patch fixes PR24779 (https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24779)
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19006
llvm-svn: 266409
map's allocator may only be used to construct objects of 'value_type',
or in this case 'pair<const Key, Value>'. In order to respect this requirement
in operator[], which requires default constructing the 'mapped_type', we have
to use pair's piecewise constructor with '(tuple<Kep>, tuple<>)'.
Unfortunately we still need to provide a fallback implementation for C++03
since we don't have <tuple>. Even worse this fallback is the last remaining
user of '__hash_map_node_destructor' and '__construct_node_with_key'.
This patch also switches try_emplace over to __tree.__emplace_unique_key_args.
llvm-svn: 264989
This patch is fairly large and contains a number of changes. The changes all work towards
allowing __tree to properly handle __value_type esspecially when inserting into the __tree.
I chose not to break this change into smaller patches because it wouldn't be possible to
write meaningful standard-compliant tests for each patch.
It is very similar to r260513 "[libcxx] Teach __hash_table how to handle unordered_map's __hash_value_type".
Changes in <map>
* Remove __value_type's constructors because it should never be constructed directly.
* Make map::emplace and multimap::emplace forward to __tree and remove the old definitions
* Remove "__construct_node" map and multimap member functions. Almost all of the construction is done within __tree.
* Fix map's move constructor to access "__value_type.__nc" directly and pass this object to __tree::insert.
Changes in <__tree>
* Add traits to detect, handle, and unwrap, map's "__value_type".
* Convert methods taking "value_type" to take "__container_value_type" instead. Previously these methods caused
unwanted implicit conversions from "std::pair<Key, Value>" to "__value_type<Key, Value>".
* Delete __tree_node and __tree_node_base's constructors and assignment operators. The node types should never be constructed
because the "__value_" member of __tree_node must be constructed directly by the allocator.
* Make the __tree_node_destructor class and "__construct_node" methods unwrap "__node_value_type" into "__container_value_type" before invoking the allocator. The user's allocator can only be used to construct and destroy the container's value_type. Passing it map's "__value_type" was incorrect.
* Cleanup the "__insert" and "__emplace" methods. Have __insert forward to an __emplace function wherever possible to reduce
code duplication. __insert_unique(value_type const&) and __insert_unique(value_type&&) forward to __emplace_unique_key_args.
These functions will not allocate a new node if the value is already in the tree.
* Change the __find* functions to take the "key_type" directly instead of passing in "value_type" and unwrapping the key later.
This change allows the find functions to be used without having to construct a "value_type" first. This allows for a number
of optimizations.
* Teach __move_assign and __assign_multi methods to unwrap map's __value_type.
llvm-svn: 264986
Summary:
This was voted into C++17 at the Jacksonville meeting. The final P0152R1
paper will be in the upcoming post-Jacksonville mailing, and is also
available here:
http://jfbastien.github.io/papers/P0152R1.html
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17951
llvm-svn: 264413
unordered_set::emplace and unordered_map::emplace construct a node, then
try to insert it. If insertion fails, the node gets deleted.
To avoid this unnecessary malloc traffic, check to see if the argument
to emplace has the appropriate key_type. If so, we can use that key
directly and delay the malloc until we're sure we're inserting something
new.
Test updates by Eric Fiselier, who rewrote the old allocation tests to
include the new cases.
There are two orthogonal future directions:
1. Apply the same optimization to set and map.
2. Extend the optimization to when the argument is not key_type, but can
be converted to it without side effects. Ideally, we could do this
whenever key_type is trivially destructible and the argument is
trivially convertible to key_type, but in practise the relevant type
traits "blow up sometimes". At least, we should catch a few simple
cases (such as when both are primitive types).
llvm-svn: 263746
This adds clang thread safety annotations to std::mutex and
std::lock_guard so code using these types can use these types directly
instead of having to wrap the types to provide annotations. These checks
when enabled by -Wthread-safety provide simple but useful static
checking to detect potential race conditions.
See http://clang.llvm.org/docs/ThreadSafetyAnalysis.html for details.
This patch was reviewed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D14731.
llvm-svn: 263611
Commit f49839299a085505eb673544744b61d2d9cdd1db in glibc-2.14 changed the
locales to the currently required format. However, they were again changed in
commit 55bdd2866f23b28422d969060b3518909a12b100 which has been released in 2.17.
That leads to the current situation where Debian and e.g. CentOS 6 have the
pre-2.14 locales, for example Ubuntu 14.04 has pre-2.17 and CentOS 7 on the
other hand has the newest locales in glibc-2.17.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18187
llvm-svn: 263554
std::addressof may be used on a storage of an object before the start
of its lifetime (see std::allocate_shared for example). CFI flags the
C-style cast as invalid in that case.
llvm-svn: 263310
For the locale refactor, the locale management functions (newlocale,
freelocale, uselocale) are needed in a separate header from the various _l
functions. This is because some platforms implement the _l functions in terms
of a locale switcher RAII helper, and the locale switcher RAII helper needs
the locale management functions. This patch helps pave the way by getting all
the functions in the right files, so that later diffs aren't completely
horrible.
Unfortunately, the Windows, Cygwin, and MinGW builds seemed to have
bit-rotted, so I wasn't able to test this completely. I don't think I made
things any worse than they already are though.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17419
llvm-svn: 263020
Instead of checking _LIBCPP_LOCALE_L_EXTENSIONS all over, instead check it
once, and define the various *_l symbols once. The private redirector symbol
names are all prefixed with _libcpp_* so that they won't conflict with user
symbols, and so they won't conflict with future C library symbols. In
particular, glibc likes providing private symbols such as __locale_t, so we
should follow a different naming pattern (like _libcpp_*) to avoid problems
on that front.
Tested on Linux with glibc. Hoping for the best on OSX and the various BSDs.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17456
llvm-svn: 263016
The "const" pointer typedefs such as "__node_const_pointer" and
"__node_base_const_pointer" are identical to their non-const pointer types.
This patch changes all usages of "const" pointer type names to their respective
non-const typedef.
Since "fancy pointers to const" cannot be converted back to a non-const pointer
type according to the allocator requirements it is important that we never
actually use "const" pointers.
Furthermore since "__node_const_pointer" and "__node_pointer" already
name the same type, it's very confusing to use both names. Especially
when defining const/non-const overloads for member functions.
llvm-svn: 261419
This patch is very similar to r260431.
This patch is the first in a series of patches that's meant to better
support map. map has a special "value_type" that
differs from pair<const Key, Value>. In order to meet the EmplaceConstructible
and CopyInsertable requirements we need to teach __tree about this
special value_type.
This patch creates a "__tree_node_types" traits class that contains
all of the typedefs needed by the associative containers and their iterators.
These typedefs include ones for each node type and node pointer type,
as well as special typedefs for "map"'s value type.
Although the associative containers already supported incomplete types, this
patch makes it official by adding tests.
This patch will be followed up shortly with various cleanups within __tree and
fixes for various map bugs and problems.
llvm-svn: 261416
Summary:
This bug was originally fixed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D7201.
However it was broken again by the fix to https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22605.
This patch re-fixes __wrap_iter with GCC by providing a forward declaration of <vector> before the friend declaration in __wrap_iter.
This patch avoids the issues in PR22605 by putting canonical forward declarations in <iosfwd> and including <iosfwd> in <vector>.
<iosfwd> was chosen as the canonical forward declaration headers for the following reasons:
1. `<iosfwd>` is small with almost no dependancies.
2. It already forward declares `std::allocator`
3. It is already included in `<iterator>` which we need to fix the GCC bug.
This patch fixes the test "gcc_workaround.pass.cpp"
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16345
llvm-svn: 261382
Summary:
According to the C++ standard <stdbool.h> isn't allowed to define `true` `false` or `bool`. However these macros are sometimes defined by the compilers `stdbool.h`.
Clang defines the macros whenever `__STRICT_ANSI__` isn't defined (ie `-std=gnu++11`).
New GCC versions define the macros in C++03 mode only, older GCC versions (4.9 and before) always define the macros.
This patch adds a wrapper header for `stdbool.h` that undefs the required macros.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rsmith, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16346
llvm-svn: 261381
This is one part of many of a locale refactor. See
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17146 for an idea of where this is going.
For the locale refactor, the locale management functions (newlocale,
freelocale, uselocale) are needed in a separate header from the various _l
functions. This is because some platforms implement the _l functions in terms
of a locale switcher RAII helper, and the locale switcher RAII helper needs
the locale management functions. This patch helps pave the way by getting all
the functions in the right files, so that later diffs aren't completely
horrible.
The "do-nothing" / "nop" locale functions are also useful on their own for
other lightweight platforms. Putting these nop implementations in
support/xlocale should enable code sharing.
Unfortunately, I have no access to a newlib system to build and test with, so
this change has been made blind.
Reviewed: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17382
llvm-svn: 261231
This is one part of many of a locale refactor. See
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17146 for an idea of where this is going.
For the locale refactor, the locale management functions (newlocale,
freelocale, uselocale) are needed in a separate header from the various _l
functions. This is because some platforms implement the _l functions in terms
of a locale switcher RAII helper, and the locale switcher RAII helper needs
the locale management functions. This patch helps pave the way by getting all
the functions in the right files, so that later diffs aren't completely
horrible.
Unfortunately, I have no access to an AIX machine to build with, so this change
has been made blind. Also, the original author (Xing Xue) does not appear to
have a Phabricator account.
Reviewed: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17380
llvm-svn: 261230
Summary:
On glibc, the bits used for the various character classes is endian dependant
(see _ISbit() in ctypes.h) but __regex_word does not account for this and uses
a spare bit that isn't spare on big-endian. On big-endian, it overlaps with the
bit for graphic characters which causes '-', '@', etc. to be considered a word
character.
Fixed this by defining the value using _ISbit(15) on MIPS glibc systems. We've
restricted this to MIPS for now to avoid the risk of introducing failures in
other targets.
Fixes PR26476.
Reviewers: hans, mclow.lists
Subscribers: dsanders, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17132
llvm-svn: 261088
This should fix PR26631, PR26622 and has the nice property that the addition
of the CheckLibcxxAtomic.cmake module acts as an NFC on the platforms of the
reporters (at least for the time being).
As these bug reports explain, CMake fails the atomic check because the
include headers might not exist in the host environment. We could
potentially point to the headers provided by libcxx itself.
llvm-svn: 260961
functions, ask it whether it did provide them after the fact. Some versions of
glibc fail to compile if you make this request and don't also claim to be at
least GCC 4.3.
llvm-svn: 260622
unordered_map's allocator may only be used to construct objects of 'value_type',
or in this case 'pair<const Key, Value>'. In order to respect this requirement
in operator[], which requires default constructing the 'mapped_type', we have
to use pair's piecewise constructor with '(tuple<Kep>, tuple<>)'.
Unfortunately we still need to provide a fallback implementation for C++03
since we don't have <tuple>. Even worse this fallback is the last remaining
user of '__hash_map_node_destructor' and '__construct_node_with_key'.
llvm-svn: 260601