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: 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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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 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 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
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
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
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
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
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:
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