These tests were only being run when _LIBCPP_DEBUG was defined, which
isn't the case by default when we run the test suite. In other words,
all these debug mode tests were never being run. This commit makes sure
they are run, and in some cases, extracts them into a file under test/libcxx
to separate them from the Standard tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88836
* Use an empty struct instead of a member pointer to represent this
type, so that we don't actually pass a zero member pointer at runtime.
* Mark the constructor as consteval to ensure that no code is emitted
for it whenever possible.
* Add a honeypot constructor to reject all non-int arguments, so that
the only argument that can arrive at the real constructor is the
literal 0.
This results in better generated code, and rejecting invalid comparisons
against nullptr, 0L, and so on, while also rejecting invalid comparisons
against (1-1) and similar that would be allowed if we required an
integer constant expression with value 0.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85051
After rebasing my trivially-relocatable branch, this behavior was broken...
but no libc++ unit test caught it! Add a regression test specifically for
erasing out of a vector.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88421
We're technically not allowed by the Standard to call ::operator new in
constexpr functions like __libcpp_allocate. Clang doesn't seem to complain
about it, but GCC does.
fdc41e11f was reverted in e46c1def5 because it broke the C++11 build.
We shouldn't be using enable_if_t in C++11, instead we must use
enable_if<...>::type.
This reverts commit fdc41e11f9. It causes the
libcxx/modules/stds_include.sh.cpp test to fail with:
libcxx/include/ostream:1039:45: error: no template named 'enable_if_t'; did you mean 'enable_if'?
template <class _Stream, class _Tp, class = enable_if_t<
Still investigating what's causing this and reverting in the meantime to get
the bots green again.
Libc++ had an issue where nonsensical code like
decltype(std::stringstream{} << std::vector<int>{});
would compile, as long as you kept the expression inside decltype in
an unevaluated operand. This turned out to be that we didn't implement
LWG1203, which clarifies what we should do in that case.
rdar://58769296
This commit adds std::construct_at, and marks various members of
std::allocator_traits and std::allocator as constexpr. It also adds
tests and turns the existing tests into hybrid constexpr/runtime tests.
Thanks to Richard Smith for initial work on this, and to Michael Park
for D69803, D69132 and D69134, which are superseded by this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68364
Mitsuru Kariya reported the map operations insert_or_assign with a hint
violates the complexity requirement. The function no longer uses a lower_bound,
which caused the wrong complexity.
Fixes PR38722: [C++17] std::map::insert_or_assign w/ hint violate complexity requirements
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62779
We don't support GCC in C++03 mode, and Clang provides variadic templates
even in C++03 mode. So there's effectively no supported compiler that
doesn't support variadic templates.
This effectively gets rid of all uses of _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_VARIADICS, but
some workarounds for the lack of variadics remain.
When statically linking libc++ on some systems, the streams are not
initialized early enough, which causes all kinds of issues. This was
reported e.g. in http://llvm.org/PR28954, but also in various open
source projects that use libc++.
Fixes http://llvm.org/PR28954.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31413
https://llvm.org/PR45099 notes (correctly) that we're inconsistent in memory
allocation in `std::any`. We allocate memory with `std::allocator<T>::allocate`,
construct with placement new, destroy by calling the destructor directly, and
deallocate by calling `delete`. Most of those are customizable by the user,
but in different ways.
The standard is silent on how these things are to be accomplished.
This patch makes it so we use `allocator_traits<allocator<T>>` for all
of these operations (allocate, construct, destruct, deallocate).
This is, at least, consistent.
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR45099.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81133
This test tries to create a 2 GiB std::string, catching the bad_alloc
exception if the allocation fails. However, for no-exceptions builds
there is no way for the error to be reported, so this crashes with a
null pointer dereference.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87682
This patch makes `std::rotate` a constexpr. In doing so, this patch also
updates the internal `__move` and `__move_backward` funtions to be
constexpr.
This patch was previously reverted in ed653184ac because it was missing
some UNSUPPORTED markup for older compilers. This commit adds it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65721
The standard does not require the constructor `strstreambuf(streamsize alsize_arg = 0)`
leave the stream array unallocated when called with parameter `alsize_arg > 0`.
Conformant implementations of this constructor may allocate minimal `alsize_arg`
number of bytes forcing `str()` method to return non-null pointer.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72465
cppreference lists the support for this paper as partial.
I found 4 functions which the paper marks as `constexpr`,
but did not use the appropriate macro.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84275
This patch makes `std::rotate` a constexpr. In doing so, this patch also
updates the internal `__move` and `__move_backward` funtions to be
constexpr.
Reviewed By: ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65721
In C++20, since P0896R4, std::ostream_iterator and std::ostreambuf_iterator
must have std::ptrdiff_t instead of void as a difference_type.
Tests by Casey Carter (thanks!).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87459
Instead, use with_system_cxx_lib with various compile-only tests to ensure
that we're getting compile-time errors, as expected. This follows the
lead of ec46cfefe8.
The needs of back-deployment testing currently require two different
ways of running the test suite: one based on the deployment target,
and one based on the target triple. Since the triple includes all the
information we need, it's better to have just one way of doing things.
Furthermore, `--param platform=XXX` is also supersedded by using the
target triple. Previously, this parameter would serve the purpose of
controling XFAILs for availability markup errors, however it is possible
to achieve the same thing by using with_system_cxx_lib only and using
.verify.cpp tests instead, as explained in the documentation changes.
The motivation for this change is twofold:
1. This part of the Lit config has always been really confusing and
complicated, and it has been a source of bugs in the past. I have
simplified it iteratively in the past, but the complexity is still
there.
2. The deployment-target detection started failing in weird ways in
recent Clangs, breaking our CI. Instead of band-aid patching the
issue, I decided to remove the complexity altogether by using target
triples even on Apple platforms.
A follow-up to this commit will bring the test suite in line with
the recommended way of handling availability markup tests.
Currently the libcxx/atomics/ext-int.verify.cpp test fails when run with
-std=c++03 because there's an extra error due to using list initialization. Fix
this by using parentheses instead.
D56913 introduced the _LIBCPP_FREESTANDING macro and guarded its
definition by:
#ifndef __STDC_HOSTED__
# define _LIBCPP_FREESTANDING
#endif
However, __STDC_HOSTED__ is defined as 0 in freestanding implementations
instead of undefined, which means that _LIBCPP_FREESTANDING would never
get defined. This patch corrects the above as:
#if __STDC_HOSTED__ == 0
# define _LIBCPP_FREESTANDING
#endif
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86055
This commit re-applies 99f3b231cb, which was reverted in 8142425727
because it broke the modules build. The modules failure was a circular
dependency between the Darwin module and __config. Specifically, the
issue was that if <__config> includes a system header, the std_config
module depends on the Darwin module. However, the Darwin module already
depends on the std_config header because some of its headers include
libc++ headers like <ctype.h> (they mean to include the C <ctype.h>,
but libc++ headers are first in the header search path).
This is fixed by moving the workaround to <ctime> only.
https://llvm.org/PR47208
rdar://68157284
This reverts commit 99f3b231cb. It breaks
libcxx/modules/stds_include.sh.cpp on macOS as the new include to sys/cdefs.h
causes a dependency from __config to the Darwin module (which already has
a dependency on __config). This cyclic dependency breaks compiling the std
module which breaks compiling pretty much every program with ToT libc++ and
enabled modules.
I'll revert for now to get the bots green again. Sorry for the inconvenience.
timespec_get is not available in Apple SDKs when (__DARWIN_C_LEVEL >= __DARWIN_C_FULL)
isn't true, which leads to libc++ trying to import ::timespec_get into
namespace std when it's not available. This issue has been reported to
Apple's libc, but we need a workaround in the meantime.
https://llvm.org/PR47208
rdar://68157284
This commit adds the first from-scratch configuration files for running
the libc++ test suite without using the old configuration:
- libcxx-trunk-shared.cfg.py:
Runs the test suite against a trunk libc++ shared library.
- libcxx-trunk-static.cfg.py:
Runs the test suite against a trunk libc++ static library.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81866
This implements the part of P0619R4 related to the default allocator.
This is incredibly important, since otherwise there is an ABI break
between C++17 and C++20 w.r.t. the default allocator's size_type on
platforms where std::size_t is not the same as std::make_unsigned<std::ptrdiff_t>.
We're (temporarily) disabling ExtInt for the '__atomic' builtins so we can better design their behavior later. The idea is until we do an audit/design for the way atomic builtins are supposed to work with _ExtInt, we should leave them restricted so they don't limit our future options, such as by binding us to a sub-optimal implementation via ABI.
Example after this change:
$ cat test.c
void f(_ExtInt(64) *ptr) {
__atomic_fetch_add(ptr, 1, 0);
}
$ clang -c test.c
test.c:2:22: error: argument to atomic builtin of type '_ExtInt' is not supported
__atomic_fetch_add(ptr, 1, 0);
^
1 error generated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84049
We don't support GCC in C++03 mode, and Clang provides rvalue references
even in C++03 mode. So there's effectively no supported compiler that
doesn't support rvalue references.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84943
Add shared_ptr tests where the element type and pointer type aren't 'convertible' but are 'compatible'.
Responding to a comment from D81414.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81532
Block.h is a pretty common name, which can lead to nasty collisions with
user provided headers. Since we're only getting a few simple declarations
from the header, it's better to declare them manually than to include the
header.
rdar://66384326
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85035
First, add a TEST_HAS_QUICK_EXIT macro to mirror other C11 features like
TEST_HAS_ALIGNED_ALLOC, and update the tests for that.
Second, get rid of TEST_HAS_C11_FEATURES and _LIBCPP_HAS_C11_FEATURES,
which were only used to ensure that feature macros don't get out of
sync between <__config> and "test_macros.h". This is not necessary
anymore, since we have tests for each individual macro now.
This change replaces std::make_unique with manual construction of
std::unique_ptr to make the tests compatible with C++11
(std::make_unique is a C++14 feature).
libc++ supports std::unique_ptr and std::shared_ptr even in C++03 but
with some limitations: unique_ptr_array.pass.cpp and
shared_ptr_arg.pass.cpp fail to compile in C++03 mode and need to be
disabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84394
Summary:
weak_ptr has two pointers (more than the 4 bytes limit), so it will not be returned in registers on ARM, even if it is trivial.
The test, therefore, will fail on ARM.
Reviewers: #libc!
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, danielkiss, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84200
Some time ago, I introduced shortcut features like dylib-has-no-shared_mutex
to encode whether the deployment target supported shared_mutex (say). This
made the test suite annotations cleaner.
However, the problem with building Lit features on top of other Lit
features is that it's easier for them to become stale, especially when
they are generated programmatically. Furthermore, it makes the bar for
defining configurations from scratch higher, since more features have
to be defined. Instead, I think it's better to put the XFAILs in the
tests directly, which allows cleaning them up with a simple grep.
This allows passing parameters to the test suites without using
LLVM_LIT_ARGS. The problem is that we sometimes want to set some
Lit arguments on the CMake command line, but the Lit parameters in
a CMake cache file. If the only knob to do that is LLVM_LIT_ARGS,
the command-line entry overrides the cache one, and the parameters
set by the cache are ignored.
This fixes a current issue with the build bots that they completely
ignore the 'std' param set by Lit, because other Lit arguments are
provided via LLVM_LIT_ARGS on the CMake command-line.
There used to be a workaround where we'd pretend that GCC 5 didn't support
C++14 because it doesn't implement it properly. Since that workaround has
been removed (in 1eb211ada1), we need to mark a few individual tests as
failing with GCC 5.
Instead of detecting it automatically (in libc++) and relying on
_LIBCXXABI_NO_EXCEPTIONS being set explicitly (in libc++abi), always
detect whether exceptions are enabled automatically.
This commit also removes support for specifying -D_LIBCPP_NO_EXCEPTIONS
and -D_LIBCXXABI_NO_EXCEPTIONS explicitly -- those should just be inferred
from using -fno-exceptions (or an equivalent flag).
Allowing both -D_FOO_NO_EXCEPTIONS to be provided explicitly and trying
to detect it automatically is just confusing, especially since we did
specify it explicitly when building libc++abi. We should have only one
way to detect whether exceptions are enabled, but it should be robust.
As announced on libcxx-dev at [1], the old libc++ testing format is being
removed in favour of the new one. Follow-up commits will clean up the
code that is dead after the removal of this option.
[1]: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/libcxx-dev/2020-June/000885.html
Summary:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D82029 introduced the non-throw check for final_suspend(). There are a few tests I missed in that patch.
Fixing them here.
Reviewers: #libc, lewissbaker, modocache, ldionne
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Subscribers: dexonsmith, modocache, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82338
Similar to <concepts>, we need to protect the header and test against
inclusion and being run if concepts aren't supported by the compiler.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82171
Before this patch, the libc++ test suite first loads lit.site.cfg
(generated by CMake), and then lit.cfg. It's also possible to load
lit.cfg before lit.site.cfg and to point to a custom lit.site.cfg
file using '--param=libcxx_site_config'. However, in that case, lit.cfg
still relies on the site configuration filling up the 'config' object
like the default lit.site.cfg file does, which isn't flexible enough.
This commit simplifies the setup by having just a single Lit site config
file per CMake configuration, and always loading exactly that config file.
However, the config file to use can be selected when setting up CMake via
the LIBCXX_TEST_CONFIG setting. Furthermore, the site configs are entirely
standalone, which means that a new site config can be added that doesn't
need to conform what's expected by config.py.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81846
The Standard documents the signature of std::advance as
template <class Iter, class Distance>
constexpr void advance(Iter& i, Distance n);
Furthermore, it does not appear to put any restriction on what the type
of Distance should be. While it is understood that it should usually
be std::iterator_traits::difference_type, I couldn't find any wording
that mandates that. Similarly, I couldn't find wording that forces the
distance to be a signed type.
This patch changes std::advance to accept any type in the second argument,
which appears to be what the Standard mandates. We then coerce it to the
iterator's difference type, but that's an implementation detail.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81425
This is useful for checking runtime properties of the target system.
This is a partial re-application of 3ea9450bda. This part was tested
to work on a Windows host with a SSH executor.
That test is already only enabled if LIBCXX_TEST_GDB_PRETTY_PRINTERS is
enabled, which isn't the default. If someone turns on that option on
Windows, they should be able to run the test and see whatever failure
happens.
The integration between CMake and executor selection in the new format
wasn't very flexible -- only the default executor and SSH executors were
supported.
This patch makes it possible to specify arbitrary executors with the new
format. With the new testing format, a custom executor is just a script
that gets called with a command-line to execute, and some arguments like
--env, --codesign_identity and --execdir. As such, the default executor
is just run.py.
Remote execution with the SSH executor can be achived by specifying
LIBCXX_EXECUTOR="<path-to-ssh.py> --host <host>". Similarly, arbitrary
scripts can be provided.
Instead of passing file dependencies individually, assume that the
whole content of the unique test directory is a dependency. This
simplifies the test harness significantly, by making %T the directory
that contains everything required to run a test. This also removes the
need for the %{file_dependencies} substitution, which is removed by this
patch.
Furthermore, this patch also changes the harness to execute tests locally
inside %T, so as to avoid creating a separate directory for no purpose.
This will allow simplifying executors by always just copying the whole
%T, and assuming that all file dependencies are contained in it.
Superseeds https://reviews.llvm.org/D78245, which tried to make %T unique
in Lit, but which encountered push back.
The test is failing on 32-bit targets in C++03 mode. Clang produces
the following warning: 'integer literal is too large to be represented
in type 'long' and is subject to undefined behavior under C++98,
interpreting as 'unsigned long'; this literal will have type 'long
long' in C++11 onwards [-Wc++11-compat]' which is promoted to an error
and causes the test to fail.
There have been no changes in the test itself since 2019, so it looks
like the diagnostic has been updated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81559
Unlike parameters in litConfig.params, the config isn't shared across
all test suites. For example, if we want to enable exceptions in the
tests for libcxxabi, but not in the tests for libcxx, we can't set the
enable_exceptions parameter in the litConfig object, cause it will be
used by both. Instead, setting it inside the config object solves that
problem.
This reverts commit 0c148430cf, which added an assertion in day().
The Standard doesn't allow day() to crash -- instead it says that the
result is unspecified.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70346
All compilers supported by libc++ have rvalues in C++03 mode so, there is no need for this non-rvalue overload.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80881
Before this patch, we tried detecting whether small atomics were available
without linking against libatomic. However, that's not really what we want
to know -- instead, we want to know what's required in order to support
atomics fully, which is to link against libatomic when it's provided.
That is both much simpler, and it doesn't suffer the problem that we would
not link against libatomic when small atomics didn't require it, which
lead to non-lockfree atomics never working.
Furthermore, because we understand that some platforms might not want to
(or be able to) ship non-lockfree atomics, we add that notion to the test
suite, independently of a potential extern library.
After this patch, we therefore:
(1) Link against libatomic when it is provided
(2) Independently detect whether non-lockfree atomics are supported in
the test suite, regardless of whether that means we're linking against
an external library or not (which is an implementation detail).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81190
Libc++ provides support for <thread> in C++03 as an extension. Furthermore,
it does not support any compiler that doesn't have rvalue references. It
is hence possible to provide the move constructor and move assignment
operator in C++03.
C++98 and C++03 are effectively aliases as far as Clang is concerned.
As such, allowing both std=c++98 and std=c++03 as Lit parameters is
just slightly confusing, but provides no value. It's similar to allowing
both std=c++17 and std=c++1z, which we don't do.
This was discovered because we had an internal bot that ran the test
suite under both c++98 AND c++03 -- one of which is redundant.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80926
This test is arguably fatally flawed, at least as long as C++ condition
variables are just trivial wrappers around POSIX. I've added some notes
to the test for future authors to consider.
The Standard is currently unimplementable. We have to pick between:
1. Not implementing constexpr support properly in std::array<T, 0>
2. Making std::array<T, 0> non-trivial even when T is trivial
3. Returning nullptr from std::array<T, 0>::begin()
Libc++ initially picked (1). In 77b9abfc8e, we started implementing constexpr properly, but lost the guarantee of triviality. Since it seems like both (1) and (2) are really important, it seems like (3) is the only viable option for libc++, after all. This is also what other implementations are doing.
This patch moves libc++ from (1) to (3).
It also:
- Improves the test coverage for the various ways of initializing std::array
- Adds tests for the triviality of std::array
- Adds tests for the aggregate-ness of std::array
Reviewed By: #libc, miscco, EricWF, zoecarver
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80821
When the __config_site header is generated, but LIBCXX_HAS_MERGED_TYPEINFO_NAMES_DEFAULT
wasn't specified, _LIBCPP_HAS_MERGED_TYPEINFO_NAMES_DEFAULT would be defined
to 0, which was the NonUnique RTTI comparison implementation. The intent
was to use the Unique RTTI comparison implementation in that case, which
caused https://llvm.org/PR45549.
Instead, use a proper "switch" to select the RTTI comparison implementation.
Note that 0 can't be used as a value, because that is treated the same
by CMake as a variable that is just not defined.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80037
This commit adds missing support for constexpr in std::array under all
standard modes up to and including C++20. It also transforms the <array>
tests to check for constexpr-friendliness under the right standard modes.
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR40124
Fixes rdar://57522096
Supersedes https://reviews.llvm.org/D60666
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80452
Summary: Update status page and test synopsis. Add synopsis in <cmath>.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80456
Summary: a4b8ee6 made all MoveOnly members constexpr but, some members and constructors contain expressions that are only valid in C++14 and later. This patch prefixes those methods and constructors with TEST_CONSTEXPR_CXX14.
Reviewers: ldionne, #libc!
Subscribers: dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80482
Don't use std::filesystem APIs for CWDGuard, use POSIX functions
instead. This way the tests don't rely on the correctness of
the functionality they're testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78200
Summary:
As described in the bug report:
The commit a8b9f59e8caf378d56e8bfcecdb22184cdabf42d "Implement feature test macros using a script" added test features macros for libc++. Among others, it added `__cpp_lib_hardware_interference_size`. However, there is nothing like std::hardware_constructive_interference_size nor std::hardware_destructive_interference_size, that should be in header <new>.
* https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41423
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80431
The tests had copy-paste errors which started showing when an
unused-variable warning started being emitted after we made
the MoveOnly type constexpr (in a4b8ee6422).
Summary:
This LWG issue states that the result of `year_month_day_last::day()` is implementation defined if `ok()` is `false`.
However, from user perspective, calling `day()` in this situation will lead to a (possibly difficult to find) crash.
Hence, I have added an assertion to warn user at least when assertions are enabled.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70346
Tests for `std::system_error` constructor marked as slightly non-portable.
One (but not the only one) reason for such non-portability is that these
tests assume the default locale to be set to "C" (or "POSIX").
However, the default locale for the process depends on OS and
environment. This patch adds explicit setting of the correct
locale expected by the tests.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72456
These two tests were clumsily using time measurements to determine
whether std::lock_guard was working correctly. In practice, this
approach merely verified that the underlying lock properly waits.
Now these two tests verify that lock is acquired, not dropped
prematurely, and finally, actually dropped at the end of the scope.
Like other uses of ALLOW_RETRIES, this test tried to verify that an API
returned "quickly" but quick is not safe to define given slow and/or
busy machines.
Instead, we now verify that these "wait" APIs actually wait, which the
old test did not.
* improve coverage in `span`'s "conversion from `std::array`" test, while eliminating MSVC diagnostics about `testConstructorArray<T>() && testConstructorArray<const T, T>()` being redundant when `T` is already `const`.
* Remove use of `is_assignable` that triggers UB due to an insufficiently-complete type argument in `std::function`'s assignment operator test.
* Don't test that `shared_ptr` initialization from an rvalue triggers the lvalue aliasing constructor on non-libc++; this is not the case for Standard Libraries that implement LWG-2996. (Ditto, I'd simply remove this but it's your library ;).)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80030
This implements the relaxed requirements on the std::array constructors of span,
where the type only needs to be convertible to the element type of the span.
Note that the previous tests were not sufficient, as the const array<T, n> constructor
was only tested for compile time and the array<T, N> only during runtime.
Restructure the tests so that we can test conversions as well as both constructors.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75706
The default constructor of a static span requires _Extent == 0 so
SFINAE it out rather than using a static_assert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71994
These two tests do not use the "thread sleeps X milliseconds" pattern
that other libcxx tests use, so all we can do in order to remove
ALLOW_RETRIES workaround is remove the assumption that measuring the
"quick" return of `wait()` is possible (it is not). Let the test harness
verify overall that `wait()` does not hang.
As a bonus, have the spin-waiting threads `yield()`, which is what well
behaved code should do.
This test tried to verify that "wait()" returned quickly but "quick" is
impossible to define given a busy and/or slow system.
Instead, I've refactored the test to verify that `wait()` actually
waits which the old test did not verify.
Implements P0414R2:
* Adds support for array types in std::shared_ptr.
* Adds reinterpret_pointer_cast for shared_ptr.
Re-committing now that the leaking tests are fixed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62259
Operating systems are best effort by default, so we cannot assume that
sleep-like APIs return as soon as we'd like.
Even if a sleep-like API returns when we want it to, the potential for
preemption means that attempts to measure time are subject to delays.
Implements P0414R2:
* Adds support for array types in std::shared_ptr.
* Adds reinterpret_pointer_cast for shared_ptr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62259
Operating systems are best effort by default, so we cannot assume that
sleep-like APIs return as soon as we'd like.
Even if a sleep-like API returns when we want it to, the potential for
preemption means that attempts to measure time are subject to delays.
The challenge with measuring time in tests is that slow and/or busy
machines can cause tests to fail in unexpected ways. After this change,
three tests should be much more robust. The only remaining and tiny race
that I can think of is preemption after `--countDown`. That being said,
the race isn't fixable because the standard library doesn't provide a
way to count threads that are waiting to acquire a lock.
Reviewers: ldionne, EricWF, howard.hinnant, mclow.lists, #libc
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Subscribers: dexonsmith, jfb, broadwaylamb, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79406
This change adds test coverage for the `codecvt<char16_t, char8_t, mbstate_t>` and `codecvt<char32_t, char8_t, mbstate_t>` ctype facets added to the C++20 WD by [P0482R6](https://wg21.link/P0428R6). Note that libc++ does not implement these facets despite implementing the remainder of P0482, presumably for ABI reasons, so these tests are marked `UNSUPPORTED: libc++`.
The ostream operator<< is currently broken for std::complex with
specified field widths.
This patch a partial revert of c3478eff7a (reviewed as D71214),
restoring the correct behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78816
These tests fail due to a couple of changes to `move_iterator` for C++20:
* `move_iterator<I>::operator++(int)` returns `void` in C++20 if `I` doesn't model `forward_iterator`.
* `move_iterator<I>::reference` is calculated in C++20, so `I` must actually have an `operator*() const`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79343
This patch adds deduction guides to <memory> to allow deducing
construction of shared_ptrs from unique_ptrs, and from weak_ptrs
and vice versa, as specified by C++17.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69603
This patch adds `_VSTD::` to some calls to `make_pair` inside the
implementations of searchers, to prevent things exploding if there is
a make_pair in an associated namespace of a user-defined type.
https://godbolt.org/z/xAFG98
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72640
When running on remote hosts, we need the whole `echo 123 | %t.exe` command
to run on the remote host. Thus, we need to escape the pipe to make sure
the command is treated as `{ echo 123 | %t.exe } > %t.out` instead of
`{ echo 123 } | %t.exe > %t.out`m where only `echo 123` is run on the
remote host.
Since c0cd106fcc, we add __config_site macro defines to the compiler
command line whether we are building with modules or not. This means
that the modules tests are expected to fail on single-threaded systems
whether we build with modules or not.
Summary:
Instead of storing `static_test_env` (with all the symlinks) in the repo, we create it on the fly to be cross-toolchain-friendly. The primary use case for this are Windows-hosted cross-toolchains. Windows doesn't really have a concept of symlinks. So, when the monorepo is cloned, those symlinks turn to ordinary text files. Previously, if we cross-compiled libc++ for some symlink-friendly system (e. g. Linux) and ran tests on the target system, some tests would fail. This patch makes them pass.
Reviewers: ldionne, #libc
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Subscribers: EricWF, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78200
Instead of storing static_test_env (with all the symlinks) in the repo,
we create it on the fly to be cross-toolchain-friendly. The primary
use case for this are Windows-hosted cross-toolchains. Windows doesn't
really have a concept of symlinks. So, when the monorepo is cloned,
those symlinks turn to ordinary text files. Previously, if we
cross-compiled libc++ for some symlink-friendly system (e. g. Linux) and
ran tests on the target system, some tests would fail. This patch makes
them pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78200
The tests were disabled under ASAN/MSAN because old Clangs were very
slow to build the test cases. However, I checked with the Clang used
on our build bots and the tests are not slow to build anymore, so the
tests can be re-enabled.
Summary:
pr42199
When using regex_constants::match_prev_avail, it is defined that
--first is valid, and match_not_bol and match_not_bow should be
ignored. At the moment these flags are not ignored. This fixis that.
Reviewers: ldionne, miyuki, EricWF, mclow.lists, #libc
Reviewed By: ldionne, miyuki, #libc
Subscribers: broadwaylamb, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75622
The libcxx.util utilities don't work properly, and we should remove them
when we get rid of compiler.py. In particular, libcxx.util.to_string
appears to be completely broken.
On Windows, quoting with single-quotes is both unnecessary and incorrect.
If the arguments are properly handled by Lit (which they are), quoting
should not be necessary.
Tests that require support for Clang-verify are already marked as such
explicitly by their extension, which is .verify.cpp. Requiring the use
of an explicit Lit feature is, after thought, not really helpful.
This is a change in design: we have been bitten in the past by tests not
being enabled when we thought they were. However, the issue was mostly
with file extensions being ignored. The fix for that is not to blindly
require explicit features all the time, but instead to report all files
that are in the suite but that don't match any known test format. This
can be implemented in a follow-up patch.
This reverts commit 51a60ed14c, since the test still doesn't pass on
Windows. Marking the test as UNSUPORTED on Windows again until I've
figured out the problem.
Instead of completely disabling the tests on Apple, which makes them
disabled on all platforms we test (and hence useless), this commit
disables only the assertions that actually fail. I also created a
bug report to track re-enabling them (https://llvm.org/PR45739).
These two locale tests are disabled because they were said to "pass in
an uncontrolled manner on Apple platforms". This commit re-enables them
to see what that means, and whether that is still relevant on the
platforms we test.
Before this commit, the tests were either XFAILed or UNSUPPORTED on
Apple and Linux, which is pretty much all the systems we support. If
the tests truly don't work anywhere, they should be removed instead.
This allows defining Lit features that can be enabled or disabled based
on compiler support, and parameters that are passed on the command line.
The main benefits are:
- Feature detection is entirely based on the substitutions provided in
the TestingConfig object, which is simpler and decouples it from the
complicated compiler emulation infrastructure.
- The syntax is declarative, which makes it easy to see what features
and parameters are accepted by the test suite. This is significantly
less entangled than the current config.py logic.
- Since feature detection is based on substitutions, it works really
well on top of the new format, and custom Lit configurations can be
created easily without being based on `config.py`.
This commit is a reapplication of 6d58030c8c, which was reverted in
8f24c4b72f because it broke Python 3 support. This re-application
supports Python 3.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78381
Defining the nested types `reference` and `iterator_concept` of `reverse_iterator<I>` necessarily requires `I` to be complete in C++20. These tests that verify that `std::map<int, X>::reverse_iterator` can be instantiated when `X` is incomplete are going to have a bad time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78944
This allows defining Lit features that can be enabled or disabled based
on compiler support, and parameters that are passed on the command line.
The main benefits are:
- Feature detection is entirely based on the substitutions provided in
the TestingConfig object, which is simpler and decouples it from the
complicated compiler emulation infrastructure.
- The syntax is declarative, which makes it easy to see what features
and parameters are accepted by the test suite. This is significantly
less entangled than the current config.py logic.
- Since feature detection is based on substitutions, it works really
well on top of the new format, and custom Lit configurations can be
created easily without being based on `config.py`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78381
The runtime for Blocks may not be available even though the Blocks
language extension _is_ available. Instead of potentially failing,
this commit is much more conservative and assumes the runtime for
Blocks is only provided on Apple platforms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78757
Instead of having different names for the same Lit feature accross code
bases, use the same name everywhere. This NFC commit is in preparation
for a refactor where all three projects will be using the same Lit
feature detection logic, and hence it won't be convenient to use
different names for the feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78370
When the new libc++ test format was enabled, warnings were accidentally
dropped cause they were not part of the %{compile_flags} substitution.
This commit adds them back, however `-Werror` is only used for non-verify
tests (cause it doesn't make sense for verify tests).
This commit is a re-application of 20fd624380, which was reverted in
5ec6fdb058 because it broke the C++03 bot. This failure should have
been fixed in b4fb705e77.
When the new libc++ test format was enabled, warnings were accidentally
dropped cause they were not part of the %{compile_flags} substitution.
This commit adds them back, however `-Werror` is only used for non-verify
tests (cause it doesn't make sense for verify tests).
This was originally committed as f8452ddfcc and reverted in 7cb1aa9d93.
The issue was that shell builtins were being escaped too, and apparently
Bash won't execute a builtin when it is quoted e.g. '!'. Instead, it
thinks it's a command and it can't find it.
Re-committing the change with that issue fixed.
These substitutions are strongly tied to the operation of the test
format, so it makes sense to have them defined by the test format
instead of the Lit configuration. They should be defined regardless
of which configuration is in use.
Marked unsupported for C++03 and C++11 since this test uses alias
declarations, and at least one C++03 bot was failing with
-Wc++11-extensions.
Change-Id: I8c3a579edd7eb83e0bc74e85d116b68f22400161
When running the tests through `lit` directly instead of through `check-cxx`,
it is required to manually build the `cxx` (and often `cxx_experimental`)
targets. Instead of having to do that manually, this commit adds a new
target `check-cxx-deps` that does that for you.
When building these tests without modules in the whole test suite,
the __config_site macro definitions are not included anymore in the
%{compile_flags}. This causes the _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_THREADS define not
to be picked up, and the test to XPASS on single-threaded systems.
This is a stop-gap measure to fix the build bots, however the proper
solution would be to always pass the __config_site defines as compiler
macros, whether we build with modules or not.
Avoid using <sys/types.h> in those tests so that we can run them on
non-AIX systems (otherwise this test is basically dead-code on all
the build bots I'm aware of). Also, split up the test to allow using
.compile.pass.cpp tests instead of .sh.cpp tests, since that is the
last test referencing the %{compile} substitution explicitly.
Instead of being ShTests that use clang-verify (and without the proper
REQUIRES annotation), create .verify.cpp tests instead with the right
REQUIRES annotation.
By renaming .fail.cpp tests that don't need clang-verify to .compile.fail.cpp,
the new test format will not try to compile these tests with clang-verify,
and the old test format will work just the same. However, this allows
removing a workaround that requires parsing each test looking for
clang-verify markup.
After this change, a .fail.cpp test should always have clang-verify markup.
When clang-verify is not supported by the compiler, we will just check that
these tests fail to compile. When clang-verify is supported, these tests
will be compiled with clang-verify whether they have markup or not (so
they should have markup, or they will fail).
This simplifies the test suite and also ensures that all of our .fail.cpp
tests provide clang-verify markup. If it's impossible for a test to have
clang-verify markup, it can be moved to a .compile.fail.cpp test, which
are unconditionally just checked for compilation failure.
With this patch, .verify.cpp tests explicitly require clang-verify, but
no other test types require clang-verify out of the box. This will allow
making several .fail.cpp tests that don't have any clang-verify markup
to be just .compile.fail.cpp tests, which in turn should allow removing
a long standing workaround that requires parsing tests to detect whether
they have any clang-verify markup in them.
There are no such tests in the libc++ test suite, and I want to move
away from `.fail.cpp` tests (in favour of something else) too, which
require a workaround.
Instead of spamming a bunch of available features that are not actually
used anywhere, only set those that are actually used in the test suite.
In the future, this should probably be based on the target triple only,
with the ability to have wildcards in the triple.
The libc++ test suite currently defines several features that are not
used anywhere in the tests, or that are redundant with other features.
For the purpose of simplifying config.py and to ease the bring up of a
new configuration, this commit removes some of these features:
- rename dylib-has-no-filesystem to c++filesystem-disabled, which exists
- rename apple-darwin to just darwin, which is already set
- remove useless setting of libstdc++, which is already set correctly
- remove libcpp-abi-unstable, which is not used anywhere
- remove the glibc-XXX features, which are not used anywhere
The libc++ test suite has a lot of old Lit features used to XFAIL tests
and mark them as UNSUPPORTED. Many of them are to workaround problems on
old compilers or old platforms. As time goes by, it is good to go and
clean those up to simplify the configuration of the test suite, and also
to reflect the testing reality. It's not useful to have markup that gives
the impression that e.g. clang-3.3 is supported, when we don't really
test on it anymore (and hence several new tests probably don't have the
necessary markup on them).
Patch from Christopher Di Bella (cjdb@google.com)
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D74291
Adds `std::same_as` to libc++. Since there aren't clang-format rules for
//requires-expressions//, I'll need to disable the formatter in certain areas.
std::optional requires C++17. Instead of only running the test above
C++14, this commit removes uses of std::optional from the test (it's
already tested in block.objc.pass.mm).
Broke builders that emit different diagnostics. e.g.:
error: 'warning' diagnostics seen but not expected:
Line 13: alias declarations are a C++11 extension
Line 20: alias declarations are a C++11 extension
This reverts commit ff87813715.
It has never been used, and it actually doesn't really work because it
assumes that the target supports Python. Instead, it's better to just
use `!` since we're running ShTests in system shells anyway.
This allows both the old and the new testing formats to handle these
tests with modules enabled.
We also include the modules flags in the %{flags} substitution, which
means that .sh.cpp tests in the old format and all tests in the new
format will use modules flags when enabled.
Otherwise, files don't link when using a GNU linker, which is more
sensitive on the order of the source file relative to the various
linked libraries. See http://c-faq.com/lib/libsearch.html for an
explanation of the problem.
Both test formats are equivalent, so this *should* not be a problem.
We've fixed a couple of failures uncovered by the first time we tried
making the switch, so this new attempt should go even farther.
If failures are noticed, it should be fine to revert this commit, but
please give a heads up afterwards so we know to address the issues!
Also note that it is still possible to use the old format by passing
`--param=use_old_format=True` when running Lit for the time being.
The LitConfig is shared across the whole test suite. However, since
enabling recursive expansion can be a breaking change for some test
suites, it's important to confine the setting to test suites that
enable it explicitly.
Note that other issues were raised with the way recursiveExpansionLimit
operates. However, this commit simply moves the setting to the right
place -- the mechanism by which it works can be improved independently.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77415
We had a workaround because GCC 5 does not evaluate static assertions
that are dependent on template parameters. This commit removes the
workaround and marks the corresponding tests as unsupported with GCC 5.
This has the benefit of bringing the new and the old test formats closer
without having to carry a workaround for an old compiler in the new
test format.
Otherwise, we're missing some flags like the flags that are used by
sanitizer builds and the 32-bit builds. In the long term, I think it
would be better to have only %{compile_flags} and %{link_flags}, but
for the benefit of adopting the new format by default, I think it's OK
to add %{flags} to it.
This reverts commit 1580c76c4a.
This causes libcxx/selftest/newformat/sh.cpp/substitutions.sh.cpp to
fail with a linker error on Fedora 31 (x86-64) release (no assert)
builds.
Both test formats are equivalent, so this *should* not be a problem.
However, I'm taking advantage of the week-end to test this and see if
there are any failures. If so, it should be fine to revert this until
the failures have been addressed.
For the time being, it is still possible to use the old format by passing
`--param=use_old_format=True` when running Lit.
Always depend on the compiler to have a correct implementation of
max_align_t in stddef.h and don't provide a fallback. For pre-C++11,
require __STDCPP_NEW_ALIGNMENT__ in <new> as provided by clang in all
standard modes. Adjust test cases to avoid testing or using max_align_t
in pre-C++11 mode and also to better deal with alignof(max_align_t)>16.
Document requirements of the alignment tests around natural alignment of
power-of-two-sized types.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73245
The testing script used to test libc++ historically did not like directories
without any testing files, so these tests had been added. Since this is
not necessary anymore, we can now remove these files. This has the benefit
that the total number of tests reflects the real number of tests more
closely, and we also skip some unnecessary work (especially relevant when
running tests over SSH).
However, some nothing_to_do.pass.cpp tests actually serve the purpose of
documenting that an area of the Standard doesn't need to be tested, or is
tested elsewhere. These files are not removed by this commit.
Removal done with:
import os
import itertools
for (dirpath, dirnames, filenames) in itertools.chain(os.walk('./libcxx/test'),
os.walk('./libcxxabi/test')):
if len(filenames + dirnames) > 1 and \
any(p == 'nothing_to_do.pass.cpp' for p in filenames):
os.remove(os.path.join(dirpath, 'nothing_to_do.pass.cpp'))
This new test format is simpler and more flexible. It creates Lit ShTests
on the fly that reuse existing substitutions (like %{cxx}) instead of
having complex logic in Python to run the tests. This has the benefit
that virtually no coding is required to customize how the test suite is
run -- one can achieve pretty much anything by defining the appropriate
substitutions in a simple lit.cfg file.
For example, in order to run the tests on an embedded device after
building with a specific SDK, one can set the %{cxx} and %{compile_flags}
substitutions to use that SDK, and the %{exec} substitution to the ssh.py
script currently used for .sh.cpp tests with a remote executor. Dealing with
the SSHExecutor becomes unnecessary, since all tests are treated like ShTests.
As a side effect of this design, configuration files for the test
suite can be as simple as:
config.substitutions.append(('%{cxx}', '<path-to-compiler>'))
config.substitutions.append(('%{compile_flags}', '<flags>'))
config.substitutions.append(('%{link_flags}', '<flags>'))
config.substitutions.append(('%{exec}', '<script-to-execute>'))
This should allow storing lit.cfg files for various configurations
directly in the repository instead of relying on complicated logic
in config.py to set up the right flags. I've found numerous problems
in that logic in the past years, and it seems like having simple and
explicit configuration files for the configurations we support is
going to solve most of these problems. Specifically, I am hoping to
store configuration files for testing other Standard Libraries in
the repository.
Improving the interaction with the test suite configuration is still a
work in progress, so for now this test format reuses the substitutions and
available features that are set up by the current config.py.
This new test format should support pretty much everything that the current
test format supports, however it will not be enabled by default at first to
make sure we're satisfied with it. For a short period of time, the new format
will require `--param=use_new_format=True` to be enabled, however it is a very
short term goal to replace the current testing format entirely and to simplify
the configuration accordingly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77338
This test regressed with 5ade17e0ca, but we never noticed it because
.pass.mm tests were skipped due to a bug in our Lit config. This commit
fixes is_pointer (by essentially reverting tha part of 5ade17e0ca) and
also adds .pass.mm tests to the list of supported test suffixes.
We can explore how to support __is_pointer with Objective-C++ qualifiers
as a follow-up -- the main goal of this commit is to fix the regression
quickly and make sure all tests of the suite are run.
Instead of hardcoding absolute paths on the build-host in the executables,
use relative paths from the current working directory. Also, use
FILE_DEPENDENCIES to mark the static test env as being required by
the relevant tests.
Given a SSH executor that copies the files to the remote host properly,
the tests can be run on that remote host.
... in `msvc_stdlib_force_include.h` to also ignore new MSVC warning C5215 "'%s' a function parameter with volatile qualified type is deprecated in C++20". Since we're touching it, also update from non-standard `__pragma(meow)` to standard `_Pragma("meow")`.
This patch reimplements the dynamic filesystem helper using Posix
functionality instead of relying on Python. The primary reason for
doing this is that it allows running the libc++ test suite on devices
that do not have Python.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77140
Using the ADDITIONAL_COMPILE_FLAGS annotation, it is possible to move
these tests from .sh.cpp to .pass.cpp, making them suitable for running
on remote hosts more easily.
Based on the current discussion in https://llvm.org/PR45307, it seems
that it's legitimate for `temp_directory_path()` to return a path with
a trailing slash. Since `p.parent_path()` will never contain a trailing
slash, comparing it to the result of `temp_directory_path()` will fail
depending on whether `temp_directory_path()` returns a trailing slash
or not.
Otherwise, trying to reproduce a failing filesystem test by copy-pasting
the command-line used and running that in the shell won't work, because
the shell will eat quoting around the define and we'll end up with a
non-stringized path in the .cpp file.
That way, local lit configuration files don't have to worry about
deep-copying the compiler instance of the test format, which is
arguably an implementation detail.
We pass the config to this method even though it is not used by the
current test format because this allows replacing the current test
format by other test formats that would require the config to add
new compile flags.
This reduces the complexity of our already complex global lit configuration,
and also avoids cluttering the compilation commands for all tests with
things that are only relevant to the filesystem tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76785
Previously, filesystem tests would require LIBCXX_FILESYSTEM_DYNAMIC_TEST_ROOT
to be present in the environment and to match the value provided when
compiling, as a macro. This has the problem that it only allows for the
filesystem tests to be run on the same machine they are created.
Instead, we create a temporary directory for each test. Technically,
this is tricky to do because we're relying on some of the code that
we're testing to do this. However, there's no other portable way of
creating temporary direcories in C++, so this is difficult to avoid.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76731
This allows adding compilation flags for a single test, which can help
eliminate some .sh.cpp tests and some custom handling in the libc++
test format.
It also works around the issue that .sh.cpp substitutions are _not_
equivalent to the actual compiler command lines used to compile tests,
since the compiler flags can be modified in local lit configurations,
and substitutions are frozen at that point. For example using %{compile}
in a .sh.cpp test in the coroutines subdirectory will not include the
-fcoroutines-ts flag, which is added in the local lit config, because
the %{compile} substitution is created long before we add -fcoroutines-ts
to the compiler flags (in the lit.local.cfg for coroutines).
We've been meaning to remove those targets for a while, and the fix is
simple enough cause they're all just aliases to other targets.
This is a re-application of f383fb40b1, wich was reverted in 04d48111b
because the build bots had not been updated yet. The build bot configurations
have now been updated not to use the deprecated targets, and I verified
that they were using the non-deprecated targets, so we should be good
unless I missed a bot.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76104
This reverts commit cd7f9751c3 which has
unintended breakage to non-libcxx projects when using the documented way
of building LLVM. (See the Getting Started guide. I.e. one big CMake setup.)
Since lit supports expanding substitutions recursively, we can define
substitutions in terms of other substitutions. This allows us to simplify
how libc++ substitutions are defined.
This doesn't change the substitutions at all, it only makes them simpler
to define.
lit is not very clever when it performs substitution on RUN lines. It
simply looks for a match anywhere in the line (without tokenization)
and replaces it by the expansion. This means that a RUN line containing
e.g. `-verify-ignore-unexpected=note` wouod be expanded to
`-verify-ignore-unexpected=<substitution for not>e`, which is
surprising and nonsensical.
It also means that something like `%compile_module` could be expanded
to `<substitution-for-%compile>_module` or to the correct substitution,
depending on the order in which substitutions are evaluated by lit.
To avoid such problems, it is a good habit to delimit custom substitutions
with some token. This commit does that for all substitutions used in the
libc++ and libc++abi test suites.
Summary:
The gdb pretty printer misprints variables declared via
using declarations of the form:
namespace foo {
using string_view = std::string_view;
string_view bar;
}
This change fixes that, by deferring the decision to ignore
types not inside std until after desugaring.
Reviewers: #libc!
Subscribers: broadwaylamb, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76816
Forcing -Werror and other warnings means that the test suite isn't
actually testing what most people are seeing in their code -- it seems
better and less arbitrary to compile these tests as close as possible
to the compiler default instead.
Removing -Werror also means that we get to differentiate between
diagnostics that are errors and those that are warnings, which makes
the test suite more precise.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76311
Introduced by https://reviews.llvm.org/D72687. This condition can happen
when the tests are not being run at all, and we're only trying to generate
the libc++ headers.
Some tests do not fail at all when -verify is not supported, unless some
arbitrary warning flag is added to make them fail. We currently used
-Werror=unused-result to make them fail, but doing so makes the test
suite a lot more inscrutable. It seems better to just disable those
tests when -verify is not supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76256
It's hard to imagine someone using a recent version of libc++ with a
roughly 3 years old Clang. Since we're not testing libc++ with Clang 3.5
anyway, claiming support for it is somewhat of a lie.
Note that we don't test Clang 4 either, however I have no reason to bump
the requirement beyond Clang 4 at the moment, whereas removing Clang 3.5
allows simplifying the test suite.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76618
This reverts commit f383fb40b. It looks like several of our build bots
are still using the legacy target names, so we'll change those before
we commit this change again.
We've been meaning to remove those targets for a while, and the fix is
simple enough cause they're all just aliases to other targets.
There's no doubt this commit will break some CI systems, however the
fix is trivial.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76104
The current lit test suite doesn't really allow us to express that the
test should be disabled when testing the trunk variant of libc++, even
if we're running it on a supported macOS. Because of that, the test
is enabled when _LIBCPP_DISABLE_AVAILABILITY is defined, and the test
XPASSes.
Before this patch, the %run substitution did not contain the same
environment variables as normal `pass.cpp` tests. It also didn't
have the right working directory and the script wasn't aware of
potential file dependencies.
With this change, the combination of %build and %run in a .sh.cpp script
should match how pass.cpp tests are actually executed much more closely.
This patch updates <type_traits> to use builtin type traits whenever
possible to improve compile times.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67900
The current implementation of binomial_distribution is not guaranteed to
converge for certain extreme configurations of the engine and distribution.
This is due to a mistake in the implementation of the algorithm from the
given reference paper. The algorithm in the paper is guaranteed to
terminate but has redundant statements. The current implementation
simplified away the redundancy into a while loop, but it excludes the
return condition of the case where a good sample cannot be returned for
the particular sample being used from the uniform distribution, which is
what causes the infinite loop. This change guarantees termination by
recognizing that a good sample cannot be returned and returning 0 after
breaking the loop. This is also in contrast to the paper because the
return value as specified in the paper violates basic checks in at least
a subset of the extreme cases where the current implementation fails to
terminate. This default return value of 0 is satisfactory for the
extreme case known so far.
Since this is only meant to affect extreme cases where the algorithm
does not terminate anyways, the behavior is expected to remain exactly
the same for all non-extreme cases that have been terminating so far.
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR44847
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74997
Summary:
Android's libc uses new/delete internally and these are counted, so
the counter needs to be reset to zero at the start of the test.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, #libc, ldionne
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Subscribers: dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76091
Summary: The return type modification has already been implemented in rL364840 and rL365290.
Reviewers: ldionne, mclow.lists, EricWF, #libc!
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70275
Due to Clang bug http://llvm.org/PR45151, deprecated attributes are not
picked up on partial specializations. This patch instead applies it to
the first declaration of std::function itself.
Summary:
This is a recommit of https://reviews.llvm.org/D73223 where the added function accidentally ended up inside an idef block.
This change splits the copy constructor up inlining short initialization, and explicitly outlining long initialization into __init_copy_ctor_external() which is the externally instantiated slow path.
For unstable ABI, this has the following changes:
remove basic_string(const basic_string&)
remove basic_string(const basic_string&, const Allocator&)
add __init_copy_ctor_external(const value_type*, size_type)
Quick local benchmark for Copy:
Master
```
---------------------------------------------------------------
Benchmark Time CPU Iterations
---------------------------------------------------------------
BM_StringCopy_Empty 3.50 ns 3.51 ns 199326720
BM_StringCopy_Small 3.50 ns 3.51 ns 199510016
BM_StringCopy_Large 15.7 ns 15.7 ns 45230080
BM_StringCopy_Huge 1503 ns 1503 ns 464896
```
With this change
```
---------------------------------------------------------------
Benchmark Time CPU Iterations
---------------------------------------------------------------
BM_StringCopy_Empty 1.99 ns 2.00 ns 356471808
BM_StringCopy_Small 3.29 ns 3.30 ns 203425792
BM_StringCopy_Large 13.3 ns 13.3 ns 52948992
BM_StringCopy_Huge 1472 ns 1472 ns 475136
```
Subscribers: libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75639
The goal of the test was only to check that we could access the
`this->current` member of std::reverse_iterator from a derived
class, but in doing so we incremented a null iterator, which is UB.
These tests check that an operations happens within a specified
deadline, which causes flaky failures on slow machines or machines
under heavy load.
By adding the // FLAKY_TEST. tag it allows the test suite to
retry or ignore the tests
Summary:
In libc++, we normally #ifdef out header content instead of #erroring
out when the Standard in use is insufficient for the requirements of
the header.
Reviewers: EricWF
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits, teemperor
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75074
- Avoid using C++11-and-later features in <atomic>:
Historically, we've supported <atomic> in C++03, so we can't use C++11
features in that header. This is something we really need to change,
since our implementation of <atomic> is starting to accumulate technical
debt because of that.
- Mark a test as unsupported on single threaded systems
- Add missing symbols to the Linux ABI list
- Add the new symbols to the ABI list on Darwin
- Add XFAIL markup to the tests that require dylib support on older platforms
- Add availability markup for back-deployment
This patch enables throwing exceptions for invalid backreferences
in the constructor when using the basic, extended, grep, or egrep grammar.
This fixes bug 34297.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62453
This patch qualifies calls to ref and cref inside ref(reference_wrapper<T>)
and cref(reference_wrapper<T>), respectively. These previously unqualified
calls could break in the presence of user functions called ref/cref inside
associated namespaces: https://gcc.godbolt.org/z/8VfprT
Fixes PR44398.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74287
The regex backreferences were not properly parsed and used when using
the extended grammar. This change parses them. The issue was found while
working on PR34297.
Thanks to Mark de Wever for the patch!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62451
The libc++ __bit_iterator type has weird ABI calling conventions as a
quirk
of the implementation. The const bit iterator is trivial, but the
non-const
bit iterator is not because it declares a user-defined copy constructor.
Changing this now is an ABI break, so this test ensures that each type
is trivial/non-trivial as expected.
The definition of 'non-trivial for the purposes of calls':
A type is considered non-trivial for the purposes of calls if:
* it has a non-trivial copy constructor, move constructor, or
destructor, or
* all of its copy and move constructors are deleted.
There are some unnecessary typenames in std/numerics/c.math/abs.pass.cpp;
e.g. they're not in a dependent context.
Patch by Bryce Adelstein Lelbach
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72106
The static asserts in span<T, N>::front() and span<T, N>::back() are
incorrect as they may be triggered from valid code due to evaluation
of a never taken branch:
span<int, 0> foo;
if (!foo.empty()) {
auto x = foo.front();
}
The problem is that the branch is always evaluated by the compiler,
creating invalid compile errors for span<T, 0>.
Thanks to Michael Schellenberger Costa for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71995
The calculation _Offset + _Count <= size() may overflow, so use
_Count <= size() - _Offset instead. Note that this is safe due to
the previous constraint that _Offset <= size().
Patch by Michael Schellenberger Costa.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71998
Summary:
In `std::filesystem::proximate` tests we assume that the current working directory's name
is `fs.op.proximate`. This is fine when we're running the tests locally.
However, if we're running those tests on a remote machine via SSH, the directory layout may be
different. For example, currently we copy each test executable individually into
a temporary directory on the target board using SCP, so the assumption about the working directory name
doesn't necessarily hold.
This patch is the only thing that is necessary for all libc++ tests to pass when run remotely.
Reviewers: ldionne, EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: ldionne, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74348
clang 9ce6dc9872 drops support for
implicit conversion of nullptr_t to bool. From that commit:
The C++ rules briefly allowed this, but the rule changed nearly 10
years ago and we never updated our implementation to match. However,
we've warned on this by default for a long time, and no other compiler
accepts (even as an extension).
The system libc++.dylib doesn't support the debug mode, so this test
can't be supported. As a fly-by fix, we also specify more stringently
that only the macOS system library is unsupported in other tests using
the debug mode.
The extent of the returned span was always std::dynamic_extent, which
is incorrect.
Thanks to Michael Schellenberger Costa for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71997
Both methods have compile time constraints that we should test against.
Patch by Michael Schellenberger Costa
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71999
This reverts commit 41f4dfd63e.
It broke standalone libc++ builds, which now try to use libc++abi from the wrong directory, instead of system instance.
(cherry picked from commit 3573526c0286c9461f0459be1a4592b2214594e7)
Summary:
This patch implements https://wg21.link/P0325.
Please mind that at it is my first contribution to libc++, so I may have forgotten to abide to some conventions.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, ldionne, lichray
Reviewed By: ldionne, lichray
Subscribers: lichray, dexonsmith, zoecarver, christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69882
Summary:
The compiler already treats them as scalar types, so the library should
too. Furthermore, this allows blocks to be used in more places, for
example in std::optional, which requires an object type.
rdar://problem/57892832
Reviewers: dexonsmith, EricWF, mclow.lists
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72708
builds.
Fix a libc++abi test that was incorrectly checking for threading
primitives even when threading was disabled.
Additionally, temporarily XFAIL some module tests that fail because
the <atomic> header is unsupported but still built as a part of the
std module.
To properly address this libc++ would either need to produce a different
module.modulemap for single-threaded configurations, or it would need
to make the <atomic> header not hard-error and instead be empty
for single-threaded configurations
Summary:
The `LIBCXX_CXX_ABI_LIBRARY_PATH` CMake variable is cached once in
libcxx/cmake/Modules/HandleLibCXXABI.cmake in the `setup_abi_lib` macro,
and then cached again in libcxx/test/CMakeLists.txt. There, if it is
not set to a value, it is by default set to `LIBCXX_LIBRARY_DIR`.
However, this new value is not actually cached, because the old (empty)
value has been already cached. Use the `FORCE` CMake flag so that it
is saved to the cache.
This should not break anything, because the code changed here previously
had no effect, when it should have.
Reviewers: jroelofs, bcraig, ldionne, EricWF, mclow.lists, vvereschaka, eastig
Reviewed By: vvereschaka
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69169
span.cons/container.pass.cpp
N4842 22.7.3.2 [span.cons]/13 constrains span's range constructor
for ranges::contiguous_range (among other criteria).
24.4.5 [range.refinements]/2 says that contiguous_range requires data(),
and (via contiguous_range, random_access_range, bidirectional_range,
forward_range, input_range, range) it also requires begin() and end()
(see 24.4.2 [range.range]/1).
Therefore, IsAContainer needs to provide begin() and end().
(Detected by MSVC's concept-constrained implementation.)
span.cons/stdarray.pass.cpp
This test uses std::array, so it must include <array>.
<span> isn't guaranteed to drag in <array>.
(Detected by MSVC's implementation which uses a forward declaration to
avoid dragging in <array>, for increased compiler throughput.)
span.objectrep/as_bytes.pass.cpp
span.objectrep/as_writable_bytes.pass.cpp
Testing `sp.extent == std::dynamic_extent` triggers MSVC warning
C4127 "conditional expression is constant". Using `if constexpr` is a
simple way to avoid this without disrupting anyone else (as span
requires C++20 mode).
span.tuple/get.pass.cpp
22.7.3.2 [span.cons]/4.3: "Preconditions: If extent is not equal to
dynamic_extent, then count is equal to extent."
These lines were triggering undefined behavior (detected by assertions
in MSVC's implementation).
I changed the count arguments in the first two chunks, followed by
changing the span extents, in order to preserve the test's coverage
and follow the existing pattern.
span.cons/span.pass.cpp
22.7.3.2 [span.cons]/18.1 constrains span's converting constructor with
"Extent == dynamic_extent || Extent == OtherExtent is true".
This means that converting from dynamic extent to static extent is
not allowed. (Other constructors tested elsewhere, like
span(It first, size_type count), can be used to write such code.)
As this is the test for the converting constructor, I have:
* Removed the "dynamic -> static" case from checkCV(), which is
comprehensive.
* Changed the initialization of std::span<T, 0> s1{}; in
testConstexprSpan() and testRuntimeSpan(), because s1 is used below.
* Removed ASSERT_NOEXCEPT(std::span<T, 0>{s0}); from those functions,
as they are otherwise comprehensive.
* Deleted testConversionSpan() entirely. Note that this could never
compile (it had a bool return type, but forgot to say `return`). And it
couldn't have provided useful coverage, as the /18.2 constraint
"OtherElementType(*)[] is convertible to ElementType(*)[]"
permits only cv-qualifications, which are already tested by checkCV().
Add NetBSD to the same feature list as Fuchsia since it matches
in available features, effectively enabling aligned_alloc(),
timespec_get() and C11 features. Remove now-duplicate declaration
of quick_exit() support.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71511
Summary:
When testing an installed (out-of-tree) version of libc++, the
"libcxx/fuzzing/partial_sort.pass.cpp" test fails because of missing
include files "../fuzzing/fuzzing.{h,cpp}". This happens because in
the source tree "../fuzzing" can be accessed as
"libcxx/include/../fuzzing", but with the installed library this does
not work.
This patch fixes the issue by changing the path to be relative from
the `libcxx/test/fuzzing" directory.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, christof, michaelplatings
Reviewed By: michaelplatings
Subscribers: merge_guards_bot, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71459
This patch de-duplicates most compressed pair constructors
to use the same code in C++11 and C++03.
Part of doing that is deleting the "__second_tag()" and replacing
it with a "__value_init_tag()" which has the same effect, but
allows for the removal of the special "one-arg" first element
constructor.
This patch is intended to have no semantic change.
This change introduces the __default_init_tag to memory, and a corresponding
element constructor to allow for default initialization of either of the pair
values. This is useful for classes such as std::string where most (all)
constructors explicitly initialize the values in the constructor.
Patch by Martijn Vels (mvels@google.com)
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D70617
libcxx/test/std/containers/sequences/array/at.pass.cpp
Need to include <stdexcept> for std::out_of_range.
libcxx/test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.time/*
Need to include <ios> for std::ios.
[libcxx] [test] Calling min and max on an empty valarray is UB.
libcxx/test/std/numerics/numarray/template.valarray/valarray.members/min.pass.cpp
libcxx/test/std/numerics/numarray/template.valarray/valarray.members/max.pass.cpp
The calls `v1.min();` and `v1.max();` were emitting nodiscard warnings
with MSVC's STL. Upon closer inspection, these calls were triggering
undefined behavior. N4842 [valarray.members] says:
"T min() const;
8 Preconditions: size() > 0 is true.
T max() const;
10 Preconditions: size() > 0 is true."
As these tests already provide coverage for non-empty valarrays
(immediately above), I've simply deleted the code for empty valarrays.
[libcxx] [test] Add macros to msvc_stdlib_force_include.h (NFC).
libcxx/test/support/msvc_stdlib_force_include.h
These macros are being used by:
libcxx/test/std/utilities/meta/meta.trans/meta.trans.other/result_of11.pass.cpp
Defining them to nothing allows that test to pass.
[libcxx] [test] Silence MSVC warning C5063 for is_constant_evaluated (NFC).
libcxx/test/std/utilities/meta/meta.const.eval/is_constant_evaluated.pass.cpp
This test is intentionally writing code that MSVC intentionally warns
about, so the warning should be silenced.
Additionally, comment an endif for clarity.
[libcxx] [test] Silence MSVC warning C4127 (NFC).
libcxx/test/support/charconv_test_helpers.h
MSVC avoids emitting this warning when it sees a single constexpr value
being tested, but this condition is a mix of compile-time and run-time.
Using push-disable-pop is the least intrusive way to silence this.
[libcxx] [test] Silence MSVC truncation warning (NFC).
libcxx/test/std/containers/sequences/vector/vector.cons/construct_iter_iter.pass.cpp
This test is intentionally truncating float to int, which MSVC
intentionally warns about, so push-disable-pop is necessary.
[libcxx] [test] Avoid truncation warnings in erase_if tests (NFC).
libcxx/test/std/containers/associative/map/map.erasure/erase_if.pass.cpp
libcxx/test/std/containers/associative/multimap/multimap.erasure/erase_if.pass.cpp
libcxx/test/std/containers/unord/unord.map/erase_if.pass.cpp
libcxx/test/std/containers/unord/unord.multimap/erase_if.pass.cpp
These tests use maps with `short` keys and values, emitting MSVC
truncation warnings from `int`. Adding `static_cast` to `key_type`
and `mapped_type` avoids these warnings.
As these tests require C++20 mode (or newer), for brevity I've changed
the multimap tests to use emplace to initialize the test data.
This has no effect on the erase_if testing.
Too many warnings are being disabled too quickly. Warnings are
important to keeping libc++ correct. This patch re-enables two
warnings: -Wconstant-evaluated and -Wdeprecated-copy.
In future, all warnings disabled for the test suite should require
an attached bug. The bug should state the plan for re-enabling that
warning, or a strong case why it should remain disabled.
Summary:
Android added quick_exit()/at_quick_exit() in API level 21,
aligned_alloc() in API level 28, and timespec_get() in API level 29,
but has the other C11 features at all API levels (since they're basically
just coming from clang directly).
_LIBCPP_HAS_QUICK_EXIT and _LIBCPP_HAS_TIMESPEC_GET already existed,
so we can reuse them. (And use _LIBCPP_HAS_TIMESPEC_GET in a few more
places where _LIBCPP_HAS_C11_FEATURES has been used as a proxy. This
isn't correct for Android.)
_LIBCPP_HAS_ALIGNED_ALLOC is added, to cover aligned_alloc() (obviously).
Add a missing std:: before aligned_alloc in a cstdlib test, and remove a
couple of !defined(_WIN32)s now that we're explicitly testing
TEST_HAS_ALIGNED_ALLOC rather than TEST_HAS_C11_FEATURES.
Reviewers: danalbert, EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: danalbert
Subscribers: srhines, christof, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69929
With the upcoming introduction of iterator concepts in ranges,
the meaning of "__is_contiguous_iterator" changes drastically.
Currently we intend it to mean "does it have this iterator category",
but it could now also mean "does it meet the requirements of this
concept", and these can be different.
These traits are currently unused because we don't implement ranges.
However, their addition is part of ongoing work to allow libc++
to optimize on user-provided contiguous iterators.
PR13592 was caused by a problem in how to compiler implemented the
__is_convertible_to intrinsic. That problem, reported as PR13591,
was fixed back in 2012. We don't support such old versions of Clang
anyway, so we don't need the library workaround that had been added
to solve PR13592 (while waiting for the compiler fix).
Summary: The implementation of P1152R4 in Clang has resulted in some deprecation warnings appearing in the libc++ and libc++abi test suite. Fix or suppress these warnings.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68879
llvm-svn: 375307
* Add the conventional `return 0` to `main` in `variant.assign/conv.pass.cpp` and `variant.ctor/conv.pass.cpp`
* Fix some MSVC signed-to-unsigned conversion warnings by replacing `int` literarls with `unsigned int` literals
llvm-svn: 374723
`make_optional<string>(4, 'X')` passes `4` (an `int`) as the first argument to `string`'s `(size_t, charT)` constructor, triggering a signed/unsigned mismatch warning when compiling with MSVC at `/W4`. The incredibly simple fix is to instead use an unsigned literal (`4u`).
llvm-svn: 374684
`sizeof(std::any) - sizeof(void*)` is correct for both libc++ and the MSVC standard library.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68756
llvm-svn: 374407
* Silence unused-local-typedef warnings: `map.cons/assign_initializer_list.pass.cpp` (and the `set.cons` variant) uses a local typedef only within `LIBCPP_ASSERT`s, so clang diagnoses it as unused when testing non-libc++.
* Add missing include: `c.math/abs.pass.cpp` uses `std::numeric_limits` but failed to `#include <limits>`.
* Don't test non-type: A "recent" change to `meta.trans.other/underlying_type.pass.cpp` unconditionally tests the type `F` which is conditionally defined.
* Use `hash<long long>` instead of `hash<short>` with `int` in `unordered_meow` deduction guide tests to avoid truncation warnings.
* Convert `3.14` explicitly in `midpoint.float.pass` since MSVC incorrectly diagnoses `float meow = 3.14;` as truncating.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68681
llvm-svn: 374248
Summary:
The current version of the pretty printers are not python3 compatible,
so turn them off by default until sufficiently improved.
Reviewers: MaskRay, tamur
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68477
llvm-svn: 373796
In both Python 2 and Python 3, gdb.Value.string returns a 'str'. We just
need to delete a `encode("utf-8")` which would return a 'bytes' in
Python 3.
llvm-svn: 373570
Summary:
LWG 3158 marks the allocator_arg_t constructor of std::tuple as
conditionnally explicit based on whether the default constructors
of the tuple's members are explicitly default constructible.
This was previously committed as r372778 and reverted in r372832 due to
the commit breaking LLVM's build in C++14 mode. This issue has now been
addressed.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65232
llvm-svn: 373092
Summary:
LWG2510 makes tag types like allocator_arg_t explicitly default
constructible instead of implicitly default constructible. It also
makes the constructors for std::pair and std::tuple conditionally
explicit based on the explicit-ness of the default constructibility
for the pair/tuple's elements.
This was previously committed as r372777 and reverted in r372832 due to
the commit breaking LLVM's build in C++14 mode. This issue has now been
addressed.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65161
llvm-svn: 372983
Users should only get the assert() macros if they explicitly include
them.
Found after switching from the GNU C++ stdlib to the LLVM C++ stdlib.
llvm-svn: 372963
We don't support GCC 4 and older according to the documentation, so
we should pretend it doesn't exist.
This is a re-application of r372787.
llvm-svn: 372916
This declaration was previously missing despite appearing in the
synopsis. Users are still required to include <ostream> to get the
definition of the streaming operator.
llvm-svn: 372909
This also reverts:
- r372778: [libc++] Implement LWG 3158
- r372782: [libc++] Try fixing tests that fail on GCC 5 and older
- r372787: Purge mentions of GCC 4 from the test suite
Reason: the change breaks compilation of LLVM with libc++, for details see
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/libcxx-dev/2019-September/000599.html
llvm-svn: 372832
Summary: As suggested by @ldionne in D66178, this patch removes C++03 variadics //only//. Following patches will apply more updates.
Reviewers: ldionne, EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits, ldionne
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67675
llvm-svn: 372780
Summary:
LWG 3158 marks the allocator_arg_t constructor of std::tuple as
conditionnally explicit based on whether the default constructors
of the tuple's members are explicitly default constructible.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65232
llvm-svn: 372778
Summary:
LWG2510 makes tag types like allocator_arg_t explicitly default
constructible instead of implicitly default constructible. It also
makes the constructors for std::pair and std::tuple conditionally
explicit based on the explicit-ness of the default constructibility
for the pair/tuple's elements.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65161
llvm-svn: 372777
std::condition_variable is currently implemented via
pthread_cond_timedwait() on systems that use pthread. This is
problematic, since that function waits by default on CLOCK_REALTIME
and libc++ does not provide any mechanism to change from this
default.
Due to this, regardless of if condition_variable::wait_until() is
called with a chrono::system_clock or chrono::steady_clock parameter,
condition_variable::wait_until() will wait using CLOCK_REALTIME. This
is not accurate to the C++ standard as calling
condition_variable::wait_until() with a chrono::steady_clock parameter
should use CLOCK_MONOTONIC.
This is particularly problematic because CLOCK_REALTIME is a bad
choice as it is subject to discontinuous time adjustments, that may
cause condition_variable::wait_until() to immediately timeout or wait
indefinitely.
This change fixes this issue with a new POSIX function,
pthread_cond_clockwait() proposed on
http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=1216. The new function is
similar to pthread_cond_timedwait() with the addition of a clock
parameter that allows it to wait using either CLOCK_REALTIME or
CLOCK_MONOTONIC, thus allowing condition_variable::wait_until() to
wait using CLOCK_REALTIME for chrono::system_clock and CLOCK_MONOTONIC
for chrono::steady_clock.
pthread_cond_clockwait() is implemented in glibc (2.30 and later) and
Android's bionic (Android API version 30 and later).
This change additionally makes wait_for() and wait_until() with clocks
other than chrono::system_clock use CLOCK_MONOTONIC.<Paste>
llvm-svn: 372016
exceptions are disabled.
The patch was reverted due to some confusion about non-movable types. ie
types
that explicitly delete their move constructors. However, such types do
not meet
the requirement for `MoveConstructible`, which is required by
`std::vector`:
Summary:
`std::vector<T>` is free choose between using copy or move operations
when it
needs to resize. The standard only candidates that the correct exception
safety
guarantees are provided. When exceptions are disabled these guarantees
are
trivially satisfied. Meaning vector is free to optimize it's
implementation by
moving instead of copying.
This patch makes `std::vector` unconditionally move elements when
exceptions are
disabled. This optimization is conforming according to the current
standard wording.
There are concerns that moving in `-fno-noexceptions`mode will be a
surprise to
users. For example, a user may be surprised to find their code is slower
with
exceptions enabled than it is disabled. I'm sympathetic to this
surprised, but
I don't think it should block this optimization.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, ldionne, rsmith
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: zoecarver, christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62228
llvm-svn: 371867
Summary:
This patch is an exact duplicate of https://reviews.llvm.org/D65609, except
that it uses the newly introduced testing framework to detect if gdb is present
so that the tests won't fail on machines without gdb.
Reviewers: echristo, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, ldionne, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67238
llvm-svn: 371131
This reverts r370502, which broke the use case of a copy-only T (with a
deleted move constructor) when exceptions are disabled. Until we figure
out the right behavior, I'm reverting the commit.
llvm-svn: 371068
This is needed anytime we need to clamp an arbitrary floating point
value to an integer type.
Thanks to Eric Fiselier for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66836
llvm-svn: 370891
Summary: Also add a test suite.
Reviewers: EricWF
Subscribers: christof, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65609
Run a pep8 formatter.
Run pep8 formatter.
Convert to PEP8, address other comments from code review.
llvm-svn: 370551
Summary:
`std::vector<T>` is free choose between using copy or move operations when it needs to resize. The standard only candidates that the correct exception safety guarantees are provided. When exceptions are disabled these guarantees are trivially satisfied. Meaning vector is free to optimize it's implementation by moving instead of copying.
This patch makes `std::vector` unconditionally move elements when exceptions are disabled.
This optimization is conforming according to the current standard wording.
There are concerns that moving in `-fno-noexceptions`mode will be a surprise to users. For example, a user may be surprised to find their code is slower with exceptions enabled than it is disabled. I'm sympathetic to this surprised, but I don't think it should block this optimization.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, ldionne, rsmith
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: zoecarver, christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62228
llvm-svn: 370502
This was reported as part of a bug report that ended up being a
duplicate for r340609, but I'm adding the test case since it's
ever so slightly different from what we had before.
llvm-svn: 370109
In r369429, I hoisted a floating point computation to a variable in order
to remove a warning. However, it turns out this doesn't play well with
floating point arithmetic. This commit reverts r369429 and instead casts
the result of the floating point computation to remove the warning.
Whether hoisting the computaiton to a variable should give the same
result can be investigated independently.
llvm-svn: 369693
On systems where sizeof(long) == sizeof(int)
the current tests failed. This commit updates
those tests to work on all systems.
std::abs has specific long specializations
which can be used instead.
llvm-svn: 369437
By stashing the computation of `E::max() - E::min()` in a variable, we
avoid the warning introduced in r367497. Note that we use `auto` to
avoid having to deduce the type of the computation, which is not a
problem since Clang provides `auto` as an extension even in C++03 (and
we disable warnings related to using C++11 extensions in the test suite).
llvm-svn: 369429
Summary:
The resolution of LWG 3199 makes sure that input-streaming into an empty bitset
does not set the failbit on the input stream.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65105
llvm-svn: 369422
In r368882, I enabled those tests for all AppleClang's above version 9.
However, it turns out that the feature is only supported starting with
AppleClang 10.0.1, not AppleClang 10.0.0. This commit fixes that hole.
llvm-svn: 369409
Like CTAD for std::unordered_set, AppleClang 9's support for CTAD is
insufficient. I suspect the corresponding LLVM Clang is broken too,
but we don't seem to have testers using that Clang.
llvm-svn: 368911
Summary:
D64914 added support for applying [[nodiscard]] to constructors. This
commit uses that capability to flag incorrect uses of std::lock_guard
where one forgets to actually create a variable for the lock_guard.
rdar://45790820
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits, Quuxplusone, lebedev.ri
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65900
llvm-svn: 368664
Summary:
We were using implicit deduction guides instead of explicit ones,
however the implicit ones don't do work anymore when changing the
constructors.
This commit adds the actual guides specified in the Standard to make
libc++ (1) closer to the Standard and (2) more resistent to changes
in std::tuple's constructors.
Reviewers: Quuxplusone
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65225
llvm-svn: 368599
This commit adds a __pstl_config_site header that contains the value of
macros specified at CMake configuration time. It works similarly to
libc++'s __config_site header, except we always include it as a separate
file instead of concatenating it to the main configuration header.
It is necessary to thread the includes for that header into libc++'s
lit configuration, otherwise we'd be requiring an installation step
prior to running the test suite.
llvm-svn: 368284
Summary:
This commit allows specifying LIBCXX_ENABLE_PARALLEL_ALGORITHMS when
configuring libc++ in CMake. When that option is enabled, libc++ will
assume that the PSTL can be found somewhere on the CMake module path,
and it will provide the C++17 parallel algorithms based on the PSTL
(that is assumed to be available).
The commit also adds support for running the PSTL tests as part of
the libc++ test suite.
The first attempt to commit this failed because it exposed a bug in the
tests for modules. Now that this has been fixed, it should be safe to
commit this.
Reviewers: EricWF
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits, mclow.lists, EricWF
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60480
llvm-svn: 367903
There are a handful of standard library types that are intended
to support CTAD but don't need any explicit deduction guides to
do so.
This patch adds a dummy deduction guide to those types to suppress
-Wctad-maybe-unsupported (which gets emitted in user code).
llvm-svn: 367770
I have upcoming changes that modify how deque handles spare blocks.
This cleanup is intended to make those changes easier to review
and understand. This patch should have NFC.
llvm-svn: 367631
Previously these types rehashed to a table of 193 elements
upon construction. But this is non-ideal, first because default
constructors should not allocate unless necessary, and second
because 193 is big and can waste a bunch of memory.
This number had previously been chosen to match GCC's implementation.
llvm-svn: 367605
[cpp.predefined]p2:
__STDCPP_THREADS__
Defined, and has the value integer literal 1, if and only if a program
can have more than one thread of execution .
Also define it only if it's not defined already, since it's supposed
to be defined by the compiler.
Also move it from thread to __config (which requires setting it only
if _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_THREADS is not defined).
Part of PR33230. The intent is to eventually make the compiler define
this instead.
llvm-svn: 367316
This issue was detected by ASan in one of our tests. This test manually
invokes basic_filebuf::cloe(). fclose(__h.release() returned a non-zero
exit status, so __file_ wasn't set to 0. Later when basic_filebuf
destructor ran, we would enter the if (__file_) block again leading to
heap-use-after-free error.
The POSIX specification for fclose says that independently of the return
value, fclose closes the underlying file descriptor and any further
access (including another call to fclose()) to the stream results in
undefined behavior. This is exactly what happened in our test case.
To avoid this issue, we have to always set __file_ to 0 independently of
the fclose return value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64979
llvm-svn: 366730
Some minor versions of AppleClang 9 appear not to fail the test. It's
such a mess that the only sane thing to do is to mark the test as
UNSUPPORTED.
llvm-svn: 366606
This reverts r366593, which caused unforeseen breakage on the build bots.
I'm reverting until the problems have been figured out and fixed.
llvm-svn: 366603
Summary:
This commit allows specifying LIBCXX_ENABLE_PARALLEL_ALGORITHMS when
configuring libc++ in CMake. When that option is enabled, libc++ will
assume that the PSTL can be found somewhere on the CMake module path,
and it will provide the C++17 parallel algorithms based on the PSTL
(that is assumed to be available).
The commit also adds support for running the PSTL tests as part of
the libc++ test suite.
Reviewers: rodgert, EricWF
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits, mclow.lists, EricWF
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60480
llvm-svn: 366593
Without the link flags, the test always fails on Linux. For some reason,
however, it works on Darwin -- which is why it wasn't caught at first.
llvm-svn: 366579
Summary:
This is effectively a revert of r344616, which was a partial fix for
PR38964 (compilation of <string> with GCC in C++03 mode). However, that
configuration is explicitly not supported anymore and that partial fix
breaks compilation with Clang when per-TU insulation is provided.
PR42676
rdar://52899715
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64941
llvm-svn: 366567
In r361572, we introduced library support for C++20 destroying delete
and decided to only define the library feature-test macro when the
compiler supports the underlying language feature. This patch reworks
the tests to mirror that.
llvm-svn: 366263
The tests for unordered_set and unordered_multiset were missing UNSUPPORTED
markup for Apple Clang 9.1, which is still being used on some CI bots.
llvm-svn: 366259
In particular, improve the compile time of the overload set builder
that variant uses to determine which alternative to construct.
Instead of having the __overload type construct itself recursively,
this patch uses a flat construction for the overload set.
llvm-svn: 366033
The standard disallows narrowing conversions when constructing a variant.
This is checked by attempting to perform braced initialization of the
destination type from the argument type. However, braced initialization
can force the compiler (mostly clang) to eagerly instantiate the
constructors of the destintation type -- which can lead to errors in
a non-immediate context.
However, as variant is currently specified, the narrowing checks only
observably apply when the destination type is arithmetic. Meaning we can
skip the check for class types. Hense avoiding the hard errors.
In order to cause fewer build breakages, this patch avoids the narrowing
check except when the destination type is arithmetic.
llvm-svn: 366022
Previously we implemented all one trillion tuple-like constructors using
a single generic overload. This worked fairly well, except that it
differed in behavior from the standard version because it didn't
consider both T&& and T const&. This was observable for certain
types.
This patch addresses that issue by splitting the generic constructor
in two. We now provide both T&& and T const& versions of the
tuple-like constructors (sort of).
llvm-svn: 365973
The paper P0608R3 - "A sane variant converting constructor" disallows
narrowing conversions in variant. It was meant to address this
surprising problem:
std::variant<std::string, bool> v = "abc";
assert(v.index() == 1); // constructs a bool.
However, it also disables every potentially narrowing conversion. For
example:
variant<unsigned> v = 0; // ill-formed
variant<string, double> v2 = 42; // ill-formed (int -> double narrows)
These latter changes break code. A lot of code. Within Google it broke
on the order of a hundred thousand target with thousands of root causes
responsible for the breakages.
Of the breakages related to the narrowing restrictions, none of them
exposed outstanding bugs. However, the breakages caused by boolean
conversions (~13 root causes), all but one of them were bugs.
For this reasons, I am adding a flag to disable the narrowing conversion
changes but not the boolean conversions one.
One purpose of this flag is to allow users to opt-out of breaking changes
in variant until the offending code can be cleaned up. For non-trivial
variant usages the amount of cleanup may be significant.
This flag is also required to support automated tooling, such as
clang-tidy, that can automatically fix code broken by this change.
In order for clang-tidy to know the correct alternative to construct,
it must know what alternative was being constructed previously, which
means running it over the old version of std::variant.
Because this change breaks so much code, I will be implementing the
aforementioned clang-tidy check in the very near future.
Additionally I'm plan present this new information to the committee so they can
re-consider if this is a breaking change we want to make.
I think libc++ should very seriously consider pulling this change
before the 9.0 release branch is cut. But that's a separate discussion
that I will start on the lists.
For now this is the minimal first step.
llvm-svn: 365960
When assigning an initializer list into set/map, libc++ would
leak memory if the initializer list contained equivalent keys
because we failed to check if the insertion was successful.
llvm-svn: 365840
Currently std::mutex has a constexpr constructor, but a non-trivial
destruction.
The constexpr constructor is required to ensure the construction of a
mutex with static storage duration happens at compile time, during
constant initialization, and not during dynamic initialization.
This means that static mutex's are always initialized and can be used
safely during dynamic initialization without the "static initialization
order fiasco".
A trivial destructor is important for similar reasons. If a mutex is
used during dynamic initialization it might also be used during program
termination. If a static mutex has a non-trivial destructor it will be
invoked during termination. This can introduce the "static
deinitialization order fiasco".
Additionally, function-local statics emit a guard variable around
non-trivially destructible types. This results in horrible codegen and
adds a runtime cost to every call to that function. non-local static's
also result in slightly worse codegen but it's not as big of a problem.
Example codegen can be found here: https://goo.gl/3CSzbM
Note: This optimization is not safe with every pthread implementation.
Some implementations allocate on the first call to pthread_mutex_lock
and free the allocation in pthread_mutex_destroy.
Also, changing the triviality of the destructor is not an ABI break.
At least to the best of my knowledge :-)
llvm-svn: 365273
types.
It seems some people like to write types that can explicitly convert
to anything, but cannot be used to explicitly construct anything.
This patch makes tuple tolerate such types, as is required
by the standard.
llvm-svn: 365074
The new meta-programming primitives are lower cost than the old versions. This patch removes those old versions and switches libc++ to use the new ones.
llvm-svn: 364160
Clang provides __is_same that doesn't produce any instantiations
and just returns a bool. It's a lot faster than using std::is_same
I'll follow up with a patch to actually start using it.
llvm-svn: 364148
Using class templates instead of alias templates causes a lot of
instantiations. As part of the move away from C++03, we want to
improve the efficiency of our meta-programming.
This patch lays the groundwork by introducing new _If, _EnableIf,
_And, _Or, and _IsValidExpansion (detect member). Future patches
will replace the existing implementations after verifying there
compile time differences.
llvm-svn: 364114
These functions are key to allowing the use of rvalues and variadics
in C++03 mode. Everything works the same as in C++11, except for one
tangentially related case:
struct T {
T(T &&) = default;
};
In C++11, T has a deleted copy constructor. But in C++03 Clang gives
it both a move and a copy constructor. This seems reasonable enough
given the extensions it's using.
The other changes in this patch were the minimal set required
to keep the tests passing after the move/forward change. Most notably
the removal of the `__rv<unique_ptr>` hack that was present
in an attempt to make unique_ptr move only without language support.
llvm-svn: 364063
This is a re-application of r362986 (which was reverted in r363688) with fixes
for the issue that caused it to be reverted.
Thanks to Arthur O'Dwyer for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58587
llvm-svn: 363968
Summary:
AIX system headers need stdint.h and inttypes.h to be re-enterable when macro _STD_TYPES_T is defined so that limit macro definitions such as UINT32_MAX can be found. This patch attempts to allow that on AIX.
Reviewers: hubert.reinterpretcast, jasonliu, mclow.lists, EricWF
Reviewed by: hubert.reinterpretcast, mclow.lists
Subscribers: jfb, jsji, christof, cfe-commits, libcxx-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #LLVM, #clang, #libc++
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59253
llvm-svn: 363939
This was found to be broken on Clang trunk. This is a revert of the
following commits (the subsequent commits added XFAILs to the tests
that were missing from the original submission):
r362986: Implement deduction guides for map/multimap.
r363014: Add some XFAILs
r363097: Add more XFAILs
r363197: Add even more XFAILs
llvm-svn: 363688
As we gear up to drop support for GCC in C++03, we should make clear
what our C++03 mode is, the C++11 extensions it provides,
and the C++11 extensions it depends on.
The section of this document discussing user-facing extensions has
been left blank while the community discusses new directions. For now
it's just a warning to users.
Additionally, the document contains examples of how these extensions
should be used and why. For example, using alias templates over class
templates.
llvm-svn: 363110
Summary:
This is not mandated by the Standard, but it's nonetheless a nice
property to have, especially since it's so easy to implement. It
also shrinks our bug list!
PR41714
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62618
llvm-svn: 363075
Summary:
Following the discussion on the libcxx-dev mailing list
(http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/libcxx-dev/2019-May/000358.html),
this implements the new policy for handling experimental features and
their deprecation. We basically add a deprecation warning for
std::experimental::filesystem, and we remove a bunch of <experimental/*>
headers that were now empty.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, arphaman, libcxx-commits, jfb
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62428
llvm-svn: 363072
Some tests require `TEST_WORKAROUND_CONSTEXPR_IMPLIES_NOEXCEPT`, but they
did not include the header that defines that macro.
Thanks to Michael Park for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62920
llvm-svn: 362660
This commit adds tests that repeated characters in regular expressions
are within numeric limits, and that a <= b in a regex like `x{a,b}`.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62816
llvm-svn: 362525
Summary:
This provides the `std::destroying_delete_t` declaration in C++2a and after. (Even when the compiler doesn't support the language feature).
However, the feature test macro `__cpp_lib_destroying_delete` is only defined when we have both language support and C++2a.
Reviewers: ldionne, ckennelly, serge-sans-paille, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: dexonsmith, riccibruno, christof, jwakely, jdoerfert, mclow.lists, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55840
llvm-svn: 361572
Some tests assume that iteration through an unordered multiset elements
will return them in the same order as at the container creation. This
assumption is not true since the container is unordered, so that no
specific order of elements is ever guaranteed for such container. This
patch introduces checks verifying that any iteration will return
elements exactly from a set of valid values and without repetition,
but in no particular order.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56500
llvm-svn: 361494
Some tests assume that iteration through an unordered multimap elements
will return them in the same order as at the container creation. This
assumption is not true since the container is unordered, so that no
specific order of elements is ever guaranteed for such container. This
patch is a continuation of D54838 and introduces checks verifying that
any iteration will return elements exactly from a set of valid values
and without repetition, but in no particular order.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56498
llvm-svn: 361414
The `using namespace std;` opens us up to ambiguity
when any of the std:: names are also present in the global namespace.
Instead we should properly qualify names we use from std::.
llvm-svn: 361074
Use std::nextafter() instead of std::nexttoward() in midpoint tests.
In the context of this test, this should not cause any difference.
Since nexttowardl() is not implemented on NetBSD 8, the latter function
combined with 'long double' type caused test failure. nextafterl() does
not have this problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61748
llvm-svn: 360673
Drive-by:
* Fix potential race between check and update of `throw_one` in `operator new`
* Fix latent bug in `operator delete`, which shouldn't decrement `outstanding_new` when passed a null pointer
* Specifically catch the expected `bad_alloc` in `main` instead of `...`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50860
llvm-svn: 359827
Linux is failing even though the test runner does report this locale
is available, but the test still isn't expected to work on platforms
without the locale (like Android).
llvm-svn: 359726
This adds explicit support for the WASI platform to libcxx.
WASI libc uses some components from musl, however it's not fully compatible
with musl, so we're planning to stop using _LIBCPP_HAS_MUSL_LIBC and
customize for WASI libc specifically.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61336
Reviewers: sbc100, ldionne
llvm-svn: 359703
Summary:
The current implementation of aligned storage was written before we had `alignas`, so it used a list of builtin types to force the alignment. But this doesn't work overaligned requests.
This patch adds a fallback case supporting over-alignment. It only affects case that were previously ill-formed.
Reviewers: rsmith, ldionne, dlj, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: mclow.lists, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61301
llvm-svn: 359596
The standard requires the following for the std::regex_constants::error_type
values: "The type error_type is an implementation-defined enumerated type."
The values of this enumerated type are not required to be non-zero.
This patch makes such checks in tests libc++-specific to let the tests
pass for other conforming implementations.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61195
llvm-svn: 359320
When the arguments to tuple cat were const, the const was incorrectly
propagated into the type of the resulting tuple. For example:
const std::tuple<int> t(42);
auto r = std::tuple_cat(t, t);
// Incorrect! should be std::tuple<int, int>.
static_assert(is_same_v<decltype(r), std::tuple<const int, const int>>);
llvm-svn: 359255
All constant expressions are non-potentially-throwing in C++14, but that is *not* the case in C++17. Change these tests of the `variant`-flavored overloads of `std::get` to expect the correct behavior when the compiler is not GCC or is GCC 9+.
Credit to Jonathan Wakely for providing an improved version of my initial change that validates the incorrect behavior on GCC < 9 as well as validating the correct behavior on other compilers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61033
llvm-svn: 359220
Teach libcxx to stop using various deprecated __has_* type traits, in favor of
the ("modern", C++11 era) __is_* type traits.
This is mostly just a simplification, but fixes at least one bug: _Atomic T
should be considered trivially-destructible, but is not considered to be POD by
Clang, and __has_trivial_destructor is specified in the GCC documentation as
returning false for non-POD non-class types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48292
llvm-svn: 359159
Summary:
All overloads of `::abs` and `std::abs` must be present in both `<cmath>` and `<cstdlib>`. This is problematic to implement because C defines `fabs` in `math.h` and `labs` in `stdlib.h`. This introduces a circular dependency between the two headers.
This patch implements that requirement by moving `abs` into `math.h` and making `stdlib.h` include `math.h`. In order to get the underlying C declarations from the "real" `stdlib.h` inside our `math.h` we need some trickery. Specifically we need to make `stdlib.h` include next itself.
Suggestions for a cleaner implementation are welcome.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, ldionne
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: krytarowski, fedor.sergeev, dexonsmith, jdoerfert, jsji, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60097
llvm-svn: 359020
Due to MSVC's decision to encode `wchar_t` as UTF-16, it rejects wide
character/string literals that expect a character value greater than
`\xffff`. UTF-16 `wchar_t` is clearly non-conforming, given that the
standard requires wchar_t to be capable of representing all characters
in the supported wide character execution sets, but rejecting e.g.
`\x40003` is a reasonably sane compromise given that encoding choice:
there's an expectation that `\xFOO` produces a single character in the
resulting literal. Consequently `L'\x40003'`/`L"\x40003"` are ill-formed
literals on MSVC. `L'\U00040003'` is a high surrogate (and produces a
warning about ignoring the "second character" in a multi-character
literal), and `L"\U00040003"` is a perfectly-valid `const wchar_t[3]`.
This change updates these tests to use universal-character-names instead
of raw values for the intended character values, which technically makes
them portable even to implementations that don't use a unicode
transformation format encoding for their wide character execution
character set. The two-character literal `L"\u1005e"` is awkward - the
`e` looks like part of the UCN's hex encoding - but necessary to compile
in '03 mode since '03 didn't allow UCNs to be used for members of the
basic execution character set even in character/string literals.
I've also eliminated the extraneous `\x00` "bonus null-terminator" in
some of the string literals which doesn't affect the tested behavior.
I'm sorry about using `*L"\U00040003"` in `conversions.string/to_bytes.pass.cpp`,
but it's correct for platforms with 32-bit wchar_t, *and* doesn't
trigger narrowing warnings as did the prior `CharT(0x40003)`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60950
llvm-svn: 358908
This is a followup to [1] which added a new `__debug_less::operator()` overload.
[2] added `_LIBCPP_CONSTEXPR_AFTER_CXX17` to the original
`__debug_less::operator()` between the time of writing [1] and landing it. This
change adds `_LIBCPP_CONSTEXPR_AFTER_CXX17` to the new overload too.
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/rL358423
[2] https://reviews.llvm.org/rL358252
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60724
llvm-svn: 358725
In r358591, I added a test that uses the debug database from multiple
threads and that helped us uncover the problem that was fixed in r355367.
However, the test broke the tsan CI bots, and I think the problem is the
test allocator that was used in the test (which is not thread safe).
I'm committing again without using the test allocator, and in a separate
test file.
llvm-svn: 358610
This reverts r358591, which seems to have uncovered an actual bug and
causes the tsan CI to fail. We need to fix the bug and re-commit the
test.
llvm-svn: 358593
There are many STL algorithms (such as lexicographical_compare) that compare
values pointed to by iterators like so:
__comp(*it1, *it2);
When building with `_LIBCPP_DEBUG=0`, comparators are wrapped in `__debug_less`
which does some additional validation. But `__debug_less::operator()` takes
non-const references, so if the type of `*it1` is int, not int&, then the build
will fail.
This change adds a `const&` overload for `operator()` to fix the build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60592
llvm-svn: 358423
We used to do it against the current system's libc++abi, which is not as
good as doing it with the libc++abi that matches the libc++ we're running
against.
Note that I made sure we were indeed picking up the provided libc++abi
by replacing it by something that doesn't work and watching it burn.
llvm-svn: 358294
Summary:
In r348529, I improved the library-defined diagnostic for using containers
with a non-const comparator/hasher. However, the check is now performed
too early, which leads to the diagnostic being emitted in cases where it
shouldn't. See PR41360 for details.
This patch moves the diagnostic to the destructor of the containers, which
means that the diagnostic will only be emitted when the container is instantiated
at a point where the comparator and the key/value are required to be complete.
We still retain better diagnostics than before r348529, because the diagnostics
are performed in the containers themselves instead of __tree and __hash_table.
As a drive-by fix, I improved the diagnostic to mention that we can't find
a _viable_ const call operator, as suggested by EricWF in PR41360.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits, zoecarver
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60540
llvm-svn: 358189
We fixed incorrect behavior of input streams in r357775 and tests were
added accordingly. However, older versions of macOS don't have the
change in the dylib yet, so the tests fail on those platforms.
llvm-svn: 357794
Summary:
This is a re-application of r357533 and r357531. They had been reverted
because we thought the commits broke the LLDB data formatters, but it
turns out this was because only r357531 had been included in the CI
run.
Before this patch, we would only ever throw an exception if the badbit
was set on the stream. The Standard is currently very unclear on how
exceptions should be propagated and what error flags should be set by
the input stream operations. This commit changes libc++ to behave under
a different (but valid) interpretation of the Standard. This interpretation
of the Standard matches what other implementations are doing.
This effectively implements the wording in p1264r0. It hasn't been voted
into the Standard yet, however there is wide agreement that the fix is
correct and it's just a matter of time before the fix is standardized.
PR21586
PR15949
rdar://problem/15347558
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49863
llvm-svn: 357775
This builds on the work done in r342808 and adds _LIBCPP_NODISCARD_EXT
to 37 more functions, namely:
adjacent_find, all_of, any_of, binary_search, clamp, count_if, count,
equal_range, equal, find_end, find_first_not_of, find_first_of, find_if,
find, includes, is_heap_until, is_heap, is_partitioned, is_permutation,
is_sorted_until, is_sorted, lexicographical_compare, lower_bound,
max_element, max, min_element, min, minmax_element, minmax, mismatch,
none_of, remove_if, remove, search_n, search, unique, upper_bound
The motivation here is that we noticed that find_if is nodiscard with
Visual Studio's standard library, and we deemed that useful
(https://crbug.com/948122).
https://devblogs.microsoft.com/cppblog/c17-progress-in-vs-2017-15-5-and-15-6/
says "Our criteria for emitting the warning are: discarding the return
value is a guaranteed leak [...], discarding the return value is
near-guaranteed to be incorrect (e.g. remove()/remove_if()/unique()), or
the function is essentially a pure observer (e.g. vector::empty() and
std::is_sorted())." so I went through algorithm and tried to apply these
criteria.
Some of these, like vector::empty() are already nodiscard per C++
standard and didn't need changing.
I didn't (yet?) go over std::string::find* methods which should probably
have _LIBCPP_NODISCARD_EXT too (but not as part of this change).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60145
llvm-svn: 357619
Summary:
Otherwise, std::is_pointer<id __strong> works, but std::is_pointer<id __weak>
(and others) don't work as expected.
The previous patch (r357517) had to be reverted in r357569 because it
broke the Chromium build. This patch shouldn't have the same problem.
rdar://problem/49126333
Reviewers: ahatanak, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60087
llvm-svn: 357586
Fixed the inability to properly rebind the testing allocator, by making the
inner alloc_impl type a plain struct and making the operations templates. Before
rebind failed to compile complaining that a alloc_impl<T>* was not convertible
to an alloc_impl<U>*.
This enables the test to pass for MSVC++ once we provide the strong guarantee
for the copy assignment operator.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D60023
llvm-svn: 357545
This reverts commits r357533 and r357531, which broke the LLDB
data formatters. I'll hold off until we know how to fix the data
formatters accordingly.
llvm-svn: 357536
Summary:
Before this patch, we would only ever throw an exception if the badbit
was set on the stream. The Standard is currently very unclear on how
exceptions should be propagated and what error flags should be set by
the input stream operations. This commit changes libc++ to behave under
a different (but valid) interpretation of the Standard. This interpretation
of the Standard matches what other implementations are doing.
I will submit a paper in San Diego to clarify the Standard such that the
interpretation used in this commit (and other implementations) is the only
possible one.
PR21586
PR15949
rdar://problem/15347558
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49863
llvm-svn: 357531
The current definitions were entirely broken. They didn't call any
existing constructor and the forgot to friend the expression types they
were trying to construct.
llvm-svn: 357453
Summary: Completes P0357R3, which was merged into the C++20 Working Draft in San Diego.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54722
llvm-svn: 357423
Summary:
Currently the C++03 implementation of common_type has much different behavior than the C++11 one. This causes bugs, including inside `<chrono>`.
This patch unifies the two implementations as best it can. The more code they share, the less their behavior can diverge.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, ldionne, sbenza
Reviewed By: mclow.lists, ldionne
Subscribers: libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59678
llvm-svn: 357370
Some tests #include <iostream> but they don't use anything from the
header. Those are probably artifacts of when the tests were developped.
llvm-svn: 357181
Dylib support for shared_mutex was added in macOS 10.12, so the tests
should be XFAILed accordingly instead of being completely disabled
whenever availability is enabled.
rdar://problem/48769104
llvm-svn: 357079
Summary:
Adds the coroutine `std::experimental::task<T>` type described in proposal P1056R0.
See https://wg21.link/P1056R0.
This implementation allows customization of the allocator used to allocate the
coroutine frame by passing std::allocator_arg as the first argument, followed by
the allocator to use.
This supports co_awaiting the same task multiple times. The second and
subsequent times it returns a reference to the already-computed value.
This diff also adds some implementations of other utilities that have potential for
standardization as helpers within the test/... area:
- `sync_wait(awaitable)` - See P1171R0
- `manual_reset_event`
Move the definition of the __aligned_allocation_size helper function
from <experimental/memory_resource> to <experimental/__memory>
so it can be more widely used without pulling in memory_resource.
Outstanding work:
- Use C++14 keywords directly rather than macro versions
eg. use `noexcept` instead of `_NOEXCEPT`).
- Add support for overaligned coroutine frames.
This may need wording in the Coroutines TS to support passing the extra `std::align_val_t`.
- Eliminate use of `if constexpr` if we want it to compile under C++14.
Patch by @lewissbaker (Lewis Baker).
llvm-svn: 357010
Summary: Filesystem doesn't work on Windows, so we need a mechanism to turn it off for the time being.
Reviewers: ldionne, serge-sans-paille, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: mstorsjo, mgorny, christof, jdoerfert, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59619
llvm-svn: 356633
Summary:
Also add the corresponding XFAILs to tests that require filesystem.
The approach taken to mark <filesystem> as unavailable in this patch
is to mark all the header as unavailable using #pragma clang attribute.
Marking each declaration using the attribute is more intrusive and
does not provide a lot of value right now because pretty much everything
in <filesystem> requires dylib support, often transitively.
This is an alternative to https://reviews.llvm.org/D59093.
A similar (but partial) patch was already applied in r356558.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, serge-sans-paille
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59224
llvm-svn: 356616
This fixes CI for back-deployment testers on platforms that don't have
<filesystem> support in the dylib.
This is effectively half of https://reviews.llvm.org/D59224. The other
half requires fixes in Clang.
llvm-svn: 356558
This silences a known issue, as can be seen by looking at similar
tests for other clocks, like time.clock.steady/consistency.pass.cpp.
llvm-svn: 356528
Summary:
This patch treats <filesystem> as a first-class citizen of the dylib,
like all other sub-libraries (e.g. <chrono>). As such, it also removes
all special handling for installing the filesystem library separately
or disabling part of the test suite from the lit command line.
Unlike the previous attempt (r356500), this doesn't remove all the
filesystem tests.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, serge-sans-paille
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, jfb, jdoerfert, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59152
llvm-svn: 356518
When I applied r356500 (https://reviews.llvm.org/D59152), I somehow
deleted all of filesystem's tests. I will revert r356500 and re-apply
it properly.
llvm-svn: 356505
Summary:
This patch treats <filesystem> as a first-class citizen of the dylib,
like all other sub-libraries (e.g. <chrono>). As such, it also removes
all special handling for installing the filesystem library separately
or disabling part of the test suite from the lit command line.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, serge-sans-paille
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, jfb, jdoerfert, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59152
llvm-svn: 356500
Summary:
The reason libc++ implemented a throwing debug mode handler was for ease of testing. Specifically,
I thought that if a debug violation aborted, we could only test one violation per file. This made
it impossible to test debug mode. Which throwing behavior we could test more!
However, the throwing approach didn't work either, since there are debug violations underneath noexcept
functions. This lead to the introduction of `_NOEXCEPT_DEBUG`, which was only noexcept when debug
mode was off.
Having thought more and having grown wiser, `_NOEXCEPT_DEBUG` was a horrible decision. It was
viral, it didn't cover all the cases it needed to, and it was observable to the user -- at worst
changing the behavior of their program.
This patch removes the throwing debug handler, and rewrites the debug tests using 'fork-ing' style
death tests.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, ldionne, thomasanderson
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: christof, arphaman, libcxx-commits, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59166
llvm-svn: 356417
Even though the header makes the exact same check since https://llvm.org/D59063,
the headers could conceivably change in the future and introduce a bug.
llvm-svn: 356376
Summary:
In r342843, I added deprecation warnings to some facilities that were
deprectated in C++14 and C++17. However, those deprecation warnings
were not enabled by default.
After discussing this on IRC, we had finally gotten consensus to enable
those warnings by default, and I'm getting around to doing that only
now.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, jdoerfert, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58140
llvm-svn: 355961
When Clang tries to complete a type containing `std::optional` it
considers the `in_place_t` constructor with no arguments which checks
if the value type is default constructible. If the value type is a
nested class type, then this check occurs too early and poisons the
is_default_constructible trait.
This patch makes optional deduce `in_place_t` so we can prevent
this early SFINAE evaluation. Technically this could break people
doing weird things with the in_place_t tag, but that seems less
important than making the nested class case work.
llvm-svn: 355877
comparator for std::sort()
Our debug comparator assumed that the comparator it wraps would always
accepts the values by const ref. This isn't required by the standard.
This patch makes our __debug_less comparator forward the constness.
llvm-svn: 355752
The issue is the following code:
__cn1->__add(*__ip);
(*__ip)->__c_ = __cn1;
`__ip` points into the array of iterators for container `__cn2`. This code adds
the iterator to the array of iterators for `__cn1`, and updates the iterator to
point to the new container.
This code works fine, except when `__cn1` and `__cn2` are the same container.
`__cn1->__add()` might need to grow the array of iterators, and when it does,
`__ip` becomes invalid, so the second line becomes a use-after-free error.
Simply swapping the order of the above two lines is not sufficient, because of
the memmove() below. The easiest and most performant solution is just to skip
touching any iterators if the containers are the same.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58926
llvm-svn: 355550
Revert "[libc++] Fix <atomic> failures on GCC"
Revert "[libc++] Change memory_order to an enum class"
Revert "[libc++] decoupling Freestanding atomic<T> from libatomic.a"
The lldb formatter nededs to be updated. Shafik and Louis will
coordinate to do so.
llvm-svn: 355417
Summary:
In https://reviews.llvm.org/D58201, we turned memory_order into an enum
class in C++20 mode. However, we were not casting memory_order to its
underlying type correctly for the GCC implementation, which broke the
build bots. I also fixed a test that was failing in C++17 mode on GCC 5.
Reviewers: EricWF, jfb, mclow.lists
Subscribers: zoecarver
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58966
llvm-svn: 355409
Summary:
This patch fixes a lifetime bug when inserting a new container into the debug database. It is
diagnosed by UBSAN when debug mode is enabled. This patch corrects how nodes are constructed
during insertion.
The fix requires unconditionally breaking the debug mode ABI. Users should not expect ABI
stability from debug mode.
Reviewers: ldionne, serge-sans-paille, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: mclow.lists, christof, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58011
llvm-svn: 355367