In src/, most files can use `constinit` directly because they're always
compiled with C++20. But some files, like "libcxxabi/src/fallback_malloc.cpp",
can't, because they're `#include`d directly from test cases in libcxxabi/test/
and therefore must (currently) compile as C++03. We might consider refactoring
those offending tests, or at least marking them `UNSUPPORTED: c++03`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119264
The logic here is that we are disabling *only* things in `std::ranges::`.
Everything in `std::` is permitted, including `default_sentinel`, `contiguous_iterator`,
`common_iterator`, `projected`, `swappable`, and so on. Then, we include
anything from `std::ranges::` that is required in order to make those things
work: `ranges::swap`, `ranges::swap_ranges`, `input_range`, `ranges::begin`,
`ranges::iter_move`, and so on. But then that's all. Everything else (including
notably all of the "views" and the `std::views` namespace itself) is still
locked up behind `_LIBCPP_HAS_NO_INCOMPLETE_RANGES`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118736
This avoids using an libc++ internal macro in our tests. This version
doesn't depend on the internal macro but redefines it.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119460
The renames the output_iterator to cpp17_output_iterator. These
iterators are still used in C++20 so it's not possible to change the
current type to the new C++20 requirements. This is done in a similar
fashion as the cpp17_input_iterator.
Reviewed By: #libc, Quuxplusone, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117950
The macro that opts out of `std::ranges::` functionality is called
`_LIBCPP_HAS_NO_INCOMPLETE_RANGES`, and is unrelated to this macro
which is specifically about _compiler_ support for the _syntax_.
The only non-mechanical diff here is in `<__config>`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118507
Remove copy and copy assignment rather than have them as private declarations.
They are superfluous given the move and move assignment.
As a drive-by, also specialize `std::hash` without reopening `namespace std`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118502
A number of the filesystem tests create a directory that contains a bad
symlink. On AIX recursively setting permissions on said directory will
return a non-zero value because of the bad symlink, however the
following rm -r still completes successfully. Avoid the assertion on
AIX, and rely on the return value of the remove command to detect
problems.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112086
As prefigured in the comments on D115315.
This gives us one unified style for all niebloids,
and also simplifies the modulemap.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116570
... rather than using `__has_builtin` directly. This both (1) allows a compiler that doesn't speak `__has_builtin` to workaround with preprocessor magic, and (2) avoids diagnostics about things that look like function like macros after `#if` but are not.
... it's easier to suppress warnings internally, where we can detect the compiler.
* Rename `TEST_COMPILER_C1XX` to `TEST_COMPILER_MSVC`
* Rename all `TEST_WORKAROUND_C1XX_<meow>` to `TEST_WORKAROUND_MSVC_<meow>`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117422
Instead of storing the wrapped iterator inside the stride_counting_iterator,
store its base so we can have e.g. a stride_counting_iterator of an
input_iterator (which was previously impossible because input_iterators
are not copyable). Also a few other simplifications in stride_counting_iterator.
As a fly-by fix, remove the member base() functions, which are super
confusing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116613
I believe all four of these failures are directly due to the pattern where
allocations in the dylib are unobserved by the client program. If AIX32 and AIX64
don't support that, we should just disable the ASSERT_WITH_LIBRARY_INTERNAL_ALLOCATIONS
macro on AIX, and then we don't need to XFAIL these tests.
This also means I won't need to XFAIL a dozen other tests in D89057,
which rely heavily on ASSERT_WITH_LIBRARY_INTERNAL_ALLOCATIONS and
also currently fail on AIX.
See https://buildkite.com/llvm-project/libcxx-ci/builds/7669
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116866
... from testing with MSVC's STL. Mostly truncation warnings and variables that are only used in `LIBCPP_ASSERT`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116878
... even when `!defined(_LIBCPP_VERSION)`. (Note that the previous definition for this case - `((void)0);` - is ill-formed at namespace scope.) Ditto for `LIBCPP_ASSERT`, `LIBCPP_ASSERT_NOEXCEPT`, `LIBCPP_ASSERT_NOT_NOEXCEPT`, and `LIBCPP_ONLY`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116880
In the test files, replace the old-style tests with a simple static_assert,
matching the current style as depicted in e.g.
`ranges_uninitialized_default_construct.pass.cpp`.
Preserve `is_function_like` (but renamed to `is_niebloid`) at
ldionne's request. The removal of this test helper will happen
in D116570 if at all.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116384
z/OS doesn't support fopen64() functions. Modify the preprocessor directive for z/OS to use fopen() instead.
Reviewed By: #libc, abhina.sreeskantharajan, muiez, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111226
This reverts commit 640beb38e7.
That commit caused performance degradtion in Quicksilver test QS:sGPU and a functional test failure in (rocPRIM rocprim.device_segmented_radix_sort).
Reverting until we have a better solution to s_cselect_b64 codegen cleanup
Change-Id: Ibf8e397df94001f248fba609f072088a46abae08
Reviewed By: kzhuravl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115960
Change-Id: Id169459ce4dfffa857d5645a0af50b0063ce1105
AFAICT, Cpp17InputIterators are not required to be default constructible,
since that requirement is added in Cpp17ForwardIterator. Hence, our
archetype for Cpp17InputIterator should not be default constructible.
Removing that constructor has a ripple effect on a couple of tests that
were making incorrect assumptions. Notably:
- Some tests were using cpp17_input_iterator as a sentinel for itself.
That is not valid, because a cpp17_input_iterator is not semiregular
anymore after the change (and hence it doesn't satisfy sentinel_for).
- Some tests were using a stride-counted cpp17_input_iterator as the
sentinel for a range. This doesn't work anymore because of the problem
above, so these tests were changed not to check stride counts for
input iterators.
- Some tests were default constructing cpp17_input_iterator when a simple
alternative was available -- those have been changed to use that alternative.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115806
Remove `s.base()`; every test that wants to get the base of a "test sentinel"
should use the ADL `base(s)` from now on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115766
The aim of this patch is to fix the post processing that is happening on the temporary test directories upon scope exit. In particular, ~scoped_test_env aims to chmod and remove the temporary directories; however,
bad symlinks are followed and we get "No such file or directory". FIX: use find as alternative to chmod and avoid -follow option.
Attempting to remove read-only files on z/OS prompts a message asking for confirmation. FIX: use the -f option to delete read-only files immediately without asking for confirmation.
Some libcxx tests such as libcxx/test/std/input.output/filesystems/cl ass.directory_entry/directory_entry.cons/path.pass.cpp set the dir permissions to none. In turn, recursively doing chmod (-R) does not set the file permissions needed to be able to remove the dir on z/OS only. FIX: use find as alternative to chmod -R, which does not run into this issue on z/OS.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108326
This follows up on my addition of base(cpp20_input_iterator) in D115177,
making all the ADL base() functions consistent.
Also align cpp20_input_iterator with the other test iterators' style.
Reviewed as part of D115272.
Before this patch, the new test's `CountedInvocable<int*, int*>`
would hard-error instead of SFINAEing and cleanly returning false.
Notice that views::counted specifically does NOT work with pipes;
`counted(42)` is ill-formed. This is because `counted`'s first argument
is supposed to be an iterator, not a range.
Also, mark `views::counted(it, n)` as [[nodiscard]], and test that.
(We have a general policy now that range adaptors are consistently
marked [[nodiscard]], so that people don't accidentally think that
they have side effects. This matters mostly for `reverse` and
`transform`, arguably `drop`, and just generally let's be consistent.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115177
Add missing tests for std::vector funcionality to improve code coverage:
- Rewrote access tests to check modification of the container using
the reference returned by the non-const overload
- Added tests for reverse iterators: rbegin, rend, etc.
- Added exception test for vector::reserve
- Extended test cases for vector copy assignment
- Fixed insert_iter_value.pass.cpp to use insert overload with const
value_type& (not with value_type&& which is tested in
iter_rvalue.pass.cpp test)
Reviewed By: Quuxplusone, rarutyun, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112438
Reviewed as part of D114658.
Ultimately this will probably have to be flipped around and renamed
`TEST_IS_RUNTIME`, and extended with `TEST_IS_RUNTIME_OR_CXX20` (once
constexpr std::string support is added) and so on for every new C++
version. But we don't need that flexibility yet, so we're not adding it.
According to the C++ standard, the stored pointer and the stored deleter
should be value-initialized.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113612
In the test suite, we generally don't use printf or other reporting
utilities. It's not that it wouldn't be useful, it's just that some
platforms don't support IO.
Instead, we try to keep test cases small and self-contained so that
we can reasonably easily reproduce failures locally and debug them.
This patch removes printf in some of the last places in the test suite
that used it. The only remaining places are in a deque test and in the
filesystem tests. The filesystem tests are arguably fine to keep using
IO, since we're testing <filesystem>. The deque test will be handled
separately.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114282
This patch resolves many of the failures in the `filesystems/` buckets in the libc++ tests. It adds the correct flag to `fopen` and marks a test case as unsupported. In particular, that test assumes time is stored as a 64 bit value when on MVS it is stored as 32 bit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113298
Also, mark these tests as compile-only. They actually are safe to run — notice that
the code "runs" at constexpr-time in C++20, without error — because both of the
input ranges are entirely filled with nullptr, so no matter how you shuffle the
elements, they remain sorted and partitioned and heapified and everything.
But there's no real reason to run them at runtime, so let's just avoid the distraction.
Test cases that fail in trunk right now are commented out with `TODO FIXME`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113906
Since coroutine is merged in C++ standard and the support for coroutine
seems relatively stable. It's the time to move the implementation of
coroutine out of the experimental directory and the std::experimental
namespace. This patch creates header <coroutine> with conformed
implementation with C++ standard. To avoid breaking user's code too
fast, the <experimental/coroutine> header is remained. Note that
<experimental/coroutine> is deprecated and it would be removed in
LLVM15.
Reviewed By: Quuxplusone, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109433
Deduction guides for containers should not participate in overload
resolution when called with certain incorrect types (e.g. when called
with a template argument in place of an `InputIterator` that doesn't
qualify as an input iterator). Similarly, class template argument
deduction should not select `unique_ptr` constructors that take a
a pointer.
The tests try out every possible incorrect parameter (but never more
than one incorrect parameter in the same invocation).
Also add deduction guides to the synopsis for associative and unordered
containers (this was accidentally omitted from [D112510](https://reviews.llvm.org/D112510)).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112904
At this point, every supported compiler that claims a -std=c++17 mode
should also support `if constexpr`. This was an issue for GCC 5
and GCC 6, but hasn't been an issue since GCC 7. (Our current
minimum supported GCC version, IIUC, is GCC 10 or 11.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113348
Make test_allocator etc. constexpr-friendly so they can be used to test constexpr string and possibly constexpr vector
Reviewed By: Quuxplusone, #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110994
Some embedded platforms do not wish to support the C library functionality
for handling wchar_t because they have no use for it. It makes sense for
libc++ to work properly on those platforms, so this commit adds a carve-out
of functionality for wchar_t.
Unfortunately, unlike some other carve-outs (e.g. random device), this
patch touches several parts of the library. However, despite the wide
impact of this patch, I still think it is important to support this
configuration since it makes it much simpler to port libc++ to some
embedded platforms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111265
Replace `&__rhs` with `_VSTD::addressof(__rhs)` to guard against ADL hijacking
of `operator&` in `operator=`. Thanks to @CaseyCarter for bringing it to our
attention.
Similar issues with hijacking `operator&` still exist, they will be
addressed separately.
Reviewed By: #libc, Quuxplusone, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110852
Implement P1391 (https://wg21.link/p1391) which allows
`std::string_view` to be constructible from any contiguous range of
characters.
Note that a different paper (http://wg21.link/P1989) handles the generic
range constructor for `std::string_view`.
Reviewed By: ldionne, Quuxplusone, Mordante, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110718
Some tests repeat the definition of `DELETE_FUNCTION` macro locally.
However, it's not even requred to guard against in the C++03 case since
Clang supports `= delete;` in C++03 mode. A warning is issued but
`libc++` tests run with `-Wno-c++11-extensions`, so this isn't an issue.
Since we don't support other compilers in C++03 mode, `= delete;` is
always available for use. As such, inline all calls of `DELETE_FUNCTION`
to use `= delete;`.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111148
- Simplify the structure of the new tests.
- Test const containers as well as non-const containers,
since it's easy to do so.
- Remove redundant enable-iffing of helper structs' member functions.
(They're not instantiated unless they're called, and who would call them?)
- Fix indentation and use more consistent SFINAE method in <unordered_map>.
- Add _LIBCPP_INLINE_VISIBILITY on some swap functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109011
The majority of the changes here are whitespace.
Also simplify `ThrowingIterator`'s bookkeeping (NFC).
Also move some free operators into hidden friends, for sanity's sake.
Also `=delete` some more comma operators.
Also use `constexpr` in C++20 instead of `TEST_CONSTEXPR_CXX14`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103341
Detected by evil-izing the widely used `MoveOnly` testing type.
I had to patch some tests that were themselves using its comma operator,
but I think that's a worthwhile cost in order to catch more places
in our headers that needed comma-proofing.
The trick here is that even `++ptr, SomeClass()` can find a comma operator
by ADL, if `ptr` is of type `Evil*`. (A comma between two operands
of non-class-or-enum type is always treated as the built-in
comma, without ADL. But if either operand is class-or-enum, then
ADL happens for _both_ operands' types.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109414
Use the same codepaths as for MSVC. Mingw-w64 does have the _mktemp_s
function; on Vista and newer, msvcrt.dll does contain the function,
which ends up called. (Same thing in the UCRT.) In older versions of
msvcrt.dll (older than what libc++ supports), mingw-w64 provides a
fallback implementation.
This effectively reverts 23323e25f8 (and
d07e5c23b4). That commit tried to fix
unspecified MinGW build breakage.
This reduces the risk of temp name collisions between processes (when
running multiple tests in parallel); the path returned by
GetTempFileName can easily collide with other similar paths.
(_mktemp_s on the other hand tries to avoid such clashes by using
the process id as part of the uniqueness seed.)
This avoids stray random failures in fstreams tests in mingw configurations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98526
This implements the struct `__format_arg_store` and its dependencies:
* the class basic_format_arg,
* the class basic_format_args,
* the class basic_format_context,
* the function make_format_args,
* the function wmake_format_args,
* the function visit_format_arg,
* several Standard required typedefs.
The following parts will be implemented in a later patch:
* the child class `basic_format_arg::handle`,
* the function `basic_format_arg::basic_format_arg(const T* p)`.
The following extension has been implemented:
* the class basic_format_arg supports `__[u]int128_t` on platform where libc++ supports 128 bit integrals.
Implements parts of:
* P0645 Text Formatting
Completes:
* LWG3371 visit_format_arg and make_format_args are not hidden friends
* LWG3542 basic_format_arg mishandles basic_string_view with custom traits
Note https://mordante.github.io/blog/2021/06/05/format.html gives a bit more information about the goals and non-goals of this initial patch series.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne, vitaut
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103357
We don't support any compiler that doesn't support C++14 constexpr when
compiling in C++14 mode anymore, so we can just assume that we have C++14
extended constexpr when compiling in C++14 mode. This allows us to remove
some workarounds for older compilers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108638
Based on https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc, it appears that the CloudABI
project has been abandoned. This patch removes a bunch of CloudABI specific
logic that had been added to support that platform.
Note that some knobs like LIBCXX_ENABLE_STDIN and LIBCXX_ENABLE_STDOUT
coud be useful in their own right, however those are currently broken.
If we want to re-add such knobs in the future, we can do it like we've
done it for localization & friends so that we can officially support
that configuration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108637
Instead of trying to sniff out what features are supported by the
library being tested, the way we normally handle these things is with
Lit annotations. This should not be treated differently.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108209
Since we officially don't support several older compilers now, we can
drop a lot of the markup in the test suite. This helps keep the test
suite simple and makes sure that UNSUPPORTED annotations don't rot.
This is the first patch of a series that will remove annotations for
compilers that are now unsupported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107787
This allows waiving the right amount of asserts on Windows and zOS.
This should supersede D107124 and D105910.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107755
This configuration is interesting because GCC has a different level of
strictness for some C++ rules. In particular, it implements the older
standards more stringently than Clang, which can help find places where
we are non-conforming (especially in the test suite).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105936
Moves:
* `std::move`, `std::forward`, `std::declval`, and `std::swap` into
`__utility/${FUNCTION_NAME}`.
* `std::swap_ranges` and `std::iter_swap` into
`__algorithm/${FUNCTION_NAME}`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103734
This started as an attempt to fix a GCC 11 warning of misplaced parentheses.
I then noticed that trying to fix the parentheses warning actually triggered
errors in the tests, showing that we were incorrectly assuming that the
implementation of ranges::advance was using operator+= or operator-=.
This commit fixes that issue and makes the tests easier to follow by
localizing the assertions it makes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103272
D101613 added some macros used by Microsofts SAL. D103425 uses `__pre`
and `__post`. They are also used by SAL and cause issues when used on
Windows. Add them to the blacklist making it easier to figure out what
the issue is.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103541
This was added inconsistently in
19fd9039ca242f408493b5c662f9d908eab8555e; Windows doesn't have the
aligned_alloc function (neither MSVC nor MinGW toolchains) and we don't
define _LIBCPP_HAS_ALIGNED_ALLOC while building libcxx.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103399
This should have been done in D96385; thanks ldionne for the catch!
Also, make the back/front inserter behavior tests a little more thorough,
which incidentally caught a cut-and-paste-bug in `nasty_list`, so fix that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103318
The problem with debug mode tests is that it isn't known which particular
_LIBCPP_ASSERT causes the test to exit, and as shown by
https://reviews.llvm.org/D100029 and 2908eb20ba it might be not the
expected one.
The patch adds TEST_LIBCPP_ASSERT_FAILURE macro that allows checking
_LIBCPP_ASSERT message to ensure we caught an expected failure.
Reviewed By: Quuxplusone, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100595
Adds MAKE_CSTRING and makes the operators of `MultiStringType` `constexpr`.
The code is copied from D96664 so it can be used in D80895.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102414
Don't use stat and lstat on Windows; lstat is missing, stat only provides
the modification times with second granularity (and does the wrong thing
regarding symlinks). Instead do a minimal reimplementation using the
native windows APIs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101731
On Windows, the permission bits are mapped down to essentially only
two possible states; readonly or readwrite. Normalize the checked
permission bitmask to match what the implementation will return.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101728
C++20 revised the definition of what it means to be an iterator. While
all _Cpp17InputIterators_ satisfy `std::input_iterator`, the reverse
isn't true. D100271 introduces a new test adaptor to accommodate this
new definition (`cpp20_input_iterator`).
In order to help readers immediately distinguish which input iterator
adaptor is _Cpp17InputIterator_, the current `input_iterator` adaptor
has been prefixed with `cpp17_`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101242
This reverts one of the macros just added in D101613, because it turns out
that the <utility> header actually uses the identifiers __x, __y, __z.
We probably *shouldn't* use __z if it's reserved on Windows; but since
it's not causing us any active problem even on Windows, I think this is
the safest way to unbreak the test.
This reverts a224bf8ec4 and fixes the
underlying issue.
The underlying issue is simply that MSVC headers contains a define
like "#define __in", where __in is one macro in the MSVC Source
Code Annotation Language, defined in sal.h
Just use a different variable name than "__in"
__indirectly_readable_impl, and add "__in" to nasty_macros.h just
like the existing __out. (Also adding a couple more potentially
conflicting ones.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101613
If libc++ is built as a DLL, calls to operator new within the DLL aren't
overridden if a user provides their own operator in calling code.
Therefore, the alloc counter doesn't pick up on allocations done within
std::string, so skip that check if running on windows. (Technically,
we could keep the checks if running on windows when not built as a DLL,
but trying to keep the conditionals simple.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100219
* `std::ranges::range`
* `std::ranges::sentinel_t`
* `std::ranges::range_difference_t`
* `std::ranges::range_value_t`
* `std::ranges::range_reference_t`
* `std::ranges::range_rvalue_reference_t`
* `std::ranges::common_range`
`range_size_t` depends on `sized_range` and will be added alongside it.
Implements parts of:
* P0896R4 The One Ranges Proposal`
Depends on D100255.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100269
While working on D70631, Microsoft's unit tests discovered an issue.
Our `std::to_chars` implementation for bases != 10 uses the range
`[first,last)` as temporary buffer. This violates the contract for
to_chars:
[charconv.to.chars]/1 http://eel.is/c++draft/charconv#to.chars-1
`to_chars_result to_chars(char* first, char* last, see below value, int base = 10);`
"If the member ec of the return value is such that the value is equal to
the value of a value-initialized errc, the conversion was successful and
the member ptr is the one-past-the-end pointer of the characters
written."
Our implementation modifies the range `[member ptr, last)`, which causes
Microsoft's test to fail. Their test verifies the buffer
`[member ptr, last)` is unchanged. (The test is only done when the
conversion is successful.)
While looking at the code I noticed the performance for bases != 10 also
is suboptimal. This is tracked in D97705.
This patch fixes the issue and adds a benchmark. This benchmark will be
used as baseline for D97705.
Reviewed By: #libc, Quuxplusone, zoecarver
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100722
That was originally committed in 04733181b5 and then reverted in
a9f11cc0d9 because it broke several people.
The problem was a missing include of __iterator/concepts.h, which has now
been fixed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100073
Implements parts of:
* P0896R4 The One Ranges Proposal`
Depends on D99873.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100073
* adds `iterator_traits` specialisation that supports all expected
member aliases except for `pointer`
* adds `iterator_traits` specialisations for iterators that meet the
legacy iterator requirements but might lack multiple member aliases
* makes pointer `iterator_traits` specialisation require objects
Depends on D99854.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99855
On Windows, one can't use perms::none on a directory to trigger
failures to read the directory entries.
These remaining tests can't use GetWindowsInaccessibleDir() sensibly,
e.g. for tests that rely on toggling accessibility back and forth during
the test, or where the semantics of the dir provided by
GetWindowsInaccessibleDir() doesn't allow for running the ifdeffed tests
meaningfully.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97538
If running in a Windows Container, there is no such directory at all.
If running from within bash on Windows Server, the directory seems to
be fully accessible. (The mechanics of this isn't fully understood, and
it doesn't seem to happen on desktop versions.)
If the directory isn't available with the expected behaviour, mark those
individual tests as unsupported. (The test as a whole is considered to
pass, but the unsupported test is mentioned in a test summary printed on
stdout.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98960
This will avoid typos like `_LIBCPP_STD_VERS` (<future>) or using `#if TEST_STD_VER > 17` without including "test_macros.h".
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99515
Prior to e0d01294bc, all tests used a
random directory name, but now it is deterministic, based on the
test name. This change was done under the assumption that the filename
portion of the cwd is unique across tests that use the filesystem
test temporary directories.
When running tests locally, the cwd of the test is something like
"<build-dir>/test/<test path>/Output/copy_assign.pass.cpp.dir",
and the filename portion, "copy_assign.pass.cpp.dir", is used as
base for the temp directory names.
The change noted that there's a risk for race conditions if multiple
threads within one test try to create temp directories in parallel, but
that doesn't really happen in practice.
However, if running tests with a large number of parallel workers,
multiple tests with the same filename portion, e.g. "copy_assign.pass.cpp.dir",
can run in parallel, leading to race conditions across processes.
Therefore, add a hash of the full cwd to distinguish such cases
from each other.
Secondly, don't use two separate levels of temporary directories
(<base>/static_env.0). When cleaning up, only the individual
directory is removed, leaving the empty intermediate directory
behind littering the temp directory.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98703
This is my attempt to merge D98077 (bugfix the format strings for
Windows paths, which use wchar_t not char)
and D96986 (replace C++ variadic templates with C-style varargs so that
`__attribute__((format(printf)))` can be applied, for better safety)
and D98065 (remove an unused function overload).
The one intentional functional change here is in `__create_what`.
It now prints path1 and path2 in square-brackets _and_ double-quotes,
rather than just square-brackets. Prior to this patch, it would
print either path double-quoted if-and-only-if it was the empty
string. Now the double-quotes are always present. I doubt anybody's
code is relying on the current format, right?
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98097
Add the missing includes for getting the defines and functions used
in the mingw version of get_temp_file_name().
This fixes 31 tests when built in a mingw configuration.
Also remove a redundant ifdef; _WIN32 is defined in mingw targets too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97456
On windows, the path internal representation is wchar_t, and
input/output often goes through utf8 inbetween, which causes extra
allocations.
MS STL also fails a number of strict allocation checks, so this
shouldn't be a standards compliance issue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98398
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D97443
Reviewed By: Quuxplusone, EricWF, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97911
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D97359
Reviewed By: EricWF, #libc, Quuxplusone, zoecarver
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97443
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D97162
Reviewed By: EricWF, #libc, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97359
Fix handling of skip_permission_denied on windows; after converting
the return value of GetLastError() to a standard error_code, ec.value()
is in the standard errc range, not a native windows error code. This
was missed in 156180727d.
The directory "C:\System Volume Information" does seem to exist and
have these properties on most relevant contempory setups.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98166
This test was previously tweaked in
321f696920 to match the output of
of MS STL (except that the MS STL fails on the testcase with an
empty path).
libc++ doesn't produce paths with all normalized separators (and the
spec doesn't mandate it to either).
Tweak the test reference to match exactly what libc++ produces. If
testing with a non-libc++ library, do a relaxed comparison that allows
the separators to differ.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98215
The implementation of tuple's constructors and assignment operators
currently diverges from the way the Standard specifies them, which leads
to subtle cases where the behavior is not as specified. In particular, a
class derived from a tuple-like type (e.g. pair) can't be assigned to a
tuple with corresponding members, when it should. This commit re-implements
the assignment operators (BUT NOT THE CONSTRUCTORS) in a way much closer
to the specification to get rid of this bug. Most of the tests have been
stolen from Eric's patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D27606.
As a fly-by improvement, tests for noexcept correctness have been added
to all overloads of operator=. We should tackle the same issue for the
tuple constructors in a future patch - I'm just trying to make progress
on fixing this long-standing bug.
PR17550
rdar://15837420
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50106
- Quality-of-implementation: Avoid calling __unwrap_iter in constexpr contexts.
The user might conceivably write a contiguous iterator where normal iterator
arithmetic is constexpr-friendly but `std::to_address(it)` isn't.
- Bugfix: When you pass contiguous iterators to `std::copy`, you should get
back your contiguous iterator type, not a raw pointer. That means that
libc++ can't `__unwrap_iter` unless it also does `__rewrap_iter`.
Fortunately, this is implementable.
- Improve test coverage of the new `contiguous_iterator` test iterator.
This catches the bug described above.
- Tests: Stop testing that we can `std::copy` //into// an `input_iterator`.
Our test iterators may currently support that, but it seems nonsensical to me.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95983
These function makes it easier to write generic unit tests for the
format header. It solves the issue where it's not possible to use
`templated_prefix"foo"`
where `templated_prefix` resolves to: nothing, `L`, `u8`, `u`,
or `U`. The templated_prefix would be more faster during execution.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93414
- Implement C++20's changes to `reverse_iterator`, so that it won't be
accidentally counted as a contiguous iterator in C++20 mode.
- Implement C++20's changes to `move_iterator` as well.
- `move_iterator` should not be contiguous. This fixes a bug where
we optimized `std::copy`-of-move-iterators in an observable way.
Add a regression test for that bugfix.
- Add libcxx tests for `__is_cpp17_contiguous_iterator` of all relevant
standard iterator types. Particularly check that vector::iterator
is still considered contiguous in all C++ modes, even C++03.
After this patch, there continues to be no supported way to write your
own iterator type in C++17-and-earlier such that libc++ will consider it
"contiguous"; however, we now fully support the C++20 approach (in C++20
mode only). If you want user-defined contiguous iterators in C++17-and-earlier,
libc++'s position is "please upgrade to C++20."
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94807
... so that comparisons with an `int` LHS and `MoveOnly` RHS are valid, as is necessary for the `partial_sort_copy` test to pass with an implementation that doesn't force a conversion to the type of the RHS as libc++ does.
* The only exception is that the flag -std=c++2a is still used not to break compatibility with older compilers (clang <= 9, gcc <= 9).
* Bump _LIBCPP_STD_VER for C++20 to 20 and use 21 for the future standard (C++2b).
That's a preparation step to add c++2b support to libc++.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93383
This implements the std::filesystem parts of P0482 (which is already
marked as in progress), and applies the actions that are suggested
in P1423.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90222