D131234 marked the ranges papers as complete, but it didn't set the
feature-test macro.
Reviewed By: ldionne, var-const, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131326
When back-deploying to older platforms, we can still provide assertions,
but we might not be able to provide a great implementation for the verbose
handler. Instead, we can just call ::abort().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131199
Evaluating `contiguous_iterator` on an iterator that satisfies all the
constraints except the `to_address` constraint and doesn't have
`operator->` defined results in a hard error. This is because
instantiating `to_address` ends up instantiating templates
dependent on the given type which might lead to a hard error even
in a SFINAE context.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130835
Also fix `ranges::stable_sort` and `ranges::inplace_merge` to support
proxy iterators now that their internal implementations can correctly
dispatch `rotate`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130758
The return value for both of these algorithms is specified as
```
`{last, result - N}` for the overloads in namespace `ranges`.
```
But the current implementation instead returns `{first, result - N}`.
Also add both algorithms to the relevant "robust" tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130968
This paper was accepted during the last plenary and is intended to be
backported to LLVM 15. When backporting the release notes in the branch
should be updated too.
Note the feature-test macro isn't updated since this will change; three
papers have updated the same macro in the same plenary.
Implements:
- P2508R1 Exposing std::basic-format-string
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130643
This improves the formatting of the generated files. That allows it to
remove the clang-format step in D129668.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130911
The macro is only enabled when the Clang is used with
-fexperimental-library.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130792
I went over the output of the following mess of a command:
`(ulimit -m 2000000; ulimit -v 2000000; git ls-files -z | parallel --xargs -0 cat | aspell list --mode=none --ignore-case | grep -E '^[A-Za-z][a-z]*$' | sort | uniq -c | sort -n | grep -vE '.{25}' | aspell pipe -W3 | grep : | cut -d' ' -f2 | less)`
and proceeded to spend a few days looking at it to find probable typos
and fixed a few hundred of them in all of the llvm project (note, the
ones I found are not anywhere near all of them, but it seems like a
good start).
Reviewed By: #libc, philnik
Spies: philnik, libcxx-commits, mgorny, arichardson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130905
With the goal of reusing that handler to do other things besides
handling assertions (such as terminating when an exception is thrown
under -fno-exceptions), the name `__libcpp_assertion_handler` doesn't
really make sense anymore.
Furthermore, I didn't want to use the name `__libcpp_abort_handler`,
since that would give the impression that the handler is called
whenever `std::abort()` is called, which is not the case at all.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130562
Summary:
The AIX linker does not merge typeinfos when shared libraries are involved, which causes address comparison to fail although the types are the same. This patch changes to use the non-unique implementation for typeinfo comparison for AIX.
Reviewed by: hubert.reinterpretcast, philnik, libc++
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130715
Avoid relying on `iterator_traits` and instead deduce the return type of
dereferencing the iterator. Additionally, add a static check to reject
iterators with incorrect `iterator_traits` at compile time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130538
Since the calendar is added in C++20 the existing operators are removed.
Implements part of:
- P1614R2 The Mothership has Landed
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129887
- for all algorithms taking more than one range, add a `robust` test to
check the case where the ranges have different value types and the
given projections are different, with each projection applying to
a different value type;
- fix `ranges::include` to apply the correct projection to each range.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130515
Instead of taking a fixed set of arguments, use variadics so that
we can pass arbitrary arguments to the handler. This is the first
step towards using the handler to handle other non-assertion-related
failures, like std::unreachable and an exception being thrown in
-fno-exceptions mode, which would improve user experience by including
additional information in crashes (right now, we call abort() without
additional information).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130507
This adds a C++20-version of `reverse_iterator` which doesn't SFINAE away the operators for use inside the classic STL algorithms. Pre-C++20 `_AlgRevIter` is just an alias for `reverse_iterator`.
Reviewed By: var-const, #libc
Spies: huixie90, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128864
When -fexperimental-library is passed, libc++ will now pick up the
appropriate __has_feature flag defined by Clang to enable the
experimental library features.
As a fly-by, also update the documentation for the various TSes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130176
In D125283, we ensured that integer distributions would not compile when
used with arbitrary unsupported types. This effectively enforced what
the Standard mentions here: http://eel.is/c++draft/rand#req.genl-1.5.
However, this also had the effect of breaking some users that were
using integer distributions with unsupported types like int8_t. Since we
already support using __int128_t in those distributions, it is reasonable
to also support smaller types like int8_t and its unsigned variant. This
commit implements that, adds tests and documents the extension. Note that
we voluntarily don't add support for instantiating these distributions
with bool and char, since those are not integer types. However, it is
trivial to replace uses of these random distributions on char using int8_t.
It is also interesting to note that in the process of adding tests
for smaller types, I discovered that our distributions sometimes don't
provide as faithful a distribution when instantiated with smaller types,
so I had to relax a couple of tests. In particular, we do a really bad
job at implementing the negative binomial, geometric and poisson distributions
for small types. I think this all boils down to the algorithm we use in
std::poisson_distribution, however I am running out of time to investigate
that and changing the algorithm would be an ABI break (which might be
reasonable).
As part of this patch, I also added a mitigation for a very likely
integer overflow bug we were hitting in our tests in negative_binomial_distribution.
I also filed http://llvm.org/PR56656 to track fixing the problematic
distributions with int8_t and uint8_t.
Supersedes D125283.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126823
The return type was specified incorrectly for proxy iterators that
define `reference` to be a class that implicitly converts to
`value_type`. `__iter_move` would end up returning an object of type
`reference` which would then implicitly convert to `value_type`; thus,
the function will return a `value_type&&` rvalue reference to the local
temporary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130197
This implements the Grapheme clustering as required by
P1868R2 width: clarifying units of width and precision in std::format
This was omitted in the initial patch, but the paper was marked as completed. This really completes the paper.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126971
The `ostream` `nullptr` inserter implemented in 3c125fe is missing a C++ version
guard. Normally, `libc++` takes the stance of backporting LWG issues to older
standards modes as was done in 3c125fe. However, backporting to older standards
modes breaks existing code in popular libraries such as `Boost.Test` and
`Google Test` who define their own overload for `nullptr_t`.
Instead, only apply this `operator<<` overload in C++17 or later.
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/55861.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127033
In particular remove the ability to expel incomplete features from the
library at configure-time, since this can now be done through the
_LIBCPP_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL macro.
Also, never provide symbols related to incomplete features inside the
dylib, instead provide them in c++experimental.a (this changes the
symbols list, but not for any configuration that should have shipped).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128928
Summary:
The patch changes the definition of __regex_word to 0x8000 for AIX because the current definition 0x80 clashes with ctype_base::print (_ISPRINT is defined as 0x80 in AIX ctype.h).
Reviewed by: Mordante, hubert.reinterpretcast, libc++
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129862
D127650 removed support for non-clang-based XL compilers, but left some
of the headers used only by this compiler and included under the
__IBMCPP__ macro. This change cleans this up by deleting these headers.
Reviewed By: hubert.reinterpretcast, fanbo-meng
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129491
Nobody knows if there are users of libc++ with MSVC. Let's try to find that out and encourage them to upstream their changes to make that configuration work.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Spies: libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129055
A format string like "{}" is quite common. In this case avoid parsing
the format-spec when it's not present. Before the parsing was always
called, therefore some refactoring is done to make sure the formatters
work properly when their parse member isn't called.
From the wording it's not entirely clear whether this optimization is
allowed
[tab:formatter]
```
and the range [pc.begin(), pc.end()) from the last call to f.parse(pc).
```
Implies there's always a call to `f.parse` even when the format-spec
isn't present. Therefore this optimization isn't done for handle
classes; it's unclear whether that would break user defined formatters.
The improvements give a small reduciton is code size:
719408 12472 488 732368 b2cd0 before
718824 12472 488 731784 b2a88 after
The performance benefits when not using a format-spec are:
```
Comparing ./formatter_int.libcxx.out-baseline to ./formatter_int.libcxx.out
Benchmark Time CPU Time Old Time New CPU Old CPU New
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BM_Basic<uint32_t> -0.0688 -0.0687 67 62 67 62
BM_Basic<int32_t> -0.1105 -0.1107 73 65 73 65
BM_Basic<uint64_t> -0.1053 -0.1049 95 85 95 85
BM_Basic<int64_t> -0.0889 -0.0888 93 85 93 85
BM_BasicLow<__uint128_t> -0.0655 -0.0655 96 90 96 90
BM_BasicLow<__int128_t> -0.0693 -0.0694 97 90 97 90
BM_Basic<__uint128_t> -0.0359 -0.0359 256 247 256 247
BM_Basic<__int128_t> -0.0414 -0.0414 239 229 239 229
```
For the cases where a format-spec is used the results remain similar,
some are faster some are slower, differing per run.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129426
Since the calendar classes were introduced in C++20 there's no need to
keep the old comparison operators.
This commit does the day calender class, the other calendar classes will
be in a followup commit.
Implements parts of:
- P1614R2 The mothership has landed
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128603
Change the mechanism in `iterator_operations.h` to pass around a generic
policy tag indicating whether an internal function is being invoked from
a "classic" STL algorithm or a ranges algorithm. `IterOps` is now
a template class specialized on the policy tag.
The advantage is that this mechanism is more generic and allows defining
arbitrary conditions in a clean manner.
Also add a few more iterator functions to `IterOps`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129390
This header need not be included on non-z/OS IBM platforms (and indeed
will add nothing when it is), so add a guard. This let's us remove the
header without things breaking when shipping libc++ for AIX.
Reviewed By: hubert.reinterpretcast, fanbo-meng
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129493
In our implementation the year is always less than or equal to the
class' `max()`. It's unlikely this ever changes since changing the
year's range will be an ABI break. A static_assert is added as a
guard.
This was reported by @philnik.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129442
- create the headers (but not include them from `<algorithm>`);
- define the niebloid and its member functions with the right signatures
(as no-ops);
- make sure all the right headers are included that are required by each
algorithm's signature;
- update `CMakeLists.txt` and the module map;
- create the test files with the appropriate synopses.
The synopsis in `<algorithm>` is deliberately not updated because that
could be taken as a readiness signal. The new headers aren't included
from `<algorithm>` for the same reason.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129549
According to @aaron.ballman this was marked Tentatively Ready as of 2022-07-07.
D129362 implemented the C counterpart.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, Mordante
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129380
implement `std::ranges::set_intersection` by reusing the classic `std::set_intersenction`
added unit tests
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129233
This implements a not accepted LWG issue. Not doing so would require
integral types to use the handle class instead of being directly stored
in the basic_format_arg.
The previous code used `std::forward` in places where it wasn't required
by the Standard. These are now removed.
Implements:
- P2418R2 Add support for std::generator-like types to std::format
- LWG 3631 basic_format_arg(T&&) should use remove_cvref_t<T> throughout
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127570
As of now containers key_eq might get called when rehashing happens, which is redundant for unique keys containers.
Reviewed By: #libc, philnik, Mordante
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128021
This commit re-applies 9ee97ce3b8, which was reverted by 61d417ce
because it broke the LLDB data formatter tests. It also re-applies
6148c79a (the manual GN change associated to it).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127444
With to_chars supporting 128-bit it's possible to support the full
128-bit range in format. This only removes the previous restrictions
and updates the tests to validate proper support.
Depends on D128929.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129007
This is required by the Standard and makes it possible to add full
128-bit support to format.
The patch also fixes 128-bit from_chars "support". One unit test
required a too large value, this failed on 128-bit; the fix was to add
more characters to the input.
Note only base 10 has been optimized. Other bases can be optimized.
Note the 128-bit lookup table could be made smaller. This will be done later. I
really want to get 128-bit working in to_chars and format in the upcomming
LLVM 15 release, these optimizations aren't critical.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128929
This removes a part of the now obsolete formater code.
The removal also removes the _v2 suffix where it's no longer needed.
Depends on D128785
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128846
This changes the implementation of the formatter. Instead of inheriting
from a specialized parser all formatters will use the same generic
parser. This reduces the binary size.
The new parser contains some additional fields only used in the chrono
formatting. Since this doesn't change the size of the parser the fields
are in the generic parser. The parser is designed to fit in 128-bit,
making it cheap to pass by value.
The new format function is a const member function. This isn't required
by the Standard yet, but it will be after LWG-3636 is accepted.
Additionally P2286 adds a formattable concept which requires the member
function to be const qualified in C++23. This paper is likely to be
accepted in the 2022 July plenary.
This is based on D125606. That commit did the groundwork and did similar
changes for the string formatters.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128785
Instead of marking private symbols with internal_linkage (which leads to
one copy per translation unit -- rather wasteful), use an ABI tag that
gets rev'd with each libc++ version. That way, we know that we can't have
name collisions between implementation-detail functions across libc++
versions, so we'll never violate the ODR. However, within a single program,
each symbol still has a proper name with external linkage, which means
that the linker is free to deduplicate symbols even across TUs.
This actually means that we can guarantee that versions of libc++ can
be mixed within the same program without ever having to take a code size
hit, and without having to manually opt-in -- it should just work out of
the box.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127444
Both clang and GCC support using `__has_builtin` for detecting compiler-provided type_traits. Use it instead of `__has_keyword` or `__has_feature` to remove special-casing for GCC-provided builtins
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Spies: libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129056
This changes the implementation of the formatter. Instead of inheriting
from a specialized parser all formatters will use the same generic
parser. This reduces the binary size.
The new parser contains some additional fields only used in the chrono
formatting. Since this doesn't change the size of the parser the fields
are in the generic parser. The parser is designed to fit in 128-bit,
making it cheap to pass by value.
The new format function is a const member function. This isn't required
by the Standard yet, but it will be after LWG-3636 is accepted.
Additionally P2286 adds a formattable concept which requires the member
function to be const qualified in C++23. This paper is likely to be
accepted in the 2022 July plenary.
This is based on D125606. That commit did the groundwork and did similar
changes for the string formatters.
Depends on D128139.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128671
This changes the implementation of the formatter. Instead of inheriting
from a specialized parser all formatters will use the same generic
parser. This reduces the binary size.
The new parser contains some additional fields only used in the chrono
formatting. Since this doesn't change the size of the parser the fields
are in the generic parser. The parser is designed to fit in 128-bit,
making it cheap to pass by value.
The new format function is a const member function. This isn't required
by the Standard yet, but it will be after LWG-3636 is accepted.
Additionally P2286 adds a formattable concept which requires the member
function to be const qualified in C++23. This paper is likely to be
accepted in the 2022 July plenary.
This is based on D125606. That commit did the groundwork and did similar
changes for the string formatters.
Depends on D125606
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128139
- P1252 ("Ranges Design Cleanup") -- deprecate
`move_iterator::operator->` starting from C++20; add range comparisons
to the `<functional>` synopsis. This restores
`move_iterator::operator->` that was incorrectly deleted in D117656;
it's still defined in the latest draft, see
http://eel.is/c++draft/depr.move.iter.elem. Note that changes to
`*_result` types from 6.1 in the paper are no longer relevant now that
these types are aliases;
- P2106 ("Alternative wording for GB315 and GB316") -- add a few
`*_result` types to the synopsis in `<algorithm>` (some algorithms are
not implemented yet and thus some of the proposal still cannot be
marked as done);
Also mark already done issues as done (or as nothing to do):
- P2091 ("Fixing Issues With Range Access CPOs") was already implemented
(this patch adds tests for some ill-formed cases);
- LWG 3247 ("`ranges::iter_move` should perform ADL-only lookup of
`iter_move`") was already implemented;
- LWG 3300 ("Non-array ssize overload is underconstrained") doesn't
affect the implementation;
- LWG 3335 ("Resolve C++20 NB comments US 273 and GB 274") was already
implemented;
- LWG 3355 ("The memory algorithms should support move-only input
iterators introduced by P1207") was already implemented (except for
testing).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126053
This commit re-adds transitive includes that had been removed by
4cd04d1687, c36870c8e7, a83f4b9cda, 1458458b55, 2e2f3158c6,
and 489637e66d. This should cover almost all the includes that had
been removed since LLVM 14 and that would contribute to breaking user
code when releasing LLVM 15.
It is possible to disable the inclusion of these headers by defining
_LIBCPP_REMOVE_TRANSITIVE_INCLUDES. The intent is that vendors will
enable that macro and start fixing downstream issues immediately. We
can then remove the macro (and the transitive includes) by default in
a future release. That way, we will break users only once by removing
transitive includes in bulk instead of doing it bit by bit a every
release, which is more disruptive for users.
Note 1: The set of headers to re-add was found by re-generating the
transitive include test on a checkout of release/14.x, which
provided the list of all transitive includes we used to provide.
Note 2: Several includes of <vector>, <optional>, <array> and <unordered_map>
have been added in this commit. These transitive inclusions were
added when we implemented boyer_moore_searcher in <functional>.
Note 3: This is a best effort patch to try and resolve downstream breakage
caused since branching LLVM 14. I wasn't able to perfectly mirror
transitive includes in LLVM 14 for a few headers, so I added a
release note explaining it. To summarize, adding boyer_moore_searcher
created a bunch of circular dependencies, so we have to break
backwards compatibility in a few cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128661
Also, improve the test for nasty macros to define min and max, so this
will be caught in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128655
Previously, we'd use raw pointers when the debug mode was enabled,
which means we wouldn't get out-of-range checking with std::span's
iterators.
This patch introduces a new class called __bounded_iter which can
be used to wrap iterators and make them carry around bounds-related
information. This allows iterators to assert when they are dereferenced
outside of their bounds.
As a fly-by change, this commit removes the _LIBCPP_ABI_SPAN_POINTER_ITERATORS
knob. Indeed, not using a raw pointer as the iterator type is useful to
avoid users depending on properties of raw pointers in their code.
This is an alternative to D127401.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127418
Summary:
Patch D123580 changed to use bit fields for strings in long and short mode. As a result, this changes the layout of these strings on AIX because bit fields on AIX are 4 bytes, which breaks the ABI compatibility with earlier strings before the change on AIX. This patch uses the attribute 'packed' and anonymous structure to make string layout compatible. This patch will also make test cases alignof.compile.pass.cpp and sizeof.compile.pass.cpp introduced in D127672 pass on AIX.
Reviewed by: philnik, Mordante, hubert.reinterpretcast, libc++
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128285
1. for constructors that takes cvref variation of tuple<UTypes...>, there
used to be two SFINAE helper _EnableCopyFromOtherTuple,
_EnableMoveFromOtherTuple. And the implementations of these two helpers
seem to slightly differ from the spec. But now, we need 4 variations.
Instead of adding another two, this change refactored it to a single one
_EnableCtrFromUTypesTuple, which directly maps to the spec without
changing the C++11 behaviour. However, we need the helper __copy_cvref_t
to get the type of std::get<i>(cvref tuple<Utypes...>) for different
cvref, so I made __copy_cvref_t to be available in C++11.
2. for constructors that takes variations of std::pair, there used to be
four helpers _EnableExplicitCopyFromPair, _EnableImplicitCopyFromPair,
_EnableImplicitMoveFromPair, _EnableExplicitMoveFromPair. Instead of
adding another four, this change refactored into two helper
_EnableCtrFromPair and _BothImplicitlyConvertible. This also removes the
need to use _nat
3. for const member assignment operator, since the requirement is very
simple, I haven't refactored the old code but instead directly adding
the new c++23 code.
4. for const swap, I pretty much copy pasted the non-const version to make
these overloads look consistent
5. while doing these change, I found two of the old constructors wasn't
marked constexpr for C++20 but they should. fixed them and added unit
tests
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116621
When merging the changes of <type_traits> header with the commits on
this header over the last month, several conflicts were mistaken
resolved and the wrong branch was picked while resolving conflicts,
which leads to CI failure. In order to resolve the conflicts properly
with qualification CI job, this change is reverted.
This reverts commit 95733a55b9.
1. for constructors that takes cvref variation of tuple<UTypes...>, there
used to be two SFINAE helper _EnableCopyFromOtherTuple,
_EnableMoveFromOtherTuple. And the implementations of these two helpers
seem to slightly differ from the spec. But now, we need 4 variations.
Instead of adding another two, this change refactored it to a single one
_EnableCtrFromUTypesTuple, which directly maps to the spec without
changing the C++11 behaviour. However, we need the helper __copy_cvref_t
to get the type of std::get<i>(cvref tuple<Utypes...>) for different
cvref, so I made __copy_cvref_t to be available in C++11.
2. for constructors that takes variations of std::pair, there used to be
four helpers _EnableExplicitCopyFromPair, _EnableImplicitCopyFromPair,
_EnableImplicitMoveFromPair, _EnableExplicitMoveFromPair. Instead of
adding another four, this change refactored into two helper
_EnableCtrFromPair and _BothImplicitlyConvertible. This also removes the
need to use _nat
3. for const member assignment operator, since the requirement is very
simple, I haven't refactored the old code but instead directly adding
the new c++23 code.
4. for const swap, I pretty much copy pasted the non-const version to make
these overloads look consistent
5. while doing these change, I found two of the old constructors wasn't
marked constexpr for C++20 but they should. fixed them and added unit
tests
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116621
A situation that happens fairly often in libc++ is that we remove some
transitive includes in a header (either purposefully or not) and that
ends up breaking users. Of course, we want to be able to remove our
transitive includes, however it's also good to have a grip on that
to know which commit changed what and when. Furthermore, it's good
to accumulate include removals for a couple of releases to avoid
breaking users at every release for this reason.
This commit adds a test that should break whenever we remove an
include. Hence, it should allow us to track which headers include
which other headers transitively, giving us a traceable way to
remove headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128236
This is a helper patch to ease the reviewing of D128139.
The originals will be removed at a later time when all formatters are
converted to the new style. (Floating-point and pointer aren't up for
review yet.)
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128367
This patch also adds a new optimization to `std::move`. It unwraps three `reverse_iterator`s if the wrapped iterator is a `contiguous_iterator` and the iterated type is trivially_movable. This allows us to simplify `ranges::move_backward` to a forward to `std::move` without any pessimization.
Reviewed By: var-const, #libc
Spies: libcxx-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126616
`__GCC_CONSTRUCTIVE_SIZE` and `__GCC_DESTRUCTIVE_SIZE` are available since GCC 12. I'm assuming clang will also implement these for compatability with libstdc++.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Spies: h-vetinari, libcxx-commits, arichardson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122276
This is a follow up based on a request of @jloser in D127594.
As drive-by qualified the function calls in the <bit> header.
Reviewed By: #libc, EricWF
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127760
Instead of instantiating all functions called by std::to_chars for the
integral types only instantiate them for 32 and 64 bit integral types.
This results in a smaller binary when using different types.
In an example using the types: signed char, short, int, long, long long,
unsigned char, unsigned short, unsigned int, unsigned long, and
unsigned long long this saved 2792 bytes of code size. For libc++.so.1
is saves 688 bytes of code size (64-bit Linux).
This was discovered while investigating a solution for #52709.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128215
For an lvalue reference to a move only view x, views::all(x) gives hard error because the expression inside noexcept is not well formed and it is not SFINAE friendly.
Given a move only view type `V`, and a concept
```
template <class R>
concept can_all = requires {
std::views::all(std::declval<R>());
};
```
The expression `can_all<V&>` returns
libstdc++: false
msvc stl : false
libc++ : error: static_cast from 'V' to 'typename decay<decltype((std::forward<V &>(__t)))>::type' (aka 'V') uses deleted function
noexcept(noexcept(_LIBCPP_AUTO_CAST(std::forward<_Tp>(__t))))
The standard spec has its own problem, the spec says it is expression equivalent to `decay-copy(E)` but the spec of `decay-copy` does not have any constraint, which means the expression `decay-copy(declval<V&>())` is well-formed and the concept `can_all<V&>` should return true and should error when instantiating the function body of decay-copy. This is clearly wrong behaviour in the spec and we will probably create an LWG issue. But the libc++'s behaviour is clearly not correct. The `noexcept` is an "extension" in libc++ which is not in the spec, but the expression inside `noexpect` triggers hard error, which is not right.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne, var-const
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128281
`std::function` has been deprecated for a few releases now. Remove it with an option to opt-back-in with a note that this option will be removed in LLVM 16.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Spies: #libc_vendors, EricWF, jloser, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127908
This changes the implementation of the formatter. Instead of inheriting
from a specialized parser all formatters will use the same generic
parser. This reduces the binary size.
The new parser contains some additional fields only used in the chrono
formatting. Since this doesn't change the size of the parser the fields
are in the generic parser. The parser is designed to fit in 128-bit,
making it cheap to pass by value.
The new format function is a const member function. This isn't required
by the Standard yet, but it will be after LWG-3636 is accepted.
Additionally P2286 adds a formattable concept which requires the member
function to be const qualified in C++23. This paper is likely to be
accepted in the 2022 July plenary.
Depends on D121530
NOTE parts of the code now contains duplicates for the current and new parser.
The intention is to remove the duplication in followup patches. A general
overview of the final code is available in D124620. That review however lacks a
bit of polish.
Most of the new code is based on the same algorithms used in the current code.
The final version of this code reduces the binary size by 17 KB for this example
code
```
int main() {
{
std::string_view sv{"hello world"};
std::format("{}{}|{}{}{}{}{}{}|{}{}{}{}{}{}|{}{}{}|{}{}|{}", true, '*',
(signed char)(42), (short)(42), (int)(42), (long)(42), (long long)(42), (__int128_t)(42),
(unsigned char)(42), (unsigned short)(42), (unsigned int)(42), (unsigned long)(42),
(unsigned long long)(42), (__uint128_t)(42),
(float)(42), (double)(42), (long double)(42),
"hello world", sv,
nullptr);
}
{
std::wstring_view sv{L"hello world"};
std::format(L"{}{}|{}{}{}{}{}{}|{}{}{}{}{}{}|{}{}{}|{}{}|{}", true, L'*',
(signed char)(42), (short)(42), (int)(42), (long)(42), (long long)(42), (__int128_t)(42),
(unsigned char)(42), (unsigned short)(42), (unsigned int)(42), (unsigned long)(42),
(unsigned long long)(42), (__uint128_t)(42),
(float)(42), (double)(42), (long double)(42),
L"hello world", sv,
nullptr);
}
}
```
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125606
This makes Clang scream at us if there is a class without a key function.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Spies: libcxx-commits, arichardson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127900
This mostly copys the `<experimental/functional>` stuff and updates the code to current libc++ style.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Spies: nlopes, adamdebreceni, arichardson, libcxx-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121074
Simplify the implementation of `std::copy` and `std::move` by using `__unwrap_iter` and `__rewrap_iter` to unwrap and rewrap `reverse_iterator<reverse_iterator<Iter>>` instead of specializing `__copy_impl` and `__move_impl`.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Spies: wenlei, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127049
Simplify logic in `__config` by assuming that we are using Clang in C++03 mode. Also, use standardized feature-test macros instead of compiler-specific checks (like `__has_feature`) in a couple of places.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Spies: libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127606