Move the implementation of __libcpp_thread_poll_with_backoff
and __libcpp_timed_backoff_policy::operator() out of the
_LIBCPP_HAS_THREAD_API_PTHREAD block. None of the code in these
methods is pthreads specific.
Also add "inline _LIBCPP_INLINE_VISIBILITY" to
__libcpp_timed_backoff_policy::operator(), to avoid errors due to
multiple definitions of the operator. Contrary to
__libcpp_thread_poll_with_backoff (which is a template function),
this is a normal non-templated method.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75102
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
Depend on the compiler to provide a correct implementation of
max_align_t. If __STDCPP_NEW_ALIGNMENT__ is missing and C++03 mode has
been explicitly enabled, provide a minimal fallback in <new> as
alignment of the largest primitive types.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D68480 added those headers and made the std module
only usable with C++14 or later as the submodules were not marked as requiring
C++14 or later. This just adds the missing requires directives.
- 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
Summary: We want to eventually remove it.
Reviewers: EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74719
- 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
Otherwise, the `availability=XXX` lit feature is set even when we're
testing trunk and _LIBCPP_DISABLE_AVAILABILITY is defined, which causes
tests that check for availability markup to be enabled and unexpectedly
pass.
This change splits the _LIBCPP_STRING_EXTERN_TEMPLATE_LIST up into a _LIBCPP_STRING_V1_EXTERN_TEMPLATE_LIST containing the stable ABI, and a _LIBCPP_STRING_UNSTABLE_EXTERN_TEMPLATE_LIST containing the unstable ABI.
The purpose is to explicitly define and maintain the two lists, where the unstable ABI allows for ABI breaking changes for purposes such as optimization while offering a strong guarantee that any change inside the unstable ABI does not affect the stable ABI.
As per the comment in the __string header, we do still allow etries to be added to the stable ABI list as the c++ versions and corresponding c++ std API changes.
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
Instead of including <ios> for ios_base::failbit, simply get failbit
member of the template argument. Print directly to a stream instead
of using intermediate ostringstream.
Parsing time: 874ms -> 164ms (-81%)
Thanks to Nikita Kniazev for the patch!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71214
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.
This reverts commit 82b47b2978.
This broke Clang and LLDB module builds without -fmodules-local-submodule-visbility.
I'll revert this for now until we have a fix and reland once Clang
can properly handle this code.
See also the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/rG82b47b2978405f802a33b00d046e6f18ef6a47be
libc++ is careful to not fracture overload sets. When one overload
is visible to a user, all of them should be. Anything less causes
subtle bugs and ODR violations.
Previously, in order to support ::abs and ::div being supplied by
both <cmath> and <cstdlib> we had to do awful things that make
<math.h> and <stdlib.h> have header cycles and be non-modular.
This really breaks with modules.
Specifically the problem was that in C++ ::abs introduces overloads
for floating point numbers, these overloads forward to ::fabs,
which are defined in math.h. Therefore ::abs needed to be in math.h
too. But this required stdlib.h to include math.h and math.h to
include stdlib.h.
To avoid these problems the definitions have been moved to stddef.h
(which math includes), and the floating point overloads of ::abs
have been changed to call __builtin_fabs, which both Clang and GCC
support.
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
Summary:
In D27429, we switched the Apple implementation of steady_clock::now()
from clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC) to clock_gettime(CLOCK_UPTIME_RAW).
The purpose was to get nanosecond precision, and also to improve the
performance of the implementation.
However, it appears that CLOCK_UPTIME_RAW does not satisfy the requirements
of the Standard, since it is not strictly speaking monotonic. Indeed, the
clock does not increment while the system is asleep, which had been
mentioned in D27429 but somehow not addressed.
This patch switches to CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW, which is monotonic, increased
during sleep, and also has nanosecond precision.
https://llvm.org/PR44773
Reviewers: bruno, howard.hinnant, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits, mclow.lists, EricWF
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74341
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
size_t is always greater than 0, so remove the artifact from the old
index_type.
Patch by Michael Schellenberger Costa.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71996
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 change reflows a comment line. This change serves as a no-op test commit
Reviewers: mclow.lists, ldionne, EricWF
Subscribers: dexonsmith, christof, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73552
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:
FreeBSD got `timespec_get` support somewhere in the 12.x timeframe, but
the C++ version check in its system headers was written incorrectly.
This has now been fixed for both FreeBSD 13 and 12.
Add checks for the corresponding `__FreeBSD_version` values, to define
`_LIBCPP_HAS_TIMESPEC_GET` when the function is supported.
Reviewers: emaste, EricWF, ldionne, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: arichardson, krytarowski, christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71522
This is failing to compile on Windows because clang-cl is trying to
use the path with quotes, dropping them resolves the issue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73525
Configuring libc++abi with LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC=OFF is broken since
https://reviews.llvm.org/D71894, so this patch fixes the issue for
Apple platforms to unblock our CI.
This fixes using non-default locales, which currently can crash when
e.g. formatting numbers.
Within the localeconv_l function, the per-thread locale is temporarily
changed with __libcpp_locale_guard, then localeconv() is called,
returning an lconv * struct pointer.
When localeconv_l returns, the __libcpp_locale_guard dtor restores
the per-thread locale back to the original. This invalidates the
contents of the earlier returned lconv struct, and all C strings
that are pointed to within it are also invalidated.
Thus, to have an actually working localeconv_l function, the
function needs to allocate some sort of storage for the returned
contents, that stays valid for as long as the caller needs to use
the returned struct.
Extend the libcxx/win32 specific locale_t class with storage for
a deep copy of a lconv struct, and change localeconv_l to take
a reference to the locale_t, to allow it to store the returned
lconv struct there.
This works fine for libcxx itself, but wouldn't necessarily be right
for a caller that uses libcxx's localeconv_l function.
This fixes around 11 of libcxx's currently failing tests on windows.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69505
libc++ on Android needs to be linked against libandroid_support on API
levels less than 21 to provide needed functions that aren't in the libc
on those platforms (e.g. posix_memalign for libcxxabi). libc++ from the
NDK is a linker script that pulls in libandroid_support, but for
building libc++ itself, we need to explicitly add libandroid_support as
a dependency. Moreover, libc++ headers reference the functions provided
by libandroid_support, so it needs to be added as a public dependency.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73516
Summary:
The libcxx test suite auto-detects spaceship operator, but __config does not. This means that the libcxx test suite has been broken for over a month when using top-of-tree clang. This also really ought to be fixed before 10.0.
See: bc633a42dd
Reviewers: chandlerc, mclow.lists, EricWF, ldionne, CaseyCarter
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: broadwaylamb, hans, dexonsmith, tstellar, llvm-commits, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72980
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
This reverts commit a8a9c8e0a1.
There are multiple reported failures caused by this change.
Each failure is really weird, but it makes sense to revert
while investigating.
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:
This patch adds a new target info object called LinuxRemoteTI.
Unlike LinuxLocalTI, which asks the host system about various things
like available locales, distribution name etc. which don't make sense
if we're testing on a remote board, LinuxRemoteTI uses SSHExecutor
to get information from the target system.
Reviewers: jroelofs, ldionne, bcraig, EricWF, danalbert, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: jroelofs
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72847
We switched to C11 thread API on Fuchsia in ab9aefe, but further
testing showed that Fuchsia's C11 mutex implementation needs a few
improvements for this to be usable, so we temporarily switch back
to the pthread implementation until those issues are addressed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72862
The C11 API specifies that to initialize a recursive mutex,
mtx_plain | mtx_recursive should be used with mtx_init.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72809
The GCC build failures have been addressed, and the LLDB failures were
fixed by LLDB.
I have also verified that the apple-clang 9.0 segfault no longer
occurs.
Original Message:
The external instantiation of std::string is a problem for libc++.
Additions and removals of inline functions in string can cause ABI
breakages, including introducing new symbols.
This patch aims to:
(1) Make clear which functions are explicitly instatiated.
(2) Prevent new functions from being accidentally instantiated.
(3) Allow a migration path for adding or removing functions from the
explicit instantiation over time.
Although this new formulation is uglier, it is preferable from a
maintainability and readability standpoint because it explicitly
enumerates the functions we've chosen to expose in our ABI. Changing
this list is non-trivial and requires thought and planning.
(3) is achieved by making it possible to control the extern template declaration
separately from it's definition. Meaning we could add a new definition to
the dylib, wait for it to roll out, then add the extern template
declaration to the header. Similarly, we could remove existing extern
template declarations while still keeping the definition to prevent ABI
breakages.
This patch is needed in order to work around a GCC bug that fails to
explicitly instantiate a non-template function of a class template when
there is another overload that's a function template.
(See https://godbolt.org/z/4bUQ_b)
This patch SFINAE's away the function templates when the argument is
a basic_string.
On Fuchsia, pthread API is emulated on top of C11 thread API. Using C11
thread API directly is more efficient.
While this implementation is only used by Fuchsia at the moment, it's
not Fuchsia specific, and could be used by other platforms that use C11
threads rather than pthreads in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64378
This also makes this function consistent with the rest of the
libc++ provided fallbacks.
The locale support in msvcrt.dll is very limited anyway; it can
only be configured processwide, not per thread, and it only seems
to support the locales "C" and "" (the user set locale), so it's
hard to make any meaningful automatic test for it. But manually tested,
this change does make time formatting locale code in libc++ output
times in the user requested format, when using locale "".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69554
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
The external instantiation of std::string is a problem for libc++.
Additions and removals of inline functions in string can cause ABI
breakages, including introducing new symbols.
This patch aims to:
(1) Make clear which functions are explicitly instatiated.
(2) Prevent new functions from being accidentally instantiated.
(3) Allow a migration path for adding or removing functions from the
explicit instantiation over time.
Although this new formulation is uglier, it is preferable from a
maintainability and readability standpoint because it explicitly
enumerates the functions we've chosen to expose in our ABI. Changing
this list is non-trivial and requires thought and planning.
(3) is achieved by making it possible to control the extern template declaration
separately from it's definition. Meaning we could add a new definition to
the dylib, wait for it to roll out, then add the extern template
declaration to the header. Similarly, we could remove existing extern
template declarations while still keeping the definition to prevent ABI
breakages.
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().
Summary:
`__has_attribute(fallthough)` -> `__has_attribute(fallthrough)`
This is a follow-up of https://reviews.llvm.org/D72287
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, Jim
Reviewed By: Jim
Subscribers: christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72314
This change adds the following benchmarks:
- StringAssignStr
Assign a const basic::string& value
- StringAssignAsciiz
Assign a const char* asciiz value
StringAssignAsciizMix
Assign mixed long/short const char* asciiz values
- StringResizeDefaultInit
Resize default init benchmark
Patch by Martijn Vels (mvels@google.com)
Reviewed as D72343
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.
Since C++11, [depr.impldec]:
The implicit definition of a copy constructor as defaulted is deprecated
if the class has a user-declared copy assignment operator or a
user-declared destructor.
At clang HEAD, -Wdeprecated-copy (included by -Wextra) will warn on such instances.
Reviewed By: EricWF
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71096
LLVM has moved to C++14, and the libc++ build should too.
C++14 is needed to provide constant initialization for certain global
objects.
I suspect this change may break some older GCC buildbots, and I'll clean
those up as they fall.
Summary:
The __name__ attribute is the correct way to get a function name in
Python 3. This also works with Python 2.
Reviewers: jroelofs, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71136
target_info is inferred to WindowsLocalTI on Windows hosts unless
specified otherwise. In the latter case, it doesn't make sense to use
Windows-specific settings if the target is not Windows.
This change should not break anything, because target_info is inferred
based on what platform.system() returns. self.is_windows was set based
on the same platform.system() call.
Thanks to Sergej Jaskiewicz for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68275
These are a part of the libc so linking these explicitly isn't necessary
and embedding these as deplibs causes link time error.
This issues was introduced in a9b5fff which changed how we emit deplibs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71135
This is a followup to 35bc5276ca. It fixes the dependent libs usage
in libcxx and libcxxabi to link pthread and rt libraries only if CMake
detects them, rather than based on explicit platform blacklist.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70888
Android API level 21 and above have all these functions available, so we
don't need to include our fallback definitions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69983
This apparently breaks weird use cases where the build directory is on
a separate drive. Someone reported that failure to me privately.
I can't remember of a reason for collating the two arguments in the
first place, so I don't think this should break anything.
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
Summary:
Rewrite the in-tree build to be a clearer tl;dr like we have for the
out-of-tree build.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, ldionne
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: dexonsmith, christof, ldionne, enh, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69917
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.
This function has the same behavior as the now-standand std::to_address.
Re-using the name makes the behavior more clear, and in the future it
will allow us to correctly get the raw pointer for user provided pointer
types.
We effectively never want to export that function, which is an
implementation detail of libc++. This was previously tried in
603715c66b and then reverted in 8335dd314f because it caused
linker warnings. These linker warnings should go away now that we
use internal_linkage instead of always_inline to implement per-TU
insulation.
This change would have warned about the bug found in D62451.
No unit tests since the exception should never throw.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62452
Same idea as the current algorithm, that is, add (half of the difference between a and b) to a.
But we use a different technique for computing the difference: we compute b - a into a pair of integers that are named "sign_bit" and "diff". We have to use a pair because subtracting two 32-bit integers produces a 33-bit result.
Computing half of that is a simple matter of shifting diff right by 1, and adding sign_bit shifted left by 31. llvm knows how to do that with one instruction: shld.
The only tricky part is that if the difference is odd and negative, then shifting it by one isn't the same as dividing it by two - shifting a negative one produces a negative one, for example. So there's one more adjustment: if the sign bit and the low bit of diff are one, we add one.
For a demonstration of the codegen difference, see https://godbolt.org/z/7ar3K9 , which also has a built-in test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69459
Use the builtin CMake support for specifying the proper flags for the targets to
build at a certain C++ standard. This avoids unnecessary checks in CMake,
speeding up the configure phase as well as simplifies the logic overall.
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:
When the ABI namespace isn't a reserved identifier, we were issuing a
warning, but this should have been an error since the beginning. This
commit enforces that the ABI namespace is a reserved identifier, and
changes the ABI namespace used by LibFuzzer.
Reviewers: phosek, EricWF
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, #sanitizers, libcxx-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #sanitizers, #libc, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69408
When running libc++ tests on a remote machine via SSH, we can encounter
a 'Permission denied' error.
Fix this with plain old 'chmod +x <executable>'.
Thanks to Sergej Jaskiewicz for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69170
Summary: This patch removes `shared_ptr::make_shared` as it is not part of the standard. This patch also adds __create_with_cntrl_block, which is a help function that can be used in std::allocate_shared and std::make_shared. This is the third patch (out of 4) from D66178.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, ldionne
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68805
llvm-svn: 375504
Summary:
In D67316 we added `_LIBCPP_C_HAS_NO_GETS` to signal that the C library
does not provide `gets()`, and added a test for FreeBSD 13 or higher,
using the compiler-defined `__FreeBSD__` macro.
Unfortunately this did not work that well for FreeBSD's own CI process,
since the gcc compilers used for some architectures define `__FreeBSD__`
to match the build host, not the target.
Instead, we should use the `__FreeBSD_version` macro from the userland
header `<osreldate.h>`, which is more fine-grained. See also
<https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22034>.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, emaste, ldionne
Reviewed By: emaste, ldionne
Subscribers: dexonsmith, bsdjhb, krytarowski, christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69174
llvm-svn: 375340
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
Handle the case when libc++abi and libunwind are being built together
with libc++ in the runtimes build. This logic was used in the previous
implementation but dropped in r374116.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68791
llvm-svn: 374510
`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:
This allows the linker script generation to query CMake properties
(specifically the dependencies of libc++.so) instead of having to
carry these dependencies around manually in global variables. Notice
the removal of the LIBCXX_INTERFACE_LIBRARIES global variable.
Reviewers: phosek, EricWF
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68343
llvm-svn: 374116
It turns out that r374056 broke _some_ build bots again, specifically
the ones using sanitizers. Instead of trying to link the right system
libraries to the benchmarks bit-by-bit, let's just link exactly the
system libraries that libc++ itself needs.
llvm-svn: 374079
We tried doing that previously (in r373487) and failed (reverted in
r373506) because the benchmarks needed to link against system libraries
and relied on libc++'s dependencies being propagated. Now that this has
been fixed (in r374053), this commit marks the system libraries as
PRIVATE dependencies of libc++.
llvm-svn: 374056
Since the benchmarks build with -nostdlib, they need to manually link
against some system libraries that are used by the benchmarks and the
GoogleBenchmark library itself.
Previously, we'd rely on the fact that these libraries were linked
through the PUBLIC dependencies of cxx_shared/cxx_static. However,
if we were to make these dependencies PRIVATE (as they should be
because they are implementation details of libc++), the benchmarks
would fail to link. This commit remediates that.
llvm-svn: 374053
It's better style to use PRIVATE when linking libraries to executables,
and it doesn't make a difference since executables don't need to propagate
their link-time dependencies anyway.
llvm-svn: 374050
Summary: In my last patch (D67675) I forgot a few variadics. This patch removes the remaining make_shared and allocate_shared C++03 variadics.
Reviewers: ldionne, EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68000
llvm-svn: 373971
If you explicitly set LIBCXX_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL_LIBRARY to OFF, your
project will fail to configure because the cxx_experimental target
doesn't exist.
llvm-svn: 373809
Also, set those flags for the cxx_experimental target. Otherwise,
cxx_experimental doesn't build properly when neither the static nor
the shared library is compiled (yes, that is a weird setup).
llvm-svn: 373808
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
The first commit removed the workaround in a old script.
This patch removes it in the file actually used by the bots.
I have no idea if this is still needed, but removing the
workaround seems like the easiest way to test.
I'll revert this change if the bots go red.
llvm-svn: 373653
I have no idea if this is still needed, but removing the
workaround seems like the easiest way to test.
I'll revert this change if the bots go red.
llvm-svn: 373650
This allows propagating the include automatically to targets that
depend on one of the libc++ targets such as the benchmarks. Note
that the GoogleBenchmark build itself still needs to manually specify
the -include, since I don't know of any way to have an external project
link against one of the libc++ targets (which would propagate the -include
automatically).
llvm-svn: 373631
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
This commit follows the trend of doing things per-target instead of
modifying the C++ flags globally. It does so for visibility-related
flags, other basic build flags and Windows-specific flags.
llvm-svn: 373517
This is part of a larger shift to move to per-target settings and
eradicate global variables from the CMake build. I'm starting small
with warnings only because those are easy to transition over and I
want to see how it pans out, but we can handle all flags like exceptions
and RTTI in the future.
llvm-svn: 373511
It turns out the benchmarks need to link against those libraries
explicitly too, so CMake's propagation of PUBLIC dependencies is
used.
llvm-svn: 373506
Summary:
I haven't managed a small reproduction for this bug, it involves
complicated and deeply nested data structures with a wide variety
of pretty printers. But in general, we shouldn't be combining
gdb's command line interface (via gdb.execute) with pretty-printers.
Subscribers: christof, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68306
llvm-svn: 373402
In reality, this workaround is for the fact that LIBCXX_CXX_ABI=libcxxabi
can't be specified on Linux, since libc++abi isn't shipped with the system.
Since the build bots explicitly specify LIBCXX_CXX_ABI=libcxxabi, they fail
unless we apply the workaround.
llvm-svn: 373385
I tried applying D63883 three times and could never get around to
making it work. I'm giving up on that for now, but soon this should
be irrelevant anyway since all builds will move to the monorepo
(where we're always using the in-tree libc++abi unless explicitly
specified otherwise).
llvm-svn: 373384
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:
In https://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/351659 @emaste removed gets() from
FreeBSD 13's libc, and our copies of libc++ and libstdc++. In that change, the
declarations were simply deleted, but I would like to propose this conditional
test instead.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, emaste
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: krytarowski, christof, ldionne, emaste, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67316
llvm-svn: 371324
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
The visibility annotations in libc++ are not quite right for GCC, which
results in symbols not being exported when -fvisibility=hidden is used.
To fix the GCC build bots, this commit reverts to the previous state of
not building with hidden visibility on GCC.
In the future, we can build with hidden visibility all the time and
export symbols explicitly using a list. See https://llvm.org/D66970
for one take at this.
llvm-svn: 370926
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
An upcoming change in Clang will flag _Atomic as being a C11 extension.
To avoid generating this warning in libc++, this commit marks the only
use of _Atomic with the __extension__ extension, which suppresses such
warnings.
llvm-svn: 370796
This patch fixes some typos and other small errors in
directory_iterator.cpp that prevented this file from being compiled for
Win32.
Patch by Stefan Schmidt <thrimbor.github@gmail.com>!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66986
llvm-svn: 370599